Answer:
all you have to do you think of five reasons and it will go for and against for and against for and against paragraphs on about it later on about it later on about it then all you have to do is just finished with your name and done
Answer:
hyperbole to express the intensity of the speaker’s memory
Explanation: just because
Answer:
yes
Explanation:
because it's good for you
Answer:
2. the ship appears to have not sustained any damage
3. the two injured men are thought to have been repairing overhead cables
4. the escaped prisoner is rumoured to be living in Spain
5. it has been agreed we will meet again in a fortnight
6. it was decided that we would try again later
7. it is confirmed that Mr. Jackson intends to resign
8. it was thought not to be a viable solution by most of the committee
( begin each sentence with a capital letter, end with a full stop and punctuate well eg commas)
A gerund looks like a verb which ends in -ing, but it functions as a noun in a sentence. A predicate noun follows a linking verb, such as <em>to be, to seem, </em>etc. So, among all these examples, the only gerund phrase which is used as a predicate noun is found in the last sentence, and the gerund is leading, whereas the whole phrase is leading people to their seats.