Get premium membership and access questions with answers, video lessons as well as revision papers.

Supply correct question tags to the following.

      

Supply correct question tags to the following.

i. Let us go home.........................................

ii. I am pleased with you................................

  

Answers


Martin
1) , shall we?

2) , aren’t I?
marto answered the question on May 24, 2019 at 07:23


Next: State ONE cause of variations in organisms that take place during gametogenesis.
Previous: Punctuate the following sentence.

View More English Questions and Answers | Return to Questions Index


Learn High School English on YouTube

Related Questions


  • Replace the underlined word with the correct phrasal verb. (Solved)

    Replace the underlined word with the correct phrasal verb.

    i. The class teacher promised to solve the problem.(sort)

    ii. He tried all his dirty tricks on us but he did not succeed .(come)

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Use the correct form of the word in brackets in the sentences that follow.(Solved)

    Use the correct form of the word in brackets in the sentences that follow.

    i. She ...........................the teachers advice in everything she did. (seek)

    ii. He has ......................... across the muddy river. (swim)

    iii. They............................. in amazement. (spin)

    iv. The senator was popular for his....................... .........character. (conscience)

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Rewrite the following sentences as instructed.(Solved)

    Rewrite the following sentences as instructed.

    (i) No one likes to be sick. (change the infinitive into a gerund)

    (ii) Many students do not benefit if they read late into the night. (Rewrite using present simple)

    (iii) My examination results were released only after I had cleared the fee balance.
    (Begin: Not until......)

    (iv) The teacher was annoyed by the students. He punished them severely. (rewrite using past participle)

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the poem bellow and answer the question that follows My grandmother by Elizabeth Jennings(Solved)

    Read the poem bellow and answer the question that follows
    My grandmother

    by Elizabeth Jennings

    She kept an antique shop-or it kept her.
    Among Apostle spoons and Bristol glasses,
    The faded silks, the heavy furniture,
    She watched her own reflection in the brass
    Salvers and silver bowls, as if to prove
    Polish was all, there was no need for love.

    And I remember how I once refused
    To go out with her, since I was afraid.
    It was perhaps a wish not to be used
    Like antique objects .Though she never said
    That she was hurt, I still could feel the guilt
    Of that refusal, guessing how she felt.

    Later, too frail to keep a shop, she put
    All her best things in one long, narrow room.
    The place smelt old, of things too long kept shut,
    The smell of absences where shadows come
    That can’t be polished. There was nothing then
    To give her own reflection back again.

    And when she died I felt no grief at all,
    Only the guilt of what I once refused.
    I walked into her room among the tall
    Sideboards and cupboards-things she never used
    But needed: and no finger-marks were there,
    Only the new dust falling through the air.

    a) Identify the persona in the above poem.

    b) In note form, summarize what each stanza is talking about

    c) Identify and briefly explain the use of any two images in the poem

    d) What does the persona feel towards the subject matter?

    e) What do the following lines mean in the poem?

    'too frail to keep a shop'
    'Only the new dust falling through the air'

    f) Describe the tone the persona uses in the poem above
    g) Explain the paradox in the line:

    -things she never used

    But needed

    h) Explain the persona’s sense of guilt?

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow(Solved)

    Read the passage below and answer the questions that follow.

