The second answer to instruct
OB. It provides him with temporary peace.
Answer:
- <u><em>The bureau shall notify the public of a proposed action.</em></u>
Explanation:
The original sentence is in passive voice: the public is not performing the action but receiving it. The passive voice uses the verb 'to be' + the past participle of the main verb: "shall be" + "notified".
The focus of a passive voice sentence is on the object and not on the subject: the public is the object; they will receive the act of the subject which is the bureau.
To change the passive voice to <em>active voice</em>, place the person who performs the action in the first part and change the tense of the verb to active form.
The subject that performs the action is the bureau. Thus, the active voice is:
- <u>The bureau shall notify the public of a proposed action.</u>
<u></u>
Now, the focus of the sentence is on who performed the action; thus, this is the <em>active voice</em>.
Answer:
A. To develop the them that significant past experiences shape our present.
<span>A grouping of words that acts like a single unit inside a sentence but that does not contain both a subject and a verb is called a B. phrase. Phrases do not have subjects or verbs - they are just a couple of words grouped together that are considered a single unit that cannot be separated. For example, "that young boy" is a noun phrase. A clause and a sentence has a verb and a subject. An apostrophe is just a punctuation mark ('). </span>