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if harriet would try to sneak a sugar cube she would get whipped
i dont know figer it out
The Sugar Act of 1934 regulated sugar imports
Yellow sugar is sugar with food coloring. Yellow sugar is, also a specialty brown sugar with less syrup in it, thus making it lighter in color and therefore, "yellow".
The Sugar Act is the law that puts tax on foreign molasses and sugar!!
She was not allows to have sugar
if harriet would try to sneak a sugar cube she would get whipped
i dont know figer it out
1. Harriet: "Hmm. Now tell me, sugar, when do you want your style to REALLY come alive?"A: "Every day."2. Harriet: "Do you like the sun? How does it make you feel?B: "Sweaty!"3. Harriet: "Are clothes important to you?"A: "Oh yeah!"
William Boot has written: 'Harriet's Sugar-Free Cookbook 170 Recipes'
In an active sentence we can see who or what does the action of the verb eg.The cat chased the mouse.The subject - cat - does the action - chase. The mouse is the object of the sentence, the 'receiver' of the action chase.In a passive sentence the object is at the beginning of the sentence in the subject position.The mouse was chased.If you want to say who or what chased the mouse then you use 'by'.The mouse was chased by the cat. ('the cat' is called the agent)Passive is used when it is not important who or what does the action egThe Mona Lisa was painted in the 16th century.The form of a passive verb phrase is be + past participleegwas chased, was being chased, is chased, etcSome more examples:Active - We keep the sugar in the cupboard.Passive - The sugar is kept in the cupboard. (by us)Active - The police brought the child home.Passive - The child was brought home. (by the police)Active - The council is building a new library.Passive - A new library is being built.Active - My parents were discussing my behaviour.Passive - My behaviour was being discussed.Active - The students have invited us to a dance.Passive - We have been invited to a dance. (by the students)
I would say a pig just because she often told the story of being caught trying to taste some sugar. She hid with a piglet to avoid getting a beating.
The passive form of the verb phrase follows this pattern:be + past participlefor example: is used / was wanted / is being builtPassive is the opposite of active. In most sentences/clauses the subject refers to the doer or actor of the action of the verb.Eg. The cat chased the mouse. The cat is the subject or the doer of the verb, chase (active).But the passive form allows us to put someone or something that is not the actor first in the position of the subject.Eg. The mouse was chased by the cat.Example:Active - We keep the sugar in the cupboard.To change this active sentence into passive the object (sugar) goes before the verb (object position).The sugar...Then the verb keep becomes be + past participle. Because the sentence is present the be verb is 'is'. The past participle of keep is keptThe sugar is keptThe phrase in the cupboard remains unchanged =The sugar is kept in the cupboard. (If you want to say who does this action then add 'by us')The sugar is kept in the cupboard by us
In a active sentence we can see who or what does the action of the verb:The dog chased the cat. -- The dog does the action of chase.In a passive sentence we don't have to know who or what does the action of the verb:The cat was chased.If you want to add who or what does the action (the agent) in a passive sentence then you use by + noun or noun phrase.The cat was chased by the dog.The verb form for passive sentences is be + past participle.The sugar is kept in the cupboard.The house is being built next year.
In a active sentence we can see who or what does the action of the verb:The dog chased the cat. -- The dog does the action of chase.In a passive sentence we don't have to know who or what does the action of the verb:The cat was chased.If you want to add who or what does the action (the agent) in a passive sentence then you use by + noun or noun phrase.The cat was chased by the dog.The verb form for passive sentences is be + past participle.The sugar is kept in the cupboard.The house is being built next year.
Passive voice is a style of writing or speaking where the subject of a sentence receives the action instead of performing it. It emphasizes the object or receiver of the action rather than the doer. In passive voice, the sentence structure is typically "object + be verb + past participle verb." For example, "The cake was baked by Sarah" is in passive voice, whereas "Sarah baked the cake" is in active voice.
The boys pushed the tree over. = active sentence. Boys = subject, pushed over = verb, tree = object(This sentence is a little different because it has a phrasal verb not a single word verb)To turn an active sentence into a passive sentence the object goes into the subject position =The treeNow the verb in a passive sentence is be + past participle. The verb (past tense of push over) in the active sentence = pushed over and the past participle is the same pushed over. The active sentence is a past sentence so the be verb in the passive sentence must be past = wasThe tree was pushed over. = the passive sentence. If you want to you can add the agent = the boys.The tree was pushed over by the boys. (But you don't have to add the agent).Another example:The dog chased the cat = The cat was chased. or The cat was chased (by the dog).We keep the sugar in the cupboard. = The sugar is kept in the cupboard or The sugar is kept in the cupboard by us.