    Terrorism is a real and urgent threat to nations and their interests a threat that could become perilous if terrorists
    acquire nuclear or biological weapons. The policies pursued by the bush administration have too often been
    counterproductive and self-defeating. In the name of an ‘offensive’ strategy, they have undermined the values and
    principles that made the United States a model for the world, dismayed cooperative nations around the world and
    jeopardize their cooperation with us, and provided ammunition for terrorist recruitment in the Middle East and
    beyond. To achieve our long-term objective we must go beyond narrow counterterrorism policies to embed
    counterterrorism in an overarching national security strategy designed to restore American leadership and respect
    in the world. This leadership must be based on a strong commitment to our values and to building the structures of
    international cooperation that are needed to only fight terrorists, but also to meet key challenges of our time:
    proliferation; climate change and energy security; the danger of pandemic disease; and the need to sustain a
    vibrant global economy that lifts the lives of people everywhere.
    We have to demonstrate that the model of liberty and tolerance embodied by the United States, are the enemy of
    these universal ambitions. We must pursue an integrated set of policies- on non-proliferation, energy and climate,
    global public health and economic development- which reflect recognition that in an independent world, the
    American people can be safe and prosperous only if others too share in these blessings. Our policies must
    demonstrate a respect for differences of history, culture and tradition, while remaining true to the principles of
    liberty embodied in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. This kind of enlightened self interest led others to
    rally to American leadership in the Cold War and offers the best hope for sustaining our leadership in the future.
    The world is filled with terrorist organizations. While the State Departments list of designated groups includes
    almost four dozen, numerous well known ones are still omitted because of issues related to designation process.
    Yet to many organizations, only one subset currently poses a serious and sustained threat to the United States and
    its allies: the Sunni jihadist organization known by the shorthand ‘al Qaeda’
    The group merits this special status because it is the only terrorist organization with the ambition and the
    capability to inflict genuinely catastrophic damage, which can provisionally be defined as attacks that claim
    causalities in the four digits or higher. The group is also unique in that it may eventually be able to carry out a
    campaign of repeated attacks that would have a paralyzing effect on American life and its institutions. Its ability to
    foil fundamental U.S. strategic goals-as it did in Iraq and as it threatens to do together with the Taliban in
    Afghanistan-has been amply demonstrated. As the turmoil in Pakistan has demonstrated, its capacity for upsetting
    the geopolitics of major regions of the world today is also unrivalled among non-state actors. The evidence
    provided by September 11, 2001 is sufficient to demonstrate the groups’ capability and its determination. Unlike
    most terrorist, it eschews incremental gains and seeks no part of a negotiation process; it seeks to achieve its
    primary ends, including mobilization of a large number of Muslims, through violence
    The Bush administration has fundamentally misunderstood the nature of the jihadist movement and its actions
    have made the threat considerably worse. The administration has hyped the threat and subordinated foreign
    security policy into the ‘Global War on Terror.’ It has relied on the wrong tools –principally the military- and
    vastly overemphasized tactics at the expense of strategy. To the extent that it has a strategy for reducing the appeal
    of jihad, it is the ‘freedom agenda’ which has backfired. Counter terrorism requires a shift away from a foreign
    and security policy that makes counterterrorism the prism through which everything is evaluated and decided. It
    requires a policy that must go beyond uncompromising efforts to do away with those who seek to harm us today.
    International engagement is essential in meeting this threat since it will ensure that new terrorist recruits do not
    come to take the place of those that have been defeated.
    (Adapted from ‘strategic Counterterrorism’ by Daniel Benjamin, Policy Paper Number 7, 2008)

    Questions

    1. In what ways were the policies pursued by the Bush administration counterproductive and self-defeating?

    2. What according to the author is the essence of American counterterrorism leadership?

    3. Make notes on what ought to be done to uphold American leadership?

    4. In the following sentence, replace the underlined expression with one word

    It requires a policy that must go beyond uncompromising efforts to do away with those who seek to harm us
    today.
    5. Why is Al-Qaida a unique group?

    6. What is needed in the fight against terrorism?

    7. In your opinion, what is the most dangerous aspect of terror a threat?

    8. Explain the meaning of each of the following words as used in the passage

    a) Embed

    b) Designated

    c) Foil

    d) Prism

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Complete the telephone conversation below between a parent and a student acting as a receptionist at her school.(Solved)

    Complete the telephone conversation below between a parent and a student acting as a receptionist at her school.

    Mrs. Wanjau: ………………………………………………………………………………
    Joan: Hallo. Yes, this is Makutano High School. How can I help you?
    Mrs. Wanjau: ………………………………………………………………………………….……
    ………………………………………………………………………………………………
    Joan: I am sorry the Principal is not in at the moment. Can you leave a message?
    Mrs. Wanjau:………………………………………………………………………………
    Joan: I am Joan, a form 4 student stepping in for the receptionist who has gone out shortly.
    Mrs. Wanjau: ………………………………………………………………………………
    Joan: Yes once in a while students of office practice and typing are allowed to step in for the receptionist as part of
    their practice.
    Mrs. Wanjau: ………………………………………………………………………………………
    ………………………………………………………………………………………………
    Joan: Thank you very much. I will let the Principal know that you will call tomorrow.

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the following poem and then answer the questions that follow. The Bride.(Solved)

    Read the following poem and then answer the questions that follow.

    The Bride.

    Why do you wear that dress so white?
    Why do you wear that veil so light?
    Why do your young eyes shine so bright?
    Is it your wedding?
    I wear dress and veil to show
    That gladly to my love I go
    My young eyes shine because I know
    It is my wedding.

    (i) Identify the rhyme scheme of this poem?

    (ii) Using illustrations show how rhythm has been achieved in the poem.

    (iii) Would you use the rising or the falling intonation in reading line 3 in stanza one in this poem? Give reason.

    (iv) How would you say the last line of the second stanza?

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Fill in the following cloze test.(Solved)

    Fill in the following cloze test.
    CLOZE TEST 10 MARKS
    There is this bizarre preoccupation with 1………………………… class among us such
    2…………………………. what happened at Langa’ta was bound to happen. Our greed 3………………………
    wealth and standing considers nothing sacred, nothing immoral, nothing offensive to everyone, which is why
    some people were wondering why the children were protesting 4……………………… they were supposed to be
    in class! Our preoccupation with private academies for our children is partly what made the “private developer”
    target public school 5…………………….., only that for the “developer’”, the police who came to secure the
    interests of one against many used tear gas on children.
    If most of us decided to 6………………………. our children to public schools and worked collectively to make
    them better, chances are this particular “private developer” and many 7……………………….. would avoid
    school land for fear of reaction. But many of us have 8………………………. to this mess by avoiding public
    facilities— schools, hospitals 9………………………. even parks — because using them does not speak
    10……………………..of our social standing.

    Date posted: May 24, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the following narrative and then answer the questions that follow(Solved)

    Read the following narrative and then answer the questions that follow.

    Once upon a time there lived a man who was very old and as poor as a church mouse. The old man his living by
    cutting trees and burning charcoal. He would then sell to the villagers for small amount of money. Business was
    very low because they were very few, poor and as a result he could go home hungry. Despite this, the old man
    never despaired but worked even One day the old man woke up very early in the morning and headed to the forest where he worked. Suddenly he
    heard a voice, “who is that who wants to destroy our house?” The old man was so scared that the axe fell down
    from his hand. He answered with a shaky voice. “It’s me a poor old man and I have not eaten since yesterday. I
    have come to look for trees, burn them into charcoal and sell.” The voice said sympathetically, “Go to that cave
    inside you will find a pot. Take it home and instruct it to cook food. He rushed to the cave and found the post as
    he had been told. He hurriedly took it home. On reaching home he repeated what he had been told. “Pot cook
    food” and Alas! There was plenty of food. He ate and ate until he could eat no more.
    The man was very happy and forgot his old business. This continued for months. Then one day the pot did not
    cook the food. He carefully checked the pot for cracks but he found none. After a thorough check he saw a tiny
    hole at the bottom of the pot. He
    “Oh dear vulture,” said the hen with confusion and great regret, “forgive me; I am so sorry for this my negligence.
    I really intended to return you razor very soon, but I put it in my leather bag, and forgot it completely. Let me go
    and take it; you will have it in half a minute.”
    “Yes, I know you are forgetful creature, but look at the damage you have caused me. You have deprived me of
    my sustenance for many days. Mind you, if you have lost it, you will pay for it very dearly,” said the vulture. The
    hen rushed into the hut to fetch the razor. She plunged her hand into the leather bag, alas! It was empty; there was
    no razor in it. She was very shocked at the unpleasant discovery. She started searching on the floor to see if by
    chance it had dropped from the bag but there was not finding it. She looked under the children’s bed, near the
    firestones, in the store; but there was no sign of it. Tired and defeated, she came out and imploring, said, “O dear
    friend and master, I can’t find it. Have mercy on me! I will search better. I am ready to demolish my hut
    altogether, and search diligently until I find and return it to you.”
    “I told you to be very careful, and I repeat again, I want my razor back! But mind, I want the very one I gave, and
    no substitute!”

    The poor hen spent all the day searching, but nothing came to light. She demolished her hut, and started searching
    in the roof grass among the rubble of the walls, between the poles, in the ashes and even in the rubbish pit, but
    nothing was found.
    The following day the vulture came to see the results of the searching. He found the hen still scratching the ground
    among a heap of dry grass and ox dung; but no razor was yet discovered.
    “I am very sorry, dear hen,” said the vulture, “but I can’t wait any longer without compensation for my razor. For
    today you must give me a chicken. Tomorrow I will return and see what has happened in the mean time.
    So the vulture flew away with a chicken gripped within its talons under its breast. The following day he returned
    to the hen. She was still scratching the ground; but she could not see any razor. Another chicken went with the
    vulture. And the same happened in the following days until today. That is the reason why the hen is always
    scratching the ground, and the vulture snooping on chickens even in our days. The hen is still searching for the
    razor, and the vulture compensating himself for its loss.

