Complete the sentences with has/have gone or has/have been in the appropriate form.
I don't know where he ... . Perhaps he is at the university.
I feel much better now. My toothache ... .
I ... never ... to America.
James ... to the cinema three times this week.
Jane's not here. She ... to her father's for the weekend.
... you ... abroad this year?
Where ... the dog ... ?
I liked the visuals of the movie, it looks amazing, better than first one. There's lot more going on happening in the movie and it's just 1hour 50 mins long, so a lot of arcs are very rushed and convenient. There are scenes where one character tells the other that this is what they have to do, to get something, with no explanation or reasons. There's lot of, I mean lots of, exposition. Characters tell the stories, tell something they just know or feel and flashbacks or hallucinations kind-of stuff.
But this is a movie aimed to kids, and it's okay if the story wasn't technically sound. But for adults, this movie might be too silly at times.
About the songs, this time expectations were high, and I didn't like a single song from movie. There were times when I felt they just ripped off their own song from previous movie, let it go. Like last time, no song connected emotionally with the character, but they're well performed.
As such has two meanings. The first is quite difficult to explain, so let’s look at an example. I could say,
I’m an English teacher, and because I’m an English teacher I hate to see grammar mistakes.
Another way to say this, with the same meaning, is like this:
I’m an English teacher, and as an English teacher I hate to see grammar mistakes.
However, in this sentence I’m saying the words an English teacher twice. An easier way to say it is like this:
I’m an English teacher, and as such I hate to see grammar mistakes.
In this example, we use the word such to represent the words ‘an English teacher’, the second time it appears. Here are some similar examples.
You could say:
She’s an athlete, and as such she has to train very hard.
The film was a romance, and as such it had the usual happy ending.
We can also use as such to mean something like exactly in a sentence like this:
The shop doesn’t sell books as such, but it does sell magazines and newspapers.
Magazines and newspapers are similar to books, but they are not exactly books. Or,
He isn’t American as such, but he’s spent most of his life there.
Объяснение:
как то так