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Категория: Начало --> КОМБАТ - ответы на тесты СГА

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  0097.09.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
A young knight named Arveragus married the lady he loved:
By redy token (ME); in ready money, in ready exchange (NE) - по-русски означает "разменять деньги":
Gentilly (ME); courteously (NE) - по-русски означает "щедро":
Once upon a time a merchant lived in Paris:
Ooth (ME); oath (NE) - по-русски означает "подарок":
Sir Thopas fell in love with a young peasant girl:
Sir Thopas was born in the country of Fairye:
The action of The Franklin's Tale takes place in France:
The Canterbury tales is the only thing Chaucer ever wrote:
The merchant held a worthy house:
The merchant was quite poor:
The Miller's tale is a "fabliau":
The tale of Sir Thopas is a burlesque of the metrical romances:
The tale of Sir Thopas is a tragic story of the young knight:
Основная часть "Кентерберийских рассказов" написана пятистопным ямбом и парнорифмованным двустишием со свободным чередованием мужских и женских рифм:
Тhinges (ME); devotions (NE) - по-русски означает "молитвы":


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  0097.09.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Choose the right answer. Afraid is ...
Choose the right answer. Alack! expresses
Choose the right answer. And ’t is means
Choose the right answer. Hark! is
Choose the right answer. How now! is an expression of
Choose the right answer. I would thou couldst! means
Choose the right answer. i ’ th’ is
Choose the right answer. In ’s sleep is
Choose the right answer. Is ’scap’d means
Choose the right answer. Methinks is
Choose the right answer. Of late is ...
Choose the right answer. Prithee is
Choose the right answer. the like is
Choose the right answer. Thou durst is
Choose the right answer. Upon ’t is
Choose the right answer. Wherefore is
Choose the right variant of translation. He’s here in double trust
Choose the right variant of translation. I am his kinsman and his subject
Choose the right variant of translation. I dare do all that may become a man
Choose the right variant of translation. Bring forth men-children only!
Choose the right variant of translation. By the pricking of my thumbs, Something wicked this way comes
Choose the right variant of translation. Come, sisters, cheer we up his sprites, And show the best of our delights.
Choose the right variant of translation. False face must hide what the false heart doth know
Choose the right variant of translation. Had he not resembled my father as he slept, I had done’t
Choose the right variant of translation. O! these flaws and starts ... would well become a woman's story at a winter's fire ...
Choose the right variant of translation. proper stuff! This is the very painting of your fear...
Choose the right variant of translation. These deeds must not be thought after these ways:so, it will make us mad
Choose the right variant of translation. To know my deed, ’t were best not know myself
Choose the right variant of translation. What hath quenched them hath given me fire
Choose the right variant of translation. ’tis the eye of childhood That fears a painted devil
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Cross out the word which doesn’t fit.
Insert the proper word. ... face must hide what the ... heart doth know.
Insert the proper word. ... I heard a voice cry, sleep no more.
Insert the proper word. ... knows what she has known
Insert the proper word. ... when in swinish sleep Their drenched natures lie as in ...
Insert the proper word. And Pity, like a ... babe
Insert the proper word. And wash this …witness ... from your hand.
Insert the proper word. At first and last, the ... welcome
Insert the proper word. but I shame ... a heart so white
Insert the proper word. for none of women ... shall harm Macbeth
Insert the proper word. Gentlemen rise, his ... is not well.
Insert the proper word. Had he not ... my father as he slept
Insert the proper word. having no witness to ... my speech
Insert the proper word. How is't with me, when every noise ... me?
Insert the proper word. I am ... to think what I have done.
Insert the proper word. I dare do all that may ... a man
Insert the proper word. Macbeth, Macbeth, Macbeth: ... Macduff
Insert the proper word. One cried God ... us
Insert the proper word. Ourselves will ... with society
Insert the proper word. Sit ... friends: my Lord is often thus
Insert the proper word. That which hath made them ..., hath made me ...
Insert the proper word. The table’s ...
Insert the proper word. This even-handed ...
