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Ilya [14]
3 years ago
13

PLZ HELP!!!!!! How does giving direction make you a better listener? pls answer correctly

English
1 answer:
irga5000 [103]3 years ago
6 0
It can make someone a better listener by understanding what to do, and if you understand something you listen more better. You also have to ask questions about the question to help out with learning more/understanding.
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1. IF IT IS RAINING TOMORROW, I WILL BE AT HOME. ------- 2. I WOULD BUY THIS CAR IF I HAD MONEY. ----------- 3. THEY WOULD GET A
Papessa [141]

I have found this question online. We are supposed to write "1" for First Conditional, "2" for Second Conditional, and "3" for Third Conditional.

Answer and Explanation:

The First Conditional uses a verb in the present tense or in the present continuous tense for the condition, and a future tense (will) for the consequence. For example: If you love me, you will marry me.

The Second Conditional uses a verb in the past tense for the condition, and the verb "would" plus a main verb for the consequence. "Would" is the past form of "will". For example: If I had a car, I would drive to the beach on weekends.

The Third Conditional uses a verb in the present perfect tense for the condition, and "would/could/might have" plus a past participle for the consequence. Example: If she had called me, I would have told her the truth.

Having the explanation above in mind, we can safely answer the question:

1. IF IT IS RAINING TOMORROW, I WILL BE AT HOME. --> 1

2. I WOULD BUY THIS CAR IF I HAD MONEY. --> 2

3. THEY WOULD GET A PROMOTION IF THEY WERE GOOD DOCTORS. ---> 2

4. I WOULD HAVE SPOKEN TO HIM IF I HAD HAD TIME. --> 3

5. I CAN LIVE THERE IF I GET A JOB THERE. --> 1

6. MY FRIEND COULD HAVE SEEN THE CAR IF HE HAD PAID ATTENTION. --> 3

7. I WILL CALL YOU IF I HAVE TIME. --> 1

8. I WOULD TELL THE TRUTH IF I KNEW IT. --> 2

9. IF I HAD BOUGHT THE HOUSE, WE COULDN'T HAVE BOUGHT THE NEW CAR. --> 3

10. SHE WILL TRAVEL IF SHE HAS MONEY. --> 1

4 0
3 years ago
In 25 words or fewer, what happens to Elisa and Henry on their ride
geniusboy [140]

It is winter in Salinas Valley, California. The sun is not shining, and fog covers the valley. On Henry Allen’s foothill ranch, the hay cutting and storing has been finished, and the orchards are waiting for rain. Elisa Allen, Henry’s wife, is working in her flower garden and sees her husband speaking with two cigarette-smoking strangers. Elisa is thirty-five years old, attractive and clear-eyed, although at the moment she is clad in a masculine gardening outfit with men’s shoes and a man’s hat. Her apron covers her dress, and gloves cover her hands. As she works away at her chrysanthemums, she steals occasional glances at the strange men. Her house, which stands nearby, is very clean.

The strangers get into their Ford coupe and leave. Elisa looks down at the stems of her flowers, which she has kept entirely free of pests. Henry appears and praises her work. Elisa seems pleased and proud. Henry says he wishes she would turn her talents to the orchard. She responds eagerly to this suggestion, but it seems he was only joking. When she asks, he tells her that the men were from the Western Meat Company and bought thirty of his steers for a good price. He suggests they go to the town of Salinas for dinner and a movie to celebrate. He teases her, asking whether she’d like to see the fights, and she says she wouldn’t.

Henry leaves, and Elisa turns her attention back to her chrysanthemums. A wagon with a canvas top driven by a large bearded man appears on the road in the distance. A misspelled sign advertises the man’s services as a tinker who repairs pots and pans. The wagon turns into Elisa’s yard. Her dogs and the man’s dog sniff each other, and the tinker makes a joke about the ferocity of his animal. When he gets out of the wagon, Elisa sees that he is big and not very old. He wears a ragged, dirty suit, and his hands are rough. They continue to make small talk, and Elisa is charmed when the tinker says he simply follows good weather. He asks whether she has any work for him, and when she repeatedly says no, he whines, saying he hasn’t had any business and is hungry. Then he asks about Elisa’s chrysanthemums, and her annoyance vanishes. They discuss the flowers, and the tinker says that he has a customer who wants to raise chrysanthemums. Excited, Elisa says he can take her some shoots in a pot filled with damp sand. She takes off her hat and gloves and fills a red pot with soil and the shoots.

Elisa gives the tinker instructions to pass along to the woman. She explains that the most care is needed when the budding begins. She claims to have planting hands and can feel the flowers as if she’s one with them. She speaks from a kneeling position, growing impassioned. The tinker says he might know what she means, and Elisa interrupts him to talk about the stars, which at night are “driven into your body” and are “hot and sharp and—lovely.” She reaches out to touch his pant leg, but stops before she does. He says such things are not as nice if you haven’t eaten. Sobered, Elisa finds two pans for him to fix.

As the tinker works, she asks him if he sleeps in the wagon. She says she wishes women could live the kind of life he does. He says it wouldn’t be suitable, and she asks how he knows. After paying him fifty cents, she says that she can do the same work he does. He says his life would be lonesome and frightening for a woman. Before he leaves, she reminds him to keep the sand around the chrysanthemums damp. For a moment, he seems to forget that she gave him the flowers. Elisa watches the wagon trundle away, whispering to herself.

She goes into the house and bathes, scrubbing her skin with pumice until it hurts. Then she examines her naked body in the mirror, pulling in her stomach and pushing out her chest, then observing her back. She dresses in new underwear and a dress and does her hair and makeup. Henry comes home and takes a bath. Elisa sets out his clothes and then goes to sit on the porch. When Henry emerges, he says that she looks nice, sounding surprised. She asks him what he means, and he says she looks “different, strong and happy.” She asks what he means by strong. Confused, he says that she’s playing a game and then explains that she looks like she could break a calf and eat it. Elisa loses her composure for a moment and then agrees with him.

.

3 0
3 years ago
1.Your friends ……………..For you for over an hour.(wait) 2. It …….. Not worth ……………so much money for this concert (pay). 3. I ……………
vovangra [49]

●✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎❀✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎●

       Hi my lil bunny!

❧⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯☙

1.Your friends <u>waited </u>for you for over an hour.(wait) 2. It <u>is</u> Not worth <u>the pay for </u>so much money for this concert (pay). 3. I <u>visited </u> Taj Mahal last month. (visit) 4. The criminal <u>attacked</u> the victim with a blunt object. (attack) 5. I think Bob  For <u>left </u>London this very moment.(leave) 6. The plane <u>takes</u> Off in a few minutes. (take) 7. I <u>get </u>Up at 7 every morning but this morning I <u>sleep for to </u> long. (get, sleep)

❧⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯⎯☙

●✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎❀✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎✴︎●

If this helped you, could you maybe give brainliest..?

❀*May*❀

8 0
3 years ago
Read 2 more answers
Read the passage from "Marriage Is a Private Affair" by Chinua Achebe. On the second evening of his return from Lagos Nnaemeka s
Lina20 [59]

Answer:

B

Explanation:

Fathers and sons are beginning to have different ideas about what marriage is

8 0
3 years ago
What do you think Tom learned from his work experience? What do you imagine to others boys learned?
Sophie [7]

Idk what this is from but if it's from The Adventures of Tom Sawyer then your answer is Tom learns that work and play depends on how you look at things. Tom was able to convince the other boys that painting his fence was fun and play.

8 0
4 years ago
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