Hey there Carlos!
Let's examine this above.
<span>Jeremy will be planting tulips in the spring.
let's take some key point's from this.
</span><span>Jeremy (will) be (planting) tulips in the spring.
The word's "will" and also "planting" are a form of the future tense.
So, in this case, we can cross out both option (c) and also (d).
Option (c) and also (d) are (present), and the sentence is not present, it would be in the future.
So, now we have both option (a) and also (b) as our last options.
This would be considered a "future perfect progressive" because the sentence shows that "he will plant tulips", which shows that this would be a future perfect goal pretty much.
Hope this helps you Carlos, and if you need any more help, never hesitate to ask more question's on Brainly
~Jurgen</span>
<em>Dyfunction</em><em> </em><em>:</em><em>There appears to be a dysfunction in the patient's respiratory system</em>
<em>Miscarriage</em><em>:</em><em>She alone was responsible for the miscarriage </em>
<em>Ramification</em><em>:</em><em>He clearly did not think of the inevitable ramification for his unwise action.</em>
<em>Drastically</em><em>:</em><em>His life wouldn't change drastically if he agreed</em><em>.</em>
<em>Exacerbate</em><em>:</em><em>Excessive or hard exercise can exacerbate it.</em>
<em>Glaring</em><em>:</em><em>This glaring light hurts eyes.</em>
<em>Lacunae</em><em>:</em><em>There are large lacunae in the head in front of the ganglia</em>
<em>Tweak</em><em> </em><em>:</em><em> We just wanted to tweak his original idea a bit.</em>
1. good
2. poorly
3. bad
4. well
5. bad
6. less
7. less
8. amount
9. fewer
10. affected
11. effect
12. like
13. like
14. like
15. like
Binsey Poplars is full of unusual language, internal rhyme, alliteration, assonance, sprung rhythm and repetition. Hopkins developed his own unique sprung rhythm, based on a much older metric tradition with roots in Greek song and Welsh poetry.