Ask a few English questions, the new two

Updated on educate 2024-04-28
11 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-08

    That's right. 2 either refers to the between, generally and the other half, that is, either of the two parts.

    3 Note that the thought clause used in the front should be consistent with the main clause in terms of voice.

    5 wear only means an action, and if you choose, you are watching him put his clothes on backwards.

    Are Wearing means a state: the clothes are being reversed.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    1 denotes an ongoing action, in the present continuous tense.

    2 That's right, it means "either", and you can take any piece.

    3 There is nothing wrong here either, had missed is in the past perfect tense. Because I think it was the past thinking and I used to think that my past past had been missed, so use the past perfect tense.

    5 agree upstairs.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    That's right.

    Question 2: You can take any half (two takes one, and it is an affirmative sentence, so you can't choose b), they are exactly the same.

    Question 3: I thought we had missed it.

    Because it is "I thought" before the other person says this sentence, it is in the past tense "originally thought", and the corresponding is in the past perfect tense.

    Question 5. Judging from the context of the sentence, "I" and the other party are talking face-to-face, which is the current situation. b is in the simple present tense, which is just an objective statement of a state.

    For example, he wears a t-shirtHe was wearing a t-shirt. There is no sense of emphasis.

    Be wearing has a sense of emphasis, "you wear it backwards (emphasizing the state of the moment)".

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    That's right. 5 says "your sweater is worn backwards", which means "it is going on now", so it is used for wearing, not for wearing.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    It can refer to any one of them, which is more contextual here.

    3.The original intention here is to show that we have missed him, and the present perfect tense should be applied, but since the object clause should be consistent in the previous tense, and the preceding thought is in the past tense, the past perfect tense should be used later.

    5.There is nothing wrong with using the present tense here, but it is a form of face-to-face conversation, with more emphasis on the ongoing, indicating the state of the moment, and it is more appropriate to choose d here.

  6. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    2,3 are all right,2Because either means any of them,There is only one that matches the meaning of the sentence.,That's either.,As for 3,,I'm not very clear - -5,Because wear is a state.,Because he's been wearing this clothes.,So use the continuous tense.,This is my personal understanding.,Blame me for being wrong.

  7. Anonymous users2024-02-02

    2: either is any of the two, any is any one, each is each, according to the following sentence, the whole sentence means: whatever you pick, they are all the same. So choose either

    3: The beginning + sentence of i thought means that we have already missed him, and only the tense of had already missed him is correct.

    5: Indicates the continuous state, your sweater is worn backwards, use the present continuous tense, so you can't use b

  8. Anonymous users2024-02-01

    Question 3 should be b (because the previous sentence is in the present continuous tense, not in the past tense).

    Question 5 is not that B cannot be selected, grammatically it is correct, but in this case D is better.

  9. Anonymous users2024-01-31

    Answers for you. 1、the prince fell in love with her as soon as he saw her.(changed to a general interrogative sentence).

    did) the prince (fall) in love with her as soon as he saw her?

    2、the english tv program monkey came out in 1979.(Question about the line drawing part).

    when did) the english program monkey (come) out?

  10. Anonymous users2024-01-30

    When will the railway connecting the two cities open? - It will only be opened next year. Only two-thirds of the way through this section of the railway was built.

    until ......Time; According to the meaning of the sentence, the railway will not be opened until next year, so it should be used in the negative form not until ......When the time comes, it is ......; The second unprecedented subject is two thirds, which means two-thirds of the railway, railway is singular, so the verb should also be singular, so choose a.

  11. Anonymous users2024-01-29

    cnot until next year

    Until next year. Railway is a whole, singular.

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