1. could go
2. had
3. talked OR would talk
4. were
5. would arrive
6. was not OR had not been
7. The guests have been invited (by them)
8. The music has been chosen (by them)
9. The sandwiches have not been made yet (by them)
10. The cake is being delivered (by the baker) tomorrow
11. A shopping list is being written now (by them)
12. The big table is being taken out of the room (by them)
Hopefully you will understand this and will be able to continue without help on Yahoo. You won't learn our complicated language if you always ask other people to do your work for you!
Good luck !
2007-01-06 22:27:51
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answer #1
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answered by chip2001 7
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A. 1. I wish I could go.......
2. If only I could have.......
3. If oly carol should talk
4. I'm so lonely, I wish you were....
5. I wish Paul shall be arriving...
6. If only I were not so.........
B. 7. Guests have been invited. by them.
8. Music have been chosen by them
9. The sandwiches haven't been made yet by them.
10. Cake is to be delivered by the baker tomorrow.
11. Shoping list are being written now by them.
12. Big table are being taken out of the room.
8.
2007-01-06 22:40:01
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answer #2
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answered by wilma m 6
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Second part:
7-the guests have been invited
8- the music has been chosen
9- the sandwiches haven't been made yet
10- the cake is being delivered tomorrow
11- the shopping list is being written now
12- the big table is being taken out of the room
In the passive form, the thing receiving the action is the subject of the sentence and the thing doing the action is optionally included at the end of the sentence. E.g. 'the dog bit the man' (active form) becomes 'the man was bit by the dog' (passive form).
2007-01-07 00:08:22
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answer #3
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answered by Mrs. Miller 3
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1. could go/went
2. had
3. talked/would talk
4. were
5. would arrive
6. was not/had not been
7. The guests have been invited
8. The music has been chosen
9. The sandwiches have not been made yet
10. The cake is being delivered tomorrow
11. A shopping list is being written now
12. The big table is being taken out of the room
but you shouldnt use this to get ur answers. keep trying to learn!!!
2007-01-07 02:02:19
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answer #4
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answered by tomw91 2
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1. could go
2. had
3. talked OR would talk
4. were
5. would arrive
6. was not OR had not been
7. The guests have been invited (by them)
8. The music has been chosen (by them)
9. The sandwiches have not been made yet (by them)
10. The cake is being delivered (by the baker) tomorrow
11. A shopping list is being written now (by them)
12. The big table is being taken out of the room (by them)
hope you under stand bye
2007-01-07 00:35:55
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answer #5
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answered by shadow_angle 2
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1 could go
2 could have
3 spoke
4 were
5
6 had not been
7 the guests are been invited
8 the music has been chosen
9 the sandwiches are not made yet
10 the cake is is to delivered the next day
11 the shopping list is been written
12 the big table is been brought out of the room by them
I AM NOT SURE OF THE ANSWERS
2007-01-06 22:56:23
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answer #6
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answered by chris 3
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Allora, dal momento che sei italiano, hai un gran vantaggio! Vediamo ... 1. could go (cond.+inf.) oppure had gone (dipende dal significato inteso, che non si sa) 2. had (cong. impf., magari avessi) 3. talked (cong.impf.), oppure would talk (cond.+inf) 4. were (cong.impf., irregolare) 5. would arrive (cond.inf.) 6. hadn't been (cong.trapassato, ipotesi impossibile)
7. have been invited 8. has been chosen 9. haven't been made yet 10. is being delivered tomorrow 11. is being written now 12. is being taken out of the room.
Per quanto riguarda le frasi ipotetiche in inglese, ti conviene pensare in italiano. Nonostante il fatto che le grammatiche inglesi lo smentiscano, Il congiuntivo esiste in inglese e, quando si tratta di un verbo semplice (cioe' non usato come modale) funziona esattamente come in italiano, sia per le ipotesi di tipo II (possibilita') - che richiedono il congiuntivo imperfetto - sia per quelle di tipo III (impossibilita') - che richiedono il congiuntivo trapassato. Pero', in inglese, i tempi passati del congiuntivo hanno le stesse desinenze dei tempi passati dell'indicativo. L'unica eccezione e' "to be", il cui congiuntivo e' sempre "were". Per i verbi modali (vedi 1 e 5 sottostante), ci vuole il condizionale (o per un'ipotesi tipo III, il condizionale passato) del modale, piu' l'infinito dell'altro verbo. Spero questo ti sia utile. Fammi pure sapere via email qualora avessi bisogno di ulteriori consigli. Buon lavoro, Ciao!
2007-01-07 03:54:41
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answer #7
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answered by Cosimo 1
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l could go
2 had
3 would talk
4 were
5 would arrive
6 weren't (hadn't been)
all conditional but thoseare important for you cause they would be subjunctive!
7i don't know what you want with these. I need an example sorry!
2007-01-06 22:22:20
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answer #8
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answered by KM 3
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I think it would be more helpful to you to try to answer them yourself, then put them on here and we can help you to correct your mistakes. Otherwise you won't learn anything!
Good luck!
2007-01-06 22:17:43
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answer #9
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answered by Funky Little Spacegirl 6
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1) gone
2) had
3) spoke but im not to sure
4) were but im not sure
5)
6)
sorry im not much help
2007-01-06 22:30:26
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answer #10
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answered by alisha 1
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