Insert the proper word. Unnatural deeds do ... unnatural troubles
Insert the proper word. Yet my heart ... to know one thing


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  0097.08.06;МТ.02;2

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
A slight pain in Mr. Ferraro’s chest reminded him of his …
According to Blackie, if Trevor … that would have been an exploit worthy of the gang:
According to Elizabeth, she did not work, because …
According to George he … a fortune in tobacco:
According to George, he would never have married Matilda if …
According to George, Matilda was …
According to George, Skinny and Needle had treated him … in Rhodesia:
According to Kathleen, all the women in her family were beautiful as girls, but they …
According to Kathleen, George spent a long time in her shop, because…
According to Mr. Ferraro, we are taught to pay first attention to … souls:
According to Mr. Hopkinson, Miss Sounders lived …
According to Mr. Thomas’ horoscope, he should …
According to the priest, the Black Madonna looked …
According to Trevor, Mr. Thomas’ house had a staircase … years old
According to Trevor, the house, in which Mr. Thomas lived, was built by …
According to Trevor’s plan, Mr. Thomas must have been stuck in …
After leaving the band of archaeologists, Needle was able to live on the fee she got for writing …
After Needle’s death Kathleen said that Needle was lucky because …
After Skinny had fallen ill, he was sent to a …
After the Parkers had decided to send their child to the adoption society …
Apart from George, … was grilled by the police in connection with the murder:
As the boys locked Mr. Thomas in the loo, he felt …
As the Parkers were expecting their child, they hoped to save up money for a …
At the beginning of their marriage, being worried about not having children, the Parkers had submitted themselves to medical tests as a result of which …
Before her marriage Lou had been a …
Before his departure Oxford promised to write to the Parkers …
Before Lou left Elizabeth’s house, she had given Elizabeth …
Before Trevor joined the gang, … had been their leader:
Blackie asked Trevor if he hated Mr. Thomas a lot, because …
Blackie did not leave the gang because …
Blackie said he had seen … at work:
Blackie said that nobody would pinch things from Mr. Thomas’ house, because …
Blackie was anxious …
By the end of the destruction the question of … no longer concerned the gang:
By the time Trevor arrived at the meeting, the boys had voted for …
Describing Mr. Thomas’ house, Trevor told the boys that the house was …
Destroying Mr. Thomas’ savings Trevor told Blackie there would have been no fun if he had … Mr. Thomas:
During the war Kathleen had been engaged to …
Elizabeth had … children:
Elizabeth lived in …
Elizabeth was a …
Elizabeth was …
Elizabeth’s house was …
Elizabeth’s letters were …
Everyone kept telling Needle she was …
George accused Needle of …
George and Matilda had … children:
George could not divorce Matilda, because …
George could see Needle in the Portobello Road on Saturdays, because Saturday was the day when he …
George explained to Needle that he had married Matilda, because …
George kept a … in Durban:
George killed Needle because …
George married Matilda in …
George treated Matilda as a …
George was always desperately afraid of …
George was taken to a nursing home, because he …
George went to Africa …
George went to the police and gave himself up after …
George’s old cousin was …
George’s uncle had a … farm in Africa:
Graham Greene called his books …
Graham Greene’s life was …
Graham Greenе ran away from school, because…
Graham Greenе was a son of a …
Henry Pierce and Oxford St. John came from …
Henry Pierce and Oxford St. John were taken on at the …
Henry was desirous of …
Henry was sent off to a sanatorium in Wales after he had taken …
Henry was … years old:
In Mr. Thomas’ opinion, horoscopes spoke …
In Raymond’s opinion, Oxford was a …
It was Trevor who suggested the gang should … Mr. Thomas’ house:
Kathleen came to London …
Kathleen was …
Kathleen’s aunt had left many supplies and the only thing that Needle needed to buy was …
Kathleen’s aunt lived in …
Lou did not share her husband’s desire to invite the Ackleys to meet the Farrells because …
Lou did not want her future child’s first name to be “Mary”, because she thought that name was too …
Lou gathered from … that the Black Madonna helped three childless couples:
Lou liked when Henry read out lines from his favorite … which he had copied into an exercise book:
Lou Parker liked …
Lou Parker was a member of …
Lou Parker was … at the time that the miraculous powers of the Black Madonna came to be talked of:
Lou said her rosary … before the Black Madonna:
Lou suggested they should call their child … if it was a boy:
Lou told Raymond that she … their child:
Lou … Elizabeth’s monthly letters:
Lou, to Raymond’s … , decided that all their friends must meet Henry and Oxford:
Manders Road was named after …
Matilda was …
Matilda’s father was a …
Maverick advised Mr. Ferraro …
Mike was the only one who …
Miss Saunders had …
Miss Saunders qualifications were special:
Miss Saunders was described in the firm’s books as …
Miss Saunders was employed to look after …
Miss Saunders was …
Most of the Parkers’s friends …
Mr. Ferraro discovered that Miss Saunders was at home with …
Mr. Ferraro engaged Miss Saunders …
Mr. Ferraro had the rare quality …
Mr. Ferraro had …
Mr. Ferraro insisted on Miss Saunders’ being in a state of … when she looked after his indulgences:
Mr. Ferraro regarded God as the …
Mr. Ferraro sat crouched in his Daimler waiting for …
Mr. Ferraro told Miss Saunders he could have attended to some of the indulgences if …
Mr. Ferraro was …
Mr. Ferraro … to combine business with pleasure:
Mr. Hopkinson was Mr. Fеrraro’s …
Mr. Thomas had mud on his shoes and he stopped to scrape them on the pavement’s edge because …
Mr. Thomas had once been a …
Mr. Thomas kept his savings in …
Mr. Thomas lived … in his crippled house:
Mr. Thomas spent in the loo …
Mr. Thomas was suffering from …
Mr. Thomas … plumbing:
Mr. Thomas’ horoscope warned him about …
Muriel Spark became a … in 1954:
Muriel Spark is celebrated as a …
Needle came to London …
Needle compared Kathleen with the poet Swinburne when Kathleen …
Needle got her nickname, because …
Needle got up speeches about … for industrial tycoons.
