English, asked by Nabhanya7102005, 1 month ago

rules to convert sentences using ... no sooner than , too .. to , so ... that​

Answers

Answered by sarkarsoumyadip30
2

Answer:

Using no sooner than…

The structure no sooner is used to talk about something that happens immediately after something else.

No sooner had I stepped out, than it started raining.

This sentence means that I stepped out and immediately after that it started raining. These two activities take place almost simultaneously. There is no real time difference between them.

When no sooner comes at the beginning of a sentence, we use inverted word order. That means the auxiliary verb comes before the subject.

No sooner had I received her call, than I left for her place. (NOT No sooner I had received her call, …)

No sooner had she finished one project, than she started the next. (= As soon as she finished one project, she started the next.)

No sooner had I eaten the fish, than I started feeling sick. (= As soon as I ate the fish, I started feeling sick.)

No sooner had they completed the work, than they demanded the wages. (= As soon as they completed the work, they demanded the wages.)

No sooner had I gotten my bags unpacked than I realized that my camera was missing.

No sooner had he graduated, than he was on his way to America.

The structure no sooner than is quite literary. It is not normally used in speaking. In a less formal style, we are more likely to say something like this:

They demanded wages soon after they completed the work

Too…to and so…that

A phrase can be expanded into a clause. In the same way, a clause can be contracted into a phrase. Thus we have seen that the form of a sentence can be changed without changing its meaning. The transformation can be done using several different methods.

For example a simple sentence containing the adverb too can be transformed into a complex sentence containing so…that with no difference in meaning.

Study the following sentences.

The news is too good to be true.

The news is so good that it cannot be true.

The thief ran too fast for the police to catch.

The thief ran so fast that the police could not catch him.

He is too proud to beg.

He is so proud that he will not beg.

The tea was too hot to drink.

The tea was so hot that I could not drink it. OR The tea was so hot that it could not be drunk.

The bag was too heavy for me to lift.

The bag was so heavy that I could not lift it.

He spoke too fast to be understood.

He spoke so fast that he could not be understood.

Notes

If the adverb too is followed by an adjective + to infinitive, we expand the sentence into two clauses, the first containing so and the second containing that.

If the sentence containing too…to is in the affirmative, the sentence containing so…that will be in the negative.

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Answered by kochedaksh06
1

Answer:

Answer

'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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