The correct answer is 3 - past
It would be a past participle if it said had made. Present is make and present participle is making.
Answer:
Siegfried Sassoon vs Rupert Brooke
Explanation:
Siegfried was a model soldier who turned into a passionate pacifist. Starting off with an exemplary military record for brave he soon became disillusioned with the war and developed a growing antagonism towards Britain´s military commanders. His poem <em>The General</em> makes it clear.
Rupert Brooke was a sort of poster-boy for the British idealism of the first war years. Unlike other poets he never lived to experience the horrors of the front line. Therefore he maintained a patriotic and romantic view of the Great War that started without a reason and continued 4 long years without even less reason.
Answer:
There are two different uses of the apostrophe that can be pointed out in these examples:
- In contractions, to indicate where the letters have been omitted. This is present in examples:
1. It's = It is, It has
3. D'Giorno = Di Giorno
4. We'll = We will
5. '70s = 1970s
7. 'til = until
8. They're = They are
9. Aren't = Are not
10. O'Reilly - this is an example of Irish last names. Long ago, the Irish had several forms of patronymic names, which meant that their full names included the name of their ancestor. In Irish, <em>Ó</em> means<em> the descendant of.</em> This became <em>O'</em> in modern English. So, we could say that O'Reilly means <em>the descendant of Reilly.</em>
- To mark possession. When used to express that something belongs to someone, the apostrophe is normally used with the letter S (when the noun is singular). This is present in the examples:
2. Sue's
6. Bill's
In these examples, the apostrophe doesn't replace anything.
Answer:
dude i cant see da picture
Explanation:
ok
Answer:
Thoughtless
Explanation:
Antonym means opposite, thoughtful means full of thought and thoughtless means not having any thought. They are opposites.