Example:You write yours truly to a person you do not know very well. Example, Yours truly Tom Jackson.
Answer:
Holiday Diary: Monday We (arrived) in the middle of a thunderstorm at one in the morning. I (took) the tent out of the car and (tried) to pitch, only to then (realised) that we had forgotten the pegs. The kids’ faces (stared) at me through the car’s streaked windows as the dogs sit beside them. Three-quarters of an hour later I finally (managed) to wake the site’s shop owner, bought some spare pegs and got us all under canvas. The forecast, typically, is for rain all week. Good old summer!
Explanation:
- arrive - arrived.
- take - took.
- try - tried.
- realise - realised.
- stare - stared.
- manage - managed.
Hope it helps.
Answer:
Is this question from your text book??
Answer:
I'm pretty sure it's 1.
Explanation:
If you read it out loud in one sentence without the "Janet asked", it's "Where is my bat?"
The other ones would be " The reason, is safety." The comma makes a slight pause and it doesn't sound correct.
Sentence 3 has no punctuation other than the period and there needs a comma between games and the. "When the high school banned non-wood bats in baseball games, the coach was pleased.
Answer:
By revealing the clergy's vindictive abuse of power.
Explanation:
Geoffrey Chaucer's "The Canterbury Tales" is a collection of stories told by a group of pilgrims on their way to Canterbury. The given excerpt is from "Prologue to the Pardoner's Tale" where the clergy talks of his 'job' of pardoning people but as a means to profit from them.
In the given excerpt, the pardoner reveals how he used his clergy position to 'attack' those who criticize him. His victims <em>"can't escape slander and defamation"</em>, which he admits is <em>"how [he] deals with people who annoy [him]"</em>. This reveals how the pardoner used the guise of being holy and virtuous to attack his enemies or anyone criticizing him. This shows the vindictive abuse of power by the clergy.
Thus, the correct answer is the third option.