Answer:
Past perfect tense.
Explanation:
Supposing that the italicized verb is <u><em>had gone</em></u>, then the tense is past perfect tense.
This past perfect tense is an action that has happened sometime in the past but before something new has happened. In the sentence, the word "gone" is the third form of the verb, thus making it a past tense. Then, the use of the word "had" which is the past tense form of the verb "to have" shows it is the "perfect" form of the verb.
Thus, the whole sentence "<em>Your sister had gone when we arrived.</em>" is in the "past perfect tense".
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Answer:
Hi, the body is in 7th grade. What are your pronouns? Are you a little? -Apple
Explanation:
In <em>Macbeth's </em>Act 1 Scene 1, both Banquo and Macbeth wonder (D) whether the prophecy about Banquo is true.
In the Royal Palace, Banquo thinks about the prophecy of the witches. At the beginning of the play, the sisters had foretold that he would become the father of a line of kings, but they had also predicted that Macbeth would become Thane of Cawdor, which immediately came true. For this reason, Macbeth fears he will not have a heir to the throne and also wonders about the possibility of Banquo's line to sit on the throne in his soliloquy, where he confesses to feel threatened by his friend.