Maybe you can use that students/teachers can get more sleep and work better because they feel more ready and have a better start on the day?
The correct answer will be women's because it is working as a possessive adjective that indicates that the locker room is the one that belongs to women, or the one in which only women can enter. As women is already the plural form of the noun, it would be incorrect to say womens to indicate the number of people. For this reason, women's is the correct option and not womens' or womens. Option A is also incorrect because it is not indicating the possessive adjective.
Answer:
1. the bananas was bought at a low price by him
2.all the books have been sold by us
3.my homework is helped by the teacher
4.this portrait was painted by a famous artist
5.his test hasn't been finished by him
6.this poem was written by Cyd
7.a mouse was caught in a mouse trap by them
8.good food is served in the restaurant by them
9.basketball is played in my country
10.telephone (?) was invented by him on 1876
Explanation:
apply the passive formula
Answer:
<em><u>borrow’d</u></em>
<em><u>fortunes.</u></em>
Explanation:
William Shakespeare's "Twelfth Night" is a romantic comedy that revolves around a number of characters in the play and their love stories. The main protagonist Viola disguises herself as a boy and thus, began the love triangle which will be the main plot of the story, infused with themes of love, appearance, reality, and the ambitious nature of the characters.
Act III scene iv of the play shows Olivia commenting about her head steward Malvolio's strange behavior. The complete sentence of Olivia's dialogue is given below-
<em>OLIVIA: I have sent after him. He says he'll come;
</em>
<em>How shall I feast him? what bestow on him?
</em>
<em>For youth is bought more oft than begged or </em><em><u>borrow’d</u></em><em>.
</em>
<em>I speak too loud.—
</em>
<em>Where's Malvolio?—He is sad and civil,
</em>
<em>And suits well for a servant with my </em><em><u>fortunes</u></em><em>.
</em>
<em>Where is Malvolio?</em>