Indicative
this is what the word “were” is, I asked my Onii-Chan lol hope this helps you ☁︎☀︎☁︎
Answer:
The best and most reliable sources are primary sources, as it is an eye-witness account of what occured. Things like diaries, autobiographies, recordings, artifacts, or an interview with a witness are examples of primary sources.
Secondary sources are things, such as a reporter telling someone what the witness told them, as the reporter could have changed the story a little without telling anyone after they interviewed someone.
For example, a reporter may ask a person who saw a car crash, and the reporter wants money. So the reporter changes up the story and tells the publishers, who print out the newspaper with the reporter's story, or the publishers changed up the reporter's story and put it on the newspaper.
The newspaper may now say: BREAKING NEWS! A DRUNK BUZZARD GOT INTO EPIC BATTLE WITH VIDEO GAME CHARACTERS!!!!
-which of course didn't happen-
It is important to get credible and reliable sources for research, because you can trust what happened, and you can use that information for your work without having a seriously biased result or conclusion.
Explanation:
6A. Mistake, Increased, Simulates, Knew, Say, Came, Makes, Enveloped, Beating
6B. It intensifies the tone, changes the pace of the story, causes a bit of anxiety.
6C. Low, dull, quick, beating, drum
6D. Madness, over-acuteness of sense, fury,
7A "well, cautiously, just so much"
7B. Causes it to be suspenseful
7C. Sight, Sound
7D creaked, single thin ray
8A. Slight noise, wind in the chimney, cricket chirp, mouse crossing the floor
8B. Relaxing, Suspenseful, either way you can support
The various tones of the story are suspenseful and anxious. The beating of the heart which in this case simulates fury causes the story to intensify as it is being read. It is like standing on the edge of a rock and knowing that one false move could lead you to tumbling. Yet, you do it. The intensity adds to the suspense of the story which makes the tone deep and mysterious. We want to read faster in order to get past those parts, yet it is everywhere. Like when your parents send you to put the garbage out at night, you run as fast as you can down the driveway.
This verb cheered is used in the active voice, the correct answer is B.
If it were passive, this would be the example sentence: The enthusiastic fans were cheered near the finish line.