In the sentence 'She visited us more often than we expected' yes, expected is a right form in this sentence.
Nah your wrong!It is "I had visited you when you called me".That is a grammatically acceptable sentence. It would require a certain type of context for it to make sense. For example, let us say, you phoned me up to complain that I never visit you. But I protest, I had visited when you called me. More likely I would put it, I had already visited you when you called me to complain that I wasn't visiting you. That would be much clearer.
Yes, "right" is an adverb in this sentence because it describes the direction in which the car turned. Adverbs often describe how, when, or where an action takes place.
Writers often adumbrate key ideas right away and then elaborate on them later
They didn't. The one I visited did have.
Although often imprisoned, Emmeline Pankhurst was and implacable crusader for women's right to vote in England.
I'd like to see what'll happen if you do. That's often the right thing to do. Monkey see; monkey do.
i do not thick the answer is right
We decided to put in an infa red sensor. Hop e I helped and got it right! Sensor her name was gertrude hilda bummgarter we never expected to see such a beauty.
"Although often imprisoned, Emmeline Pankhurst was an implacable crusader for a woman's right to vote in England."
It usually stands for awkward, as in the sentence or phrase sounds awkward. To fix it, you often just need to adjust and reword that sentence or phrase.
At the right time, miracles often happen. As far as directions, writers wouldn't usually say "at the right". Instead, we'd say or write "on the right". Example: Take the third street on the right, go 1/2 mile, and our driveway is the first on the right.
No it not a sentence its a run on sentence.