When I was five, my brother <u>Had</u> to babysit me. He and I <u>Got </u>into a huge fight, and I pretended to run away. I <u>Slammed</u> the front door and ran outside. Then I sneaked around and went back inside through a back door. I <u>Hid </u>in my closet for over an hour while my brother searched the whole neighborhood, worried that my mother would come home and find me gone. I <u>thought </u>it was a great joke. Looking back on it now, I <u>Feel </u>horrible for how much I must have scared him with my trick. I didn't realize how he must have felt.
<h3>What is past tense?</h3>
The past tense is a grammar tense used to indicate that an action or circumstance occurred in the past. The English verbs sang, went, and washed are examples of verbs in the past tense. Most languages include a past tense, and some have numerous varieties to show how long ago the action occurred.
The past tense describes things that have already happened. In order to create the past tense in English, one must take the word's present tense and add the suffix -ed. For instance, adding -ed makes the verb "walk" into the past tense, creating the word "walked."
Learn more about past tense on:
brainly.com/question/26249737
#SPJ1
Since the person above took a logical approach I will do this
Table is under the cat
Under table is the cat
Table under is the cat
The cat is table under
The cat is table under
Cat is under the table
Kekeke
In this Poem, "Heat" by H.D., the speaker -from whom we don't know much- describes an Imagist poem - a really precise, tight and sonically dense poem. We can find some sounds repetitons -'heat' and 'rend' which are present in all over the first stanza; filled with alliteration (the first stanza in 'fruit cannot fall') and consonance (the third stanza in 'cut apart the heat'). All this resources create short, concise and pretty intense evocative images, which means that it doesn't have a regular rhyme scheme or meter.
The poem is not explicit about setting, but what we do know is that the weather is pretty hot. The speaker refers to a hot, humid and stifling environment which leads the audition to call on the wind for relief.
For all these clues descripted, I can asure this poem talk about and ask for 'a breeze' that, as I previously said, would bring relief to the hot weather.
In "<span>Astrophysicist Chronicles Battle over Pluto," Dr. Tyson states that he </span>believes Pluto is more content to be classified as a dwarf planet than it was to be the ninth planet. He argues that Pluto is more of an individual now, not included where it doesn't belong out of pity. Pluto has become a representation of embracing differences. The spirit of America is all about accepting difference (at least the good part of it), and Pluto is almost a mascot for that exact purpose. Hope this helps!
Answer: A. Americans identify with Pluto's remoteness and independent spirit.