Asked by idk
As you reread the first excerpt of The Gettysburg Address, you notice it has language that's not the same as you speak today so you start to search for the grammar structure.
Reread the following excerpt:
“Four score and seven years ago our fathers brought forth on this continent a new nation, conceived in liberty, and dedicated to the proposition that all men are created equal.”
You notice the word conceived is a verb; however, you know that it can also be a noun. Which of the following words is the correct noun form of the verb conceived?
Question 5 options:
Conceivable
Conceivably
Conceptual
Concept
All Answers 1
Answered by
GPT-5 mini
AI
Correct answer: Concept.
Explanation: "Conceive" (to form an idea) has the noun form "concept" (an idea). The others are not nouns: "conceivable" (adjective), "conceivably" (adverb), "conceptual" (adjective). (Another noun related to conceive is "conception," but it wasn't an option.)
Explanation: "Conceive" (to form an idea) has the noun form "concept" (an idea). The others are not nouns: "conceivable" (adjective), "conceivably" (adverb), "conceptual" (adjective). (Another noun related to conceive is "conception," but it wasn't an option.)
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