An adverb usually ends in -ly and modifies a adjective, verb or another adverb. out of these choices, the third one is the only one which begins with "softly" and "softly" changes the way the students tuned their instruments. before specifying softly, that verb was up for interpretation--they could have tuned them loudly, or disrespectfully, or slowly, etc.
Answer: The theme in both passages are similar because they both show don't lose hope or faith in something. According to
Passage 2 " and there have been many moments when I was sure all hope was lost." The passages present that theme because they both show the same perspectives but in different contexts. Like I said the theme was don't lose hope or faith in something and both passages shows that the person or whoever almost lost hope and almost gave up until they got where they're supposed to be.
Answer:
'Confucius taught a doctrine of consideration for others, similar to the golden rule as the basis for all social and political conduct.'
Explanation:
The given sentence is written in the passive voice because the subject 'Confucius' is not performing the action(taught) stated by the verb but rather receives it and the object and verb are being emphasized and shown interest in.
It can be converted into the active voice by substituting the subject to its original position and removing 'by.' This will help emphasize the subject in the sentence where it(the subject) is directly performing the action. Thus, the final sentence will follow the structure of 'subject(Confucius) + verb(taught) + object('a doctrine...conduct'). Therefore, the final sentence in the active voice reads as:
'Confucius taught a doctrine of consideration for others, similar to the golden rule as the basis for all social and political conduct.'
Answer:
In my opinion, no. Because that's a form that people can express themselves. Plus, the government probably won't let anything on there that they find offensive to them. So it kinda violates our freedom of speech. (hope this helps!!)