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i-ready determine the meanings of related words in a word family make a…

Question

i-ready determine the meanings of related words in a word family make a word that tells what you did when you put something in the wrong place. image shows three boxes: left box with yellow strip and em below, middle box (yellow) with place, right box with yellow strip and ed below

Explanation:

Brief Explanations

To form a word meaning "put something in the wrong place", we analyze word parts. The root related to placing is combined with a prefix/suffix. The left part "em" (forming "misplace" - but here with "em" and "ed", wait, actually "misplace" is wrong, wait, the parts: left is "em"? Wait, no, the correct word for "put in wrong place" is "misplace" but here the parts are "em", "place", "ed". Wait, no, maybe "mislocate"? No, the given parts: left box has "em" (maybe "mis" but no, the left yellow and "em" below, middle "place", right "ed". Wait, maybe "mislace"? No. Wait, the correct structure: to make a past - tense verb for putting in wrong place. The word is "misplaced"? No, the parts: left is "em" (maybe "mis" is not here). Wait, the left box's yellow part and "em" below, middle "place", right "ed". Wait, maybe "emplaced" no. Wait, the problem is about word family. The action of putting in wrong place: the word is "misplaced" but the parts here: left is "em" (maybe "mis" is a typo? No, the left box has "em" below the yellow. Wait, maybe "mislace" no. Wait, the correct word from the parts: left (yellow + em) + place + (yellow + ed). Wait, the left part: if we take "mis" but no, the left has "em". Wait, maybe "emplaced" is not. Wait, the intended word is "misplaced" but the parts here: maybe the left is "mis" (but written as "em"? No, maybe a typo. Wait, the correct answer is "misplaced" but with the given parts: left "em" (maybe "mis" is miswritten as "em"? No, maybe "em" + "place" + "ed" = "emplaced" no. Wait, no, the meaning is "put in wrong place", so the word is "misplaced". But the parts: left is "mis" (but shown as "em"), middle "place", right "ed". Maybe a typo, but the correct word is "misplaced", but with the given parts, combining left (em? No, mis) + place + ed. Wait, maybe the left is "mis" and the "em" is a mistake. So the word is "misplaced". But according to the given boxes: left box (yellow + em), middle "place", right (yellow + ed). So combining them: "em" + "place" + "ed" = "emplaced" no. Wait, no, the correct meaning is "put in wrong place", so the word is "misplaced". Maybe the left box is "mis" (not "em"). Assuming that, the word is "misplaced". But with the given "em", maybe it's a mistake. Alternatively, maybe "mislace" no. Wait, the correct answer is "misplaced", so the word is formed by "mis" (left) + "place" (middle) + "ed" (right). So the left part is "mis" (maybe "em" is a typo), middle "place", right "ed". So the word is "misplaced".

Answer:

misplaced (formed by combining the prefix "mis" (assuming the left "em" is a typo for "mis"), the root "place", and the suffix "ed" to form the past - tense verb meaning "put something in the wrong place")