Needle happened to be alone in the empty house of Kathleen’s aunt, because ...
Needle met Kathleen and George in the Portobello Road … years later after her death:
Needle returned to England with …
Needle taught in … school in Kensington:
Needle thought of her type of luck after …
Needle thought that George needed …
Needle was told that George’s daughter was …
Needle went to the Portobello Road …
Needle’s Rhodesian friends referred to Matilda as …
On coming down from Ballion College, Oxford, Graham Greenе worked for four years as sub-editor on …
On Monday morning Summers was not eager to begin the destruction, because …
On the way back to the hotel as Lou called her husband “Ray”, he …
Once Needle found a … in the cinema for which she received a reward of fifty pounds:
Oxford St. John took up with a pretty …
Oxford was … than Henry:
Oxford’s love affair with his girlfriend came to …
Raymond advised Lou to be careful what she …
Raymond applied for promotion and …
Raymond considered Elizabeth …
Raymond discovered that there had been black blood in Lou’s family after he had …
Raymond fell out with his mother when …
Raymond had a feeling that when Lou went to the Black Our Lady and said her rosary praying for a baby she …
Raymond had been married for … years to Lou:
Raymond made a … for the baby when Lou was pregnant:
Raymond organized the … lottery in aid of the Church Decoration Fund:
Raymond Parker preferred …
Raymond Parker was a … at the motor works:
Raymond Parker was on the … committee.
Raymond told Lou if she didn’t want a child, he …
Raymond warned Lou not to tempt …
Raymond … being called Ray:
Since the murder of Needle, Skinny had always been …
Skinny came to London …
Skinny persuaded George and Kathleen…
Talking to Needle in Bulawayo? George described Matilda as a … woman.
The Black Madonna was carved out of …
The Black Madonna was installed in …
The byrehand emigrated to Canada to start afresh …
The gang met …
The gesture, when Mr. Ferraro knotted his fingers together in the shape some people use for prayer, meant that he …
The house of Kathleen’s aunt used to be a …
The murder of Needle was known as …
The Parker’s daughter was baptized and … became her godmother.
Tina Farrell told the Parkers that if their child had been hers, she would …
Tina Farrell was …
Tina said that the Parkers’ daughter was …
To Needle the main attraction of marrying Skinny was …
To prove that George had absolutly no motive in killing Needle, Kathleen told the police that …
Trevor did not believe in …
Trevor had been with the gang …
Trevor ordered Mike to smash … he would find in the kitchen:
Trevor said that the gang would need … to fulfil his plan:
Trevor said the gang would be in Mr. Thomas’ house like …
Trevor told the gang that a staircase in Mr. Thomas’ house looked like a …
Trevor was … years old:
Trevor’s father was a …
Trevor’s father …
Trevor’s mother considered herself …
Two days before Lou left the hospital … had visited her:
When Blackie asked Trevor if he had found anything special, Trevor …
When George returned home from Africa, Kathleen thought he …
When George told Needle he was married to Matilda she said it was …
When George told Needle that he was going to marry Kathleen, she said it would have been …
When Henry mentioned the slum mentality, he thought of …
When Lou prayed to the Black Madonna, she wanted Oxford to …
When Lou was in hospital she gave instructions that no one except … should be let in to see her:
When Lou was pregnant she gave up most of her church work in order to …
When Mr. Ferraro found Miss Saunders’ house, he …
When Mr. Ferraro looked through the window at Miss Saunders, it became obvious to him that …
When Mr. Ferraro realized that Miss Saunders betrayed his trust, in her he thought that the next day he would …
When Mr. Ferraro saw Miss Saunders approach the upper window, she was …
When Mr. Ferraro telephoned his wife it was a …
When Mr. Ferraro visited Christie’s, he discovered that Maverick …
When Mr. Ferraro … it occured to him to check on Miss Saunders.
When Mr. Thomas gave the gang three packets of Smarties, Summers said that …
When Mr. Thomas offered the gang three packets of Smarties the boys were … by this action:
When Mr. Thomas saw the destruction of his house, he …
When Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, he did not call out for help, because …
When Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, one of the boys gave him a …
When Needle met George in a hotel in Bulawayo, they drank …
When Needle saw George in the Portobello Road for the first time, he …
When Needle saw Kathleen in the Portobello Road, Kathleen wanted to buy a …
When Needle saw Kathleen in the Portobello Road, Kathleen …
When Raymond came home from the hospital he … the cot in his first fury.
When Raymond saw his daughter for the first time she was …
When the Black Madonna was installed … himself came to consecrate it:
When the Matron told Raymond that his daughter would be black, he accused her of …
When the new recruit said his name was “Trevor” it was a statement of …
When the new recruit said his name was “Trevor” …
When the Parkers got word about the adoption …
When the Parkers visited Elizabeth, she expressed admiration for …
When the Parkers visited Henry in the sanatorium, he was ...
When Trevor suggested the gang should meet at nine o’clock on Sunday morning, Mike said that he could not come because …
When Trevor’s position was in danger, it only needed a single use of his … and the gang would be at his heels:
While Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, Summers was sent to watch the road for …
Whitney Clay was … town:
William Ferraro lived in …
William Ferraro’s business was called …
William Ferraro’s wife believed herself to be …
… , George used to tell his friends:
… was a sidesman:


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  0097.08.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
A slight pain in Mr. Ferraro’s chest reminded him of his …
According to Blackie, if Trevor … that would have been an exploit worthy of the gang:
According to Elizabeth, she did not work, because …
According to George he … a fortune in tobacco:
According to George, he would never have married Matilda if …
According to George, Matilda was …
According to George, Skinny and Needle had treated him … in Rhodesia:
According to Kathleen, all the women in her family were beautiful as girls, but they …
According to Kathleen, George spent a long time in her shop, because…
According to Mr. Thomas’ horoscope, he should …
According to Trevor, Mr. Thomas’ house had a staircase … years old
According to Trevor’s plan, Mr. Thomas must have been stuck in …
After leaving the band of archaeologists, Needle was able to live on the fee she got for writing …
After Needle’s death Kathleen said that Needle was lucky because …
After Skinny had fallen ill, he was sent to a …
After the Parkers had decided to send their child to the adoption society …
Apart from George, … was grilled by the police in connection with the murder:
At the beginning of their marriage, being worried about not having children, the Parkers had submitted themselves to medical tests as a result of which …
Before her marriage Lou had been a …
Before his departure Oxford promised to write to the Parkers …
Before Lou left Elizabeth’s house, she had given Elizabeth …
Blackie asked Trevor if he hated Mr. Thomas a lot, because …
Blackie did not leave the gang because …
Blackie said he had seen … at work:
Blackie said that nobody would pinch things from Mr. Thomas’ house, because …
Blackie was anxious …
By the end of the destruction the question of … no longer concerned the gang:
By the time Trevor arrived at the meeting, the boys had voted for …
Describing Mr. Thomas’ house, Trevor told the boys that the house was …
Destroying Mr. Thomas’ savings Trevor told Blackie there would have been no fun if he had … Mr. Thomas:
During the war Kathleen had been engaged to …
Elizabeth lived in …
Elizabeth was a …
Elizabeth’s letters were …
Everyone kept telling Needle she was …
George accused Needle of …
George and Matilda had … children:
George could not divorce Matilda, because …
George could see Needle in the Portobello Road on Saturdays, because Saturday was the day when he …
George explained to Needle that he had married Matilda, because …
George kept a … in Durban:
George killed Needle because …
George married Matilda in …
George treated Matilda as a …
George was always desperately afraid of …
George was taken to a nursing home, because he …
George went to Africa …
George went to the police and gave himself up after …
George’s old cousin was …
George’s uncle had a … farm in Africa:
Graham Greene’s life was …
Henry Pierce and Oxford St. John came from …
Henry Pierce and Oxford St. John were taken on at the …
Henry was desirous of …
Henry was … years old:
In Mr. Thomas’ opinion, horoscopes spoke …
It was Trevor who suggested the gang should … Mr. Thomas’ house:
Kathleen came to London …
Kathleen was …
Kathleen’s aunt had left many supplies and the only thing that Needle needed to buy was …
Kathleen’s aunt lived in …
Lou did not share her husband’s desire to invite the Ackleys to meet the Farrells because …
Lou did not want her future child’s first name to be “Mary”, because she thought that name was too …
Lou liked when Henry read out lines from his favorite … which he had copied into an exercise book:
Lou Parker liked …
Lou said her rosary … before the Black Madonna:
Lou told Raymond that she … their child:
Lou … Elizabeth’s monthly letters:
Lou, to Raymond’s … , decided that all their friends must meet Henry and Oxford:
Manders Road was named after …
Matilda was …
Matilda’s father was a …
Mike was the only one who …
Miss Saunders qualifications were special:
Miss Saunders was …
Mr. Ferraro had the rare quality …
Mr. Ferraro insisted on Miss Saunders’ being in a state of … when she looked after his indulgences:
Mr. Ferraro regarded God as the …
Mr. Ferraro was …
Mr. Hopkinson was Mr. Fеrraro’s …
Mr. Thomas had mud on his shoes and he stopped to scrape them on the pavement’s edge because …
Mr. Thomas had once been a …
Mr. Thomas kept his savings in …
Mr. Thomas lived … in his crippled house:
Mr. Thomas spent in the loo …
Mr. Thomas was suffering from …
Mr. Thomas … plumbing:
Mr. Thomas’ horoscope warned him about …
Needle came to London …
Needle compared Kathleen with the poet Swinburne when Kathleen …
Needle got her nickname, because …
Needle got up speeches about … for industrial tycoons.
Needle met Kathleen and George in the Portobello Road … years later after her death:
Needle returned to England with …
Needle taught in … school in Kensington:
Needle thought of her type of luck after …
Needle thought that George needed …
Needle was told that George’s daughter was …
Needle went to the Portobello Road …
Needle’s Rhodesian friends referred to Matilda as …
On Monday morning Summers was not eager to begin the destruction, because …
Once Needle found a … in the cinema for which she received a reward of fifty pounds:
Oxford St. John took up with a pretty …
Oxford was … than Henry:
Oxford’s love affair with his girlfriend came to …
Raymond advised Lou to be careful what she …
Raymond applied for promotion and …
Raymond considered Elizabeth …
Raymond discovered that there had been black blood in Lou’s family after he had …
Raymond fell out with his mother when …
Raymond had a feeling that when Lou went to the Black Our Lady and said her rosary praying for a baby she …
Raymond made a … for the baby when Lou was pregnant:
Raymond Parker preferred …
Raymond Parker was a … at the motor works:
Raymond Parker was on the … committee.
Raymond warned Lou not to tempt …
Raymond … being called Ray:
Since the murder of Needle, Skinny had always been …
Skinny came to London …
Skinny persuaded George and Kathleen…
Talking to Needle in Bulawayo? George described Matilda as a … woman.
The Black Madonna was carved out of …
The Black Madonna was installed in …
The byrehand emigrated to Canada to start afresh …
The gesture, when Mr. Ferraro knotted his fingers together in the shape some people use for prayer, meant that he …
The murder of Needle was known as …
The Parker’s daughter was baptized and … became her godmother.
Tina Farrell told the Parkers that if their child had been hers, she would …
Tina Farrell was …
Tina said that the Parkers’ daughter was …
To Needle the main attraction of marrying Skinny was …
To prove that George had absolutly no motive in killing Needle, Kathleen told the police that …
Trevor did not believe in …
Trevor ordered Mike to smash … he would find in the kitchen:
Trevor said that the gang would need … to fulfil his plan:
Trevor said the gang would be in Mr. Thomas’ house like …
Trevor told the gang that a staircase in Mr. Thomas’ house looked like a …
Trevor was … years old:
Trevor’s father was a …
Trevor’s father …
Trevor’s mother considered herself …
Two days before Lou left the hospital … had visited her:
When Blackie asked Trevor if he had found anything special, Trevor …
When George returned home from Africa, Kathleen thought he …
When George told Needle he was married to Matilda she said it was …
When George told Needle that he was going to marry Kathleen, she said it would have been …
When Lou was in hospital she gave instructions that no one except … should be let in to see her:
When Lou was pregnant she gave up most of her church work in order to …
When Mr. Ferraro looked through the window at Miss Saunders, it became obvious to him that …
When Mr. Ferraro realized that Miss Saunders betrayed his trust, in her he thought that the next day he would …
When Mr. Ferraro saw Miss Saunders approach the upper window, she was …
When Mr. Ferraro telephoned his wife it was a …
When Mr. Ferraro … it occured to him to check on Miss Saunders.
When Mr. Thomas gave the gang three packets of Smarties, Summers said that …
When Mr. Thomas saw the destruction of his house, he …
When Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, he did not call out for help, because …
When Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, one of the boys gave him a …
When Needle met George in a hotel in Bulawayo, they drank …
When Needle saw George in the Portobello Road for the first time, he …
When Needle saw Kathleen in the Portobello Road, Kathleen wanted to buy a …
When Needle saw Kathleen in the Portobello Road, Kathleen …
When Raymond came home from the hospital he … the cot in his first fury.
When Raymond saw his daughter for the first time she was …
When the Black Madonna was installed … himself came to consecrate it:
When the Matron told Raymond that his daughter would be black, he accused her of …
When the new recruit said his name was “Trevor” it was a statement of …
When the Parkers got word about the adoption …
When the Parkers visited Elizabeth, she expressed admiration for …
When the Parkers visited Henry in the sanatorium, he was ...
When Trevor suggested the gang should meet at nine o’clock on Sunday morning, Mike said that he could not come because …
When Trevor’s position was in danger, it only needed a single use of his … and the gang would be at his heels:
Whitney Clay was … town:
William Ferraro lived in …
… , George used to tell his friends:
According to Mr. Ferraro, we are taught to pay first attention to … souls:
According to Mr. Hopkinson, Miss Sounders lived …
According to the priest, the Black Madonna looked …
According to Trevor, the house, in which Mr. Thomas lived, was built by …
As the boys locked Mr. Thomas in the loo, he felt …
As the Parkers were expecting their child, they hoped to save up money for a …
Before Trevor joined the gang, … had been their leader:
Elizabeth had … children:
Elizabeth was …
Elizabeth’s house was …
Graham Greene called his books …
Graham Greenе ran away from school, because…
Graham Greenе was a son of a …
Henry was sent off to a sanatorium in Wales after he had taken …
In Raymond’s opinion, Oxford was a …
Lou gathered from … that the Black Madonna helped three childless couples:
Lou Parker was a member of …
Lou Parker was … at the time that the miraculous powers of the Black Madonna came to be talked of:
Lou suggested they should call their child … if it was a boy:
Maverick advised Mr. Ferraro …
Miss Saunders had …
Miss Saunders was described in the firm’s books as …
Miss Saunders was employed to look after …
Most of the Parkers’s friends …
Mr. Ferraro discovered that Miss Saunders was at home with …
Mr. Ferraro engaged Miss Saunders …
Mr. Ferraro had …
Mr. Ferraro sat crouched in his Daimler waiting for …
Mr. Ferraro told Miss Saunders he could have attended to some of the indulgences if …
Mr. Ferraro … to combine business with pleasure:
Muriel Spark became a … in 1954:
Muriel Spark is celebrated as a …
Needle happened to be alone in the empty house of Kathleen’s aunt, because ...
