Watch the video and read the text. Answer the questions and put the answers in the table.
Water. It’s life’s most basic need. But there’s a water crisis in our world right now. Seriously, a crisis. Nearly one billion people live without clean drinking water. It’s happening all over the world, especially in developing areas of Sub-Saharan Africa, South-East Asia, and Latin America. It’s a water crisis because it starts with water. But water affects everything – education, health, poverty, and especially women and children. Let’s look at a family caught in the water crisis. It’s likely they live on less than a dollar a day. When they’re thirsty they can’t just turn on the faucet for a nice, cold glass of water – they don’t have a faucet. Instead, the women and children go off to collect water. Many walk up to three hours a day to the nearest swamp, pond, or river to gather water that’s been sitting out in the open – exposed to all kinds of germs. Time spent gathering water is time they can’t spend learning to read, write, earn an income, or take care of their family. Some women in Sub-Saharan Africa spend more time collecting water than any other activity they do in the day. And the walk isn’t just hard, it’s dangerous. The women are alone and burdened with 40 pounds
| How many times is the Present Continuous tense used in the text? | How many verbs are used in Passive voice in the text? | How many nouns are used in irregular plurals? | How many nouns are used in regular plurals? Do not count the same nouns. |
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