Answer:
The computer worked fine until I began playing music through it. Then it slowed down to a halt and froze. It was really frustrating. I just wanted it to work!
Explanation:
This is what we need to know about the Simple Past Tense to answer this question.
1. The verb to be presents two forms in the past: was and were. The form was is used for the persons I, he, she, and it. Were is used for the rest.
2. Regular verbs in the past will have -d, -ed, or -ied added to their ending. The ones that end in e receive -d. The ones that end in consonant + y drop the -y and receive -ied. And the rest receives -ed.
3. Irregular verbs in the past have each a different form. There isn't much we can do but memorize them. For example: begin - began; freeze - froze; go - went; speak - spoke.
Answer:
Sure.
The ship stops on the way to New Orleans, picking up four more slaves. Among them is a slave named Arthur. Like Solomon and Robert, Arthur is a free man with a family and was kidnapped and sold into slavery. When the ship departs again for New Orleans, the captain appoints Robert as his waiter and Solomon as the overseer of the cooking department. Solomon is also made to distribute food and water twice a day. At night, the slaves are “driven into the hold and securely fastened down.”
Arthur’s story of being kidnapped echoes that of Robert and Solomon, pushing the reader to recognize the widespread distortion of justice that permeates the nation. The slaves are once again compared to livestock, as they are “driven into the hold and securely fastened down” like horses or cattle being kept in the barn for the night.
ACTIVE THEMES
Racism and Slavery Theme Icon Truth and Justice Theme Icon
A violent storm descends upon the ship, and many of the slaves wish that the “compassionate sea” would drown them, saving them from “the clutches of remorseless men.” Solomon tells his reader not to judge him for any of his actions that follow in the narrative, writing: “Let not those who have never been placed in like circumstances, judge me harshly.”
The answer would be (A) again because in a essay you are stating your points and you have a structure on how to do it and it must be consistent throughout the whole essay or its going to be choppy and you wont get a good grade. hopefully that made sense. The other answers wouldn't make sense. So go with (A)
If youre taking about a book you can use "the reader"
The answer is D.
Hope it’s correct