I confused is there a list of choices you can choose from or is it that you can you put anything that makes sense
Answer:
This is a personal paragraph, so try to re-word it so it sounds like you (so the teacher doesn't suspect anything)
Explanation:
2041, that's <em>five</em> presidents away from now. With that, a lot of things probably have changed, jobs, clothing, movies, life styles, a LOT of things would change. Looking at jobs in 20 years from now, I would probably work at some company, or some good job I'm at that pays around 60k-70k. Maybe currency has changed, it could all just be digital, or not, since it's only 20 years. I couldn't think how my family would look like since I'm not even 18 yet. I'm more of a present minded person, so I just hope things don't spiral out of control by the time of 2041
Answer:
1.Because of her poor health, her family and friends assume that she is too fragile to endure the loss of her husband
Explanation:
Mallard's health is poor. She suffers from "heart trouble" (95). The significance of this is fully realized when the shock of seeing her husband at the end of the story causes her death.
Answer:
Jason and Sara are friends. They work at the same computer company 2. Jason loves his job. 3. Sara feels stressed at work. 4. They share an office. 5. They work hard. 6. Jason eats three healthy meals every day. 7. He drinks a lot of water. 8. Sara skips breakfast. 9. She orders take-out food from nearby restaurants. 10. Jason and Sara both like sports.
Explanation:
We are supposed to choose between two forms of verbs in the present tense to complete the sentences above. One form is used for the persons "I, you, we, they". The other form - the one ending in -s - is for the third person singular (he, she, it). Therefore, we need to pay attention to the subject of each sentence. Let's choose two of them as an example:
3. Sara (feel/feels) stressed at work. --> The subject here is Sarah, or "she". The correct form of the verb is "feels".
10. Jason and Sara both (like/likes) sports. --> Here, both Jason and Sarah are the subject, which makes it plural (they). The best option then is "like".