Do something that someone else thinks is worth paying you 30 dollars for.
And here we see that if a mathematical problem can be open to interpretation, it is possible to obtain vastly different results. Both experts agree that something gets tripled every two days, fifteen triplings in total. The first, showing the importance of compounding, posits that the first dollar gets tripled to three dollars after two days and that total gets tripled two days later, and subsequent totals etc. The second thinks that a dollar gets tripled after two days and that process gets repeated. The first solution is more likely the author's original intent, but it's important to state problems unambiguously.
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The boy is such a nuisance that Bill thinks it unlikely that the boy's father would pay two thousand dollars to get him back.
Do something that someone else thinks is worth paying you 30 dollars for.
Tim thinks he will never get there. His wagon has no wheels.
Do some work for 10 minutes that someone thinks is worth paying you 5 dollars for.
huck really likes her and feels so bad for her, he tells her the truth about the conn men
Montag initially thinks he sees a person on the railroad tracks, but it turns out to be a mechanical hound.
The given sentence has got two clauses: First one is a main or principal clause, "Elena thinks" where the subject 'Elena' is first person singular which agrees with the verb 'thinks'. Second clause is a subordinate one: "five dollars are a lot of money". In this, 'five dollars', even though apparently a plural noun does work as singular noun, is the subject of verb 'are'. As 'a lot of money', the object of the verb 'are', is considered singular since the article 'a' makes it a singular entity, the verb 'are' does not agree with it. Actually the verb 'is' should be substituted for 'are' ("Elena thinks [that] five dollars is a lot money"). Hope this explanation clears the confusion.
# She works. # They work. # She lives. # They live. # They write. # He writes. # They go. # It goes. # It thinks. # We think. # She hears. # They hear. # He loves. # They love. # He runs.
M. Krempe thinks that Agrippa, Paracelsus, and Magnus are outdated, and pathetic, the same view his father expressed when Victor was fifteen.
Holden thinks it will cost him about ten dollars to get a prime table in the Lavender Room.
Roy initially thinks his father works in Orlando, but he later discovers that his father is actually a building site superintendent in Coconut Cove.
Mr. Tumnus initially thinks Lucy has come from Narnia when he meets her in the forest because he doesn't recognize her as a human from the outside world. He assumes she is a Narnian creature due to her appearance.