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Choose a has ever, which means that it is the result of the past on the present.
In the simple present tense. But within the same sentence, the infinitive has to be used.
It must be a phrase, and it is an active sentence, and it is a fixed collocation with losing to choose cbe based on.
There are no conjunctions here, and the following sentences must be guaranteed to be incomplete.
So omit be
with based
Huh, understood?
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1.The answer is DBecause there is a passive relationship between The Former President and Send.
2.The answer is aIn this sentence. Stay is a connecting verb that has no passive tense and no progressive tense.
3.The answer is aThe first void refers to the concrete being or person and is countable, while the second void is an abstract concept and is uncountable.
4.The answer is aThe first empty should be used as a conjunction, and like is often used as a preposition; The second null is to be constructed passively.
5.The answer is aThe infinitive is used as a definite, and there is a passive relationship between the verb and the noun.
6.The answer is aBecause what is missing in the definite clause is the object of the preposition for, the relative pronoun is used, and because the antecedent is modified by very, it can only be guided by that.
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d a a a a a
on doing something, and because it is a passive relation + verb primitive.
There are two interpretations.
4.Fixed matching.
5.Infinitive.
6.Determinative clause, reason+that
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, president is specifically referring to, Rogge, president of the International Olympic Committee; The year is generally preceded by a definite article.
The first cellphone is the first ** that refers specifically to human inventions, and the second belongs to the usage of the definite article in front of the superlative of the adjective, indicating the most useful invention!
Hope it helps!
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a b The first president is specifically used to refer to the year before which the article 2 cell phone is generally not added
It's a specific thing, and invention has a lot of them, and I'm highlighting one of them here.
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a a The second space of the second question should be the superlative, and the first should be preceded by the.
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1. b.President of the IOC is an insertion, explaining the proper noun of the person in front, of has a citation qualification, and the president should be qualified by adding the, but the latter "Vancouver 2010 Winter Olympics" is a proper noun composed of common nouns, and the front is sure to add the, so I think this question is selected B.
2.The phone here is representative, it is something that both sides of the speaker know, add the; The latter one should be tested at the highest level.
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1 Translation: In my opinion, life in the 21st century is much simpler than life in the past2 be used to is accustomed to, and it is not appropriate to translate in a sentence excluding bcused to the past.
3 Distinguish between that and it
That doesn't refer to the same thing, while it refers to the same thing. Here it refers to life, but the same life is in different times.
4 it used to be, it is the subject, used is the predicate, and to be is the object.
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It stands for life and is not omitted... The English language is commonly used, which translates to compare with the life of the past.
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be prepared for means "ready for ---", it's over.
That's fine, but how well do you plan to apply to your work? This is a question of the level of preparation. How well is not asked whether you are ready, but how well you are prepared, and how good this is is not up to you, but to be confirmed at work.
According to your understanding, be prepared for cannot be used in the future tense, in fact it can be used. For example, I will study hard to prepare for tomorrow's exam. The future tense is used here because I haven't graduated yet, and I haven't done a job yet.
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The explanation you gave is far-fetched, and I personally prefer to explain it from the semantic (agency) side.
While grammatically there is nothing wrong with a or b, from a semantic point of view, this sentence is more focused on "whether you are fully prepared for the career you are about to start after graduation". The school is not a processing factory, and the subjective will and active behavior of the students themselves are more important.
If it's something like "is the product ready to be delivered after leaving the factory", it's obviously B.
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First of all, be prepared for the state of being prepared is a sure thing, and here we use the word for the state.
And then you say it's over, which is not true, because the phrase can be used in various tenses. The question asks how well you are prepared for the work ahead of you. This question asks about the future, so it means how well prepared you will be when you graduate.
This is a future tense, so it is not contradictory. Don't think it's a thing of the past when you see prepare with d added to it, here and the preceding be verb form a passive voice, and there can be many tenses.
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