isaquemenezes's avatar
isaquemenezes

May 7, 2025

0
Reflection time.

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start being more intensives. People walking calmy at the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon. That's the perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities he gives.


O sol estava começando a se pôr, e as cores do céu ficaram cada vez mais intensas. As pessoas caminhavam tranquilamente pelas ruas, aproveitando o fim de tarde. Era o momento perfeito para refletir sobre o dia e as oportunidades que ele trouxe.

Corrections (6)
Correction Settings
Choose how corrections are organized

Only show inserted text
Word-level diffs are planned for a future update.

Reflection time.

Kindred Spirit

Reflection time.

That's the perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities he gives.

Reflection time.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

This sentence has been marked as perfect!

OPTION A: Time for Reflection OPTION B: A Moment's Reflection time. OPTION A: Time for Reflection OPTION B: A Moment's Reflection

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start being more intensives.


The sun was starting to rise, and the colours of the sky start becoming more intensivese . The sun was starting to rise, and the colours of the sky start becoming more intense .

‘Colours’ is the British spelling. ‘Colours’ is the American spelling. You could also say ‘The sun was starting to rise, and the colours of the sky started becoming more intense.’ This keeps the sentence in the past tense as you’re talking about something that has already happened. But both work, it just depends on your preference of which one you want to use.

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start beinged to become more intensivese. The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky started to become more intense.

The whole sentence should be in past tense. You could also use 'intense' as a verb by saying 'the colors of the sky started to intensify.'

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start beinged to become more intensivese. The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky started to become more intense.

"intensive" is an adjective for something like a course that is focused on a thing

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start bewere becoming more intensivese. The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky were becoming more intense.

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky start beinged to become more intensivese. The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky started to become more intense.

The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky started becoming more intensives. The sun was starting to rise, and the colors of the sky started becoming more intensive.

People walking calmy at the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon.


People walking calmly aton the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon. People walking calmly on the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon.

When talking about an object that you are standing on or moving on, the word ‘on’ is used. Other examples of using the word ‘on’: ‘I went on the treadmill today.’ ‘I was stood on the pavement.’ ‘I was sitting on that chair.’ ‘I was standing on a stool.’

People are walking calmly aton the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon. People are walking calmly on the road, enjoying the end of the afternoon.

People were walking calmly aton the roads/streets, enjoying the end of the afternoon. People were walking calmly on the roads/streets, enjoying the end of the afternoon.

"On the streets" is the term for like walking around an urban area with roads, "on the roads" implies (at least to me) being physically on the roads (and I assume you mean on the sidewalks)

People were walking calmly aton the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon. People were walking calmly on the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon.

People were walking calmly at the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon. People were walking calmly at the roads, enjoying the end of the afternoon.

You started with "was starting to rise", which means you're talking in the past tense, so you should keep the past tense throughout the paragraph.

People were walking calmly atlong the roads, enjoying the end of thlate afternoon. People were walking calmly along the roads, enjoying the late afternoon.

That's the perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities he gives.


This sentence has been marked as perfect!

That's the perfect moment to reflect abouton the day and the opportunities heit gives. That's the perfect moment to reflect on the day and the opportunities it gives.

Nouns don't have a gender in English, so 'the day' would just use 'it.' You can use gendered pronouns to refer to abstract nouns like 'the day,' but that will sound very literary, like you are saying they are alive.

That'It was the perfect moment to reflect abouton the day and the opportunities heit gives. It was the perfect moment to reflect on the day and the opportunities it gives.

I changed "that" to "it" because "it" sounds more natural (sorry for not giving a better explanation) Past tense for "it was/that was," since the rest of the text is told like a past event All inanimate nouns use the pronoun "it"

That'It was the perfect moment to reflect abouton the day and the opportunities he givesit provided. It was the perfect moment to reflect on the day and the opportunities it provided.

That' was the perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities heit giaves. That was the perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities it gave.

"That's" is short for "that is", but since we're in the past tense, it needs to be "That was"

That's thea perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities he givesthat exist. That's a perfect moment to reflect about the day and the opportunities that exist.

You need LangCorrect Premium to access this feature.

Go Premium