English, asked by shalugiri02shalugiri, 11 months ago

01)
If it doesn't rain, the crop will fail.
(Rewrite the sentence using 'unless' in place of 'if)
She is very proud. She will not beg for her livelihood.
(Use "too..to' and rewrite the sentence)
(in
(iii) Father said to his son, "Go and pay your fees."
(Change the narration)
(iv) Who wrote this letter? (Change the voice)
(1) Open the door. (Change the voice)
(vi) He said to me, "The earth revolves round the sun."
(Change the narration)​

Answers

Answered by purshotamSingh
19

Answer:

the crop will fail unless does not come

she is too proud to beg for her livelihood

father ordered his son to go and pay his fees

by whom the letter is written

you are ordered to open the door

he told me that Earth revolves round the sun

Answered by smartbrainz
6

(I) Unless it rains, the crop will fail

(ii) She is too proud to beg for her livelihood

(iii) Father ordered his son to go and pay his fees

(iv) By  whom was this letter written

(v) Let the door be opened

(vi) He told me the Earth revolves around the son

Explanation:

(i) We use the unless to imply ‘except if’. The clause that follows unless is a subordinate clause and it requires a main/independent clause to make a complete sentence.

(ii) We use too meaning ‘more than enough’ in different positions. Too  is used before an adjective/adverb+to-infinitive

(iii) Indirect speech is a way of conveying the content of questions, statements, or other expressions, sans citing them explicitly as it is done in direct speech. When we want to report an order/request, we use a verb like 'tell' with a to-clause: example, He told me to go away. The pattern is verb+indirect-object+to-clause.

(iv) Active voice implies that the sentence has a subject which acts upon the verb. Passive voice implies that the subject is the recipient of the verb’s action

(v) Open the door! is an imperative sentence that is generally used to order someone to go and open the door. Usually, imperative sentences are not used in the passive voice, since we speak directly to someone when telling them what to do. Although it does not sound natural, it is possible to re-phrase such sentences in the passive voice using the rule : let+object+be+past participle

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