    (i) With reasons for your answer, categorize the above narrative

    (ii) Give and illustrate any character trait of ‘the hen’

    (iii)Identify and illustrate two features of style characteristic or oral narratives present in this narrative

    (iv) What preparations would you put in place if you intend to carry out a field study in this genre?

    (v) Highlight the problems you are likely to encounter during the field study and propose suitable solutions to
    them

    (vi) What moral lesson do you learn from this oral narrative? Give a reason for your answer

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the passage below then answer the questions that follow.(Solved)

    Read the passage below then answer the questions that follow.
    Problem drinkers and alcoholics pay severe penalties for their drinking. It has been estimated that alcoholics are
    likely to die ten to twelve years sooner than non-alcoholics half die before the age of fifty, which is one reason
    there are so few elderly alcoholics. The mortality rate (that is, the number of persons per 100,000 who die each
    year) among alcoholics is more than two and a half times higher than that of the general population.
    Alcoholics often die violent circumstances; serious accidents, homicide, and suicide are not uncommon. This,
    together with the physical deterioration accompanying alcoholism, helps explain the limits on life expectancy. No
    one really knows how many deaths are directly attributed to drinking, and all such statistics are estimates. One
    reason for our limited knowledge is that many physicians do not report alcoholism as the main cause of death out
    of concern for the feelings of the family of the deceased.
    Research on the physiological effects of alcoholism has increased in the last few years. Heavy drinking is known
    to be associated with various types of cancer, particularly among persons who also use tobacco. Alcohol abuse
    also increases the probability of hypertension, stroke and coronary heart disease. Alcoholics frequently suffer
    illness and death from cirrhosis of the liver, a disease in which the liver becomes fatty, scarred, and incapable of
    functioning normally. In large urban areas, cirrhosis is the fourth most common cause of death among men aged
    twenty-five to forty-five.
    Alcohol affects the brain, often permanently damaging the mental functioning of alcoholics. Drinking may reduce
    the number of living cells in the brain. Since brain cells do not grow back, alcoholics may suffer from organic
    psychosis (a mental illness traceable to brain damages), loss of memory, and poor physical and mental coordination. One out of four persons who are admitted to mental hospitals are diagnosed as alcoholics and 40
    percent of all admissions are alcohol related. Many of the alcoholic inmates are unlikely to recover.
    The unborn children of female alcoholics are subject to harm from drinking in what is called foetal alcohol
    syndrome.
    Because alcohol tends to be a substitute for a balanced diet, alcoholics are often malnourished. Consequently, the
    infants of alcoholic women are likely to be less healthy and less well developed than other babies. Moreover,
    when a pregnant woman drinks, so, in effect, does her foetus. The new born children of alcoholic women may die
    shortly after birth unless they are medically treated from the shock to their systems for suddenly being cut off
    from alcohol. Furthermore, the impact of alcohol on the woman and her foetus is a major cause of birth defects
    and originally based mental deficiency among the newborn. The effects of foetal alcohol syndrome on the
    children of female alcoholics are usually chronic and may be permanently disabling.
    Clearly, it is not too much of an exaggeration to say that alcohol kills and mains people. When abused, alcohol is
    a highly dangerous drug.
    Questions
    (i) What are the major causes of death among alcoholics?
    (ii) Which reason does the writer give as to why physicians do not report alcoholic related deaths?
    (iii) One out of four persons who are admitted to mental hospitals are diagnosed as alcoholics. (Rewrite using a
    few………………)
    (iv) Alcoholics often die under violent circumstances…. (add a question tag)
    (v) What is the attitude of the writer towards people who abuse alcohol
    (vi) Explain what the following sentence means. Alcohol tends to be a substrate for a balanced diet
    (vii) Make notes on the effects of alcohol to expectant mothers and their children
    (viii) Supply a suitable title for the passage
    (ix) Explain the meanings of the following words and phrases as used in the passage
    a) Attributable
    b) Scarred
    c) Statistics

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Your former primary school has invited you to give a talk on how to improve performance. You decide to focus your talk on the value of...(Solved)

    Your former primary school has invited you to give a talk on how to improve performance. You decide to focus
    your talk on the value of listening skills. Write down three points on how you would ensure the listening is
    effective

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Identify the intonation that would be present in the following sentences (Solved)

    Identify the intonation that would be present in the following sentences.
    (i) What deal did the two agree on?
    (ii) Did you see the summary?

