The second question:
The third question:
The fourth question:
The fifth question:
This part of the extended materials mainly examines the knowledge points of inverted sentences:
Due to the requirements of grammatical structure or rhetoric, it is often necessary to change the natural word order of sentences and put some sentence elements that should be placed after the subject before the subject. Such an inversion of word order may cause subtle or even obvious changes in the internal meaning of the sentence. Only by observing the causes of inverted sentences can we understand the meaning of sentences more accurately. In order to make a certain component of a sentence stand out, emphasis is also used, and inversion word order is often used for emphasis.
Subject and predicate are the core of a sentence, and there are two word orders between them. One is that the subject is called natural order); Before the predicate; Second, the subject followed by the predicate is called reverse order. There are complete inversion sentences and partial inversion sentences in inversion sentence order.
Complete inversion: Also called "complete inversion", it refers to putting all the predicates in a sentence before the subject. This structure is usually only used in the simple present tense and the simple past tense.
Partial inversion sentence (also called semi-inversion sentence): refers to a part of a predicate, such as an auxiliary verb or a modal verb, which is inverted before the subject, while the predicate verb remains unchanged. If the predicate in the sentence has no auxiliary verbs or modal verbs, you need to add auxiliary verbs do, does or did before the subject.