Answer:
1. Where, messages, receive? - Where are messages received?
2. How, newspapers, deliver? - How are newspapers delivered?
Third conditional. If the students hadn't been late for the exam, they would have passed.
Second conditional. If the weather weren't so cold, we could go to the beach.
Third conditional. If she had had a laptop with her, she could have emailed me.
First conditional. If she doesn't go to the meeting, I won't go either.
Second conditional. If Lucy had enough time, she would travel more.
Explanation:
The first part of this question concerns the passive voice. <u>When we use the passive voice, the subject is not the one performing the action expressed by the verb. In the present tense, the passive voice consists of the verb to be plus the past participle of the main verb.</u>
The second part of this question concerns conditionals. <u>Sentences in the first conditional use an if-clause in the simple present. The consequence is expressed in the simple future. In the second conditional, the if-clause uses the simple past, while the consequence uses would/could/might plus the main verb. Finally, the third conditional uses the past perfect in the if-clause. The consequence uses would/could/might + have + past participle of the main verb.</u>
Answer:
We can infer something bad will happen.
Explanation:
From the phrases in the opening paragraph, "…there seemed an intangible pall…" and "…a subtle gloom that made the day dark…" we can safely infer the story will take a tragic turn. A pall is a cloth placed over a coffin. Therefore, from the very beginning, the writer subtly alludes to death. Darkness is also commonly related to death, to fear, to hopelessness, while light or brightness is connected to the precise opposite.
As it turns out, those sentences function as foreshadowing. The main character in the short story "To Build a Fire" does indeed die. He underestimates nature's fierceness. Unable to protect himself from the harsh cold weather in the Yukon territory, he dies acknowledging his mistake.
Can you send me a picture and I tell you the answer
Answer: In chapter one of the novel The Great Gatsby, the central couple presented are Tom and Daisy Buchanan. ... During chapter 1 it was apparent that Tom and Daisy had an unstable relationship. Tom is first described as a “cruel body” and is very physical because of his past career as a football player.