Answer:
A Friend of you're's is having a guitar lesson, You Ask Him =
Some Questions =
"How did you learn to play the Guitar so Quickly?"
"What Type of Guitar Are you Playing?"
"Can You Play a Song for Me?"
"Do you know how to Play Other Instruments too?"
Welcome!
Answer:
Most definitely! Tom Buchanan is your typical upper class snob. He married Daisy because she was the Golden Girl of the American Dream. He would never ever divorce her because having Daisy assures his status in society. He blatantly indulges in an affair with Myrtle purely for sexual gratification. He has no intention of marrying her and he clearly has no respect for her because he has no qualms in punching her when she takes the name of his wife. He's part of the reason Gatsby is killed because he tells Myrtle's husband that Gatsby was the owner of the car that ran over his wife. He just looks out for his own interests throughout the novel. He doesn't care at all and like Nick Caraway says, both he and Daisy retire to where people like them are rich together, smug and safe behind their wealth and status.
Everyone found the joke amusing
This is romanian
Formulate a assert in which to specify the following aspects of the given text: the southern boundary of the Banat mountains, the area in which the sedimentary of the getic domain is well represented.
<u>The fourth principal part, as the perfect passive participle, is an adjective. Usually just the masculine nominative singular is given. The complete forms are: -us, -a, -um.
</u>
<u>N.B.: intransitive verbs do not have a regular 4th principal part (because they can’t be made passive); this includes the verbs that take a dative (noceō, pāreō, etc.)
</u>
<u> Some are listed as –tum/-sum, which is the supine.
</u>
<u> Some have forms in -tūrus/-sūrus (e.g. sum – futūrus; veniō – ventūrus; fugiō – fugitūrus), which is the future active participle
</u>
<u> Some have no fourth form: (e.g. timeō – –; noceō —)
</u>
<u></u>