2 Match the pairs of sentences. Then rewrite the sentences with and.

2 Match the pairs of sentences. Then rewrite the sentences with and.

I can’t finish this without the sentence pairs — please paste them here.

Explanation & instructions

To match and rewrite pairs with and:

  • Match sentences that logically go together (same idea, same subject, or related actions).
  • If the same subject performs both actions, combine by keeping the subject once and joining verbs:
  • Example: “She went to the store.” + “She bought milk.” → “She went to the store and bought milk.”
  • If the same auxiliary/modal is used, you can combine verbs after the auxiliary:
  • Example: “Tom can swim.” + “He can run fast.” → “Tom can swim and run fast.”
  • If different subjects perform different actions, keep both subjects and join the clauses with and:
  • Example: “I finished my homework.” + “My brother washed the dishes.” → “I finished my homework and my brother washed the dishes.”
  • Watch tense and subject agreement; remove repeated words (like repeated subject or repeated auxiliary) when appropriate.

Quick examples

  1. Pair: “She studies hard.” + “She gets good grades.”

Rewritten: “She studies hard and gets good grades.”

  1. Pair: “They arrived early.” + “They waited outside.”

Rewritten: “They arrived early and waited outside.”

Paste your specific sentence pairs and I’ll match them and rewrite each with and.

Related

the allele for black noses in wolves is dominant over the allele fro the brown noses. There is no known selective advantage for one nose colour over another in wolves. If this remains true, which of the following statements is most liklely TRUE about the change in wolf nose colours re over many generations? Black noses will become more common than they are now black noses will stay about the same frequency as now black noses will become less common than they are now brown noses wil disappear after enough generations pass