Answer:
Be - were
Forget - forgot
Go - went
Do - did
Cry - cried
Love - loved
Want - wanted
Leave - left
Abandon - abandoned
Go - went
Stay - stay
Begin - began
Come - came
Be - was
Explanation:
The Simple Past Tense is the basic form of the past tense in English. It is used to talk about an action completed at some point in the past. The said action can be in the recent past (e.g. ten minutes ago) or distant past (e.g. ten years ago), and it's not important how long it took to complete (e.g. a second or years).
Some verbs have a regular and some irregular form of the Simple Past Tense.
Regular: inifitive + -ed -> Past Simple Tense (e.g. <em>play - played, cry - cried, love - loved</em>, etc.)
Irregular forms simply have to be learned (e.g. <em>be - was/were, forget - forgot, go - went,</em> etc.)
You can see more about phrases with the Simple Past Tense below:
Answer:
It’s “an image of Jackie testifying against discrimination”
Explanation:
I’m 90% sure this is the right answer
Well the passage isint here so I’m gonna list some words:
Disgusting
Repulsive
Despicable
Loathsome
Emily Dickenson was certainly the queen of all observant poetry. She writes very much from what she sees around her. Much of it is unique to her own quite external life. The details about the Sabbath are engaging. She listens to God's sermons through the nature around her: Orchids and birds deliver what God has to say. She concludes that by observant of God's Creation she does need to yearn for heaven. She's already there. If she speaks in first person, we know what she sees and what it means to her, but most of all we knows how she thinks about herself and the life around her. What she lives vibrates with internal power.
In I could not stop for death, the same sort of thing is going on. Each detail shows a path that could be taken with death leading on. She sees death as a singular servant taking her in a carriage that is headed into eternity. These are not idle thoughts. There the internal things she feels from what she sees. We are drawn into the things that mean the very most to her.