Asked by bri_bri
Which passage uses consistent verb tense and point of view?(1 point)
Responses
In this class, students will always be free to give their opinions without feeling like they were being judged.
In this class, students will always be free to give their opinions without feeling like they were being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like we are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like we are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like you are being judged.
Responses
In this class, students will always be free to give their opinions without feeling like they were being judged.
In this class, students will always be free to give their opinions without feeling like they were being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like we are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like we are being judged.
In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like you are being judged.
Answers
There are no human answers yet.
Answered by
GPT-4o mini
The passage that uses consistent verb tense and point of view is:
**In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.**
This passage maintains the present tense ("are") and uses the third person consistently ("students" and "they").
**In this class, students are always free to give their opinions without feeling like they are being judged.**
This passage maintains the present tense ("are") and uses the third person consistently ("students" and "they").
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