Al smith
Unpack is a verb.
The past tense of unpack is unpacked.
The phrase "Unpack immediately." is an imperative sentence. The understood subject is "you," so the sentence means "(You) unpack immediately." It is a command.
Undress, unpack and unpaid.
The pope has absolutely no interest in what you do on your wedding night.
No, unpack is not a compound word because "un" is not a word a compound word is a word that has two words in it.
Oh honey, the prefix for "pack" is "un." Just like how you can't "unpack" a suitcase without first "packing" it. It's like the yin and yang of luggage, darling.
The bolded words "to unpack immediately" form an infinitive phrase, which consists of the infinitive "to unpack" and the adverb "immediately." Infinitive phrases can act as nouns, adjectives, or adverbs in a sentence.
COOL RUNNINGS
It is said that a Pope has infallibility.
his excuse was that he thought she was incapable of producing a male heir, but the pope said no, so Henry created the church of England
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