Answer:
1. to visit (shown)
2. to learn
3. to go
4. to have
5. to drink
Explanation:
Every verb that goes after the word 'to' must be in a present form/present tense.
Answer:
This question requires a personal answer, since you have to describe your own day with your mother. Anyway, I will give you an example of how this question can be answered.
Explanation:
<em>Mother's Day was one of the funniest of my life.</em>
<em>My mom and I decided to go party at an amusement park, and I had never been to one!</em>
<em>We got on a lot of fun games and laughed a lot.</em>
<em>There we also ate hamburgers and bought cotton candy.</em>
<em>My mom said it was one of the best mother's days ever!</em>
To answer this question you just need to use your imagination. You can describe a real day in which you and your mother had a lot of fun, or you can also make something up.
Just think about what a fun day would be like for you, and tell that story.
<h2>☆☆☆☆¤《HEH MATE》¤☆☆☆☆</h2><h3>I HAVE SEEN MONKEY PAWS.</h3>
Answer:
The inference that can be drawn from "To Autumn" is:
A. Autumn is a peaceful and abundant season, full of natural beauty.
The evidence that supports the answer in Part A is:
A. "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness . . . Conspiring . . . how to lead and bless With fruit the vines . . . And fill all fruit with ripeness to the core."
Explanation:
John Keats was an English Romantic poet, born in 1795, dead in 1821 at the age of only 25. In his poem "To Autumn", Keats describes the season with vivid imagery, praising its abundance. Especially in the first stanza, Keats describes in detail how fruitful autumn is - how fruits and flowers are abundant. They grow ripe, succulent and sweet, thanks to blessed autumn. Keats does not describe autumn as being inferior to spring. Quite the contrary, he says both seasons have their songs. He also describes the transition from autumn to winter beautifully, peacefully. There is no sadness in his description, but the very opposite, with images of noisy animals, rivers, and winds.