He taught me this word

Предложения:
taught
teach


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать грубую лексику.


На основании Вашего запроса эти примеры могут содержать разговорную лексику.

научил меня этому

научила меня этому

научил меня этой

учил меня этому

учила меня этому

меня этому научили

меня этому научил

меня этому учила

этому не учил

Этому меня научили

научили меня этому

научить нас этому

научили меня этой


I’m forever thankful that my roommate taught me this and then demanded I join in.



Я всегда благодарен, что мой сосед по комнате научил меня этому, а затем потребовал, чтобы я присоединился.


He was my mentor, the one who taught me this sport.


Mena, my counsellor, had taught me this.


My mom taught me this style of leadership and it has driven me through my career.



Моя мама научила меня этому стилю управления, и я пронес его через всю свою карьеру.


My cousin’s taught me this new thing.


Russell taught me this game when I was still human.


The world has taught me this and so much more.


Living in Vigo taught me this.


When I tell you the lady who taught me this illusion actually died performing it, you’ll understand the seriousness of the dangers involved.



Женщина, которая научила меня этому трюку, действительно погибла, выполняя его, из чего вы сделаете вывод, насколько серьезна опасность.


I will look upon him who shall have taught me this art even as one of my parents.



Я буду смотреть на того, кто научил меня этому Искусству (врачевания), как на одного из своих родителей.


Old Frogmen taught me this a few years ago.


A Polish dude taught me this trick.


My brother Lawrence taught me this game.


Dear 1919, it is you that has taught me this cry!


It was Josh Kopelman, who taught me this lesson.


My Grandpa Bernie taught me this.


The master educator who taught me this was Phil Campbell and his term for it is Sprint 8.



Мастером, который научил меня этому, был Фил Кэмпбелл, который называет тренировку такого типа «Sprint 8».


A colleague taught me this game.


My mom taught me this one, and it still works.


My years of experience in the business world have taught me this balance is crucial for a healthy, productive working environment.



Мой многолетний опыт работы в корпоративном мире, научил меня, что баланс имеет решающее значение для здоровой, продуктивной рабочей среды.

Ничего не найдено для этого значения.

Результатов: 141. Точных совпадений: 141. Затраченное время: 128 мс

Documents

Корпоративные решения

Спряжение

Синонимы

Корректор

Справка и о нас

Индекс слова: 1-300, 301-600, 601-900

Индекс выражения: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

Индекс фразы: 1-400, 401-800, 801-1200

A. Choose the correct word or phrase.

1   The prime minister was / has criticised for his recent actions.

2   When I walked past the Wilsons’ house, their new sofa was / has being delivered.

3   Our teacher was / has told us to take our favourite book to school tomorrow.

4   I think my mobile was / has been stolen!

5   Jonathan was / has chosen to play the lead role in the school play.

6   I’m sleeping downstairs because my bedroom is being painted / has been painting.

7   This picture was / has probably taken during the winter.

8   Your essays must be / have handed in on Friday morning.

9   Someone was / has left their wallet on the floor.

10   Did you hear about the bank being / having robbed?

11   Treasure Island was / has written by Robert Louis Stevenson.

12   It was a real shock when my dad was / has fired from his job.

13   The Vikings had visited America before it was / has discovered by Columbus.

14   When we got to the airport, we learned that our flight was / had been delayed.

15   Was / Has your ticket for the concert tomorrow paid for by you or your parents?

Answer

1 was   2 was   3 has   4 has   5 was

6 is being painted   7 was   8 be

9 has   10 being   11 was   12 was

13 was   14 had   15 Was

B. Complete using the correct passive form of the verbs in brackets.

1   The Earth ………………………… (hold) by the gravity of the Sun and orbits around it.

2   The first feature-length comedy film ………………………… (create) by Charlie Chaplin.

3   The award for best video ………………………… (present) later this evening.

4   By the time you read this, I ………………………… (arrest) for murder.

5   I don’t know whether our tests ………………………… (mark) yet or not.

6   Radio waves ………………………… (discover) by Marconi.

7   You wouldn’t think it to look at him now, but Jack ………………………… (bully) when he was at school.

8   Your application ………………………… (consider) and we will let you know was soon as we’ve made a decision.

 The roof of the car can ………………………… (lower) by pressing this button here.

10   Our tent ………………………… (blow) over in the night by the wind.

11   Chess ………………………… (play) for around two thousand years now.

12   Two men ………………………… (question) at this moment by police in connection with the burglary.

Answer

1 is held   2 was created

3 is going to/will be presented

4 will have been arrested

5 have been marked

6 were discovered

7 was bullied

8 is being considered

9 be lowered   10 was blown

11 has been played

12 are being questioned

C. Write sentences in the passive.

1   Our car / service / a mechanic / at the moment.

     ……………………………………………….

2   A man / shoot / an air gun / outside the petrol station last night.

     ……………………………………………….

3   Gunpowder / invent / the Chinese.

     ……………………………………………….

4   At the surgery yesterday, I / examine / Dr Peterson / and I / give / a prescription.

     ……………………………………………….

5   I went to see it because I / tell / it was a good film / all my friends.

     ……………………………………………….

6   This photograph / take / my grandfather.

     ……………………………………………….

 It looked like the window / break / a hammer / some time before.

     ……………………………………………….

 Our dog / give / an injection / a special syringe / the vet.

     ……………………………………………….

 The winning goal in last night’s match / score / Donatello / a brilliant free kick.

     ……………………………………………….

10   Your cheque / send / last Friday and / should / deliver / to you tomorrow.

     ……………………………………………….

Answer

 Our car is being serviced by a mechanic at the moment.

2   A man was shot with an air gun outside the petrol station last night.

3   Gunpowder was invented by the Chinese.

4   At the surgery yesterday, I was examined by Dr Peterson and I was given a prescription.

5   I went to see it because I had been told it was a good film by all my friends.

6   This photograph was taken by my grandfather.

7   It looked like the window had been broken with a hammer some time before.

8   Our dog was given an injection with a special syringe by the vet.

9   The winning goal in last night’s match was scored by Donatello with a brilliant free kick.

10   Your check was sent last Friday and should be delivered to you tomorrow.

D. Rewrite using the phrase given.

1   They have been building the new road for a long time now. (under construction)

     ……………………………………………….

2   They had been training the horse for the race for over a year. (in training)

     ……………………………………………….

3   They have been discussing the issue in Parliament. (under discussion)

     ……………………………………………….

4   They had been observing the criminal for the past two weeks. (under observation)

     ……………………………………………….

5   They have been using this plane for over 25 years now. (in use)

     ……………………………………………….

6   They have been developing the Cyborg D423 robot for over ten years. (in development)

     ……………………………………………….

Answer

1   The new road has been under construction for a long time now.

2   The horse had been in training for the race for over a year.

3   The issue has been under discussion in Parliament.

4   The criminal had been under observation for the past two weeks.

5   This plane has been in use for over 25 years now.

6   The Cyborg D423 robot has been in development for over ten years.

E. Rewrite in the passive starting with the words given.

1   People say that Bali is a beautiful island.

     It ………………………………………………

2   People generally think that life won’t be found on Mars.

     It ………………………………………………

3   It is generally said that Christmas is too commercialised.

     Christmas ………………………………………………

4   People often argue that prison doesn’t work.

     It ………………………………………………

5   People have suggested that the school should start to produce a magazine.

     It ………………………………………………

6   People say that crocodile tastes like squid.

     Crocodile ………………………………………………

7   It is said that the Vikings discovered America before Columbus.

     The Vikings ………………………………………………

8   People think that heart disease is caused by eating the wrong things.

     Heart disease ………………………………………………

Answer

1   is said that Bali is a beautiful island.

2   is generally thought that life won’t be found on Mars.

3   is generally said to be too commercialised.

4   is often argued that prison doesn’t work.

5   has been suggested that the school start to produce a magazine.

6   is said to taste like squid.

7   are said to have discovered America before Columbus.

8   is thought to be caused by eating the wrong things.

F. Choose the correct answer.

 We …………… a swimming pool put in this week.

      A   get      are having

      C   have     D   have got

 Why don’t you get a doctor …………… at your arm?

      A   to look      looked

      C   look     D   be looking

 My teeth were a little yellow so I …………… by the dentist.

      A   had cleaned them

      B   have them cleaned

      C   was cleaned them

      D   had them cleaned

 Stuart’s thinking of having ……………!

      A   shaved his head

      B   his head shaving

      C   his head shaved

      D   shaved to his head

 My sister …………… her ear pierced last weekend.

      A   made      got

      C   did     D   took

 Mum and Dad didn’t fancy cooking, so we got a pizza …………… .

      A   be delivered

      B   to be delivered

      C   delivered

      D   deliver

 You should …………… a professional to check your house for earthquake damage.

      A   have      make

      C   take     D   get

 Kelly wanted to have a live band …………… at her wedding.

      A   to be played      play

      C   played     D   been playing

 Can we …………… this summer?

      A   get installed air-conditioning

      B   get air-conditioning to install

      C   have installed air-conditioning

      D   have air-conditioning installed

10   We …………… while we were on holiday.

      A   were burgled our house

      B   had our house burgled

      C   had burgled our house

      D   got burgled our house

Answer

1 B   2 A   3 D   4 C   5 B

6 C   7 D   8 B   9 D   10 B

G. Complete each second sentence using the word given, so that it has a similar meaning to the first sentence. Write between two and five words in each gap.

1   Someone has scratched my car on the door!   been

     My car ……………………………… on the door!

2   Tommy is having an operation right now.   being

     Tommy ……………………………… right now.

3   Has Fiona invited you to her party?   been

     Have ……………………………… party?

