Answer:
0.1598
Explanation:
number of points between K and L= 6
probability of point on KL= 6/26
number of points not on KL= 18/26
Probabiltiy of 1st point on JL and 2nd not on JL= 6/26 × 18/26
= 0.1598
<span>"An action, process, or skill" denoted by the combining root: rearmament, tournament, management."A result, object, or agent of an action" named by the joining root: entombment, enthrallment, agreement."The means or instrument of an action": implement, medicament, reinforcement.<span>"The place of an action" named by the first root: battlement, ambushment, settlement.</span></span>
Answer:
"Hanging Fire" does not have any type of punctuation during the stanzas, presenting only a period when each stanza is finished.
Explanation:
"Hanging Fire" is a poem that features a girl who is anguished, sad, worried and stressed about all the elements of her life. The girl is very sad and with a great emptiness and loneliness that does not leave her alone. Within this poem, the author does not present any punctuation in the middle of the stanzas, which means they are read without pauses, without emphasis and promotes the feeling of anxiety, nervousness and lack of emotion, allowing the reader to feel the same as the girl feel when telling about the one that distresses her.
Answer:
The answers are:
- <u>Left </u>and<u> got off</u>
- <u>Has felt </u>and <u>took</u>
- <u>Think </u>and<u> act</u>
- <u>Came</u>
- <u>Will be going </u>
Explanation:
Verbs are the actions of the sentence, those that you can conjugate with pronouns, e.g,. <em>I drink, you drink, we drink, he drinks, she drinks, etc... </em>some of them in the sentences provided are in different tenses: <em>past, infinitive, past participle, future, continuous, etc... </em>So this is basically what it means when stating "complete verbs" in the instructions. For instance, sentence 1 has the verbs left and got off in the simple past --infinitive: to leave, to get off-- Number 2 is the past participle which is: have or has plus the participle for of the verb. Number three is in the simple present, the verbs are on its natural form. Number 4, simple past <em>--come-came--. </em>And number 5 is the <em>future continuous </em>tense; remember that continuous forms the verb ends in -ing.
Number three because the rest use commas