English, asked by alankrita3105, 5 months ago

Write out the following questions correctly:

a) Why he came late?

b) Where you found the keys?

c) How long you have been studying here?

d) When you will grow up?

e) How much milk he sold?

f) Why there is so much noise?

g) What there is in your bag?

h) How difficult this is going to be?


answer please. dont give irrelevant answer....​

Answers

Answered by almeidafatim21
0

Answer:

Imagine that you are seven years old. You are participating in an experiment. A

researcher greets you and shows you into a small room. In the room there is a

marshmallow. The marshmallow is for you, but here is the interesting part: The

researcher tells you that he is going to leave you alone in the room for a while. You can

eat the marshmallow right away, or you can wait until he gets back. If you wait until he

gets back, you will get a second marshmallow.

What do you do? Do you eat the marshmallow right away?

An experiment like this, known informally as the marshmallow experiment, was

conducted decades ago at Stanford University. It turned out that some children ate the

marshmallow right away, while others were able to wait. In other words, some sought

instant self-gratification, and some delayed it.

Years later, the researchers followed up on the participants. They found that the

children who delayed self-gratification were in general more successful than those who

ate the marshmallow right away. By a variety of measures, including SAT scores, they

appeared to be more competent.

Common sense tells us that the ability to delay self-gratification is a mark of maturity.

The marshmallow experiment provides evidence that it may also correlate with success

in life.

Notes:

- Many of these verb phrases consist of an auxiliary verb and a main verb. So, for

example, “are participating” and “do…eat” are considered verb phrases.

- “is going to leave”: If we consder “is going to” a kind of auxiliary verb, then this is a

verb phrase, just like “will leave.”

- “known as…”: If you underlined “known,” that’s fine. It is a verb. It is a nonfinite verb,

unlike the other underlined verbs and verb phrases. (See Chapter 4.)

■ Exercise 2 Underline the complete subjects in the sentences below, and double-

underline the verbs that go with them. Identifying the subject means identifying the

main word of the subject and the parts that modify it. (In the first sentence, the main

word is in boldface.) When you underline the verb, include both auxiliary verbs and

main verbs (as in the first sentence, with was…used).

In the 1960s and 70s, the term “generation gap” was often used to refer to the

differences between young people in the U.S. and their parents’ generation. Many

young people felt distant from their parents because of differences in ideas about

politics, social issues, and popular culture. Since then, conflicts between generations

have diminished in many ways. Child-rearing experts in the late 20th century

encouraged parents to be like friends to their children. Thanks to technology, young

people and their parents are able to contact each other easily at any time. On any

college campus, the students you see texting or talking on cell phones are often

communicating with Mom or Dad. Fifty years ago, closeness of this kind was less

Answered by jaya7942
2

Answer:

why did he come late?

where have u found this key?

how long r u studying here?

when will u grow up?

how much milk did he sell?

why isn't there much of noise?

what's there in your bag?

how difficult is it gonna be?

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