QUESTION IMAGE
Question
allowed
al-lowed uh-loud
middle english; anglo - french; old french aloeᵣ
verb
- given permission
- to let have
aloud
a - loud uh-loud
middle english
adverb
- with normal speaking voice
- vocally
which sentence uses aloud correctly?
○ krista is not aloud to eat food with artificial coloring
○ you are aloud only one late assignment this term
○ my parents aloud me to drive their new car this week.
○ jorge’s cell phone gave him driving directions aloud.
First, identify that "aloud" is an adverb meaning vocally/with speaking voice, while "allowed" is a verb meaning given permission/to let have. Check each option:
- "Krista is not aloud..." uses "aloud" incorrectly; it needs the verb "allowed" (permission context).
- "You are aloud only one..." uses "aloud" incorrectly; it needs the verb "allowed" (permission for late work).
- "My parents aloud me..." uses "aloud" incorrectly; it needs the verb "allowed" (giving permission to drive).
- "Jorge's cell phone gave him driving directions aloud" uses "aloud" correctly, as it describes the directions being spoken vocally, matching the adverb's definition.
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Jorge's cell phone gave him driving directions aloud