Answer:
honestly I'm upset with you if i get this wrong cause some of these don't make sense no matter how you change the tense
Explanation:
1.lived
2.worked
3.became
4.not only looked
5.also made
6.been
7.had
8.sat
9.met
10.did not visit
11.did not feel
12.went
13.usually played
14.rode
15.was
16.had
17.got
18.was
19.had
20.watched
21.blow
22.make
23.wanted
24.did not tell
25.stayed
26.read
27.finished
28.is
29.often read
30.read
31.told
32.wanted
Answer:
Modal of permission: Students may be allowed to use their personal computers in class to take notes and read digital books.
Modal of obligation: Students and teachers have to recycle papers.
Modal of prohibition: The school does not have to leave the lights on when no one is in the classroom
Explanation:
Modals of permission are used in a sentence to inform or ask if an action is allowed. These modals are can, may, and could. May and could are more formal than can.
Modals of obligation are used in a sentence to inform of something compulsory. Must is a modal of obligation use for a personal obligation like I must study for the exam, or rules like you must wear gloves in the laboratory. Have to, is also a modal of obligation, but it expresses general obligation like Students have to study hard for the exam.
Modals of prohibition are in sentences that express something that is not allowed. They are can not and must not. For example, you can not smoke inside this building.
Answer:
If the boys find anything interesting or unusual while digging, they're supposed to tell Mr. P or Mr. Sir. And if the Warden likes what they find, they'll get the rest of the day off with no more digging.
Explanation:
It is true that Sonnet 73 is written in iambic pentameter. All of Shakespeare's sonnets are written in iambic pentameters, which means that an unstressed syllable is followed by a stressed one (iambic), and that there are ten syllables in each line (pentameter - penta means 5, meter consists of two syllables).