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suter [353]
3 years ago
13

Que es un adjetivo y un adverbio

English
2 answers:
podryga [215]3 years ago
7 0

Answer:

An adjective describes nouns, and adverbs modify verbs.

Explanation:

una maquina silenciosa

vs.

hablamos silenciosamente

Bond [772]3 years ago
5 0

Answer: An adjective outline nouns, and adverbs adapt verbs.

Answer: Un adjetivo resume sustantivos y adverbios adaptan verbos.

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Which phrase defines “mortified” best?
Sergio [31]
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C:horrified or shamed
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6 0
3 years ago
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Several roommates share a kitchen. They each contribute food necessary for their meals, and they take turns using that food to p
seraphim [82]

The definition of communal is "Shared by all members of a community; for common use."

I would say that their kitchen <em>is</em> communal because their "community" consists of all the roommates who use the kitchen and contribute to it. If only one person contributed to the kitchen stock, then it would not be communal.

3 0
2 years ago
Complete the sentences with the correct form of a phrasal verb with go (go away, go back, go down, go in, go on, go over, go up)
Nataly_w [17]

1. John, could you please go on reading the paragraph.


The phrasal verb <em>to go on </em>means to keep on doing something, continue doing what you've previously been doing. In the sentence above, the teacher wants John to continue reading the paragraph because probably he stopped doing that, or he just took over from another student.


2. Prices have gone up again, I'm afraid.


The phrasal verb <em>to go up </em>means to become higher, to raise/rise. So if prices go up, it means that the objects in question have become more expensive. The opposite form of this phrasal verb would be <em>to go down, </em>when those things become less expensive, or rather cheaper.


3. You go in through that door over there.


The phrasal verb <em>to go in </em>means to enter a particular place, to be at a particular location that you previously haven't been in. So, in the case above, you are supposed to enter a particular building through a particular door that someone showed you.


4. The temperature went down ten degrees last night. It's now minus five.


The phrasal verb <em>to go down </em>means to become lower, to descend. So, if temperature went up, it means that it became cooler outside, and you'd have to wear warmer clothes. The opposite would be <em>to go up, </em>like in sentence number 2.


5. I'd like the problem to go away.


The phrasal verb <em>to go away </em>means to disappear, to not exist anymore, to leave. So, if you want something or someone to go away, you don't want to see them anymore. If your problem goes away, then you won't have a problem anymore because it will no longer exist.


6. I'll go over the instructions if you like.


The phrasal verb <em>to go over </em>something means that you will read it diligently, you will pay attention to every detail in order to understand what it is about. If you go over the instructions, it means that you are going to read them so as to know what to do.


7. They decided to go back because it started to rain.


The phrasal verb <em>to go back </em>means to return to a previous location, to be at the location that you were before you arrived at your next one. If you decide go outside and it starts raining, then you will probably go back home so as to avoid getting soaked in the rain.


5 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
7. Which of the following sentences has an error in capitalization? A. Maybe you've already heard the news: Jamie and Alex are g
MakcuM [25]

Answer:

The answer is: B. He looked at me carefully and stated, "Don't worry because I'm here."

Explanation:

In British English it is frequent to use a capitalization in the first letter of the word after a colon, but only if it's a proper noun or an acronym as in American English but it also depends on one thing: if a sentence is being introduced, this is why the first option cannot be possible. The penultimate option doesn't have any mistakes either as Atlantic Ocean has to be capitalized in both words, for the word "ocean" belongs to that part of the proper name; the same with the last option: Central Park and New York are proper nouns and must be capitalized. So the second option shouldn't be capitalized, with the comma and then the quotation marks, for someone saying something, unless it was a proper noun.

5 0
3 years ago
Read this excerpt from “The Pit and the Pendulum” by Edgar Allan Poe.
worty [1.4K]

The correct answer is “It creates an agitated atmosphere that conveys the narrators anxiety over the descending Pendulum. I have the answer right on my test.

7 0
2 years ago
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