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the passage below and fill in each blank space with an appropriate word(Solved)

    Read the passage below and fill in each blank space with an appropriate word

    Alcohol impacts people and societies in different (1)__________________ and is determined by the (2)
    _________________ of alcohol consumed, the pattern of drinking, and, on rare occasions, the quality of alcohol
    (3)_________________. Alcohol is a psychoactive substance and its harmful use is known (4)
    _________________________ have dependence - producing properties and cause (5) ____________________
    than 200 diseases among drinkers as well as devastating effects to innocent victims such as unborn children.
    Drinking alcohol (6)_______________________ pregnancy can lead to miscarriage, preterm birth, still birth,
    spontaneous abortion, and contribute to a range of disabilities known (7) ____________________ foetal alcohol
    spectrum disorders (FASD). FASD is an umbrella term (8) _______________________ to an array of conditions
    involving impairments of the growth and development of the central (9)______________________ system
    caused by (10) ________________ intake during pregnancy.
    (Adapted from DN2 - The Daily Nation 19th May 2015)

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • The Novel WitiIhimaera, The Whale Rider. Each and every activity carried out among the Whangara community is carried out in utter sacredness. Discuss the validity of this statement...(Solved)

    The Novel
    WitiIhimaera, The Whale Rider.
    Each and every activity carried out among the Whangara community is carried out in utter sacredness. Discuss
    the validity of this statement drawing your illustrations from The Whale Ride

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Combine the following pairs of sentences using a participle(Solved)

    Combine the following pairs of sentences using a participle

    (i) The street Urchin was clobbered. He cried out for mercy

    (ii) The police surrounded the gangsters’ house. He shot in the air to scare them away

    (iii) Jeff was bored of my nagging. He moved out of the house

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Choose the correct pronoun from the brackets to complete the following sentences(Solved)

    Choose the correct pronoun from the brackets to complete the following sentences

    i. Mr. Kamau and _______________ visited us last year. (he/him/himself)

    ii. John offered Njoroge and ________________some biscuits. (I/me)

    iii. Do you think that he is wiser than _________________. (I/me

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the narrative below and answer the questions that follow.(Solved)

    Read the narrative below and answer the questions that follow.
    Long ago, there was famine in Gikuyu land. This famine had made the cows and goats to die. Only human
    beings were left and even them, it could be seen that they were not going to live much longer. Now the people
    asked themselves, “What shall we do?” It was decided that the most beautiful girl, one called Wanjiru should be
    sacrificed to god so that the rain could fall. She was brought to a place where there was a big river. She started to
    sing:
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    My father said I should be lost. I should be lost
    My mother said I should be lost. I should be lost
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    She went down on her knee, she sang:
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    My father said I should be lost, I should be lost
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    The water reached the waist, she sang
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    My father said I should be lost, I should be lost
    My mother said I should be lost, I should be lost
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    The water reached the neck, she sang
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    My father said I should be lost, I should be lost
    My mother said I should be lost, I should be lost
    Rain fall and make this ridge green
    Make this ridge green
    The head went in
    Very heavy rains fell on this land. The grass grew, a lot of food and the people began to feel better. Now where Wanjiru went
    she found her people who had died before her. These people had a lot of cows and goats. Now they asked her what she would
    like. She said she wanted cows and goats. She was given many goats and cows and then she was told to lie down in a place.
    When she woke up she found that she had returned back to her people. She woke up at a place where there was a river and
    she had her cows and goats. Now when the people saw her they rejoiced greatly.
    The story ends there.
    Adapted from: The Oral Literature of the Gikuyu by WanjikuKabira and KaregaMutahi.

    (a) Why do you think this community makes the choice of a beautiful girl such as Wanjiru to sacrifice to god so as to receive
    rain?
    (b) Which functions does this song serve in this narrative?
    (c) Describe one character trait of the villagers in this narrative.
    (d) In point form, list how events follow each other in this story.
    (e) Identify and explain two features of oral narration employed in this narrative.
    (f) Identify two elements of fantasy in this story.
    (g) Describe Wanjiru’stone in the song.
    (h) Which social/cultural practices of the Agikuyu are brought out in this narrative.
    (i) What does this phrase mean? 'My father said I should be lost.'
    (j) Answer the following question according to the instructions given in brackets.
    Very heavy rains fell on this land. (Write in the passive form).

