Answer:
Our guests wished <u><em>they had seen our message about the time change of a meeting.</em></u>
Explanation:
In the given question, we have to change the form of the statement to make it start with "our guests wish...." To do that, we have to change the structure and also into an indirect form.
As the sentence requires us to start the sentence with "our guests wish...". the only way to continue with the sentence is to make it is to change the "disn't see" into 'wished', and then including the pronoun "they" to refer to the guests.
Thus, the final sentence will become
Our guests wished <u><em>they had seen our message about the time change of a meeting.</em></u>
Answer:
A: It does not convey to power and immensity of the idea.
Explanation:
The given question refers to the essay <em>Love's Vocabulary</em> by Diane Ackerman.
<em>How can love’s spaciousness be conveyed in the narrow confines of one syllable? </em>-<em> </em>asks the author. She discusses the origin of the word, and how people use it: <em>We use the word love in such a sloppy way that it can mean almost nothing or absolutely everything.</em>
The problem is not that the word <em>love </em>consists of only one syllable, but that such a powerful, diverse feeling is difficult to describe. One word is not enough to convey its power, and the way people use it is not appropriate.
Thus, the correct answer is A.
B. This Monday, I danced with Dolly.