Well one example would be the word Had.
Answer:
I don't know what I ought to do
Answer:
this will be fun hoped this was able to help hun.
Explanation:
BEFORE:
Dear Diary,
Today mother told me that my principle will be coming to visit due to my absences i cannot relash the knots in my stomach beside feeling utterly sick this mad it worse my head spun and i could barely catch my breath, how could i put myself into this position. I had good grades and i excelled academically and i could not stop that now i forced myself up and got dressed and waited as he arrived feeling sicker than usual.
AFTER:
Dear Diary,
The visit was not as bad as I had though it would be he was very understanding and even brought me a gift and said it was made by everyone in my class I felt tears well in my eyes but I would not cry in front of him and show any emotion I tried to hold it together and the more i tried the more my head spun and then the world just went black I appeared in my room my mother hovering over with my principle 3 steps behind he asked me if I was okay but i couldn't speak I was to weak so I just nodded and tried to get up but my body was numb my principal gave his sincere apologies for if he had anything to do with that and my mother simply said it was fine and to give me 2 more weeks of recovery and it began as an amazing private meeting to a horrible disaster
It is natural to stand at the beginning of a research project and feel overwhelmed by the amount of published research that exists in databases, literature reviews, and reference pages. At the same time, each new research project brings the hope of discovering something new. Overwhelming though a project may be, starting at the foothills of a new thread of research is a great privilege, and is best approached as an opportunity to learn rather than a drudgery. As a researcher/writer, you have the chance to dive more deeply into less frequently encountered pools of knowledge.
Depending on the topic or scope of your research, it is also natural to spend many days and weeks - and in some cases months and years - searching. No matter how great or small the scope of research is, the serious researcher needs to reserve adequate time to perform a thorough survey of published articles. For an undergraduate course project, finding five or six sources might seem like plenty of material to review, but graduate-level writing projects typically involve up to 20 sources minimum.
Please note that the main point here is not to say that it is only the number of research articles matters most, but rather that having a broad spectrum of papers to choose from helps you choose your topic for at least the following two reasons: 1) a larger pool of sources provides you with a broader perspective of the topics within your scope of research and 2) along the way you will find many topics within your field that you DO NOT want to write about! So, one particularly effective way of viewing research is not finding the absolute minimum sources to "get by", but rather to find a variety of sources that you can use...like an artist uses negative space to "carve" shapes out of a dark background...to guide you toward topics that are more directly relevant to your topic.
The good news is that as you research you may find that some of your sources that were published in the same decade or so will cite and reference each other.
One of the joys and privileges of research is being able to follow your curiosity; if you are truly curious about your topic, and authentically driven to find out as much as you can, then even the articles you don't find interesting will be useful for a future project, and no energy will be wasted.
Answer: Make predictions would be correct.
Explanation: The narrator in the above passage is making a prediction that the girls wouldn’t be lost much longer in the woods.