English, asked by santoshkarle76, 1 month ago

as soon as it arrived he would go out and celebrate, use no sooner than​

Answers

Answered by sc19032004
2

Answer:

no sooner it arrived than he would go out and celebrate.

hope my answer meets your requirements

Answered by harshvikshah
0

Answer:

Correct option is

A

No sooner had the moon risen than the clouds disappeared.

B

No sooner did the moon rise than the clouds disappeared.

'No sooner..than' is used to suggest that one action takes place immediately after another action. When 'no sooner..than' is used at the beginning of the sentences then auxiliary verb goes before the subject. No sooner always introduces the event that occurred first.

The given sentence can be transformed using no sooner..than by beginning the sentence with 'no sooner'' followed by 'than'.

There are two correct answers to this question. Options A and B are the correct answers as the auxiliary verb is before the subject 'the moon' and the tense is correctly used. Option C is grammatically wrong. 'Disappeared' should be used in option D thus it is also a wrong option.

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