In "The Giver," the punishment for arriving to school late was public chastisement in front of the class by the Teacher. The student was also given a warning which would be recorded in their permanent record.
The word late is an adverb, but it is the object of the participle "arriving" and the participial phrase "arriving late" is the object of the sentence (what I hate).
A high school dropout becomes a successful doctor.
Ship Arriving Too Late to Save a Drowning Witch was created in 1981-09.
In ancient Mesopotamia, the punishment for being late to school is not well-documented or widely known. However, it is possible that being late could have resulted in disciplinary measures such as physical chastisement or public humiliation. It is important to note that specific punishments would vary depending on the time period and the school's rules or policies.
Adverb
Yes, who was "Arriving ten minutes late,"? The noun 'store' is the subject of the sentence, but the store was not the one arriving.
Neither of these phrases are correct. They should be:have been arriving / has been arriving - not have/has been arrived.You use have when there is a plural subject. egThe boys have been arriving all day for the camp - or They have been arriving all day for the camp.You use has when there is a singular subject egThe boy has been arriving late for school recently - or - She has been arriving late for school recently
It means when Puberty is delayed or late in arriving !
For talking back, the boy received after school detention. The rate of detention and suspension was low at the school. "Detention for you, Mister James." Said the Teacher.
talking back, swearing, cheating, chewing gums, skipping class, arriving late, use cellphones
Re-write as: 'The problem, is that he is always arriving late to meetings'
"Late" is the adverb in the sentence. It describes the action of the students arriving late to their English class.