QUESTION IMAGE
Question
read the introduction to milas personal narrative, \true lessons.\
\smile, mila! smile!\ when my little sister was almost three years old, she would wol this every day when i wol in the door from school.
fill in the blanks in order.
repeated . . . walk
repeat . . . walked
repeated . . . walked
repeat . . . walk
<pre_analysis>
{
"quality": "clear",
"question_count": 1,
"skills_matched": [
"direct_cot",
"multiple_choice_formatter",
"explain_then_answer",
"tutor",
"mastery_adaptive_brevity"
],
"needs_drawing": false,
"concepts_used": [
"Verb Tense Consistency"
],
"new_concepts": [
"Modal Verbs",
"Subordinate Clauses"
],
"current_concepts": [
"Verb Tense Consistency",
"Modal Verbs",
"Subordinate Clauses"
]
}
</pre_analysis>
<reasoning>
Analyze the first blank with the modal verb
Using the Verb Tense Consistency knowledge point
The first blank follows the modal auxiliary verb "would" in the phrase "she would [WOL] this every day." In English grammar, a modal verb must be followed directly by the base form (bare infinitive) of the main verb. Therefore, the correct verb form for the first blank is "repeat" rather than the past-tense form "repeated."
Analyze the second blank for tense consistency
The sentence describes a habitual action in the past ("When my little sister was almost three years old..."). The subordinate time clause "when I [WOL] in the door from school" must maintain this past-tense context. Therefore, the verb in the second blank must be in the simple past tense, which is "walked."
Combine the findings to select the correct option
Combining the two grammatically correct forms:
- First blank: "repeat" (base form after "would")
- Second blank: "walked" (simple past tense for historical consistency)
This corresponds to the pair "repeat . . . walked."
</reasoning>
<answer>
<mcq-option>repeated . . . walk</mcq-option>
<mcq-correct>repeat . . . walked</mcq-correct>
<mcq-option>repeated . . . walked</mcq-option>
<mcq-option>repeat . . . walk</mcq-option>
</answer>
<post_analysis>
{
"subject": "Others",
"question_type": "Multiple Choice",
"knowledge_point": [
"Others",
"English Language Arts",
"Grammar and Mechanics"
]
}
</post_analysis>
Snap & solve any problem in the app
Get step-by-step solutions on Sovi AI
Photo-based solutions with guided steps
Explore more problems and detailed explanations
<pre_analysis>
{
"quality": "clear",
"question_count": 1,
"skills_matched": [
"direct_cot",
"multiple_choice_formatter",
"explain_then_answer",
"tutor",
"mastery_adaptive_brevity"
],
"needs_drawing": false,
"concepts_used": [
"Verb Tense Consistency"
],
"new_concepts": [
"Modal Verbs",
"Subordinate Clauses"
],
"current_concepts": [
"Verb Tense Consistency",
"Modal Verbs",
"Subordinate Clauses"
]
}
</pre_analysis>
<reasoning>
Analyze the first blank with the modal verb
Using the Verb Tense Consistency knowledge point
The first blank follows the modal auxiliary verb "would" in the phrase "she would [WOL] this every day." In English grammar, a modal verb must be followed directly by the base form (bare infinitive) of the main verb. Therefore, the correct verb form for the first blank is "repeat" rather than the past-tense form "repeated."
Analyze the second blank for tense consistency
The sentence describes a habitual action in the past ("When my little sister was almost three years old..."). The subordinate time clause "when I [WOL] in the door from school" must maintain this past-tense context. Therefore, the verb in the second blank must be in the simple past tense, which is "walked."
Combine the findings to select the correct option
Combining the two grammatically correct forms:
- First blank: "repeat" (base form after "would")
- Second blank: "walked" (simple past tense for historical consistency)
This corresponds to the pair "repeat . . . walked."
</reasoning>
<answer>
<mcq-option>repeated . . . walk</mcq-option>
<mcq-correct>repeat . . . walked</mcq-correct>
<mcq-option>repeated . . . walked</mcq-option>
<mcq-option>repeat . . . walk</mcq-option>
</answer>
<post_analysis>
{
"subject": "Others",
"question_type": "Multiple Choice",
"knowledge_point": [
"Others",
"English Language Arts",
"Grammar and Mechanics"
]
}
</post_analysis>