Answer:
My sister and I <em><u>grew up</u></em> and went to school in Jamaica we <em><u>were educated</u></em> according to the British system. In 1997 we <u><em>were given</em></u> the opportunity to come to United states. We decided to finish high school before leaving our own country. We <em><u>were concerned</u></em> that the education in this country might not be as good as the one we had there, and we wanted to improve our English too.
My colleagues A, B, and I, <em><u>designed</u></em> an experiment to test the impact on worker perceptions of well-being when domesticated cats <em><u>were allowed</u></em> to freely roam various work environments in which the subjects were normally employed. Three test environments <em><u>were selected</u></em> for our experiment: a law office, a laboratory in which experiments <em><u>were performed</u></em> using laboratory rats,
Explanation:
In the two given passages, the words given in parenthesis are to be used however they can make the sentence correct. This means that they are to be used in such a way that they make the sentence work.
In the first passage, the words will be used in the past form, simple past tense. Moreover, they are written in the passive voice, to maintain the focus of the same subject throughout the whole passage.
Contrary to the first passage, the second passage is narrated in the active voice. But the tense form of the verbs in parenthesis still remains the same, meaning the verbs are used in their simple past tense forms too.
Viola, at this point in the plot, is still under the belief that her only brother Sebastian has died of drowning during their shipwreck. She is still in disguise as a young man and her reply is a figurative and adorned way to say that he/she is the only surviving scion of his/her family.
The pronoun me used in the sentence is under the objective case (A) or
object pronouns. Object pronouns specify the recipient of an object or action. Some
typically used object pronouns are me, you, him, her, it, us, you, and them. It
is normally use after a verb or preposition
By describing actions such as "seemed to look each of us in the eye"