On coming down from Ballion College, Oxford, Graham Greenе worked for four years as sub-editor on …
On the way back to the hotel as Lou called her husband “Ray”, he …
Raymond had been married for … years to Lou:
Raymond organized the … lottery in aid of the Church Decoration Fund:
Raymond told Lou if she didn’t want a child, he …
The gang met …
The house of Kathleen’s aunt used to be a …
Trevor had been with the gang …
When Henry mentioned the slum mentality, he thought of …
When Lou prayed to the Black Madonna, she wanted Oxford to …
When Mr. Ferraro found Miss Saunders’ house, he …
When Mr. Ferraro visited Christie’s, he discovered that Maverick …
When Mr. Thomas offered the gang three packets of Smarties the boys were … by this action:
When the new recruit said his name was “Trevor” …
While Mr. Thomas was locked in the loo, Summers was sent to watch the road for …
William Ferraro’s business was called …
William Ferraro’s wife believed herself to be …
… was a sidesman:


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  0097.07.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
As a result of his "interview" with the witches Macbeth is very angry because all the information he gets seems hopeless:
At the start of the feast Macbeth tries to win popularity:
Banquo fails to be present at the feast in person because he has been murdered:
During the feast Macbeth has to speak with the murderer and so he leaves his guests:
How now? - приветственное восклицание:
Macbeth cannot take his seat at the table because all the seats are in fact occupied - "the table is full":
Macbeth is particularly disappointed that Fleance has managed to escape because that means that the witches' prophecy may still come true:
Macduff is the Thane of Fife:
Mirth переводится как "веселье":
None of woman born переводится как "никто, кого родила женщина":
Prithee - устаревшее поэтическое сокращение - I pray thee:
Remembrancer переводится как "тот, кто помнит":
The apparitions and their prophecies may be interpreted only retrospectively when one has read the tragedy to the end:
The prophecies of the first and of the second apparitions apparently contradict each other:
The prophecy of the third apparition is that Macbeth will only be conquered when something impossible happens:
Trammel up имеет значение "стреножить (коня)" и "опутать сетью":
Не is about it переводится как "Он делает свое дело":


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  0097.06.07;Т-Т.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and mystical thrillers B) He established his reputation with his fourth novel, Stamboul Ship
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was born prematurely B) Many of his novels and short stories have been filmed and The Third Man was written as a film treatment
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He undertook work for the Foreign Office and was stationed in Kupavna B) Many of his novels and short stories have been filmed and The Third Man was written as a film treatment
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Among the many people who paid tribute to him on his death were Kingsley Amis B) Graham Greene describes horrible things and is critisized by many, but this is his strong point
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As well as his many novels, Graham Greene wrote several collections of pamphlets B) In 1916 he had been received into the Roman Catholic Church and visited Mexico in 1938 to report on the religious persecution there. As a result he wrote The Lawless Roads and, later, his famous novel The Power and the Glory
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As well as his many novels, Graham Greene wrote several collections of rap songs B) In 1916 he had been received into the Roman Catholic Church and visited Mexico in 1938 to report on the religious persecution there. As a result he wrote The Lawless Roads and, later, his famous novel The Power and the Glory
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As well as his many novels, Graham Greene wrote several collections of short stories B) He undertook work for the Foreign Office and was stationed in Latvia from 1941 to 1943
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As well as his many novels, Graham Greene wrote several collections of short stories B) He established his reputation with his fourth novel The plane
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Being a son of a headmaster, Greene ran away from school, because he hated his teachers and learning B) He learned depression quite early, he was about to commit a suicide, though he lived in a friendly atmosphere of careful parents
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Being a son of a headmaster, Greene ran away from school, because he hated his teachers and learning B) His first novel wasn’t published
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Brighton Rock was published in 1938 and in 1940 he became literary editor of the Spectator B) As well as his many novels, Graham Greene wrote articles for Pionerskaya Pravda
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Brighton Rock was published in 1938 and in 1940 he became literary editor of the Spectator B) In 1916 he had been received into the Roman Catholic Church and visited Mexico in 1938 to report on the religious persecution there. As a result he wrote The Lawless Roads and, later, his famous novel The Power and the Glory
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection entitled Reflections B) Among the many people who paid tribute to him on his death were members of the rock band Nirvana
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection entitled Reflections B) He established his reputation with his fourth novel, Petushki Train
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection entitled Reflections B) In 1935 he made a Journey across Liberia, described in Journey Without Maps, and on his return was appointed film critic of the Spectator
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection entitled Reflections B) He established his reputation with his fourth novel, London Tube
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection of butterflies B) He undertook work for the Foreign Office and was stationed in Sierra Leone from 1841 to 1843
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene describes horrible things and is critisized by many, but he said he always wanted to imitate Stephen King B) Graham Greene was a member of the Order of Merit and Ku Klux Klan
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene describes horrible things and is critisized by many, but this is his strong point B) He learned depression quite early, he was about to commit a suicide, but then decided to become a gangster instead
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene describes horrible things and is critisized by many, but this is his strong point B) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene describes only pleasant things B) His life was always nice and comfortable