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Read the passage below and then answer the questions that follow(Solved)

    Read the passage below and then answer the questions that follow

    Society has failed and parents have not played their role fully in raising their children. This is according to
    Jeff Ngari, a counseling psychologist and a deacon with the Reformed Catholic Church. Jeff says the issue of
    teenage mothers is so big that it should be considered a cry for help. He adds that today, children lack the
    guidance they require when it comes to having independent social interactions.
    “The idea is not to block them from forming their own relationships, but to make them understand what it
    means to be in a relationship, especially with the opposite sex, and how far this relationship should go,” says Jeff.
    And just like the rest of society, parents have not been spared by the wave of moral decay and thus, according to
    Jeff, they have failed as role models for their children. Due to this, many teenagers are picking up social ills from
    their parents- the very people they are supposed to look up to.
    “For instance, a teenager who has seen his or her mother repeatedly sleep out or come home in the wee hours
    of the morning will most likely be excited about staying out late out of curiosity,” he says , adding, “this is
    happening to most of our homes today.” Jeff says many parents are engaging carelessly in extra-marital
    relationships that leave very little to the imagination of their children, and this is likely to be seen as a normal
    thing by children, especially teenagers. As a result, there are many avenues through which teenagers can explore
    the issue of sex and the greatest worry is that girls need to be rescued.
    “The boy invariably walks away scot-free as the school, society and church turn their full attention on the girl
    and judge her,” he says adding that it is one of the issues that the Reformed Catholic Church is trying to address so
    that children such as these can be recognized instead of being neglected. “This is not to say that teenage pregnancy
    is right, but it is a social ill that must be fought from family level, within the school setting, in the church and the
    wider society,” he says.
    Most teenage mothers experience rejection and abuse by their families, friends and wider community,
    including the church. “No wonder these girls abandon their babies either in toilets or litter bins. The effects of
    rejection can be fatal- rejection by society is the worst thing anybody can suffer. It kills from within. That is why
    teenage motherhood is a cry for help and family support is very important, as the result is children giving birth,
    and trying to raise babies
    Jeff notes that without any know-how, finances or proper structures, teenage mothers face a very big
    challenge. Add to this the stigma that comes with being regarded as immoral. “Yet we know that not all teenage
    pregnancy is consensual. There are cases of grown men preying on innocent girls.” Abortion or an attempt to
    carry it out complicates an already complicated situation, especially if crude methods are used. Besides, there is a
    post-abortion self-stigma that does not go away.
    “In the course of my career, I have met mature women who tell me that they had abortions when they were
    very young, and they still feel guilty decades later. Some even go to the extent of saying, ‘My firstborn would be
    this or that age.’ It is very painful.”
    In Kenya, four in every ten women who die from unsafe abortions are adolescents; 70% of adolescents engage
    in high-risk unprotected sex. This is according to a research paper presented by Dr. Richard O. Muga of the
    National Co-ordinating Agency for Population and Development, Nairobi- Kenya, 2006. The alarming figures are
    the reason why Margaret Muyanga, a counseling psychologist says open communication between teenagers and
    parents can be instrumental in curbing any post- pregnancy abortion or even worse, suicidal tendencies.

    a) Explain how parents have contributed to the moral decay of their children.
    b) Give the factors leading to teenage pregnancy.
    c) What is the consequence of the rejection and abuse that teenage mothers experience?
    d) In not more than 50 words, summarize the consequences of teenage pregnancy.
    - Rough draft
    - Final draft
    e) What is the writer’s attitude towards parenting?
    f) Explain the meaning of the following words as used in the passage;
    Scot-free

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • Complete the following conversation appropriately (Solved)

    Complete the following conversation appropriately

    Delphine: (Telephone rings), Hello, …………………………………………………………

    Trevor ...……………………………………………………………………………………
    Delphine: I’m sorry. Ms Oketch is in a conference out of town. Could you kindly leave a message for her?

    Trevor: ………………………..……………………………………………………………

    Delphine: Sorry, I didn’t get the last two digits of the number.

    Trevor: ……………………………………………………………………………………..

    Delphine: ……………………………………………………………………………………..
    Trevor: Correct.

    Delphine ………………………………………………………………………..……………

    Trevor: Yes, let him know I’ll be expecting his call.

    Delphine: Okay, goodbye.

    Trevor: ……………………….…………………………………………………………….

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)

  • For each of the following words, write two sentences to bring out two different meanings. i) Polish ii) Intimate(Solved)

    For each of the following words, write two sentences to bring out two different meanings.
    i) Polish
    ii) Intimate

    Date posted: May 23, 2019.  Answers (1)