Match the words to make word combinations from the text

medieval

embark
on

walk
off

take

clamour

enduring

hawk

misconstrue

for
an audience

evidence

wares

fair

in
a huff

mark

to
the streets

one’s
new career

II. Discussing the text

1. Read the text.

The
Emergency Ward

By
S. A. Hoffman

Stephan
A. Hoffman attended Harvard Medical School and worked as an intern in
the emergency ward at Massachusetts General Hospital, at large
hospital in Boston. His book, Under the Ether Dome, describes his
experiences working there. In this abstract from his book, Hoffman
discusses what it is like to be a novice intern working in the
Emergency Ward
.

1.
The Emergency Ward of a city hospital often resembles a medieval
fair. The scene is full of pageantry, a state of commotion prevails,
and the atmosphere is reminiscent of a marketplace: people throng in
with complaints as if they were hawking wares. Exposing painful
chests or stomachs, or waving injured parts in the air, they clamour
for an audience. Hoping to attract notice, they will bargain
spiritedly, each one entering into an explanation of why his illness,
like a piece of merchandise, is more deserving of attention than the
next.

2.
In the sea of mendicants and merchants, every imaginable infirmity is
represented. Like items brought in for sale, none is too plain or
pitiful, too colorful, comic, or exotic to encounter. I remember
treating an elderly man who developed chest pain after having been
beaten by his children, a young physician with a cough who turned out
to have lung cancer, a woman who complained of a buzzing sensation in
her abdomen and who was thought to be a “crock” until an X ray
revealed that she had a vibrator lodged in her intestine, an
attractive young woman with chest pain dead only minutes after her
arrival of a massive myocardial infarction, and a gentleman who
walked in with an urn inverted on his head, telling us in a
reverberating voice that it was the work of a jealous wife.

3.
Not only is every imaginable kind of problem on display in an
Emergency ward, but every variety of personality is exhibited. There
are evangelists and troubadours, the self-styled clowns and princes,
tragedians and trouble-makers, even matchmakers. Some people are
openly out to profit or to close a deal and will try to wheedle
anything from narcotics to immediate attention to a room with a TV.
One comes to recognize both the practiced historian, who arrives with
a prepared announcement, and the shy one, who fidgets simply in
anticipation of having to speak. The innocent lies next to the sage,
and the penitent patient rubs shoulders with the outraged. There are
both the famous and the unrenowned. I can recall taking care of
senators and television personalities as well as of a street nomad
who proudly taught me the distinction between a vagrant and a bum.

4.
Unfortunately, an Emergency ward is not always so convivial a place.
When the pulse of action quickens, and survival becomes the sole
priority, the Emergency ward is transformed from a fair to a theater
of war. At such times, an intern’s job is to battle with diseases,
and the people who bear them are almost incidental. Rather than being
able to appreciate the human comedy around him, an intern is bent on
minimizing losses, and he is apt to emerge from a day’s work
shell’shocked. If there are calm moments in an Emergency Ward,
there are also hectic ones, which tend to leave a more enduring mark.
This is why it is so rare for any intern to escape his one-month tour
of duty without coming down with a case of combat fatigue. An
Emergency Ward is not one but two worlds, which can switch back and
forth with vexatious rapidity like images on a Gestalt screen.

5.
Even though I was not assigned to do my first of several rotations in
the Emergency Ward until the fourth month of internship, I had
already had some experience of it. Almost every patient I had
admitted to the hospital during my days on call for the wards, the
private service, and the intensive-care unit had made his or her
first stop in “The Pit”, as the Emergency Ward is affectionately
known, and clipboard and black bag in hand, I would descend there to
do my workup. I had also become acquainted with the Emergency Ward in
a purely social capacity. The EW is a way station, a place where
house officers stop frequently to trade stories, ventilate, and
unwind. Just as it is the medical hub of the hospital for patients,
the EW is the social center of the hospital for interns and
residents, and like my colleagues I had spent my share of time there.

6.
If the thought of managing emergencies intimidated me at the
beginning of the year, I welcomed the chance to experience the world
of acute care by the time my EW rotation drew near. Much as I hated
to admit it, I was already weary of working on the wards. I had spent
the first three months of internship on one or another hospital
floor, where in spite of daily discharges and admissions, a sizable
core of patients would remain. Day after day, my colleagues and I
looked after these unfortunate people. When we made our morning
rounds, the same faces – angry, discouraged, pained – turned
toward us, serving notice of how little we could do. It was true: few
seemed to improve with our ministrations. Many suffered from diseases
whose courses were affected minimally or not at all by what we did,
and both for them and for us our supposed interventions seemed more
like busywork designed to preserve the illusion that we were doing
something than like truly curative care.

7.
Despite my determination to remain optimistic, I found myself growing
discouraged on the wards, and I looked increasingly to the EW for
relief from this hermetic world. Not only would I see a different
group of people every day, but also I would be more likely to bring
about major improvements in their lives, even cures, and I craved
this opportunity as if it were the antidote to my experiences so far.

8.
On my first day in the EW, I arrived a little early in order to
outfit myself appropriately. Having studied the attire of a junior
resident who had been on duty there the day before, I copied his
example, tying a rubber tourniquet around one belt loop and fixing a
pair of EKG calipers to another. A reflex hammer, I had learned from
watching a neurologist, could be kept conveniently in a buttonhole of
my white coat, and a safety pin, which I would use to test sensation,
fit nearly through one of the coat’s lapels. I studded my pockets
with scissors and tape and tucked in several intravenous catheters
where I could still find room. Preparing for each rotation of the
year, as every intern knows, is very much a matter of looking and
becoming one with the part.

9.
When 8:00 a.m. arrived and my shift began, I asked the senior
resident to sign me up for the first case of the day. To be free of
the constraints of ward care was a thrill, and I was eager to embark
on my new career. Had I been able to, I would have signed up for
every case, and there were times during the month when I nearly
succeeded in doing so. Poised in readiness for any and every
emergency from asthma to heart attack to overdose, I felt like a
privileged member of a repertory company, prepared to perform any of
a hundred roles at a moment’s notice. To do so I needed to command
a knowledge not only of how to apply medications, medical props, and
emergency techniques, but also of how to use words and gestures to
their full effect. In any medical arena, but in the Emergency Ward
especially, a doctor is always part actor. Whenever a patient
presents to him for help, he must stage an individualized
performance, choosing his words and timing his expressions with care
in the hope of moving his audience toward the desired dramatic
resolution.

10.
It is over four years since my debut in the Emergency Ward, but I
still recall exactly how I felt while waiting for my first patient to
arrive. As I relive this sense of anticipation, I imagine myself
beginning in the EW all over again. Standing at the front desk, where
interns and residents congregate, I keep a watchful eye on the door.

11.
The first patient to arrive is a middle-aged street dweller.
Disheveled, carrying a Lord & Taylor bag, and bundled in several
layers of tattered rags, she comes in coughing. Looking on while the
nurse obtains her temperature and other vital signs, I entertain a
quick differential diagnosis: pneumonia, lung abscess, or
tuberculosis.

12.
When I ask the woman more about her cough, however, she divulges only
that she once lived in France. Meandering over the terrain of her
life, she goes on to tell me about her house (did she say on the Rue
de Rivoli?), about a string of lovers, and about syphilis, which she
claimed to have contracted during a balmy night on a beach in
Normandy. Eventually she married, but her husband left her. She
returned to the United States and took to the streets.

13.
Casting a quick glance at the vital signs on the nurse’s sheet, I
notice that it is only a cold that has brought her in. Indeed, her
throat appears benign and her lungs are clear. After undoing the
cloths that are swathed about her, I find that there are scars across
her belly, and a wave of pity hits me. Following my gaze, she too
glances down and gives me a rueful smile. “C’est la vie, helas,
c’est la vie,” she says, without providing further explanation.

14.
Although her chest X ray is clear (it shows no evidence of
pneumonia), I decide to admit her, fully aware that it is strictly a
“social admission” designed to provide her with food, lodging,
and a good night’s rest. As expected, the junior resident whose
turn it is to take the case balks at the admission. “You’re weak,
Hoffmann,” he tells me. “She needs to be admitted about as much
as I do.” Prepared for his attack, I counter, “It’s an easy
case, Jim. There’s hardly anything for you to do.” He knows it.
She fills one of his beds and couldn’t possibly entail less work.
That’s why, despite complaining, he agrees to admit the woman.

15.
When I am through, the senior gives me a quick lesson on how to
evaluate the patient who arrives with shortness of breath, and as we
stand together in the front of the EW reviewing the workgroup, in
comes a middle-aged woman who is wheezing. “It’s Clara again,”
the senior says knowingly as the woman is wheeled to one of the rooms
in the rear. “She has asthma and is a regular around here. You
might as well get to know her.”

16.
“You’re an intern, aren’t you?” Clara asks as I stride into
the room. “Yes, I am,” I answer, “I’m Dr Hoffmann.” “Well,
I don’t want any intern taking care of me; get me a resident,”
she responds curtly. Not wishing to provoke an argument, I seek out
the senior, who patiently but firmly lays down the law. “You know
how the Emergency Ward works, Clara,” he admonishes her. “You’ve
been around long enough to know. You’re assigned to Dr Hoffmann,
and if that isn’t agreeable to you, you may leave.” As he
prepares to return to his work, he turns around and reminds her,
“Besides, your new clinic doctor is an intern, so your argument
doesn’t hold steam!”

17.
Clara agrees to stay. As I take a brief history, (“Can you tell me
when your breathing became labored? Did anything seem to set it off?
Have you been able to take all your medicines?”) Clara appears
impatient and eventually cuts me off. “Look,” she says irritably,
“I just want a shot of epinephrine, an aminophylline drip – run
it in at forty – some Bronkosol to breathe, and my lungs will
clear. I always clear with that.” A little taken aback, I decide
not to argue, since her plan of treatment seems reasonable. “Fair
enough,” I say.

18.
But then she tells me that she wants a blood gas test, a test that
requires puncturing an artery to measure the oxygen level in the
blood. Since there is no reason for her to undergo the procedure, I
am caught entirely off guard. It has always been the patient who has
refused to undergo this sometimes painful and hazardous but often
important test, and I who have had to lobby for it. Now I am
compelled to argue the opposite side, and despite my most persuasive
case against her undergoing the test, she gives me only a begrudging
ear. “I want it anyway,” she says the instant I finish. “I
always get a blood gas drawn.”

19.
When I make a renewed appeal, however, she grows excited and
increasingly short of breath. This, I realize, is nothing short of
blackmail: by threatening to aggravate her asthma she has literally
forced my hand. Reluctantly I draw the specimen from her radial
artery, while she looks on with a triumphant smile. Having sent off
the test, I begin her on medications, and eventually (how much from
medication and how much from my having capitulated to her is unclear)
Clara improves. On her way out she is all smiles, and she informs me
that I am a good physician. The senior resident also tells me that I
did well, giving me a pat on the back. The whole thing leaves me
feeling empty and duped.

20.
The next patient comes in with jaundice. She is frail and has clearly
lost a good deal of weight. The obvious possibility is a malignancy,
and as the thought goes through my mind, she actually puts the
question to me: “Is it cancer?” My heart sinks. Put on the spot,
I try to find an honest but humane reply.

21.
In
the middle of examining her, I am called away to assist in a code,
the resuscitation of a patient suffering cardiac arrest. The
emergency Medical technicians have just wheeled in an elderly man,
age and identity unknown, who dropped at a nearby Massachusetts
Transit Authority station. The senior asks me to pump on his chest,
that is, to continue CPR, and as I do so, one junior resident slips
an endotracheal tube down the man’s throat so that he can be
ventilated and another hurriedly inserts a central line beneath his
collarbone so that he can receive intravenous drugs. The senior asks
someone to relieve me, then asks me to draw a blood gas specimen from
an artery in the man’s groin. I have trouble, grow embarrassed, and
begin to sweat, but finally obtain it. I relax, thinking my trials to
be over.

22.
Then the senior asks me if I have inserted the pacemaker; the
patient’s heart has failed to generate a beat. “Uh, no, I
haven’t,” I reply nervously, unsure of just what awaits me. I am
handed a huge needle and syringe and told to attach the syringe to
the needle. I do this obediently but reluctantly, thinking that I
really shouldn’t be doing this without having had an opportunity to
practice first. But I do not argue. I know that it is part of
internship to learn by doing and I know that some of that learning
must be done under duress.

23.
Pointing out the anatomic landmarks on the patient’s chest, the
resident instructs me just where to insert the needle. I do as he
tells me, advancing the apparatus through the skin and drawing back
on the syringe, so that I will know when I have entered the heart. I
am nervous – my heart is pounding and my hands are shaking – but
the senior talks me calmly through the procedure as if he were a
pilot on the ground coaching an inexperienced passenger on an
airplane through an emergency landing. As I continue to advance the
needle slowly, it suddenly fills with blood, signifying that I have
reached the man’s left ventricle. Under the senior’s guidance, I
thread a wire (which connects to a pacemaker) through the center of
the needle, and after experimenting with its placement in the way
that the senior suggests, I hear the junior resident manning the EKG
machine shout, “It’s capturing, you’ve got a complex.” When
he asks if anyone can feel a pulse, someone blurts out, “Yes!”
and when he then asks that the blood pressure be taken, it turns out
to be not only obtainable, but high. Everyone smiles and pats each
other on the back, and the mood relaxes.

24.
Trembling but exhilarated, I leave the scene, wondering what my next
visitation from a patient will bring, what unexpected twist of plot
lies in store for me with the beginning of a new act. As my first
shift in the EW plays itself out, I begin to appreciate not only how
relentlessly forward-moving is the action, but also how many dramatic
turns a day may take, and it strikes me that in the Emergency Ward an
intern has as little control over his reactions to a day’s drama as
over the course of action itself.

25.
I return to see the woman with suspended cancer, but just as I am
about to enter her room, the senior asks me if I can evaluate another
patient first. Not only has the code set us back, but the pace has
picked up. The senior resident in the Emergency Ward is like an
air-traffic controller who polices the flow of patients in and out,
and who is always juggling many flights simultaneously.

26.
The patient I am asked to evaluate his chest pain. When I walked into
the room to shake his hand, he begins to cry. It is three months
since he had a heart attack, he tells me, and he is terrified of a
recurrence. His pain today lasted only moments and was preceded by a
heavy lunch, but he is worried nonetheless. “Is this another heart
attack?” he asks me almost in a whisper. Looking at his
electrocardiogram, I tell him that it is too soon to say, but that on
the face of things the strip looks reassuring. The patient tells me
that he is so incapacitated by fear that he has been unable to return
to work. “He is a partner in a large firm,” his wife informs me,
with an almost supplicating look.

27.
Just as I begin to examine him, the alarm on the heart monitor at the
adjacent stretcher sounds. The patient who occupies the stretcher had
also arrived with chest pain and has now arrested. A code ensues, and
the man, who is only fifty-four years old, dies. Although the
curtains were drawn around him throughout the code, this did not
prevent my patient from overhearing all the goings-on. I return to
find him silent but shaking uncontrollably.

28.
Next in line is a nearly toothless old Hispanic man who playfully
withholds his reason for coming. The man, whose face is tan but
wizened, gives me a big smile and nods his head up and down. He holds
up his medicines and in broken English explains their each and every
wonderful effect. It’s as if he were an advertisement. I smile,
shake my head in disbelief, and ask him what’s bothering him, but
he only grins. My amusement fades as the game continues, and I can’t
discover why the devil he’s here. There are many other patients to
see, and the time pressure has begun to weigh on me. Eventually I
seek out the senior. “Remember, it’s Friday afternoon,” he
tells me. “His family has probably dumped him for the weekend.” I
protest, telling him I find it hard to believe. “Do you see any
family members around?” he asks me nonchalantly. Regretfully, I
enter the patient’s name in the admission book, knowing that I will
get flak for this one. It makes me mad that the man’s family would
do such a thing.

29.
At six o’clock I sit down just long enough to swallow a pack of
M&M’s and make a tally of how many patients I have seen
(seven). Although the rest of the night awaits me, I realize that in
spite of being keyed up, I am already beginning to slow down. “See
this guy quickly, would you, Steve?” the senior asks as I am just
about to return to my last patient. “I don’t think there’s
anything medical going on,” he explains, “but look him over
briefly just to make sure. Then rocket him out of here!”

30.
The man complains of dizziness and chest pains. As I take a history,
he confides that he is hooked on heroin. He hasn’t been able to get
the drug for a day and begs me for a substitute that he can take.
“You’ve gotta understand, Doc, for the wife and kids…” He
breaks down, and I feel sorry for him, but when I explain that all I
can offer is hospitalization at a detox center, he grows angry and
abusive. Before I realize what is happening, he has smashed several
IV bottles and overturned a medical cart. Thanks to a nurse who
phoned the security guards, however, less than a minute later he
winds up immobilized in four-point restraints. The psychiatrists see
him and arrange for him to be admitted to a detox center in the
morning. He gets his first dose of methadone.

31.
Next, I see an old man with fever and cough who turns out to have
pneumonia. I send off all the routine blood work, draw two blood
cultures, obtain a chest X ray, put in an IV, and do special stains
of his sputum and urine, which I examine under the microscope. Since
the man will need an intravenous antibiotic, I arrange for his
admission. The intern who comes down to do the honors listens to the
patient’s chest, thinks he hears a new heart murmur, and complains
that I haven’t drawn six blood cultures to exclude the diagnosis of
endocarditis, an infection of the heart. Although I disagree with his
finding and therefore don’t believe the extra blood cultures are
indicated, I go ahead and draw them anyway so as to avoid argument.
When the senior resident finds out what the intern has done, however,
he is infuriated: “What the hell you think you’re doing, tying up
my intern with stupid things like that?” he yells. The intern grows
equally enraged, and the two of them get into a shouting match at the
patient’s side. Throughout the argument the old man looks straight
ahead of him, smiling vaguely, trying to pretend he doesn’t notice.

32.
A nurse interrupts the argument to tell me that a young man who is
vomiting blood and has a blood pressure of only 60 has just arrived.
I run off to see him, and although I would have appreciated his help,
my senior stays behind, still absorbed in argument. With the aid of
another resident, I place several large intravenous lines and give
the man first a saline infusion, then transfusions of blood. Using a
fiberoptic instrument, we establish that a large duodenal ulcer is
the source of bleeding.

33.
Although it takes only an hour and a half from the time of his
arrival to stabilize the patient, it takes us over two additional
hours to get him a hospital bed: my senior resident had tried to
“turf ” him to the surgical service in order to spare the medical
house officers another admission, but the surgeons want to see what’s
in it for them. When the senior finally offers to do a consult on one
of their patients (a woman with an acute gall-bladder attack who
suffers from other medical problems that they are having trouble
managing), they agree to admit our patient. It is all a matter of
politics.

34.
My next patient is a wealthy woman from Florida who flew up
unannounced today. She has had diarrhea off and on for three years
and insists on being admitted. She knows the assistant director of
the hospital, she says. As I begin to explain that she will have to
board on the ward service since there are no more private beds
available, her husband’s face grows purple. “The hell she will,”
he shouts. “Wait until I tell my lawyer!” Seeing that I am
unmoved (he credits me with far more control over the admitting
office than I have), he adds, “And why the hell did she have to
wait fifteen minutes to be seen?” I explain that much as I
regretted the wait (though I am beginning to wish that they had
waited for four or five hours), such a delay was unfortunately
neither avoidable nor unusual. A lady passed out in the X-ray suite,
I tell him, and a woman with airway obstruction had also occupied our
time. “Well, what the hell is that supposed to mean?” the husband
demands. “Don’t you think my wife is important enough?”

35.
Angry, but outwardly unruffled, I do a physical exam and draw some
blood tests, determined not to allow my personal feelings to
interfere with this patient’s care. Once again I explain that if
the woman wants a private bed she will have to wait until the
following morning, and I encourage her to establish a relationship
with one of the private doctors. After the husband takes down my
name, the two of them walk off in a huff, and when I walk into the
lobby several minutes later to meet the family of another patient, I
overhear the husband talking on a phone: “Can you believe it? It
meant nothing to the son of a bitch that we know the assistant
director!” How much does the momentary madness of illness

excuse?
I wonder. Although I know them to have been unreasonable, it
nonetheless disturbs me that these people have seen fit to grow angry
at me. I take pride in doing a good job and in making patients happy,
and it bothers me that in the eyes of this couple I succeeded on
neither count. What upsets me almost as much is what they have
succeeded in doing: making me angry at them.

36.
Still smoldering over this encounter, I learn from the senior that
another patient is waiting to be seen. On my way in the door, I am
met by his nurse, who gives me a wink. Wondering what she means by
this, I begin to take a history and discover that the patient suffers
from unremitting eructation, that is, he cannot keep from burping!
The man tells me how it has affected his business, his sleep, and his
sex life. He laughs (nervously), I laugh, but he confides that his
marriage is on the rocks. I try to give him as much of an opportunity
to talk as time permits, since a lady with abdominal pain and a man
who passed out in the subway are still waiting to be seen. I schedule
an upper GI series – maybe he has a large hiatus hernia – and
write him a prescription for antacids. He pumps my hand gratefully,
and tears appear in his eyes.

37.
And on through the night it continues. I see a young woman who has
overdosed on drugs, several elderly women with heart failure, two men
with heart attacks, a man with decompensated diabetes who comes in in
shock, a woman from a nursing home with a stroke, and a young man
with cancer and bone pain so severe that he couldn’t take it at
home any longer. I never do get back to the woman I suspect has
cancer. By the time 9 a.m., the end of my shift, arrives, I feel as
though I have seen a large slice of illness and of life.

38.
In the ensuing days and nights on call, I learned far more than the
technical aspects of emergency medicine. I learned a whole approach
to the making of diagnoses, and I acquired an appreciation for how
much artistry is involved. Having been at first unsure of my skills
as a diagnostician, I grew to be overly confident of them midway
through the month, only to become humbled toward the close of my
rotation by how easy it was to misconstrue the evidence before me and
wind up wide of the mark. Making diagnoses is fraught with hazards
for the unwary, and I came to think it a wonder that it could be done
at all.

Перевод задания
Сопоставьте слова из двух полей, чтобы образовать словосочетания. Используйте их, чтобы составить свои собственные предложения.
Пример: известный памятник
Посмотрите направо! Это известный памятник сказочному персонажу.

 
известный, исторический, интересный, современный, прекрасный, старый, традиционный, красивый, ручной работы
↓↑
город / городок, место, здание, памятник, дом, сувенир

 
ОТВЕТ
1) a historical building

There are lots of historical buildings on Nevsky prospect in St Petersburg.

2) an interesting place

We visited many interesting places in Scotland last summer.

3) a modern house

The centre of my city is full of modern houses.

4) a lovely souvenir

My dad brought me a lovely souvenir from England.

5) an old city

Suzdal is an old city with old wooden houses.

6) a traditional souvenir

Many Russian towns have their own traditional souvenirs.

7) a beautiful monument

There is a beautiful monument to Alexander Pushkin in the middle of Pushkin Square in Moscow.

8) a handmade souvenir

Many children give handmade souvenirs to their mothers for Mother’s Day.

 
Перевод ответа
1) историческое здание
На Невском проспекте в Санкт−Петербурге много исторических зданий.
2) интересное место
Прошлым летом мы посетили много интересных мест в Шотландии.
3) современный дом
В центре моего города полно современных домов.
4) прекрасный сувенир
Папа привез мне из Англии прекрасный сувенир.
5) старый город
Суздаль − старинный город со старыми деревянными домами.
6) традиционный сувенир
Во многих городах России есть свои традиционные сувениры.
7) красивый памятник
Посреди Пушкинской площади в Москве стоит красивый памятник Александру Пушкину.
8) сувенир ручной работы
Многие дети дарят своим мамам сувениры ручной работы на День матери.

  • Лексико-грамматический практикум
  • Unit 3
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A. Match the words to make word combinations and write them down.
Сопоставьте слова, чтобы составить словосочетания, и запишите их.

1d

to wish success
пожелать успеха

2f

strike midnight
пробить полночь

3g

send a card
отправить открытку

4h

celebrate a holiday
отпраздновать праздник

5a

decorate eggs
украсить яйца

6e

enjoy a party
наслаждаться вечеринкой

7b

hang a coat
повесить пальто

8c

prepare gifts.
приготовить подарки.

B. Write your own sentences using the word combinations from part A.
Напишите свои собственные предложения, используя словосочетания из части A.

1

We wish Holly every success and happiness for the future.
Мы желаем Холли всяческих успехов и счастья в будущем.

2

Clock inevitably strikes midnight.
Часы неизбежно пробьют полночь.

3

She sent you a Christmas card.
Она прислала тебе рождественскую открытку.

4

It's a bit odd, isn't it, celebrating an American holiday?
Немного странно, не правда ли, отмечать американский праздник?

5

We seldom decorate eggs at Easter.
Мы редко украшаем яйца на Пасху.

6

I want you to enjoy the party.
Я хочу, чтобы вам понравилась вечеринка.

7

Where can I hang my coat?
Где я могу повесить свое пальто?

8

We're preparing a little gift for Michel.
Мы готовим маленький подарок для Мишель.

ГДЗ — «Rainbow English — Лексико-грамматический практикум»

по предмету Английский язык за 6 класс.

Год издания

2018

Aвторы

Афанасьева О.В., Баранова К.М., Михеева И.В.

Задание

A. Match the words to make word combinations and write them down.
Сопоставьте слова, чтобы составить словосочетания, и запишите их.

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