Answer:
The two exams will be taken by Rita next term.
Explanation:
With the passive voice, the verb (taken) acts upon the subject (Rita)- it tells us what is done to someone or something.
So the sentence structure for a passive voice sentence is:
Object (exams) + verb (taken) + subject (Rita)
Hope this helps you and good luck with your exams! :D
It helps bring the reader into what you are going to talk about it's like a tour guide and you slowly showing them what it's about but you also want to interest them so they read on and get to the central /main idea
Answer:
Form
Explanation:
It isn't theme. Theme is the message of a passage or text. (Not to be confused with main idea, which is the the overall point the passage or text was written. ) It isn't figurative language, because that is a whole <em>type </em>of writing structure. (For example, instead of saying, "She felt sick and dizzy," you could use figurative language and say, "Her legs felt like cooked spaghetti noodles and her stomach started doing somersaults." Heck, it's a little crazy, but it makes the writing better. Lastly, it isn't plot, since plot is pretty much what <em>happens</em> in the story. I would call it conflict, but it isn't always problems. Maybe a girl finds her long-lost father. That would be part of the plot but not conflict. (Well, I guess it <em>could</em> cause some conflict if you think about it.
So, long story short, the answer is form.
Answer: by being timid
I finally say in a little voice
Thomas Gray emphasis<span> on the aspirations and potential of all human beings </span>emphasis on fantasy and the supernatural emphasis<span> on mysticism and spirituality</span>