4   Shakespeare probably wrote this play in 1587.   written

     This play ……………………………… Shakespeare in 1587.

5   The government is considering a new law to ban smoking following new research.   considered

     A new law to ban smoking ……………………………… following new research.

6   My mum told me to go to Megagrocers.   sent

     I ……………………………… my mum.

7   I didn’t understand a word so I asked my teacher and she explained it to me.   got

     I didn’t understand a word so I ……………………………… it to me.

Answer

1   has been scratched

2   is being operated on

3   you been invited to Fiona’s

4   was probably written by

5   is being considered

6   was sent to Megagrocer’s by

7   got my teacher to explain

H. Find the extra word.

Wedding disaster

(1) My wedding had been being arranged for months. I knew exactly what I (2) wanted for that special day. I had the caterers to give me a menu and (3) have got them to provide me with samples so that I could be sure we (4) would have the best food. I also wanted to have us a string quartet play (5) classical music and I arranged that, too. My dress was been being made (6) specially and I had told the dressmaker put silver thread in it. Finally, the (7) big day got arrived. My dress was being delivered in the morning, but by (8) ten it still hadn’t arrived. They called me and said it had been being (9) damaged! I was furious! I had my best friend quickly to pop out and get (10) a new dress. I had got my lawyer to call to get my money back.

Answer

1 being   2 to   3 have   4 us   5 been

6 told   7 got   8 being   9 to   10 had

I. Rewrite with the indirect object at the end of the sentence.

1   My dad got me a great computer game!

     …………………………………………..

2   Dave sent Jill a really nice letter.

     …………………………………………..

3   I threw Colin the ball.

     …………………………………………..

4   The waiter offered us a menu.

     …………………………………………..

5   The hotel provides its guests with satellite television.

     …………………………………………..

6   My grandma taught me this song.

     …………………………………………..

Answer

1   My dad got a great computer game for me.

2   Dave sent a really nice letter to Jill.

3   I threw the ball to Colin.

4   The waiter offered a menu to us.

5   The hotel provides satellite television to/for its guests.

6   My grandma taught this song to me.

J. Write one word in each gap.

The European Diet

It’s hard for us to imagine what (1) ………………… included in the European diet before America (2) ………………… discovered (3) ………………… Columbus in 1492. So many ingredients which today (4) ………………… grown all over the world (5) ………………… unknown to medieval Europeans. Potatoes, tomatoes, maize and chocolate (6) ………………… all originally imported from the New World. Until then, meals had (7) ………………… prepared using ingredients native to Europe, such as root vegetables. Of course, spices such as pepper (8) ………………… been traded and added to food for centuries. When the potato (9) ………………… first introduced, it was surprisingly unpopular. It (10) ………………… considered to be poisonous and it took a long time to become common. There is a story of Parmentier, a French army officer, who (11) ………………… potatoes planted in the royal garden and (12) ………………… Marie Antoinette to wear a potato flower to make them fashionable. The poor peasants were curious about the new plants and many of them (13) ………………… stolen to be planted in their own gardens. It was the start of French fries!

Answer

1 was   2 was   3 by   4 are   5 were   6 were   7 been

8 had   9 was   10 was   11 had/got   12 got   13 were

Related Posts

  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – Linking words 2: reason, purpose and result
  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – Linking words 1
  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – It and there
  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – Word formation 2: nouns (affixes)
  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – Word formation 1: verbs and adjectives (affixes)
  • English Grammar Exercises for B1 B2 – Non-defining relative clauses

  • #1

Which is correct:

1-He taught me to dance.
2-He taught me dancing.

I think both are correct, but I use 1.

    • #2

    Which is correct:

    1-He taught me to dance.
    2-He taught me dancing.
    3. Navi
    I think both are correct, but I use 1.

    I think #1,#2 and #3 are all correct.:D

    • #3

    I agree — they’re both correct, but #1 is probably better.

    To me, the infinitive implies «taught me how to do the activity» and the gerund implies «made me more expert in the activity.» These usually mean the same thing (how to dance = how to dance well; same for how to cook, how to play chess, etc.). But there are other examples where the difference is clearer, for example:

    He taught me to fight = taught me that I should defend myself, not let bullies punch me without striking back, etc.

    He taught me fighting = taught me techniques to be an expert boxer, etc.

    chasfh


    Loob


    • #5

    He taught me History.
    He taught me French.
    He taught me dancing.

    He taught me to understand different historical approaches.
    He taught me to speak French.
    He taught me to dance.

    The blue sentences describe subject areas I was taught about. The red sentences talk about skills I was taught to perform.

    • #6

    Possible interpretations of «He taught me to dance»:

    He taught me that I should dance.
    He taught me how to dance.
    He taught me in order to dance.

    Possible interpretations of «He taught me dancing»:

    He taught me the art of dance.
    He gave me classes in some aspect(s) of dance.
    He taught me as he danced.
    He taught me as I danced.

    • #7

    Possible interpretations of «He taught me to dance»:

    He taught me that I should dance.
    He taught me how to dance.
    He taught me in order to dance.

    Possible interpretations of «He taught me dancing»:

    He taught me the art of dance.
    He gave me classes in some aspect(s) of dance.
    He taught me as he danced.
    He taught me as I danced.

    I can not agree that these are normal interpretations, or even possible interpretations, and find them rather odd. «He taught me in order to dance???»

    If someone said to me that «John taught her to dance.» My clear understanding and only interpretation would be that, in fact, «John taught her to dance» .

    • #8

    ¿Which one is better?
    He taught her reading and writing or he taught her to read and write.

    owlman5


    • #9

    ¿Which one is better?
    He taught her reading and writing or he taught her to read and write.

    Hello, moonlight7. I prefer «to read and write» in that sentence.

    • #11

    ¿Which one is better?
    He taught her reading and writing or he taught her to read and write.

    It really depends on context. If you mean her father taught her how to read and write, then use «to read and write», but if you mean a schoolteacher taught her reading and writing as a teacher might also teach arithmetic and music, then use «reading and writing».

    «Taught her to read and write» has at least two meanings, both emphasizing the result of the teaching. In the more usual meaning, the result is that she

    can

    read and write; in the other meaning, the result is that she

    will

    read and write under circumstances for which she has been taught she should. This other meaning would be expected in a context that suggested such circumstances or at least mentioned what she was to read and write.

    Last edited: Jan 11, 2013

    • #12

    He taught me to dance. — He taught me (how to drive in order) to dance (at the disco with me).

    velisarius


    • #14

    Possible interpretations of «He taught me to dance»:
    He taught me in order to dance.

    If someone said to me that «John taught her to dance.» My clear understanding and only interpretation would be that, in fact, «John taught her to dance» .

    velisarius


    • #15

    Sorry, but where does He taught me (how to drive in order) to dance (at the disco with me) fit in? Are you saying that it’s a possible interpretation of He taught me to dance?

    I’m sorry, but I have to disagree.

    • #16

    Yes, Forero sees that «He taught me to dance» may mean «He taught me in order to dance.» I just made up a possible option.

    • #17

    Well, in the right context, «He taught me [that] [in order] to dance [at a disco]» might be a possible interpretation, but I don’t quite follow your sentence, Ivan_I.

    • #18

    He taught me to dance. — He taught me (how to drive in order) to dance (at the disco with me).

    That may be a possible meaning, but only if you start from the premise that language isn’t an exact science, meaning that just about any meaning is possible, provided that you add enough words/context (what you’ve placed in parenthesis); and even then, the meaning may not be universally accepted.

    In actuality, a sentence like «He taught me to dance» is by default interpreted as He taught me how to dance (= «he gave me dancing lessons»). The (technical) linguistic explanation for this is that the «subject» of the infinitive (the «me» of «me to dance») is raised to become the «object» of the main clause (the object of «taught»). Native speakers intuitively know this.

    • #19

    Well, in the right context, «He taught me [that] [in order] to dance [at a disco]» might be a possible interpretation, but I don’t quite follow your sentence, Ivan_I.

    For example.
    Helen says: «If you want to dance with me you have to teach me driving.»
    We get.
    He taught Helen to dance. He taught me (Helen) driving in order to dance with me (Helen).

    Sounds possible to me.

    chasfh


    • #20

    «He taught me how to dance» is the way most native speakers would say it, even more than «he taught me to dance». «He taught me dancing», with all due respect, sounds like how an ESL person might say it. It doesn’t really matter in terms of what you’re trying to put across—they all mean enough of the same thing to not matter much—but if you want to sound like a native, say «he taught me how to dance».

    On the other hand, if you want to talk about what the teacher does, you say: «he teaches dancing», and never «he teaches to dance» or «he teaches how to dance», because dancing is the gerund (noun) in this case. Even «he teaches people how to dance», which is the most correct way to include «to dance», sounds clunky.

    • #21

    Chasfh, I apologize tenfold, but on hearing «he teaches dancing» I might interject to ask «Who does he teach?». How would the one asked have to answer so that he or she sound as a native? As far as I understand «He teachers X dancing» is not OK.

    You might suggest «He teachers X» without dancing…. well, it’s a bit a handicapped version, in my «iffy» opinion.
    Apart from that, it’s quite legit to elaborate, for example, that he teaches only boys. How to put it in words if «He teachers boys dancing» is BAD «He teachers boys how to dance» is also not good.

    chasfh


    • #22

    Chasfh, I apologize tenfold, but on hearing «he teaches dancing» I might interject to ask «Who does he teach?». How would the one asked have to answer so that he or she sound as a native? As far as I understand «He teachers X dancing» is not OK.

