<span>Arrangement of the events in the first three acts of Shakespeare's Twelfth Night.
6. Viola enters Orsino's court dressed as a male.
</span><span>2. Olivia asks Cesario about his parentage.
</span><span>4. Sebastian reveals to Antonio that he has a twin sister.
</span><span>5. Malvolio makes a fool of himself in front of Olivia.
</span><span>3. Feste returns the ring to Cesario that Orsino had given to Olivia.
</span><span>1. Antonio offers to take Cesario's place in the duel.</span>
Answer:
1. b You might have left it at school.
2. c You can't have sent it to the right address.
3. c He can't have taken his phone to work.
Dialogue:
Number one
Bill: I can't find my camera.
Ben: <u>You might have left it at school.</u>
Bill: Yes, maybe. I'll look there tomorrow.
Number two
Alex: She didn't get my email.
Kat: <u>You can't have sent it to the right address.</u>
Alex: I'm sure I did. I checked before I sent it.
Number three
Clare: My dad wasn't answering his phone.
Liz: <u>He can't have taken his phone to work.</u>
Clare: But he always has it.
Answer:
1. Mother has all power
2. Child has no voice you speak against mother you get the belt
Explanation:
This sentence does not contain the parallel structure.
<span>My sisters always bicker over who gets to drive the car, wear the newest dress, and having the best boyfriend.
</span>Parallel structure<span> or parallelism is defined as the repetition of a chosen grammatical form within a sentence.
</span>
In the above sentence the phrase that should be parallel are "drive the car", "wear the newest dres", and "having the best boyfriend". The usage is inconsistent and it creates confusion.
The sentence using the correct parallel structure reads like this:
<span>My sisters always bicker over who gets to drive the car, wear the newest dress, and have the best boyfriend.
</span>
"having" is the present participle form of have. The term "have" is used to refer to a possession or belonging.
Answer:
what ryhmes with cat is hat mat pat bat sat hope this helps
Explanation: