How many high school English questions to ask, one high school English question?

Updated on educate 2024-03-03
8 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    In the first question, you should choose a If d is used as the verb predicate of the drink object clause in the past perfect tense, the verb of the if clause must be in the past tense instead of don'T present tense, because had order is in the past perfect tense, which means "past past", that is, the action of order occurred earlier than the like action (like action that happened in the past), and the condition given by the present question is that the subject of the clause is in the simple present tense, so you should choose a, because the action of ordering a drink has already happened and happened in the past, so the simple past tense is used.

    The second question, you should choose A, there are two things to pay attention to in this question, one is little of....This is the subject, and it is an uncountable noun form, and another temporal adverbial now, so it is okay to use the general present tense, or use the present continuous tense, leaving a, c can be selected and then because the word remain is more special, it is generally not used as a continuous tense, because remain generally indicates the continuation of the state, the action of maintenance, and this kind of verb is not used in the English idiomatic usage, which is different from Chinese, so c can be excluded, choose a

    The whole sentence means that the palace has survived 3 fires in the last century, and now only a small part of the original building has been preserved.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    The first question should be A

    The "just clicked" is in the simple past tense. And the precondition for choosing option d is that this sentence must first be in the simple past tense, and the past that happened in the past is the past perfect tense.

    The second question should be selected: a

    Reason: The meaning of this phrase is: this palace was burned down three times in the last century, and only a few of the original buildings remain.

    The meaning of remain here is: to remain, to stay, i.e. intransitive verb, which can only be used in the active voice. Looking at the answer, only a is the active voice.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    aThe past perfect tense indicates that the action was completed before a certain time in the past. or before one action in the past, another action has been completed. There is no time or action in your sentence that has passed. Of course, don't use the past to finish.

    a remain, don't use passive.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    In the first question, don is used't, not didn't, so don't choose d.

    Now in question 2 is the key.

    I don't know if it's right, I haven't read English grammar for a long time!

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    The first group: is a clause, there is a tense house as a noun, the following relative pronoun is the object of the following sentence, and the non-tense relational word is an adverb.

    The first sentence of the second group should be:

    The definite clause, the relative word that is omitted, as the object, the second should be an emphatic sentence, it is emphasized with isitthat, and it is a fixed structure of the emphasis.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    rather than, more than only, other than except.

  7. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    If B is chosen, it is obviously a definite clause, and this photo was taken in the place ()stands the Eiffel TowerIn the sentence, the parenthetical part is used as a place adverbial in the second half of the sentence, so the relative words of the definite clause should use the relative adverb where. In other words, it is also possible to change item b to in the place where.

    Of course, you can directly choose C, at this time, the sentence is a place adverbial clause.

  8. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    This sentence is a definite clause.

    The main clause is this photo was taken in the place

    The clause is which stands the eiffel towerThe antecedent is the place in the definite clause as the subject, and it does not refer to people, but to things, so use the introductory word which that

    The difficulty of this problem is the choice of where, where in the definite clause is only chosen when the antecedent word is used as a place adverbial in the clause.

    In this question, what is missing in the clause is the subject, so it must not be the question where, in the place is the place adverbial of the main clause, which has nothing to do with the clause A option has no antecedent, D option does not know what to do, and what clause is not C option is wrong.

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