Answer:
1. Where, messages, receive? - Where are messages received?
2. How, newspapers, deliver? - How are newspapers delivered?
Third conditional. If the students hadn't been late for the exam, they would have passed.
Second conditional. If the weather weren't so cold, we could go to the beach.
Third conditional. If she had had a laptop with her, she could have emailed me.
First conditional. If she doesn't go to the meeting, I won't go either.
Second conditional. If Lucy had enough time, she would travel more.
Explanation:
The first part of this question concerns the passive voice. <u>When we use the passive voice, the subject is not the one performing the action expressed by the verb. In the present tense, the passive voice consists of the verb to be plus the past participle of the main verb.</u>
The second part of this question concerns conditionals. <u>Sentences in the first conditional use an if-clause in the simple present. The consequence is expressed in the simple future. In the second conditional, the if-clause uses the simple past, while the consequence uses would/could/might plus the main verb. Finally, the third conditional uses the past perfect in the if-clause. The consequence uses would/could/might + have + past participle of the main verb.</u>
Answer:
1. awful
2. careful
3. carefully
4. terrible
5. well
6. good
7. pretty
8. pretty
9. pretty
10. wonderfully
11. wonderful
12. terrible
13. terribly
14. better
15. best
16. fastest
17. slowest
18. slow
19. slowest
20. fast
21. fastest
22. slow
23. happy
24. sad
25. late
26. angry
27. angrily
28. happy
29. well
30. good
Explanation:
I have no clue why I did this; I really just want to not finish my math. They have the weirdest conversations, btw.
Answer:
I would help . . .
Explanation:
but this is not a question . . .
sorry :(
I think it refers to pride or power
Answer:
i dont know where the text is to read so...
Explanation: