Answer: Explanation: The day as gray and wintry emphasize the narrator’s feelings about life in the new country and was described that the day is cold and uninviting, like the people and their cities. This was described in a passage from Dragonwings by Laurence Yep.
Q. How does the narrator most likely feel about American cities?
Based on the description of the setting in this passage, how does the narrator most likely feel about American cities? He finds them unfamiliar and frightening. Read this passage from Dragonwings by Laurence Yep. He had an intuitive feeling for what made the horseless carriages tick.
Table of Contents
- Q. How does the narrator most likely feel about American cities?
- Q. What detail was present in the film and used by yet to create a realistic setting in Dragonwings?
- Q. Is wintery a word?
- Q. What is a adjective for winter?
- Q. What is adjective of fear?
- Q. What is the verb for snow?
- Q. How would you describe a winter morning?
- Q. How do you describe winter in writing?
- Q. What type of word is snow?
- Q. Is the word snow a noun or verb?
- Q. What is never in grammar?
- Q. Where do you put never in a sentence?
- Q. Where do we use Never?
- Q. When can we use the word can t?
- Q. What kind of word is Cannot?
- Q. Is Cannot correct?
- Q. Why I can’t or why can’t I?
- Q. Is had not correct?
- Q. Can not or Cannot British English?
- Q. What does can’t not mean?
- Q. What is the short form of will not?
- Q. Why is Cannot written as one word?
- Q. Is Cannot 1 word or 2?
- Q. Can and Cannot sentences?
Q. What detail was present in the film and used by yet to create a realistic setting in Dragonwings?
What detail was present in the film and used by Yep to create a realistic setting in Dragonwings? the fact that streets were shared by horse-drawn carriages and the new horseless carriages. the prejudice that many Chinese immigrants faced upon their arrival in the United States.
Q. Is wintery a word?
“Wintry” is an adjective we use to describe something that relates to winter or is chilly or frigid. “Wintery” is another way to spell “wintry,” but even though it’s not incorrect, it’s far less common than “wintry.” You might describe it as wintry. Or wintery.
Q. What is a adjective for winter?
wintry Add to list Share. If it makes you think of winter, it’s wintry. Use the adjective wintry to describe a cold, gray January day. The adjective wintry is sometimes spelled wintery. Either way, it describes something that happens in the winter time, or that reminds you of winter in some way.
Q. What is adjective of fear?
Scared, frightened, afraid and terrified are probably the most common adjectives to describe feeling fear, but if you want to broaden your vocabulary, there are many other useful alternatives. If someone is slightly afraid of something that is going to happen in the future, we could describe them as apprehensive.
Q. What is the verb for snow?
snow
present simple I / you / we / they snow | /snəʊ/ /snəʊ/ |
---|---|
he / she / it snows | /snəʊz/ /snəʊz/ |
past simple snowed | /snəʊd/ /snəʊd/ |
past participle snowed | /snəʊd/ /snəʊd/ |
-ing form snowing | /ˈsnəʊɪŋ/ /ˈsnəʊɪŋ/ |
Q. How would you describe a winter morning?
A winter morning is a cold morning of the winter season. Sometimes, it dews. The environment is dull and dismal. It is covered with mist and fog.
Q. How do you describe winter in writing?
- The snow was whalebone-white. SNOW COLOUR.
- The battering gusts were awful. SOUND.
- The screeching winds were dreadful. STORMS.
- A gentle hush cloaked the land. SILENCE.
- The gravel-grey skies were bare. SKY COLOUR.
- The empty skies were silent. BARREN SKIES.
- Winter squeezes everything to death.
- Peppery scents filled the room.
Q. What type of word is snow?
As detailed above, ‘snow’ can be a verb or a noun. Here are some examples of its usage: Verb usage: It is snowing. Verb usage: It started to snow.
Q. Is the word snow a noun or verb?
snow (noun) snow (verb) snow–white (adjective)
Q. What is never in grammar?
Never means ‘at no time’ or ‘not at any time’. We often use ‘ever’ and ‘never’ with the present perfect, but they can also be used with other verb tenses. I’ve never been to Brazil. They had never seen such a beautiful sunset before.
Q. Where do you put never in a sentence?
Ever, never: usage, position in sentence
Ever, never | |
---|---|
Ever = ‘at any time’. We generally use ever in questions. | Do you ever drink coffee? Have you ever been to Paris? |
Never = ‘at no time’. | He has never visited me. I’ll never forget how kind he has been. I never drink tea with milk. |
Q. Where do we use Never?
Use the present perfect + never to talk about things you have NOT done at any time in your life.
- I’ve never failed a test. I’ve always gotten 80% or more.
- He’s never heard of Michael Jackson.
- Samantha has never been surfing.
- We’ve never studied Italian.
- They’ve never told a lie.
Q. When can we use the word can t?
Can’t is a contraction of cannot, and it’s best suited for informal writing. In formal writing and where contractions are frowned upon, use cannot. It is possible to write can not, but you generally find it only as part of some other construction, such as “not only . . . but also.”
Q. What kind of word is Cannot?
auxiliary verb. to be able to; have the ability, power, or skill to:She can solve the problem easily, I’m sure.
Q. Is Cannot correct?
Both cannot and can not are acceptable spellings, but the first is much more usual. You would use can not when the “not” forms part of another construction such as “not only.” For example: These green industries can not only create more jobs, but also promote sustainable development of the land.
Q. Why I can’t or why can’t I?
The answer is, they’re both correct. Just used in different situations. “Why can’t I see?” is a question, asking for the reason the “asker” is not perceiving something. “Why I can’t see” is a statement, not a question.
Q. Is had not correct?
The Past Perfect tense, “HAD NOT seen” has no valid place in this dialogue and is incorrect. The Present Perfect tense is formed by combining the auxiliary verb “has” (singular) or “have” (plural) with the past participle. The Past Perfect tense is formed by combining the auxiliary verb “had” with the past participle.
Q. Can not or Cannot British English?
Cannot is a contraction of can not. In British English cannot is the normal form. In American English both forms are acceptable but cannot is more common. In general I would suggest that you use cannot.
Q. What does can’t not mean?
1. Strictly speaking, “I can’t not do X” means “I am unable not to do X”. In this context, your sentence could be paraphrased as “I am unable to not get the song out of my head”, or more simply “I can’t keep the song in my head.”
Q. What is the short form of will not?
Shan’t and won’t are the contracted forms of shall not and will not. They are both used to make predictions about what will happen in the future, as in your example, Yasmeen.
Q. Why is Cannot written as one word?
The definition of cannot should be either “the negative form of can” (as the AHD has it) or a periphrasis like “is not able to.” The only context in which can not, two words, occurs is as an emphatic alternative: “You can do it, or you can not do it.” In that case, it is clearly two separately spoken words, with the …
Q. Is Cannot 1 word or 2?
Is cannot one word or two words? The answer is one word – most of the time. Cannot and can’t have the same meaning, but can not appears differently in a sentence. Read on to find examples of situations in which cannot or can’t would be acceptable, and when can not might cross your path.
Q. Can and Cannot sentences?
Can/Cannot in affirmative and negative sentences.
- I can travel in December. I cannot (can’t) travel now.
- You can see the stars! You cannot (can’t) hear the teacher.
- He can be rude sometimes.
- She can play the guitar.
- It can wait for an hour.
- We can try again later.
- They can study after lunch.