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene died in April 1891 B) Brighton Rock was published in 1838 and in 1840 he became literary editor of the Spectator
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene died in April 1919 B) Graham Greene is very famous for his stories, poems and theatrical plays
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene died of swine flu B) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in Finland B) He will be missed all over the world
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England B) But there are many kinds of books: psychological, philosophical to some extent, where Greene analyses the inner world of a man paying much attention to the dark sides of Man’s nature, to the origin of the crime, to wickedness and weekness of a man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England B) Graham Greene describes horrible things and is critisized by many, but this is his strong point
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England B) Graham Greene was born in 1904
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern England B) He is also very famous for his comic shows and acrobatic circus performances
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is still alive B) He wrote some novels during the AfghanWar
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and horror books B) He is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and novels
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and novels B) Many of his novels and short stories have been filmed and The Spider Man was written as a film treatment
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was a member of the Order of Merit and a Companion of Honour B) Graham Greene is one of the most readable writers in modern Afghanistan
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was a member of the Order of Merit and a Companion of Honour B) Graham Greene is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and novels
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was a member of the Order of Merit and the cult called the Branch Davidian B) Graham Greene contributed hundreds of essays and film and book reviews, some of which appear in a collection entitled Reflections
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was a member of the Order of Merit and the Russian Union of Writers B) But there are many kinds of shows: psychological, philosophical to some extent, where Greene analyses the inner world of a man paying much attention to the dark sides of Man’s nature, to the origin of the crime, to wickedness and weekness of a man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene was born in the streets B) His first novel was published in 1929
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene’s life was hard and unusual B) Being a son of a headmaster, Greene ran away from school, because he wanted to travel to Russia
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene’s life was hard and unusual B) He will be missed all over the world
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Graham Greene’s life was in the hands of secret services B) He learned depression quite early, he was about to commit a suicide, though he lived in a friendly atmosphere of hockey players
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Green undertook work for the Scotland Yard B) Brighton Rain was published in 1938 and in 1940 he became literary editor of the Spectator
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene called his books “erotic” and “entertaining” B) In 1935 he made a Journey across Siberia
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene called his books “funny” and “crazy” B) But there are many kinds of books: psychological, philosophical to some extent, where Greene analyses the inner world of a man paying much attention to the dark sides of Man’s nature, to the origin of the crime, to wickedness and weekness of a man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene called his books “long” and “difficult to read” B) His first novel was published in 1929
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene called his books “serious” and “entertaining” B) Graham Greene is very famous for his wonderful clever detective stories and novels
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the last century B) Graham Greene died in April 1991
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the sixties B) He undertook work for the Foreign Office and was stationed in Russia
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the twenties B) He is hated all over the world
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the twenties B) Many of Green’s novels and short stories have been forbidden
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the twenties B) Many of his novels and short stories have been filmed and The Third Man was written as a film treatment
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Greene started writing at the end of the twenties B) There are many kinds of books: psychological, philosophical to some extent, where Greene analyses the inner world of a man paying much attention to the dark sides of Man’s nature, to the origin of the crime, to wickedness and weekness of a man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Green’s first novel was published in kindergarden B) In 1916 he had been received into the Roman Catholic Church and visited Mexico in 1938 to report on the religious persecution there. As a result he wrote The Lawless Roads and, later, his famous novel The Power and the Glory
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He learned depression quite early, he was about to commit a suicide, though he lived in a friendly atmosphere of careful parents B) In 1935 he made a Journey across Liberia, described in Journey Without Caps, and on his return was appointed film critic of the Survivor
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In 1916 Graham Greene had been received into the Roman Catholic Church and visited Mexico in 1938 to report on the religious persecution there. There he tried haluccinogenic mushrooms and befriended Timothy Leary B) He undertook work for the Foreign Office and was stationed in Sierra Leone from 1941 to 1943
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Many of Green’s novels and short stories have been filmed and The Batman was written as a film treatment B) His first novel was published in Moscow
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) On coming down from Balliol College, Oxford, Greene worked for four years as sub-editor on Moscovski Komsomolets B) He wrote some novels before the Second World War
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) On coming down from Balliol College, Oxford, Greene worked for four years as sub-editor on The Times B) His first novel was published in 1929
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He never wasted a word __________ to tell his name until that was required of him by the rules
