Explanation:
a. Let's enjoy the party.......?
Answer : shall we?
b. Did he help yesterday?
Answer : He helped yesterday.
c. I did it.
Answer : I didn't do it.
d. He once ..... ( be ) a good teacher.
Answer : was
e. No one saw me
Answer : I was seen by no one.
f . She said " she is ready now"
Answer : She said that she was ready then.
Hope it will help :)❤
<span>Either
to listen or to contemplate. Listen to what the speaker has got to say, to hear
and feel the emotions he is trying to convey, to criticize his speech either positively
or negatively. Contemplate to the lessons or learnings they have gathered upon listening.
They are trying to recall the experiences they had before, connect it to the
speech, find meaning with it and apply it in their daily lives. Or they are
simply in awe of how the speech got in touch with their feelings.</span>
This question is incomplete. Here's the complete question.
Read The Lady Or The Tiger?, by Frank Stockton
How did the king keep from feeling guilty about this form of justice? *
a. He did not watch the festivities.
b. He made his daughter in charge of signaling judgement
c. He said the criminals made their own choices, not him.
d. He was barbaric and just did not feel guilty.
Answer: c. He said the criminals made their own choices, not him.
Explanation:
The arena of the king was meant as a device of poetic justice, where a crime was punished, or virtue rewarded, depending on what was thought to be an impartial test. Given the chance to choose one out of two doors, the criminal would face either the punishment of a tiger´s attack or the reward of a woman to get married to. Whether they would be punished or rewarded was established based on their own choice, making the King feel like has no responsibility for the result.
They often spoke in Free Verse
<span>A play for a writer.</span>