Answer:
Cats are a pets such as dogs they are tricky to be taken care of but it will work out as long as you know how to treat your pet if you treat it badly it will not like you but if you treat it nicely it will take a liking to you.
Cats are a mystery such as other pets but fun facts about cats is that If you see a cat or your cat blink at you two times it's giving you a kiss, If a cat is hire than the others it means it's in charge.
Cats make postures (signs) to let you know what they want if you don't have any bond with your cat then you won't understand them but if you do have a bond with them or close to a bond then you will understand some or all of what they want to do.
Cats have different species some you don't see often and some you do every cat is different just because their the same breed as another cat doesn't mean their the same they will act and play a part of their own live not be a clone.
Hope this helps I'm a cat owner so I new this and why not tell someone else some of these "secrets"
"A" to make the sentence grammatically correct both all parts for the sentence have to be in present tense.
Answer:
Good clear answers and obviously more knowledgeable than me, but i would like to add that when I taught English as a foreign language I would, once students had achieved a sufficient level, have introduced the idea of two types of English side-by-side, one of a perhaps more ‘educated’ and certainly more Latinate, and another more ‘homely’ which echoes the more Anglo-Saxon tradition, so regal/kingly, maternal/motherly. I have come across translations from other languages that are clearly from one tradition and from the other, and if a choice is to be made I far prefer the Anglo-Saxon, even though it’s not so posh.
And yes, I did encourage students to be Anglo-Saxons.
I could also add that I have a notion that Norman children were brought up very largely by Anglo-Saxon servants, and when they wandered into the kitchens looking for something to eat they would have used the language. By the time the courtier Geoffrey Chaucer was writing I’m sure Normans were cheerfully bilingual and getting to like English.
Explanation:
The significance is because the title of it refers to the time elapsed between the moments at which the protagonist, Louise Mallard, hears that her husband is dead, then discovers that he is alive after all