Inglês, perguntado por luisasoouzaa, 9 meses atrás

Test 3 (Units 1 to 6)
Read the text below, choosing the verb forms - options
a to e-that complete it correctly.
a) am asking/have been asking/will ask/asked/ask
b) were/are/was/is/have been
c) is happening/happened/can happen/happen/must
happen
d) learn/learned/to learn/learns/learning
e) will be designed/was designed/is designing/has
designed/designed
(6)
Suppose that you could offer one word
of advice to a young person. One word!! What
would it be?
Over the past few years I (a).
this question of many friends, and the answers
remarkably consistent. Three
words are almost universally at the top of
the list.
The most frequently mentioned word is
"Live". It is a sound choice for the First Maxim.
If you have in mind Schweitzer's "reverence for
life", and a biologist's sense of the complexity and
wonder of the life process, you will understand
the breadth and depth of the word. [...]
The second one-word maxim mentioned by
almost everyone is "Love". People attach many
different meanings to the world, and the Second
Maxim means all kinds of love - fraternal,
sexual, religious, humanistic. But it means above
all the capacity to break through the barriers
that cut one off from others and from values
beyond the claims of self - to give and receive,
to commit oneself, not childishly but in mature
escape from the prison of self-absorption. It (c)
__ at 18 or 80. [...]
The Third Maxim is "Learn". We're brought
up to think that learning is a "duty", and all too
often school convinces us that it is a very dull
duty. To clear your mind of such nonsense, watch
a baby (a)
to walk. He tries, fails, tries
again, improves, bumps his nose, cries, laughs
and keeps on. He isn't being dutiful. He's simply
doing what he (e)
to do -learn.​

Soluções para a tarefa

Respondido por rafaelrosagui
3

Segue abaixo o texto Test 3 (Units 1 to 6),completo com as palavras apresentadas:

Suppose that you could offer one word of advice to a young person. One word!! What would it be? Over the past few years "I have been asking" this question of many friends, and the answers remarkably consistent. Three words are almost universally at the top of the list. The most frequently mentioned word is "Live". It is a sound choice for the First Maxim. If you have in mind Schweitzer's "reverence for life", and a biologist's sense of the complexity and wonder of the life process, you will understand the breadth and depth of the word. The second one-word maxim mentioned by almost everyone is "Love". People attach many different meanings to the world, and the Second Maxim means all kinds of love - fraternal, sexual, religious, humanistic. But it means above all the capacity to break through the barriers that cut one off from others and from values beyond the claims of self - to give and receive, to commit oneself, not childishly but in mature escape from the prison of self-absorption. It "is happening" at 18 or 80. The Third Maxim is "Learn". We're brought up to think that learning is a "duty", and all too often school convinces us that it is a very dull duty. To clear your mind of such nonsense, watch a baby "learn" to walk. He tries, fails, tries again, improves, bumps his nose, cries, laughs and keeps on. He isn't being dutiful. He's simply doing what he was "designed" to do -learn.​

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