Ask high school English questions, ask a few high school English questions

Updated on educate 2024-02-09
19 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    1. Not only the sentence placed after the beginning of the sentence should be inverted.

    2. The second sentence is that the last time he was in Cairo, he stayed at the Pyramids Hotel. So use the last time. If for the last time would be the last time he stayed at the Pyramid Hotel, the meaning would obviously be wrong.

    3. Considering is the active voice, which means that in view of the current deteriorating financial situation, Ireland**... If you use considere, the sentence should be the ,.. the current worsened financial state was considered

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    only the following sentence should be upside down.

    last time is the last time.

    3.The subject of the second half of the sentence is the goverment, so the initiative should be used in the front, because the originator of the action conside is the goverment

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    not only, to use partial inversion.

    The last time is an adverb that can be used as an adverbial directly.

    The goverment of ireland and consider are active relationships.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    A garden means to cultivate a garden, that is, to take care of the garden and plant things.

    2.What this sentence wants to express means that things are too expensive for me to afford, and I paid is used to modify the high Therefore, it should be filled in here.

    3.Looking at the upper and lower sentences of this sentence, we can know that the boy is in the river, and should not be able to swim, in the answers A and B, drag means to drag, indicating that it takes a lot of effort to pull the boy, and hold does not have the meaning of dragging hard, according to the meaning of the sentence, we choose A

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    1.You can say that, grammatically. But the meaning is not logical.

    This is the difference between Chinese thinking and English thinking.

    If it were that, the subtext of the sentence would be "She's been sick and has been working."

    But the actual meaning of the sentence should be "I admire my English teacher." I remember that she almost didn't stop working when she was sick" (occasions)", so when is the embodiment of "stop working when you're sick" instead of "stay sick and work all the time".

    2。This is easier to understand.

    Something to Eat, why don't you say something to be eaten? Active and passive.

  6. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    1. This sentence is a definite clause of time, indicating what kind of occasion it is. In the impression of homonyms, most of the first sentences can be expressed clearly, and the latter sentences are used as further emphasis.

    2. The subject in the first analysis sentence is the goverment, ** should solve the problem, so it is the initiative.

    The above is purely personal understanding, only for the reference of the landlord, graduated for many years, and I can't remember it very clearly, forgive me!

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    1.Translation: (because) the party that led him came to power for the fourth time, and he made a name for himself among the leaders of the West.

    2.Answer: B

    3.Explanation:

    1) The leading in question B does not do the sentence predicate to indicate the continuous tense, but the present participle does the reason adverbial.

    2) The predicate of this simple sentence is became, so lead is not a predicate, so it can only be used as a sentence adverbial in its non-predicate form.

    Moreover, there is an active relationship between lead and the subject of the sentence he, so its present participle form leading

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    b This is a participle as an adverbial, not a concept in the continuous tense, which is an active one, and a participle as an adverbial is equivalent to an adverbial clause.

    Equivalent to this: as he led his party to power for the fourth time, he became famous among .

    For the fourth time is the meaning of the fourth time, not a period of time.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-28

    leading is now participle to do adverbial. and does not show the meaning in progress.

    a. First of all, it can be excluded.

    c is now in the perfect tense, d. Now complete in the continuous tense. The table has been and continues to do something.

    The fourth time, on the other hand, is only the fourth time. So also excluded.

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-27

    The leading here is not the continuous tense, indicating the active non-predicate form First, the non-predicate must be used here, because, the main clause that follows already has a predicate, excluding ad secondly, followed by for the fourth time is the fourth, so it is not appropriate to use the perfect tense, if it is for 4 times, then choose d.

    In addition, because the subject is omitted, it means that the subject is the subject of the main clause in the back, he, therefore, lead must use the initiative, and in summary, only lead can be used

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-26

    Here it is not the continuous tense, but the present participle as an adverbial, which can express accompaniment, condition, concession, cause, effect, etc.

    Because the front is an adverbial, A and C are definitely not chosen.

    d does not correspond to the following tense, so choose a

  12. Anonymous users2024-01-25

    believe+ to do sth.

    believe+ doing sth

    Use whoever when doing the subject, and whomever when the object.

  13. Anonymous users2024-01-24

    1.c This question is partially upside down, due to the previous hardly"Hardly "negating adverbs in advance."

    This is an expression of the multiple relationship, and there are generally three expressions.

    Multiplier + as + primary + as

    Multiplier + Comparative+ than

    Multiples + the + nouns (but not all nouns, generally the size the height the length the width the depth...)

    For example: this river is three times as long as that one

    this river is three times longer than that one.

    this river is three times the length of that one.This sentence is the third type.

  14. Anonymous users2024-01-23

    The first question hardly means almost no, that is, the negative word is placed at the beginning of the sentence, which will cause the sentence to be semi-inverted, and choose c

    In the second question, the multiple expression question, the multiple is placed in front of the noun, if you want to use as, the structure is multiple + as + adjective + as

    eg. this room is three times as large as that one.

  15. Anonymous users2024-01-22

    The first question hardly means almost no, that is to say, the negative word is put at the beginning of the sentence, the sentence is partially inverted, and there are such words as no, little, etc.

    In the second question, the multiple expression question, the multiple is placed in front of the noun, if you want to use as, the structure is multiple + as + adjective + as

    Multiplier + as + primary + as

    Multiplier + Comparative+ than

    Multiples + the + nouns (but not all nouns, generally the size the height the length the width the depth...)

  16. Anonymous users2024-01-21

    It should be according to scientists, you can ignore the insertion when you mention it, and remove according to scientists, because the beginning is still hardly, and the negative word at the beginning of the sentence is to be inverted.

  17. Anonymous users2024-01-20

    1) hardly, negative adverb advance, verb advance (modal verbs need to be prepositioned).

    2) Pressure, as three times, is equivalent to 3 times.

  18. Anonymous users2024-01-19

    Option A, spend (time or money) on doing sth, does not have the usage of spend effort.

    Option B, undertake has the meaning of 1Serving, contracting, engaged, responsible; Guarantee 2Proceed, Start 3Promise; Promise; Promise.

    It can be paired with words such as mission, case, responsibility, etc., or to indicate that something is set out to be started. There is no undertake effort

    Option C, cost has the meaning of "spending", "loss", "paying", etc., although it can be paired with effort, but it generally refers to paying a lot of money including time and energy for engineering work. In this question, the cost of learning a new language is exaggerated, so I don't choose it.

    Option D, take effort is a verb-object phrase with a fixed collocation, which means to spend energy, to strive, to do something (to do something).

    So don't be discouraged by choosing D, learning a new language takes a lot of effort.

  19. Anonymous users2024-01-18

    spends spend, spend money; Spend time, spend; spending, wasting undertakes to start doing, conducting, engaged; Serve, undertake, agree, agree costs (time, money, labor, etc.) costs, expenses takes needs, expenses, occupations.

    Take effort is a fixed collocation, which means to spend energy, to work hard, to try (to do something) to choose D

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