    You might suggest «He teachers X» without dancing…. well, it’s a bit a handicapped version, in my «iffy» opinion.
    Apart from that, it’s quite legit to elaborate, for example, that he teaches only boys. How to put it in words if «He teachers boys dancing» is BAD «He teachers boys how to dance» is also not good.

    When talking to someone about another person who is a dance teacher, when you say, «he teaches dancing», you mean he does that in general, and not to someone specific. That’s what the guy works at, whether for a living or on the side (i.e., as a second job). «What does Ivan do for a living?» «He teaches dancing.» (Note that in this case, «he’s teaching dancing» is not the same thing. You would say this only if he was teaching somebody dancing right now, at this moment.)

    If you’re talking about someone who is teaching a specific someone else dancing, you’d say, «he’s teaches her dancing». That assumes a continual basis, that is, she takes ongoing lessons from him. You could also use, «he’s teaching her dancing» in this case, too. They’re close enough to use them basically interchangeably. As if that weren’t confusing enough.

    Also, to clarify, «teacher» is never a verb, as in, «He teachers boys how to dance». Use «teaches» as a verb. «Teacher» is a noun: the guy is a teacher, and he teaches people stuff.

    Lastly, I hope you’re not serious about apologizing, because there’s certainly no need for that. :)

    Complex Object – сложное дополнение

    Инфинитив образует сложное дополнение с местоимением в объектном падеже (me, you, him, her, us, them, it) или с существительным в общем падеже (John, my sister, our teacher etc.). На русский язык такая конструкция переводится придаточным предложением с союзами «что, чтобы».

    Конструкция Complex object употребляется:

    • поле глаголов want, expect, would like — с инфинитивом с частицей to
    • после восприятия — see, hear, feel, notice, watch — с инфинитивом без частицы to или с причастием настоящего времени
    • после глаголов make и let — с инфинитивом без частицы to

    Конструкция Complex object

           

    Конструкция Complex object + инфинитив

    Конструкция Complex object + инфинитив с частицей to употребляется после глаголов:

    Complex object упражнения с ответами

    Упражнение 1

    Откройте скобки, используя конструкцию Complex Object.

    Example: We expected (she, come) at 5. – We expected her to come at 5.

    1. Do you want (they, stay) at the hotel?
    2. Would you like (I, show) you the sights of the city?
    3. We expect (she, set) the table by the time we come.
    4. I want (she, tell) me the news.
    5. I don’t want (they, be late) for dinner.
    6. He expected (she, invite) him to the party.
    7. They found (the lecture, be) boring.
    8. I wish (my mother, buy) the dress by Saturday.
    9. We considered (he, be) an honest person.
    10. I know (he, learn) this poem by heart.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. Do you want them to stay at the hotel?
    2. Would you like me to show you the sights of the city?
    3. We expect her to set the table by the time we come.
    4. I want her to tell me the news.
    5. I don’t want them to be late for dinner.
    6.  He expected her to invite him to the party.
    7. They found the lecture to be boring.
    8. I wish my mother to buy the dress by Saturday.
    9. We considered him to be an honest person.
    10. I know him to learn this poem by heart.

    Упражнение 2

    Составьте предложения с конструкцией Complex Object.

    1. them/She/ to read/ wanted /that book.
    2. I/ him/ expect / in a minute/ to come.
    3. wishes / John /to do / the work/ her/ at once.
    4. well / to study/ Sarah /The teacher expected.
    5. to come/They/ him/ know/ in time.
    6. this girl/ He/ to be/ believes/ his wife.
    7. I/ this computer game/ find/ exciting/ to be.
    8. her children/ to dance/ The Mother /likes.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. She wanted them to read that book.
    2. I expect him to come here in a minute.
    3. John wishes her to do the work at once.
    4. The teacher expected Sarah to study well.
    5. They know him to come in time.
    6. He believes this girl to be his wife.
    7. I find this computer game to be exciting.
    8. The mother likes her children to dance.

    Упражнение 3

    Составьте предложения с Complex Object, используя глагол, данный в скобках.

    1. I think she will phone. (expect)
    2. My father said I could use his car. (allow)
    3. I suggested that she should go home. (ask)
    4. I asked my friend ‘Can you help me?’ (ask)
    5. I think you should know the truth. (want)

    Правильные ответы:

    I expect her to phone.

    My father allowed me to use his car.
    I asked her to go home.
    I asked my friend to help me.
    I want you to know the truth.

    Упражнение 4 

    Поставьте глагол в правильной форме: -ing, infinitive with or without to (с окончанием -ing, инфинитивом с частицей to или без частицы to).

    The film was very sad. It made me ….. (cry)
    Have you got enough money or do you want me ….. you some. (lend)
    I heard her ….. the door and ….. (open, go out)
    She told him ….. the door. (lock)
    I saw him ….. the ducks. (feed)

    Правильные ответы:

    cry
    to lend
    open/opening, go out/going out
    to lock
    feed/feeding

    Упражнение 5 

    Замените дополнение, выраженное существительным, на местоимение в объектном падеже.

    We expected Tom to be late.
    I wouldn’t recommend my friends to stay in that hotel.
    I saw Mary take the pen out of the pocket.
    I asked my friend to help me.
    Jane’s parents wouldn’t let their daughter go out alone.

    Правильные ответы:

    him
    them
    her
    him/her
    her

    Complex Object

    Упражнение 6

    Переведите предложения на английский язык, используя конструкцию Complex Object.

    Я хочу, чтобы ты знал об этом.
    Я сказал Алану идти домой.
    Они пригласили его погостить у них несколько дней.
    Она не хотела, чтобы я ушел.
    Я слышал, как она играет на пианино.

    Правильные ответы:

    I want you to know about it.
    I told Alan to go home.
    They invited him to come and stay with them for a few days.
    She didn’t want me to go.
    I heard her playing the piano.

    Упражнение 7 

    Постройте предложения без конструкции Complex Object, сохранив их первоначальный смысл.

    I want you to remember this rule.
    Glasses make him look older.
    Do you expect her to phone?
    They think him to be a good driver.
    She allowed us to borrow her books.

    Правильные ответы:

    You should remember this rule.
    He looks older in glasses.
    Do you think she will phone?
    They think that he is a good driver.
    She said that we could borrow her books.

    Упражнение 8

    Раскройте скобки, используя сложное дополнение. Переведите.

    1. I want (she) to be my wife.
    2. My brother taught ( I ) to swim and dive.
    3. They would like (we) to read aloud.
    4. Bob advised (she) to stay for another week.
    5. We expect (he) to arrive at noon.
    6. I heard (you) open the door.
    7. Dad always makes ( I ) go fishing with him every weekend.
    8. Our parents expect (we) to stop quarreling.
    9. Sara never lets (he) drive her car.
    10. I saw (you) cross the street.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. her (Я хочу, чтобы она стала моей женой.)
    2. me (Мой брат научил меня плавать и нырять.)
    3. us (Они хотят, чтобы мы читали вслух.)
    4. her (Боб посоветовал ей остаться еще на неделю.)
    5. him (Мы ожидаем, что он приедет в полдень.)
    6. you (Я слышал, как ты открыл дверь.)
    7. me (Папа всегда заставляет меня ходить с ним на рыбалку каждый выходной.)
    8. us (Наши родители надеются, что мы перестанем ссориться.)
    9. him (Сара никогда не разрешает ему водить ее машину.)
    10. you (Я видел, как ты переходил улицу.)

    Упражнение 9

    Поставьте «to» там, где необходимо.

    1. We heard the lorry … stop near the house.
    2. I want my elder sister … take me to the zoo.
    3. I believe the Internet … be the greatest invention ever.
    4. The teacher doesn’t let us … use our mobile phones.
    5. They didn’t expect her … be late.
    6. The police officer made him … tell the truth.
    7. I would like you … admit your fault.
    8. Swan believes Vicky … be the best manager in our store.
    9. Nick persuaded me … go in for sports.
    10. We saw Jacob … break the window.
    11. I consider this sculpture … be a masterpiece.
    12. She noticed Mary suddenly … turn pale.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. — (Мы слышали, как грузовик остановился возле дома.)
    2. to (Я хочу, чтобы моя старшая сестра сводила меня в зоопарк.)
    3. to (Я считаю, что интернет – величайшее изобретение всех времен.)
    4. — (Учитель не разрешает нам пользоваться мобильными телефонами.)
    5. to (Они не ожидали, что она опоздает.)
    6. — (Полицейский заставил его сказать правду.)
    7. to (Я бы хотел, чтобы ты признал свою вину.)
    8. to (Мистер Свон считает Вики лучшим менеджером в нашем магазине.)
    9. to (Ник убедил меня заняться спортом.)
    10. — (Мы видели, как Джейкоб разбил окно.)
    11. to (Я считаю эту скульптуру шедевром.)
    12. — (Она заметила, что Мэри вдруг побледнела.)

    Упражнение 10

    Перефразируйте предложения, используя сложное дополнение.

    Н-р:  I want that she will cook mushroom soup. (Я хочу, чтобы она приготовила грибной суп.) – I want her to cook mushroom soup.

    1. The children were laughing and enjoying themselves on the beach. Their parents saw them. – Their parents saw … .
    2. They said: “He is an expert in our industry.” – They consider … .
    3. The bike disappeared in the forest. The policeman noticed it. – The policeman noticed … .
    4. Elvis said to his son: “Don’t watch horror films.” – Elvis doesn’t let … .
    5. “Mummy, please, buy me that doll”, said the little girl. – The little girl would like … .
    6. Dad says that I can travel to China with you. – Dad allows … .
    7. He swears a lot. Many people heard that. – Many people heard … .
    8. “Bring me some water from the well,” my grandmother said. – My grandmother wanted … .
    9. Somebody was watching me. I felt that. – I felt … .
    10. Daniel said: “Helen, you can go to a night club tonight.” – Daniel let … .

    Правильные ответы:

    1. Their parents saw the children laughing and enjoying themselves on the beach. (Их родители видели, как дети смеются и веселятся на пляже.)
    2. They consider him to be an expert in our industry. (Они считают его экспертом в нашей индустрии.)
    3. The policeman noticed the bike disappear in the forest. (Полицейский заметил, как мотоцикл скрылся в лесу.)
    4. Elvis doesn’t let his son watch horror films. (Элвис не разрешает своему сыну смотреть фильмы ужасов.)
    5. The little girl would like her mum to buy a doll. (Маленькая девочка хотела бы, чтобы мама купила ей куклу.)
    6. Dad allows me to travel to China with you. (Папа разрешает мне поехать с тобой в Китай.)
    7. Many people heard him swear a lot. (Многие люди слышали, как он нецензурно выражается.)
    8. My grandmother wanted me to bring her some water from the well. (Моя бабушка захотела, чтобы я принесла для нее воды из колодца.)
    9. I felt somebody watching me. (Я чувствовал, что кто-то следил за мной.)
    10. Daniel let Helen go to a night club. (Дэниэл позволил Хелен сходить в ночной клуб.)

    Complex Object

    Упражнение 11


    Complete the following sentences using the infinitive with or without to.

    The teacher asked us ________ (listen) to his explanations.
    He made the students _____________ (write) the composition.
    The teacher let us ____________ (use) the dictionaries.
    The teacher noticed me ____________ (open) my dictionary several times.
    I made myself ____________ ( write) as neatly as I could.
    The teacher watched us _____________ (work) and didn’t say anything.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. to listen, 2 write, 3 use, 4 open, 5 write, 6 work / working.

    Упражнение 12

    Open the brackets and use the Complex Object.

    1. Do you want (they / stay) at the hotel?
    2. I would like (the professor / look through) my report.
    3. We considered (he /be) an honest person.
    4. I would like (the dress / buy) by Sunday.
    5. He doesn’t want (they / be late) for dinner.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. Do you want them to stay at the hotel?
    2. I would like the professor to look through my report.
    3. We considered him to be an honest person.
    4. I would like the dress to be bought by Sunday.
    5. He doesn’t want them to be late for dinner.

    Упражнение 13

    Combine the sentences using the Complex Object.

    Example:

    I felt something hard. It hurt my leg. -> I felt something hard hurt my leg.
    I saw Mike. He was entering the house. -> I saw Mike entering the house. 

    1. They didn’t notice us. We passed by.
    2. Mike heard Sam. She was playing the violin.
    3. I felt her hand. It was shaking.
    4. I heard them. They were arguing.
    5. We many times heard him. He told this story.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. They didn’t notice us pass by.
    2. Mike heard Sam playing the violin.
    3. I felt her hand shaking.
    4. I heard them arguing.
    5. We many times heard him tell this story.

    Упражнение 14


    Fill in the correct form of the Infinitive to make Complex Object.

    1. Our teacher made us _______ (do) this exercise all over again.
    2. The teacher advised us _______ (rewrite) the test.
    3. Please, let me _______ (know) when your sister returns from Paris.
    4. I find your story _______ (be) very unusual and interesting.
    5. Nick doesn’t want me _______ (tell) everybody this news.
    6. I watched the cat _______ (crawl) to the flock of sparrows.
    7. I would like you _______ (be) very accurate and attentive.

    Правильные ответы:

    1 do, 2 to rewrite; 3 know; 4 to be; 5 to tell; 6  crawl; 7 to be.

    Упражнение 15

    Translate the sentences using Complex Object.

    1. Я бы хотел, чтобы вы доставили товары к концу месяца.
    2. Вы сегодня услышите, как она поет.
    3. Я не ожидал, что Майк – такой невежливый.
    4. Я слышал, что его имя упоминали на собрании.
    5. Он не заметил, как мы подошли к нему.
    6. Я бы хотел, чтобы никто не брал мои вещи.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. I would like you to deliver the goods by the end of the month.
    2. You will hear her sing / singing today.
    3. I did not expect Mike to be so impolite.
    4. I heard his name be mentioned at the meeting.
    5. He did not notice us approach / approaching him.
    6. I would like my belongings not to be taken.

    Запомни

    Упражнение 16

    Составьте предложения с Complex Object, используя глагол, данный в скобках.

    1. I think she will phone. (expect)
    2. My father said I could use his car. (allow)
    3. I suggested that she should go home. (ask)
    4. I asked my friend ‘Can you help me?’ (ask)
    5. I think you should know the truth. (want)

    Правильные ответы:

    1. I expect her to phone.
    2. My father allowed me to use his car.
    3. I asked her to go home.
    4. I asked my friend to help me.
    5. I want you to know the truth.

    Упражнение 17

    Translate into English using Complex Object.

    1. Mr. Worthing is sure to be back soon.
    2. These two young people are sure to be very good friends.
    3. You are sure to be there tomorrow night, aren’t you?
    4. We most of us want a good many things that we are not likely to get.
    5. He is sure to tell me all about this even if I don’t ask him.
    6. When Sondra said that they were sure to meet again, she saw Clyde’s face suddenly brighten.
    7. If we go on arguing, we are sure to quarrel.
    8. They are sure to acknowledge your talent.
    9. He is sure to give us some useful information.
    10. The article is likely to appear in the next issue of the journal. 

    Правильные ответы:

    1. Известно, что марсианские (martian) каналы были открыты в 1877 году.
    2. Предполагают, что заседание закончится в десять часов.
    3. Полагают, что они знают об этом больше, чем хотят показать.
    4. Джим оказался храбрым мальчиком.
    5. Рочестер случайно встретил Джейн по дороге домой.
    6. Говорят, что он работает над своим изобретением уже несколько лет.
    7. Говорят, что эта статья переведена на все языки мира.
    8. Вы, кажется, много читали до поступления в университет.
    9. Как известно, Жуковский был прекрасным педагогом и лектором.
    10. Никак не ожидали, что холодная погода наступит так рано.

    Упражнение 18

    Read the article and identify constructions with Complex Subject.

    Fears for Lone Missing Climber

    Fears are growing here for a lone climber missing for the past 48 hours. Jamie Biddals, 32, from New Zealand, is known to have left Kathmandu alone six days ago but has not been seen since. He is thought to have only a small amount of food and he is believed to be wearing only lightweight climbing clothes. As for equipment, he is known to be carrying a small rucksack and a lightweight tent. He is said to have been heading for an old base camp. The weather has deteriorated during the last 48 hours, and he is thought to have been trying to get to the camp when a severe blizzard started. Jamie is considered to be one of the best climbers in the world but there are still fears for his safety in these conditions.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. Is Jamie Biddals said to have left Kathmandu alone or with a group of other climbers?
    2. How much food supplies is he thought to have taken with him?
    3. What kind of clothes is he reported to be wearing?
    4. Did he happen to take any tent to sleep in?
    5. Where is he expected to have been heading for?
    6. Why do people appear to be worried about Jamie?

    Work in groups. Suggest any ideas about Jamie’s escape

    Exchange your ideas in the class.

    Use the following patterns:

    Jamie               is sure                     to do smth.
                            certain                     to be doing smth.
                            (not) likely               to be done.
                            bound                      to have done smth.
                                                            to have been doing smth.
                                                            to have been done.

    Упражнение 19

    Complex Subject with the word-groups.

    1. He is likely to win the prize. — Похоже, что он выиграет приз.
    2. He is sure to come. — Он обязательно придет.
    3. We are certain to meet them. — Мы несомненно встретим его.
    4. He is sure to come.
    5. He was not likely to have made a mistake.
    6. He is easy to deal with.
    7. He is anxious to see her. — Ему очень хочется увидеть ее.

    Правильные ответы:

    1. to be (un) likely
    2. To be sure
    3. To be certain / to be bound
    4. To be anxious
    5. To be pleased
    6. To be easy
    7. To be happy

    Упражнение 20

    He is said to know six languages.
    He was said to know 6 languages.
    He is said to have gone to London.
    He was said to have gone to London.

    Правильные ответы:

    Говорят, что он знает 6 языков.
    Говорили, что он знает 6 языков.
    Говорят, что он уехал в Лондон.
    Говорили, что он уехал в Лондон.

    Complex Object – сложное дополнение

    • Главная
    • Английский язык

    • Чтение

    • Чтение 12-18

    2. Чтение

    Формат ответа: цифра или несколько цифр, слово или несколько слов. Вопросы на соответствие «буква» — «цифра» должны записываться как несколько цифр. Между словами и цифрами не должно быть пробелов или других знаков.

    Примеры ответов: 7 или здесьисейчас или 3514

    Раскрыть
    Скрыть

    №1

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12–18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    For almost 125 years, the secrecy surrounding the recipe for Coca-Cola has been one of the world’s great marketing tricks. As the story goes, the fizzy drink’s famous ‘7X’ formula has remained unchanged since it was developed in 1886. Today, the recipe is entrusted only to two Coke executives, neither of whom can travel on the same plane for fear the secret would go down with them.

    Now, one of America’s most celebrated radio broadcasters claims to have discovered the Coke secret. Ira Glass, presenter of the public radio institution This American Life, says he has tracked down a copy of the recipe, the original of which is still supposedly held in a burglar-proof vault at the Sun Trust Bank in Atlanta, Georgia.

    The formula was created by John Pemberton, an Atlanta chemist and former Confederate army officer who crafted cough medicines in his spare time. In 1887, he sold the recipe to a businessman, Asa Griggs, who immediately placed it for safekeeping in the Georgia Trust Bank.

    Glass came across a recipe that he believes is the secret formula in a back issue of Pemberton’s local paper, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, while he was researching an entirely different story. Tucked away on an inside page of the 8 February 1979 edition, he stumbled on an article that claimed to have uncovered the closely guarded ‘7X’ formula.

    The column was based on information found in an old leather-bound notebook that belonged to Pemberton’s best friend and fellow Atlanta chemist, RR Evans. Glass was intrigued and, after some digging, found that the notebook had been handed down over generations until it reached a chemist in Georgia called Everett Beal, whose widow still possesses it.

    The rediscovered recipe includes extract of coca leaves, caffeine, plenty of sugar (it specifies 30 unidentified units thought to be pounds), lime juice, vanilla and caramel. Into that syrup, the all-important ‘7X’ ingredients are added: alcohol and six oils – orange, lemon, nutmeg, coriander, neroli and cinnamon. The formula is very similar to the recipe worked out by Mark Pendergrast who wrote a history of the drink in 1993 called For God, Country & Coca-Cola.

    Coke’s secret recipe is, in fact, partly a myth. The soda has changed substantially over time. Cocaine, a legal stimulant in Pemberton’s day, was removed from the drink in 1904 after mounting public unease about the drug. Extract of coca leaves is still used but only after the cocaine has been removed.

    In 1980, the company replaced sugar, squeezed from beet and cane, with the cheaper corn sweetener that is often found in American food and drink. Coke fans were not impressed.

    Despite such occasional controversies, one element has remained constant: Coke’s commitment to keeping its own secret. Speculation about the recipe has been a popular talking point for more than a century, proving good for business. The company has reacted to the This American Life story in a way that has been typical of its commercial strategy since the 19th century. “Many third parties have tried to crack our secret formula. Try as they might, they’ve been unsuccessful,” Coca-Cola’s Kerry Tressler said.

    12. The best title reflecting the message of the story probably is

    1. Coca-Cola secret recipe revealed?
    2. Tracking down the famous recipe.
    3. The secret recipe is a fraud.
    4. The History of The Coca-Cola Company.

    13. Who is supposed to know the Coke secret recipe nowadays?

    1. RR Evans.
    2. The director of Atlanta Sun Trust Bank.
    3. Certain Coca-Cola executives.
    4. A broadcaster.

    14. How did Ira Glass learn about the recipe?

    1. Accidentally reading an article in an old Atlanta paper.
    2. Studying an old notebook that belonged to Pemberton.
    3. Talking to a relative of John Pemberton.
    4. Working in Atlanta archives.

    15. Which of the following does NOT belong to the famous ‘7X’ ingredients?

    1. Alcohol.
    2. Orange oil.
    3. Caffeine.
    4. Nutmeg oil.

    16. Why might the secret recipe be considered a myth?

    1. The company has been regularly changing the ingredients.
    2. The quality of the ingredients has been changing.
    3. It has never been a secret.
    4. The recipe has never existed.

    17. What disappointed Coca-Cola fans in 1980?

    1. The price of the drink went up with the price of sugar.
    2. Sugar was removed from the drink.
    3. The recipe of the drink was revealed.
    4. Beet and cane sugar was replaced with the corn one.

    18. The phrase “proving good for business” in the last paragraph means that the rumors about the recipe …

    1. helped to keep the recipe in secret.
    2. were supported by the company.
    3. helped the company’s sales.
    4. provided unnecessary problems for the company.

    №2

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12-18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    Yves Henri Donat Matthieu Saint Laurent was born on August 1, 1936, in Oran, Algeria. He grew up in a villa by the Mediterranean with his two younger sisters, Michelle and Brigitte. While his family was relatively well off—his father was a lawyer and insurance broker who owned a chain of cinemas—childhood for the future fashion icon was not easy. Saint Laurent was not popular in school, and was often bullied by schoolmates. As a consequence, Saint Laurent was a nervous child, and sick nearly every day.

    He found solace, however, in the world of fashion. He liked to create intricate paper dolls, and by his early teen years he was designing dresses for his mother and sisters. At the age of 17, a whole new world opened up to Saint Laurent when his mother took him to Paris for a meeting she had arranged with Michael de Brunhoff, the editor of French Vogue.

    A year later, Saint Laurent, who had impressed de Brunhoff with his drawings, moved to Paris and enrolled at the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture, where his designs gained notice very quickly. De Brunhoff also introduced Saint Laurent to designer Christian Dior, a giant in the fashion world. «Dior fascinated me,» Saint Laurent later recalled. «I couldn’t speak in front of him. He taught me the basis of my art. Whatever was to happen next, I never forgot the years I spent at his side.» Under Dior’s tutelage, Saint Laurent’s style continued to mature and gain still more notice.

    In 1960 Saint Laurent was called back to his home country of Algeria to fight for its independence. He managed to secure an exemption based on health grounds, but when he returned to Paris, Saint Laurent found that his job with Dior had disappeared. The news, at first, was traumatic for the young, fragile designer. Then it became ugly, with Saint Laurent successfully suing his former mentor for breach of contract, and collecting £48,000.

    Over the next two decades, Saint Laurent’s designs sat atop the fashion world. Models and actresses gushed over his creations. He outfitted women in blazers and smoking jackets, and introduced attire like the pea coat to the runway. His signature pieces also included the sheer blouse and the jumpsuit.

    By the 1980s, Yves Saint Laurent was a true icon. He became the first designer to have a retrospective on his work at the Metropolitan Museum in New York City. The fashion house flourished as a money making venture.

    12. Yves Saint Laurent didn’t have a happy childhood because

    1. he lived far from the city
    2. his family was very poor
    3. he didn’t get along with his classmates
    4. his father was too busy at work

    13. The turning point in his life was

    1. the first time he saw Paris
    2. the acquaintance with a well-known representative of the fashion industry
    3. the moment when his relatives started to wear clothes of his own design
    4. his new hobby of creating dolls

    14. At the Chambre Syndicale de la Couture the work of Yves Saint Laurent

    1. aroused interest almost immediately
    2. wasn’t appreciated at the beginning
    3. didn’t find appraisal at all
    4. flourished only after his studies with Christian Dior

    15. Why couldn’t Yves Saint Laurent speak in front of Christian Dior?

    1. he was too shy
    2. he didn’t know what to say
    3. he was afraid of Dior
    4. he was in awe with Dior

    16. After Yves Saint Laurent returned from Algeria, Christian Dior

    1. made him pay £48,000
    2. continued working with him
    3. broke his dream of becoming a well-known designer
    4. was made to pay a huge sum because of firing Yves

    17. The expression “sat atop” in the first line of the 5th paragraph means

    1. was passive and didn’t make any contribution to the fashion development
    2. played the leading role in the fashion world
    3. lost his influence in the fashion world
    4. became less popular in the fashion world

    18. During the 80-s the profits of the fashion ‘Saint Laurent’ house were

    1. very modest
    2. critically low
    3. huge
    4. satisfactory

    №3

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 1218. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    «I don’t mind staying after school,» I said to Professor Herbert, «but I’d rather you’d whip me with a switch and let me go home early. Pa will whip me anyway for getting home two hours late.» «You are too big to whip,» said Professor Herbert, «and I have to punish you for climbing up in that cherry tree. The other five boys have paid their dollar each. You have been the only one who has not helped pay for the tree. Can you borrow a dollar?» «I can’t,» I said. «I’ll have to take the punishment. I wouldn’t mind. My father believes that if you spare the rod you spoil the child. I’ll never be able to make him understand about the cherry tree.”

    «You must take the punishment,» said Professor Herbert. «You must stay two hours after school today and two hours after school tomorrow. I’m allowing you twenty-five cents an hour. That is good money for a high-school student. You can sweep the schoolhouse floor, wash the blackboards, clean windows. I’ll pay the dollar for you.»

    It was six o’clock when I left the schoolhouse. I hurried home. I saw Pa spreading fodder on the ground to the cattle. That was my job. I ran up to the fence. I said, «Leave that for me, Pa. I’ll do it. I’m just a little late.» «I see you are,» said Pa. He turned and looked at me. His eyes danced fire. «What in the world has kept you so? Why ain’t you been here to help me with this work?» I didn’t want to tell him why I was late from school. Pa stopped scattering the bundles of fodder. He said, «Why are you getting in here this time of night?» I said, «I had to stay after school.»

    I couldn’t lie to Pa. He’d go to school and find out why I had to stay. If I lied to him it would be too bad for me. I said, «Our biology class went on a field trip today. Six of us boys broke down a cherry tree. We had to give a dollar apiece to pay for the tree. I didn’t have the dollar. Professor Herbert is making me work out my dollar. He gives me twenty-five cents an hour. I had to stay in this afternoon. I’ll have to stay in tomorrow afternoon!» “Are you telling me the truth?” asked Pa. «Yes,» I said, «go and see for yourself.» «That’s just what I’ll do in the morning,» said Pa.

    It was early when we got to the county high school the next morning. Professor Herbert had just got there. «You’re the Professor here, ain’t you?» asked Pa. «Yes,» said Professor Herbert, «and you are Dave’s father.» «Yes,» said Pa, «just a few things about this school I want to know. I’m trying to make a scholar of Dave. He’s the only one out of eleven young ones I’ve sent to high school. Here he comes in late and leaves me all the work to do! He says you all were out bug hunting yesterday and he broke a cherry tree down. He had to stay two hours after school yesterday and work out money to pay on that cherry tree! Is that right?» «I guess it is,» said Professor Herbert. «Well,» said Pa, «this ain’t no high school. It’s a bug school, a lizard school, a snake school! It ain’t no school no how!»

    «I was only doing my duty, Mr. Sexton, and following the course of study the state provided us with.» said Professor Herbert. «Course o’ study,» said Pa, «what study, bug study? Taking young ones to the woods and their poor old Ma’s and Pa’s at home slaving to keep them in school and give them education!» «We were not only hunting snakes, toads, flowers, butterflies, lizards,» said Professor Herbert, «but I was hunting dry timothy grass to put in an incubator and raise some protozoa.» «I don’t know what that is,» said Pa. «The incubator is the new-fangled way of cheating the hens and raising chickens. I ain’t so sure about the breed of chickens you mentioned.»

    «You’ve heard of germs, Mr. Sexton, haven’t you?» said Professor Herbert. «Yes,» said Pa, «but I don’t believe in germs. I’m sixty-five years old and I ain’t seen one yet!» «You can’t see them with your naked eye,» said Professor Herbert. «Just stay with me in the high school today. I have a few things to show you. That scum on your teeth has germs in it.» «What,» said Pa, «you mean to tell me I’ve got germs on my teeth!» «Yes,» said Professor Herbert. «I don’t mean to dispute your word,» said Pa, «but I don’t believe it. I don’t believe I have germs on my teeth!» «Stay with me today and I’ll show you”, said Professor Herbert. «I’ll stay with you,» said Pa. «I want to see the germs on my teeth. I’ve never seen one in my life.»

    12. The narrator thought that the most suitable punishment for him under the circumstances was to …

    1) be detained after school.

    2) be whipped by the Professor.

    3) be whipped by his father.

    4) find a way to pay the money.

    13. The pedagogical credo of the narrator’s father “If you spare the rod you spoil the child” implies that …

    1) the corporal punishment is the most effective way to bring up children.

    2) you should use the rod sparingly when you deal with children.

    3) the more you use the rod, the more spoilt the child becomes.

    4) parents shouldn’t spoil children by giving them too much freedom.

    14. Professor Herbert suggested that the narrator should …

    1) do some odd jobs to earn the money he had to repay his teacher.

    2) take up the job of a school cleaner to help his family.

    3) help Professor Herbert with the household chores like cleaning windows.

    4) look for a job for at least twenty-five cents an hour.

    15. The narrator’s Pa was angry with his son because …

    1) his son was reluctant to help him with the farm work.

    2) his son was unwilling to explain why he was late.

    3) he had to do his son’s share of routine work on the farm.

    4) his son had broken down a cherry tree.

    16.The narrator’s father went to the county high school in order to …

    1) find out if his son had really been offered a job.

    2) forbid Professor Herbert to detain his son after school.

    3) apologize for his son and pay the money for the broken tree.

    4) express his dissatisfaction with the school curriculum.

    17. When Professor Herbert used the word “protozoa”, which the narrator’s Pa didn’t know, the father …

    1) felt humiliated by his own ignorance.

    2) asked the Professor to clarify the meaning of the word.

    3) understood the meaning of the word from the context.

    4) thought it was a new breed of chickens.

    18. The narrator’s father made up his mind to stay at school for a day in order to …

    1) make sure his son was taught properly.

    2) satisfy his natural curiosity.

    3) expose Professor Herbert as a charlatan.

    4) prove that his teeth were absolutely clean.

    №4

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12–18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    REUNION

    The last time I saw my father was in Grand Central Station. I was going from my grandmother’s in the Adirondacks to a cottage on the Cape that my mother had rented, and I wrote my father that I would be in New York between trains for an hour and a half, and asked if we could have lunch together. His secretary wrote to say that he would meet me at the information booth at noon, and at twelve o’clock sharp I saw him coming through the crowd.

    He was a stranger to me – my mother divorced him three years ago and I hadn’t been with him since – but as soon as I saw him I felt that he was my father, my flesh and blood, my future and my doom. I knew that when I was grown I would be something like him; I would have to plan my campaigns within his limitations. He was a big, good-looking man, and I was terribly happy to see him again.

    He struck me on the back and shook my hand. «Hi, Charlie,» he said. «Hi, boy. I’d like to take you up to my club, but it’s in the Sixties, and if you have to catch an early train I guess we’d better get something to eat around here.» He put his arm around me, and I smelled my father the way my mother sniffs a rose. It was a rich compound of whiskey, after-shave lotion, shoe polish, woollens, and the rankness of a mature male. I hoped that someone would see us together. I wished that we could be photographed. I wanted some record of our having been together.

    We went out of the station and up a side street to a restaurant. It was still early, and the place was empty. The bartender was quarrelling with a delivery boy, and there was one very old waiter in a red coat down by the kitchen door. We sat down, and my father hailed the waiter in a loud voice. «Kellner!» he shouted. «Garcon! You!» His boisterousness in the empty restaurant seemed out of place. «Could we have a little service here!» he shouted. Then he clapped his hands. This caught the waiter’s attention, and he shuffled over to our table.

    «Were you clapping your hands at me?» he asked.
    «Calm down, calm down,» my father said. «It isn’t too much to ask of you – if it wouldn’t be too much above and beyond the call of duty, we would like a couple of Beefeater Gibsons.»
    «I don’t like to be clapped at,» the waiter said.
    «I should have brought my whistle,» my father said. «I have a whistle that is audible only to the ears of old waiters. Now, take out your little pad and your little pencil and see if you can get this straight: two Beefeater Gibsons. Repeat after me: two Beefeater Gibsons.»
    «I think you’d better go somewhere else,» the waiter said quietly.
    «That,» said my father, «is one of the most brilliant suggestions I have ever heard. Come on, Charlie.»

    I followed my father out of that restaurant into another. He was not so boisterous this time. Our drinks came, and he cross-questioned me about the baseball season. He then struck the edge of his empty glass with his knife and began shouting again. «Garcon! You! Could we trouble you to bring us two more of the same.»

    «How old is the boy?» the waiter asked.
    «That,» my father said, «is none of your business.»
    «I’m sorry, sir,» the waiter said, «but I won’t serve the boy another drink.»

    «Well, I have some news for you,» my father said. «I have some very interesting news for you. This doesn’t happen to be the only restaurant in New York. They’ve opened another on the corner. Come on, Charlie.»

    He paid the bill, and I followed him out of that restaurant into another …

    12.The narrator was looking forward to meeting with his father because he

    1) expected to get a valuable present from him.

    2) missed the feeling of being with him.

    3) wanted to stay with him in New York.

    4) hoped that his parents would get back together.

    13.The narrator’s request to meet was accepted by his father

    1) with great pleasure.

    2) unwillingly.

    3) in business-like manner.

    4) with much hope and expectation.

    14.The narrator wanted to be photographed with his father because

    1) he was proud of his father’s good looks.

    2) he wished to remember their moments together.

    3) it was the happiest time of his life.

    4) he wanted to boast of his father to his friends.

    15.The father did not invite his son to his club because

    1) the son was pressed for time to catch a train.

    2) it was a closed club with no children allowed.

    3) the man feared that his son would not behave properly.

    4) it was necessary to book in advance to enter the club.

    16.The father’s behaviour in the first restaurant was inappropriate as he

    1) was too boisterous in an empty restaurant.

    2) tried to boast of his knowledge of foreign languages.

    3) could not afford to pay the bill.

    4) treated the waiter in a rude manner.

    17.The waiter in the next restaurant refused to bring them more drinks as

    1) the restaurant was closing soon.

    2) the son looked pale and faint.

    3) the boy was too young to drink alcohol.

    4) the waiter got angry with the son.

    18.The title of the story “Reunion” actually implies that the

    1) son found his lost father after decades of separation.

    2) son now would be living together with his father.

    3) “father – son” relations is what both sides feel the need for.

    4) son made an attempt to re-establish relations with his father.

    №5

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12-18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    The London Marathon celebrates its 23rd birthday. That is 23 years of stresses and strains, blisters and sore bits, and incredible tales. Somehow, I truly managed to run four of them. And I have medals to prove it. It seemed like a good idea at the time. I watched the inaugural London Marathon on March 29th, 1981. It seemed extraordinary that normal people would want to run 26 miles and 385 yards. And, it must be said, they looked strange and not quite steady at the end of it all. There are, indeed, terrible tales of people losing consciousness by the time they reach that glorious finishing line. But I was captivated. I knew I had to do it.

    Three years later I was living in London, not far from Greenwich where the event begins, and it seemed the perfect opportunity to give it a go. I was only a short train ride from the starting line, but more than 26 miles from the finish. “Who cares?” I thought. By the end I did. The moment I crossed that finishing line, and had that medal placed around my neck, was one of the finest in my life. The sense of achievement was immense. It was a mad thing to do, and ultimately pointless. But knowing that I’d run a Marathon – that most historic of all distant races – felt incredible.

    London provides one of the easiest of all the officially sanctioned marathons because most of it is flat. Yes, there are the cobblestones while running through the Tower of London, and there are the quiet patches where crowds are thin and you are crying out for some encouragement – those things matter to the alleged “fun” runners like myself, the serious runners don’t think of such things.

    This year London will attract unprecedented number of athletes, a lot of title holders among them. It is set to witness what is probably the greatest field ever for a marathon. In the men’s race, for example, among numerous applicants there’s the holder of the world’s best time, Khalid Khannouchi of the USA; the defending champion El Mouriz of Morocco; Ethiopia’s Olympic bronze-medallist Tesfaye Tola. And, making his marathon debut, is one of the finest long distance runners of all time Haile Gebrselassie.

    Since 1981, almost half a million people have completed the London Marathon, raising more than $125 million for charity. For the majority of the runners, this is what it is all about. It is for charity, for fun, for self-development. It is a wonderful day. I have run it with poor training, with proper training. And I have always loved it.

    It’s crazy, and it’s one of the greatest things I’ve ever done. If you want to feel as though you’ve achieved something, run a marathon.

    12. Participation in the London Marathon resulted for the author in

    1)stresses and strains.

    2)blisters and sore bits.

    3)memorable medals.

    4)incredible tales.

    13. When the author watched the end of the first marathon he saw people who were

    1)extraordinary steady.

    2)feeling weak and exhausted.

    3)losing consciousness.

    4)having a glorious time.

    14. The reason for the author’s participation in the marathon was the fact that he

    1)was fascinated by it.

    2)lived not far from its finishing line.

    3)wanted to receive a medal.

    4)wanted to do something incredible.

    15. “By the end I did” means that the author

    1)found the distance suitable.

    2)found the distance challenging.

    3)decided to take part in the marathon.

    4)eventually took a train to the finish.

    16. According to the author, the London Marathon is one of the easiest because

    1)it goes through the Tower of London.

    2)there are quiet patches without crowds.

    3)many “fun” runners participate in it.

    4)its course does not slope up or down.

    17. “… the greatest field ever for a marathon” means that the marathon

    1)will take place on a big field.

    2)is to be run by the famous runners only.

    3)will be witnessed by more people.

    4)will welcome a huge number of sportsmen.

    18. According to the author, one should run the London Marathon to

    1)raise money for charity.

    2)get some training.

    3)feel self-fulfillment.

    4)have fun in a crazy way.

    №6

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12-18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    Although many countries are saddled with stereotypes, in Switzerland’s case they’re dead on.

    The alpine nation really is highly efficient. And meticulously punctual. Clean, too. For chronically tardy, resolutely inefficient (not to mention slovenly) people like myself, a visit to Switzerland yields a cocktail of emotions: awe, relief and a dash of irritation.

    For the Swiss, punctuality is not merely a nicety, a bonbon in the buffet of life. It is a source of deep contentment. The Swiss, it seems, subscribe to the German philosopher Schopenhauer’s definition of happiness as “an absence of misery”. They derive genuine joy from the fact that life unfolds on time and in a highly efficient manner.

    Whenever I visit Switzerland, I go through several stages of punctuality reaction. At first it delights me, especially if I’m coming from neighbouring Italy or France with their rather more flexible approach to timekeeping. By contrast, life in Switzerland is sturdy and dependable, like a Saint Bernard dog. If someone says they will meet me at 2 pm, they arrive at 2 pm not 2:05 (or 1:55, for that matter). I like this. For a while. Then it annoys me. The extreme punctuality strikes me as a kind of stinginess, and I find myself agreeing with the English writer Evelyn Waugh who said that “punctuality is the virtue of the bored.” That is unfair though, and finally, invariably, I come to appreciate Swiss punctuality for what it is: a deep expression of respect for other people. A punctual person is a considerate one. By showing up on time – for everything – a Swiss person is saying, in effect, “I value your time and, by extension, I value you.”

    It’s no coincidence that the Swiss are the world’s watchmakers. Which came first – the precise timekeepers or the precise people? Hard to say, but the result is the same: a nation where the trains – and everything else – really do run on time. Then there are the toilets. “Have you seen our public toilets?” asked Dieter, a Swiss doctor, over an afternoon beer in Geneva. “They are very clean.” He’s right. Swiss toilets are indeed clean, as is everything else too. In some countries it would be suicidal to drink the tap water. In Switzerland it is fashionable to do so; the water comes from natural springs.

    How to explain this cleanliness and punctuality? No one knows for sure. But a popular theory is that, historically, it stems from the unforgiving, mountainous terrain. Either you planted your crops on time and harvested them promptly or, well, you starved.

    Punctuality, sadly, is a dying art in many parts of the world. Mobile phones are partly to blame. We feel less compelled to arrive on time if we can always text to say we’re running a few minutes late. I don’t sense that is happening in Switzerland, though.

    Susan Jane Gilman, an American author who has lived in Geneva for the past 11 years, recounted with awe how she’s “never had a taxi that arrived late, that wasn’t there exactly when it said it would be”. She marvelled at how, for instance, when she’s ordered a new refrigerator, the company gives her a precise two-hour window for delivery – and sticks to it.

    Switzerland has changed her. Once a “chronically late person”, Gilman is now meticulously punctual. “I feel a greater respect for people’s time,” she said, sounding very Swiss.

    The flip side, though, is that when she visits New York, her hometown, she is annoyed by the relative lack of punctuality: the bus that is 15 minutes behind schedule or doesn’t show up at all, the friends who saunter into a restaurant 30 minutes late. “My friends will say ‘Suze hon, this isn’t Switzerland, relax. They’ll hold our table.’ but I get annoyed if people are late.”

    Punctuality is not without its drawbacks. For one thing, it creates a kind of bunching effect. Coffee shops in Swiss cities tend to be crowded at 4pm every day because everybody takes their coffee break at exactly 4pm. In apartment buildings, residents must abide by a strict weekday schedule for use of the laundry room.

    Extreme punctuality also creates an expectation, and if that expectation is not met, disappointment ensues. On those rare occasions that things do not function smoothly, the Swiss get flustered – and angry. Recently, the country was thrown into a tizzy with the disturbing news that only 87.5% of the trains run by the federal railroad arrived within three minutes of their scheduled time, shy of their 89% target.

    But perhaps that frustration has some merit. After all, Switzerland has some fierce competition when it comes to punctuality. In Japan, the Shinkansen bullet trains make the Swiss railroads look downright tardy. The average annual delay? Thirty six seconds.

    12. What does the word “tardy” from the 1st paragraph mean?

    1. Dirty
    2. Lazy
    3. Late
    4. Ignorant

    13. What is true about how the Swiss treat punctuality?

    1. It’s a satisfying part of life
    2. It’s a part of etiquette
    3. It’s a taboo concept
    4. It’s a miserable part of life

    14. What stage of punctuality reaction is not mentioned in the text?

    1. Aversion
    2. Accepting
    3. Annoyance
    4. Joy

    15. What is the reason for Swiss punctuality, according to one theory mentioned in the text?

    1. The Swiss are the watchmakers
    2. Switzerland never participated in wars
    3. Switzerland’s geographical position
    4. The Swiss certain agricultural customs

    16. What disadvantage does punctuality cause to Susan?

    1. Her friends get annoyed with her
    2. She gets annoyed with her friends
    3. The restaurants don’t hold the tables up
    4. If the service is late, she is angry

    17. What is the drawback of being punctual mentioned in the text?

    1. You get frustrated if something breaks your plan
    2. You can’t get service on time
    3. Your expectations are too undetermined
    4. You can’t use laundry

    18. What is the tone of the last paragraph?

    1. Respectful
    2. Mocking
    3. Indifferent
    4. Ironic

    №7

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12- 18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    First Train Trip

    I must have been about eight when I made my first train trip. I think I was in second grade at that time. It was midsummer, hot and wet in central Kansas, and time for my aunt Winnie’s annual vacation from the store, where she worked as a clerk six days a week. She invited me to join her on a trip to Pittsburgh, fifty miles away, to see her sister, my aunt Alice. «Sally, would you like to go there by train or by car?» asked aunt Winnie. «Oh, please, by train, aunt Winnie, dear! We’ve been there by car three times already!»

    Alice was one of my favourite relatives and I was delighted to be invited to her house. As I was the youngest niece in Mother’s big family, the aunties all tended to spoil me and Alice was no exception. She kept a boarding house for college students, a two-storey, brown brick building with comfortable, nicely decorated rooms at the corner of 1200 Kearney Avenue. She was also a world-class cook, which kept her boarding house full of young people. It seemed to me that their life was so exciting and joyful.

    Since I’d never ridden a train before, I became more and more excited as the magic day drew near. I kept questioning Mother about train travel, but she just said, «Wait. You’ll see.» For an eight-year-old, waiting was really difficult, but finally the big day arrived. Mother had helped me pack the night before, and my little suitcase was full with summer sundresses, shorts and blouses, underwear and pyjamas. I was reading Billy Whiskers, a fantastic story about a goat that once made a train trip to New York, and I had put that in as well. It was almost midnight when I could go to bed at last.

    We arrived at the station early, purchased our tickets and found our car. I was fascinated by the face-to-face seats so some passengers could ride backwards. Why would anyone, I thought, want to see where they’d been? I only wanted to see what lay ahead for me.

    Finally, the conductor shouted, «All aboard!» to the people on the platform. They climbed into the cars, the engineer blew the whistle and clanged the bell, and we pulled out of the station.

    This train stopped at every town between my home in Solomon and Pittsburgh. It was known as the «milk train» because at one time it had delivered goods as well as passengers to these villages. I looked eagerly at the signs at each station. I’d been through all these towns by car, but this was different. The shaky ride of the coaches, the soft brown plush seats, the smells of the engine drifting back down the track and in through the open windows made this trip far more exotic.

    The conductor, with his black uniform and shiny hat, the twinkling signals that told the engineer when to stop and go, thrilled me. To an adult, the trip must have seemed painfully slow, but I enjoyed every minute.

    Aunt Winnie had packed a lunch for us to eat along the way as there was no dining car in the train. I was dying to know just what was in that big shopping bag she carried, but she, too, said, «Wait. You’ll see.» Midway, Aunt Winnie pulled down her shopping bag from the luggage rack above our seats. My eyes widened as she opened it and began to take out its contents. I had expected lunchmeat sandwiches, but instead there was a container of fried chicken, two hardboiled eggs, bread and butter wrapped in waxed paper, crisp radishes and slim green onions from Winnie’s garden, as well as rosy sliced tomatoes. She had brought paper plates, paper cups and some of the «everyday» silverware. A large bottle of cold tea was well wrapped in a dishtowel; the ice had melted, but it was still chilly. I cautiously balanced my plate on my knees and ate, wiping my lips and fingers with a large paper napkin. This was living!

    When we had cleaned our plates, Aunt Winnie looked into the bag one more time. The best treat of all appeared ⎯ homemade chocolate cakes! Another cup of cold tea washed these down and then we carefully returned the remains of the food and silverware to the bag, which Aunt Winnie put into the corner by her feet.

    «Almost there,» said my aunt, looking out of the window at the scenery passing by. And sure enough, as we pulled into the Pittsburgh station we immediately caught sight of aunt Alice, waiting for us, a smile like the sun lighting up her face, arms wide open. We got off the train and she led us past the taxi rank and the bus stop to her car that was parked near the station. And all the way to her home she was asking about my impressions of my first train trip and I could hardly find the words to express all the thrill and excitement that filled me.

    12. The first time Sally travelled by train was when she1) had to move to her aunt Alice.

    2)had a summer vacation at school.

    3)went to Pittsburgh for the first time in her life.

    4)visited her aunt Alice together with aunt Winnie.

    13. Aunt Alice made her living by

    1)working as a cook.

    2)keeping a boarding house.

    3)decorating houses.

    4)working as a teacher at college.

    14. Sally was waiting for her first train trip so impatiently that she

    1)packed her things long before the trip.

    2)lost her appetite a week before the trip.

    3)asked her Mother many questions about train trips.

    4)couldn’t sleep the night before the trip.

    15. Sally didn’t like the idea of riding backwards because

    1)it could make her sick.

    2)she could miss her station.

    3)she could miss the conductor.

    4)she wanted to see where she was going.

    16. The trip to Pittsburgh by train seemed so exotic to Sally because

    1)she had never travelled so far from her native town.

    2) travelling by train was very different from a car ride.

    3)she had never travelled in comfort.

    4)she had never travelled without her parents.

    17. Sally thought that at lunchtime they would have

    1)meat sandwiches.

    2)bread and butter with coffee.

    3)fried chicken, eggs and vegetables.

    4)tea with chocolate cakes.

    18.Aunt Alice was waiting for Sally and aunt Winnie

    1)at home.

    2)in her car.

    3)on the platform.

    4)at the bus stop.

    №8

    Прочитайте текст и выполните задания 12–18. Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

    Chronic lack of sleep affects one in three British workers

    One in three British workers suffers from poor sleep, research shows, with stress, computers and taking work home blamed for the lack of quality sleep. Some employees get fewer than five hours sleep a night, only one in seven feels completely refreshed when they wake and more women have poor shut-eye than men. The alarming findings emerged from a study of self-assessments completed by 38,784 staff working in the UK for firms such as telecoms firm, O2, drugs developer, Quintiles and medical technology manufacturer, Medtronic.

    A third was dissatisfied with the amount and quality of their sleep, with 8.4% saying they were «very unhappy» with it, and another 24.4% describing themselves as «unhappy». When asked how they felt 30 minutes after getting up, only 15.5% said «refreshed». Of the others, 3.3% said they were «exhausted», 24% said «unrefreshed» and 57.2% were still «a little tired».

    While experts say that everyone should ideally get seven to eight hours sleep a night, only 38.5% of the 38,784 respondents did so. More had between five and seven hours (45%), only a lucky 10% reported sleeping for eight to nine hours and one in 100 enjoyed more than nine hours.

    When researchers combined those results to give each respondent an overall «sleep score» out of 100, some 33.8% got a mark of less than 30 — the lowest category. That means someone either has, or is at high risk of developing, a sleeping problem. «This research is telling us that a large number of working adults, one in three in the UK, has a sleeping problem,» said Dr Tony Massey, medical director of Vielife, the health and productivity firm that carried out the assessments between 2009 and 2011. «A very concerning number of British workers get too little sleep.» Britain is near the top of an international league table for lack of sleep. A Vielife study of 116,452 staff in America found that 23.4% scored poorly for sleep.

    The extent of inadequate rest has prompted fears that many people are too tired to do their jobs properly, with some so sleep-deprived their brains are as confused as if they had consumed too much alcohol.

    «Too few people practice sleep hygiene,» said Massey. «That involves little things that people can do without professional help, like ensuring your room is dark and quiet, getting to bed at the same time every night — just like a two-year-old — reading a book, which is a proven relaxant, and not looking at bright screens, such as the TV or computer, for an hour before you go to bed as that will disturb your sleep.»

    The growing tendency for employees to do extra work in the evenings and at weekends, which may have risen in the recession, also seems to be linked to poor sleep. «More people are scrunching the golden hour before they go to sleep, and they are paying the price in that their sleep isn’t refreshing and they end up in a vicious cycle of fatigue, poor productivity and then feeling that they have to do the same again the next day to compensate,» said Massey.

    The best guarantee of good quality shut-eye is to work five days a week and sleep seven to eight hours a night. Five-days-a-week staff had the best sleep score, while those getting seven to eight hours a night scored 72.7.

    «These are very worrying findings because lack of sleep is a risk factor for a whole range of serious health problems, such as stroke and heart disease,» said Massey.

    12. Which of the following is mentioned among the reasons for poorer sleep?

    1) work for telecom firms

    2) consumption of drugs

    3) work done at home

    4) lack of communication

    13. According to the research, just about … percent of people have the recommended number of sleeping hours.

    1) forty

    2) twenty

    3) thirty

    4) ten

    14. Paragraph 4 stresses that …

    1) the “sleep score” in Britain is relatively low.

    2) many people in Britain are unaware of sleeping disorders.

    3) he number of Britons who don’t get enough sleep is alarming.

    4) British workers get more sleep than American ones.

    15. The inadequate nighttime rest of employees might result in …

    1) brain damage

    2) inefficiency at work

    3) lack of job satisfaction

    4) problems with alcohol

    16. What does “sleep hygiene” NOT involve?

    1) professional help

    2) a darkened room

    3) a relaxing book

    4) regular bedtime

    17. The phrase “vicious cycle” in paragraph 7 means …

    1) a sudden ware of tiredness

    2) a course of everyday events

    3) a large amount of extra work

    4) a repetitive cycle of poor sleep consequences

    18. What, according to the article, is important for good quality sleep?

    1) higher productivity at work

    2) a five-day working week

    3) five to seven hours of nighttime sleep

    4) absence of health problems

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    Underline the correct word.
    1. I was very amusing / amused by the jokes that he told us yesterday.
    2. This is the house where / when my grandmother was born.
    3. Mary is a beautiful / short tall American actress.
    4. She hoped that they wouldn’t give her secret up / away.
    5. That’s the girl whose / who father is a lawyer.
    6. What does / do Mike look like? He’s tall with spiky black hair.
    7. Natalie gave him out / back the money she owed him.
    8. Our teacher is a funny / German, short, middle−aged man.
    9. My Mum wanted to know when / why I didn’t finish my homework.
    10. The doctor told him to give up / back chocolate because he was too plump.
    11. Why / What do people admire her?
    12. When and which / where were they born?

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    Английский язык 7 класс рабочая тетрадь Spotlight Английский в фокусе Ваулина. 3. Grammar Practice. Номер №5

    Решение

    Перевод задания
    Подчеркните правильное слово.
    1. Я был очень amusing / amused анекдотами, которые он нам рассказал вчера.
    2. Это дом, where / when родилась моя бабушка.
    3. Мэри – beautiful / short высокая американская актриса.
    4. Она надеялась, что они не give up / away ее секрет.
    5. Это девушка, whose / who отец − юрист.
    6. Как does / do Майк выглядит? Он высокий, с колючими черными волосами.
    7. Натали give out / back ему деньги, которые она ему задолжала.
    8. Наш учитель − funny / German, невысокого роста, мужчина средних лет.
    9. Моя мама хотела знать, when / why я не закончил домашнее задание.
    10. Врач сказал ему give up / back от шоколада, потому что он был слишком полным.
    11. Why / What люди восхищаются ею?
    12. Когда и which / where они родились?

    ОТВЕТ
    1. I was very amused by the jokes that he told us yesterday.
    2. This is the house where my grandmother was born.
    3. Mary is a beautiful tall American actress.
    4. She hoped that they wouldn’t give her secret away.
    5. That’s the girl whose father is a lawyer.
    6. What does Mike look like? He’s tall with spiky black hair.
    7. Natalie gave him back the money she owed him.
    8. Our teacher is a funny, short, middle−aged man.
    9. My Mum wanted to know why I didn’t finish my homework.
    10. The doctor told him to give up chocolate because he was too plump.
    11. Why do people admire her?
    12. When and where were they born?

    Перевод ответа
    1. Меня очень позабавили анекдоты, которые он рассказал нам вчера.
    2. Это дом, в котором родилась моя бабушка.
    3. Мэри − красивая высокая американская актриса.
    4. Она надеялась, что они не выдадут ее секрет.
    5. Это девушка, отец которой юрист.
    6. Как выглядит Майк? Он высокий, с колючими черными волосами.
    7. Натали вернула ему деньги, которые она ему задолжала.
    8. Наш учитель − забавный, невысокий мужчина средних лет.
    9. Моя мама хотела знать, почему я не закончил домашнее задание.
    10. Врач сказал ему отказаться от шоколада, потому что он был слишком полным.
    11. Почему люди восхищаются ею?
    12. Когда и где они родились?

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