Answer:
28) He’s worked for that company since last June.
29) “Have you been to Russia.” - “Yes, I have .” A) Had / be / haven’t C) Have / be / have
30) Have you done your homework?
31) I haven’t done it yet.
32) What are you going to wear this evening?
33) I am not going to drink/I won't drink because it is too sweet. (it could be either)
34) I’ve seen the latest Star Wars film. I saw it last week.
35) She’s written the letter. She wrote it yesterday
Hera, the goddess of marriage, women, childbirth, and family, used her cunning nature and vile cleverness as a weapon.
Answer:
America is awash in ugly, hateful speech. White nationalists march defiantly, and their slogans are echoed in murderous rampages. Government officials revel in disparaging the very people they patrol. Many people—and I’m one of them—argue that the president’s rhetoric encourages this grotesque and shameful state of affairs even as he nominally condemns it. This has all led to more discussion about free speech and its limits.
The pic doesn’t work for everyone
The correct answer is A.
<em>Quotation marks</em> ( quotes, speech marks, inverted comas, talking marks) are punctuation marks used in pairs to set off direct speech, a quotation or a phrase. The pair consists of the opening quotation marks and closing quotation marks.
Quotation marks set apart a direct quotation. An example: My mother said <em>"don't do it"</em> when I wanted to enter her room.
Quotation marks are also used to mark a title, a direct speech or a square quote.