Your passport might A. be in the top drawer - did you look there?
Melanie couldn't exist D. take another piece of cake.
Colin stopped C. drinking a glass of water before he continued his workout.
It is unnatural for Thomas A. to leave without saying goodbye.
The house should A. be painted before you move in next month.
I really enjoy A. meeting people.
I’d like to go camping after A. staying in a hotel.
If I were you, I wouldn't have C. invent the wheel about a thousand years.
What are we going to do about C. finding the tickets?
Your childish behaviour is A. driving me.
I don't really like that kind of D. being told.
You must D. have eaten such a big dinner last night.
He was B. to be starving.
You were A. having been starving before you went to sleep.
They decided A. to take the bus to work.
The doctor discouraged him D. to disappear.
He seems B. to smoke in the office. He's a no-show.
It is expected A. to be happening right now.
I wouldn't mention that C. broken my favourite coffee mug.
The shaver is B. blunt - it needs sharpening.
Susan mentioned D. sleeping that her brother would be arriving.
The accident is believed C. to be allowed more debate than news.
They seemed A. to have been the deadline.
I should have been A. thinking some of that.
We will meet D. borrow for the weekend?
Thu gọn (-)
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11 Tặng xu Tặng quà Báo cáo Bình luận
Cậu ơi , cậu có thể chấm điểm giúp tớ đc khum ạ >w<
không nhé bạn
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Let's analyze each sentence and choose the correct verb form:
A. be: "Might be" is a modal verb construction used to express possibility.
D. take: "Couldn't" is a negative form of "can," and it requires the base form of the verb.
B. to drink: "Stopped" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing purpose or intention.
A. to leave: "It is unnatural for" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb.
A. be painted: "Should" is followed by the passive form of the verb when expressing necessity or obligation.
A. meeting: "Enjoy" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing continuous action or enjoyment.
A. staying: "After" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an action that precedes another action.
C. invent: "Wouldn't have" is followed by the past participle form of the verb.
C. finding: "About" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an activity or situation.
A. driving: "Is" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an ongoing action.
D. being told: "Like" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing a feeling or preference.
D. have: "Must have" is a modal verb construction used to express certainty about a past action.
A. being: "Was" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an ongoing action in the past.
A. having been: "Were" is followed by the perfect participle form of the verb when expressing a completed action in the past.
A. to take: "Decided" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing a decision or intention.
D. to disappear: "Discouraged" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing advice or recommendation.
B. to smoke: "Seems" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing an opinion or belief.
A. to be happening: "Is expected" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing expectation.
C. broken: "Mention" is followed by the past participle form of the verb when expressing something that has already happened.
B. blunt: "Is" is followed by the adjective form of the verb when describing a state or quality.
D. sleeping: "Mentioned" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an activity or situation.
A. to allow: "Is believed" is followed by the infinitive form of the verb when expressing a belief or opinion.
A. to have been: "Seemed" is followed by the perfect participle form of the verb when expressing a past action that is believed to have happened.
A. thinking: "Should have been" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing a past action that should have happened but didn't.
B. borrowing: "Meet" is followed by the -ing form of the verb when expressing an activity or