After passing her driving test, Lisa felt a sense of <u><em>lightness</em></u>.
Please <em><u>light</u></em> the candles on the birthday cake.
Patrick did not take the test <em><u>lightly</u></em> and studied intensely.
Explanation:
The words "light", "lightly" and "lightness" all signify a different aspect. "Light" is a verb while "lightly" is an adverb and "lightness" is a noun. And so, their uses are also all different, depending on the sentence structure.
In the first sentence, Lisa felt a sense of "lightness" after she passed her driving test. This means that she felt relieved.
The second sentence uses "light", asking someone to "light" the candle. This means that the candle must be made to burn.
The third sentence talks about Patrick not taking his test "lightly" which means that he is serious about it.
This inequality is an imprint on her life, this is the following sentence in the negative form.
The sentence structure for negative verb conjugation is subject + auxiliary verb + "not" + main verb + object. Combinations of "not" and auxiliary verbs are often shortened in English. For example: no = no, no = no, no = no.
In English, add the word "not" after the auxiliary or auxiliary verbs to form negative sentences. An example of an auxiliary verb is the auxiliary verb ``be''. 'to be' has several forms: 'am', 'is', 'are', 'was', 'were'.
Negative forms are worded such that a positive answer requires a "no" and a negative answer requires a "yes". In other words, a negative question changes the "yes/no" answer order from normal or affirmative questions to a non-intuitive "no/yes" order.