cool.
evidice: cool super duper. cool man
<span>Gene Kranz is the name your looking for.
Good luck
</span>
<span>Yes, it certainly can be when it's properly punctuated.
The statement looks back on a day last week, when the teacher was grading
essays written by James and John. It tells of one particular sentence in the
essays, almost identically worded in both essays, except for one word difference.
<span>James ... while John had had "had" ... had had "had had". "Had had" had had
a better effect on their teacher.</span></span>
The answer is C or D. all poems are complex to understand, but most of them have the same rhyme scheme.
Answer:
1. action
2. failure
3. permission
4. loss
5. thought/thinking
Explanation:
Nominalization or nouning is the transformation of verbs into nouns. Most times, such a transformation will require some alteration or other to be made, mostly through the use of suffixes, which changes the ending of the original word. However, there are nominalizations that require no change at all, the difference between verb and noun being revealed through context.
Some common suffixes for nominalization are -ation, -ance, and -ment.
Having that in mind, let's change the verbs given in the question into nouns:
1. to act - action
2. to fail - failure
3. to permit - permission
4. to lose - loss
5. to think - thought/thinking