Répondre :
Bonjour,
Réponse :
Kate Sheppard (be) was the leading light of the New Zealand women's suffrage movement.
Born in Liverpool in 1847, Kate Malcolm (migrate) migrated
to Christchurch in her early twenties and in 1871 (marry) married
the merchant Walter Sheppard. In 1885 she (join) joined new Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU), which (advocate) advocated
women's suffrage as a way to fight for liquor prohibition.
For Kate Sheppard, suffrage quickly (become) became an objective.
Sheppard (travel) travelled the country, (write) wrote to newspapers and
(hold) held public meetings. Opposition (be) was fierce. As Wellington
resident Henry Wright (write)wrote men (think) thought women (be) were inferior to men.
In 1893, Kate Sheppard and her suffragettes (gather) gathered
the signatures of nearly 32,000 women to get the right to vote and
Parliament finally (vote) voted for the law. They (become)became
the first women ever to vote in the world. The news. (take) took
New Zealand by storm and (inspire) inspired suffrage movements all over the world.
Kate Sheppard (continue) continued to work at home and abroad for women's rights - from contraception to freedom from the corset. She (become) became the first newspaper editor.
Sheppard (outlive) outlived two husbands, her only son, and her only grandchild. She (die) died on 13 July 1934, a year after the first woman MP, Labour's Elizabeth McCombs, (enter) entered Parliament.
Explications :
verbes réguliers : on ajoute "-ed"
verbes irréguliers : on apprend par coeur ...
C'est long, mais ça finit toujours par rentrer !
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