Answer:
okay so i wrote you an introduction on "Frosty the Snowman". You can pretty much change around the words so it fits a lot of circumstances. Change december to summer... that kinda thing. Fit the vibe you're going for. Pretty much just add extra words, spice it up, just try and get the word count up.
Good luck! :)
Explanation:
There's nothing like sitting down with your family, getting close, all laughing together. Just being in eachother's presence, and spending time together. Some of my happiest memories from childhood were spent just like that. Surrounded by the people I love, making memories that I didn't know would last a lifetime. Every year when December rolls around, I get so excited. It is for a very specific reason.
From as young as I can remember, my mom was obsessed with 'Frosty the Snowman'. It was not only a classic film, but it is her favorite. Each year on December 1st my mom would reveal the old, classic, Christmas movie while we all gathered around. We would get blankets, and she would make hot chocolate. Everything about December 1st movie night is magical to me, and I owe it all to 'Frosty the Snowman'.
A) When she says “I don’t see the power, the confidence you say I have,” she’s saying that other people see her in a way that she can never see herself as
Hope this helps comment below for more questions :)
Hamlet’s tragic flaw is his inability to act to avenge his father’s death
Simple past tense verbs are used for completed actions that happened before now. It's the basic form of past tense, used to say when something happened. The action is in the past, either recently or distantly. For example: "We lived in Chicago during the 1980s."
Infinitive verbs are the basic form of verbs, with the word "to" in front of it. There are no conjugations used with it (such as -ed, -ing, or -s). For example: "Sherry wanted to score more points than her brother in basketball."
Irregular verbs are those that don't use the typical -ed, -d, or -ied forms of spelling of past simple or past participles. For example: "I would like to drink more of your raspberry lemonade. I drank some yesterday and it was amazing!" (We wouldn't add an -ed to drink like most verbs to say "drinked"; instead, we would use the irregular verb drank.)
Past perfect verbs are those used for actions that were completed at some point in the past. They're used when talking about something that occurred before something else. For example: "Mark did so well on the math test because he had been tutored all month."
The best answer would be D. past perfect since you're using a verb that occurred before another action in the past.
The answer should interrogative verb.