Answer:
Having lost her virginity and thus her ability to foretell the future, Solitaire realizes she would be killed by Kananga, so she agrees to cooperate with Bond.
Answer:
<em><u>a short story entitled The Idler.</u></em> The Idler was a magazine in the 19th century.
He did write all of the other options here.
A . Life Is Meaningless and completely random
Answer:
U.S. News - The New York Times
Explanation:
(From newspapers and magazines)
There are numerous situations when reading articles from popular sources might serve to introduce you to a topic and how that topic is addressed in society. In most cases, articles from popular sources:
- are published for a general audience by journalists or professional authors
- written in a language that the broader public can understand
- They rarely contain a bibliography; instead, they are fact-checked throughout the editorial process of the magazine in which they appear.
- They do not presuppose prior knowledge of a subject area; as a result, they are frequently quite useful to read if you don't know a lot about your subject area yet.
- may include an argument, viewpoint, or analysis of a problem
Answer:
Exercise 2:
just add 'ed'
: pushed and baked
take off the 'e' + 'ed' double the last letter: clapped
Exercise 3:
just add 'ed': played
take off the 'e' + 'ed' double the last letter: stopped
Explanation:
When we form regular verbs in Past Simple, we normally add the termination 'ed' to their infinitive form.
e.g. played, lived, baked, pushed, etc.
However, there are some cases when we must apply some changes to the base of the verb, in order to obtain an adequate past simple form. If a verb ends in a vowel and a consonant, we double the consonant before adding -ed.
e.g. clapped, stopped, planned, etc.