What the verbs fit, set, and read have in common is that <span>they keep the same form no matter what tense is used.
</span>You can say - I read a book every day. Or Those pants fit you nicely. Or I set the table often.
And if you want to say all that in the past tense, it would look the same:
I read a book yesterday. Those pants fit him nicely a long time ago. I set the table two days ago.
<span>to sacrifice self-interest for the common good</span>
Answer:
Are you asking for examples of this? If so, then here are some....
alive
awake
delight
lapel
perhaps
rejoice
Explanation:
The attitude that a writer takes towards a subject, the reader, or a character is called the B. tone.
Answer: "He" is the person who succeeded despite the doubters.
The context seems to be a situation that seemed impossible to most people, but one person dared to try, even when someone scoffed and tried to discourage him.
The alliteration is the repetition of s-sounds in "someone scoffed"
Explanation: