Write the correct word from the box next to the definition

df17a

write the verbs in the box next to the correct definitions

whisper complain boast gossip argue joke shout criticise

1. disagree with someone, sometimes loudly or aggressively
2. say how good you are at going something
3. say something funny
4. talk very quietly so other people can’t hear
5. talk very louddly
6. talk about other people
7. say negative thinngs about someone
8. say that you don’t like something

burlybaevau

3 **Write the animals in the box next to the correct definitions. polar bear horse frog shark cow dog gorilla cat frog 1 This green animal comes out at night. 2 This fish can attack people. 3 This farm animal gives milk. 4 This wild animal lives in Africa. 5 This pet sleeps a lot. 6 This animal lives in very cold places. 7 You can ride this animal. 8 This animal is man’s best friend. Пжжжж помогите​

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Ответ:

Grestave Eiffreid спроектировал Эйфелеву башню. Рабочие построили ее между 1887 и 1889 годами. Для ее строительства использовали железо. Мэр города открыл ее для публики 6 мая 1889 года. Многие туристы посещают башню каждый год. Они покупают сувениры, фотографируют Париж и любуются видом сверху.

Объяснение:

Эйфелева башня была спроектирована Гюставом Эйфелем

Look
in
я думаю так, как вариант

Mary fishes

Paul comes

Kelly and Paul eat

Mean — значить; mean — жадный

A Match the words h the box with the correct definition. Witte a-j.

The words are from the passage.b perceive a maliciousrelinquishb perpektog replicatec perpetrator h rationale d dominate e intimate f refingish g replicatei assert j cue1…very closely associated or familiar2… to realize or understand something3… to influence or control something or someone4 …someone who commits a crime or harmful act5… to copy or repeat something6… give up or surrender something7 …wanting to cause harm to others8..reasoning or justification for something9…to express oneself in a bold or forceful10…a signal or IndicationB.Complete the following sentences using the correct form of thefrom A.1 lis commonly assumed that women have deeper, morerelationships with each other than men do with other men.2 Whoever talks the loudest and the most tends todiscussion3 People with high self-esteem lend tobeing able to handle challenges.4. Following the financial crisis in 2008, many banks had to.control of their management to the government5 That is a unique ploce of an, and nobody knows the technique formaking it anymore. It is quite impossible to me6 After spending years being shy and introverted, Ling decided toherself and asked Michael out on a date7. We took it as ourto leave when she said she was firedand needed to sleepHe wasn’t being uwhen he revealed your secret:d was anaccident!As a teenager, I never understood my parents’.they insisted I come home by midnight.10 The detective assured tho larrily that he would track down the …. of the crime.​

………………… To
fall or decrease in value or price; to

lower the value of

………………… To
cause to happen quickly, suddenly or sooner

than expected

………………… A
pretense or counterfeit; something meant to

deceive

………………… Done
in secret; kept hidden

………………… Happening
by chance, by accident, or at random;

lucky

………………… To
avoid by going around, to escape from,

prevent, or stop through
cleverness

………………….
Quiet or uncommunicative; reluctant to speak out

………………….
Unintentional; accidental

………………….
To be deliberately vague in order to mislead

………………….
To spread or scatter widely; distribute

3. Using the answer line provided, complete each item below with the correct word from the box. Use each word once.

Depreciate,
precipitate, sham, clandestine, fortuitous, circumvent, reticent,
inadvertent, equivocate, disseminate

1.
Employees were ordered not to disclose any information about the fire
at the factory; the leakage might scare off stockholders and ……………..
bankruptcy.

2.
The property ………….. when the city built a sewage plant
nearby.

3.
Advertising restrictions are easily ………….. by unscrupulous
wheeler-dealers.

4.
People of the legal profession are usually expected to be garrulous
and vociferous, however legal advisers are all ………. about their
clients’ secrets.

5.
The candidate for the bank chair office seemed impeccable, but it was
a …………He was a drinker and a womanizer and was mixed up in
all kinds of illicit activities involving drugs and bribes.

6.
It was strictly …………….. that company suffered no losses
during the recent economic crises.

7.
In a …………… meeting at the café Gordon sold his employer’s
valuable anti-aging formula to a competitor.

8.
When I asked my father if he liked my new dress, he …………,
saying “Green is a terrific color”.

9.
The newspaper was quick to …………………….. information
about new tax rules. However it turned out to be premature.

10.
When going into new business the losses are …………… . However
it is possible to minimize them.

1.4 B. Sales Tactics

What
do you know about sales gimmicks?

1. Read the article

How
Hidden Persuasion Makes Shoppers Spend
14

Counter
culture:

subtle psychology is gearing soft sell to big profits.

ENTERING
a supermarket is like taking a seat in the psychiatrist’s chair — the
food shopper’s deepest desires will be laid open and explored.
In-store cameras backed up by dis­creet human surveillance
measure when and where we are predisposed to pause and drop that
unnecessary little luxury into the trolley. The laser beam at the
check-out records what precipitates higher sales of mozzarella cheese
– moving it to an eye-catching display or featuring it in the
supermarket’s latest TV advertisement. Nothing is fortuitous, or left
to chance. Everything is thought out in minute detail and geared to
increased sales and prof­its, which means getting consumers to
buy things they don’t really need, but cannot resist.

It’s
only evident that supermarkets prefer to equivocate any questions
about tactics. They are reticent about their shams aimed at
circumventing the most critically-minded shopper, and making him part
with his critical faculties. They wish to appear the friendly grocer
who helps wash our salads, not our brains.

Both
shopping precinct design and goods layout should look inadvertent.

However,
it is hard to disguise that virtually every new superstore has its
primary doors on the left so the shopping is done clockwise, to the
right. «Nine out of ten people are right handed and they prefer
turning to the right,» said Wendy Godfrey, a spokeswoman for
Salisbury’s, one major supermarket chain.

Profits
from the store’s own label products are normally higher than those
from the big manu­facturers. So own label baked beans are usually
placed to the left of the Heinz display because the eye reads left to
right and will spot the store’s brand first. The big manufacturers
can rectify this by paying a premium for better display. How much
they pay — especially when they may well be making the own brand
version for the super­market — is a closely guarded secret and
remains clandestine.

Of
the 16,000 items of food which a superstore displays, only about 200
are KVIs — known value items — essentials such as tea, butter and
coffee, the price of which will be known by most customers.

Three
rules apply here.

Firstly,
keep the cost competitive, which means halving gross profit margins
to 15 per cent.

Second,
dot the KVIs around the store, disseminating bakery and dairy
products in different corners. Customers will have to follow the
route known among specialists as golden triangle hunting essentials
out and walking past the frozen black forest gateau, or mangetout
peas — items they do not really need.

Moreover
change the location of the KVIs from time to time shifting them from
familiar surroundings to compel customers to search for trivial goods
prolonging even the most routine shopping.

Can
a store be too big, threatening and confus­ing for the customer?
Current thinking is that abundance sells. A well-stocked 20-foot
display of tomato ketchup sells more sauce than a depleted shelf 15
feet long. «I don’t think there is a maxi­mum size unless it
is how fast the average cus­tomer can get round without the
frozen food defrosting,» said John Davidson, a lecturer in
retail marketing at the University of Surrey.

«Lighting
influences the customer,» he said. «It is kept soft in the
wine section to encourage browsing, but it is sharp and bright at the
cosmet­ics counter to suggest cleanliness.»

Width
of aisles is also a factor. «If they move too fast they are
missing buying opportunities,» said Andy Mitchell, research
officer with the Institute of Grocery Distribution. «They also
try to bounce you back and forth across the aisle by putting the
best-selling digestive biscuit on one side and the most popular
chocolate one on the other.»

Convenience
and cost are also behind Sunday trading. Round-the-clock running of
freezer and chill cabinets means supermarkets cost a lot to operate
after closing. Many perishables depreciated and thrown away on
Saturday afternoon could be sold on Sunday. Just as important,
however, is the psychology of leisure shopping. International studies
show that people buy more expensive, discretionary items when they
are relaxed and browsing.

It
is not only how much one buys, but what one buys. A supermarket makes
more profit from its own brand, microwave cooked-chill chicken Kiev
than it does from the ingredients needed to make it at home. Many
consumers appear willing to pay almost any price to avoid preparing
food. Grated carrots wrapped in a nice plastic bag sell briskly for
£1.18 a pound at Sainsbury’s. Whole carrots, a few feet away, cost
just 19p a pound.

Culture

black
forest gateau

– (plural gateaux) – a large sweet cake, often filled and
decorated with cream, fruit, chocolate etc.

mangetout
pea

— a kind of flat pea whose outer part is eaten as well as seeds.

digestive
biscuit

— a type of plain, slightly sweet biscuit that is popular in Britain.

cook-chill
— cook-chill foods have already been cooked when you buy them, and
are stored at a low temperature but not frozen.

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MATVEYCORONA

+25

Решено

1 год назад

Английский язык

Студенческий

СРОЧНО, ДАЮ 25 БАЛЛОВ!! Read the story. Choose a word from the box. write the correct word next to numbers 1-5. There is one example. (смотри фотографию)

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1

mrLapse
1 год назад

Светило науки — 575 ответов — 0 раз оказано помощи

Ответ:

1.for

2.as

3.when

4.frightened

5.too

(0 оценок)

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СРОЧНО, ДАЮ 25 БАЛЛОВ!! Read the story. Choose a word from the box. write the correct word next to numbers 1-5. There is one example. (смотри фотографию)

4. Write an adjective from the box next to each definition.

Beautiful crowded dull expensive polluted romantic spectacular

a) Full of people crowded

b) Too much smoke / traffic

c) Not interesting dull

d) Ideal for lovers

e) Costs a lot of money

f) Very good — looking

g) Dramatic and exciting.

На этой странице находится ответ на вопрос 4. Write an adjective from the box next to each definition?, из категории
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Предмет: Английский язык,


автор: MATVEYCORONA

Приложения:

Ответы

Автор ответа: mrLapse





3

Ответ:

1.for

2.as

3.when

4.frightened

5.too

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