<p>all the debate/research for one point...lol</p>
<p>i think "running and skating" is correct, cuz if you look at this sentence:
the zoo went into chaos, with monkeys flying and dancing around.</p>
<p>the two ing words are not of present tense, they are just participles (or so i think) so running and skating should be right. at least i hope so :)</p>
<p>I dunno...it just sounded wrong to me for some reason because conventional english usually doesn't switch from a discussion of and old village and its inhabitants to a phrase at the end like "with the strongest running and skating". I just felt like the pronoun "whom" modified the villages and appropriately indicated in the same tense that only the strongest villagers danced, skated, ran, partied, or whatever.</p>
<p>I just think it's funny that I've learned more about tenses and how they're used in Spanish 3 than I have in any English class, ever. :)</p>
<p><a href="http://www.longview.k12.wa.us/mmhs/wyatt/homework/grammar/aless9.html%5B/url%5D">http://www.longview.k12.wa.us/mmhs/wyatt/homework/grammar/aless9.html</a></p>
<p>Our church had a meeting, the purpose of which was to increase Sunday attendance.
I have many friends, none of whom drink.</p>
<p>Doesn't this conflict with what I just posted?</p>
<p>Ugh, ambiguous question. Ok, I'm done.</p>
<p>anyone remember the improving paragraph question with a colon in the answer? I don't think I put down the answer that had the colon in it.</p>
<p>Did anyone get 4 Math sections?</p>