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The new recruit had _________with the gang since the beginning of the summer holidays, and there were pos sibilities about his brooding silence that all recognized
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: They squatted in the ruins of the room and _________. unwanted sandwiches. Half an hour for lunch and they were at work again
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: When he said “Trevor” __________ was a statement of fact, not as it would have been with the others a statement of shame or defiance
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: __________ did anyone laugh except Mike, who finding himself without support and meeting the dark gaze of the newcomer opened his mouth and was quiet again
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: One __________ was occupied by his wife, who believed herself to be an invalid and obeyed strictly the dictate that one should live every day as if it were one’s last
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A __________ came to Mr. Ferraro to take a real holiday, and he nearly told his chauffeur to drive to Richmond Park
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: After an early lunch—a simple one in a City chop-house which concluded with some Stilton and a glass of excellent port—Mr. Ferraro visited Christie’s. Maverick was satisfactorily on the spot and Mr. Ferraro did not bother to wait for the Bonnard and the Monet which his agent __________ advised him to buy
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: And what had she been doing with her office time—those long hours of pilgrimage? She had __________ taken a whole week-end at Walsingham
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Before leaving for his office at nine-thirty Mr. Ferraro as a matter of courtesy would telephone to his wife in the other _________. “Father Dewes speaking,” a voice would say
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But he always preferred, if it were possible, to combine business with pleasure, and it occurred to him that if he drove out now to Canon Wood, Miss Saunders should be arriving about the same time, after her lunch __________, to start the afternoon’s work
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But he had not been mistaken, and suddenly a terrible doubt came to him how often in the last __________ years Miss Saunders had betrayed her trust
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But then an arm circled her __________, a young man’s face looked down into the street, a hand pulled a curtain across with the familiarity of habit
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Canon Wood was one of those new suburbs built around an old _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Even her qualifications were special: she had been __________ girl at the Convent of Saint Latitudinaria, Woking, where she had won in three successive years the special prize for piety—a little trip tych of Our Lady with a background of blue silk, bound in Florentine leather and supplied by Burns Oates & Washbourne. She also had a long record of unpaid serv ice as a Child of Mary
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Even his doctor had to submit to a sudden counter-check from a rival consultant. “I think,” he said to Hopkinson, “this after noon I will drop in to Christie’s and see how Maverick is getting on.” (Maverick was employed __________ his agent in the purchase of pictures)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: For this reason her wing for the last ten years had invariably housed some Jesuit or Dominican priest with a taste for good __________ and whisky and an emergency bell in his bedroom
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: God has made man in his image, and it was not unreasonable for Mr. Ferraro to return the com pliment and to regard God as the director of some __________ business which yet depended for certain of its operations on Ferraro & Smith
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He couldn’t believe that. Surely a few of that vast total of 36,892 days must still be valid. But only Miss Saunders could tell him how _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He did this the more readily because he was accustomed to make unexpected __________, and woe betide the employee who failed him
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He retained the firm __________ on practical affairs that had enabled his grandfather, who had been a fellow exile with Mazzini, to found the great business of Ferraro & Smith in a foreign land
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He sat __________ in his Daimler waiting for something to happen
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I noticed just now that your estimate for May is lower than your April __________, and your estimate for June is nearly down to the March level
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: If a friend could have seen Mr. Ferraro that evening __________ the steps of Montagu Square, he would have been surprised at how he had aged
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In his office he unlocked the drawer and took __________ the special file
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In the terraces behind dubious girls leant against the railings, and a street band blew harshly round a corner. _________. Ferraro found the house, but he could not bring himself to ring the bell
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It became obvious to Mr. Ferraro that not even the conditions for an indulgence had been properly _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It was almost as though he _________assumed during the long afternoon those 36,892 days he had thought to have saved during the last three years from Purgatory. The curtains were drawn, the lights were on, and no doubt Father Dewes was pouring out the first of his evening whiskies in the other wing
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It was not very onerous, for Mr. Ferraro had the __________ quality of being able to delegate responsibility
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Saunders __________ in. She gave the impression of moving close to the ground
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Ferraro did not ring the __________, but let himself quietly in. The thick carpet swallowed his footsteps like quicksand. He switched on no lights: only a red-shaded lamp in each room had been lit ready for his use and now guided his steps
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Ferraro drove into the dreary waste of Bayswater: __________ family houses had been converted into private hotels or fortunately bombed into car parks
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Ferraro looked after his salvation in more independent _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Ferraro thought at first that it was the warmth of the __________ that had caused her to be so inefficiently clothed, as she slid the window a little wider open
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Ferraro, having telephoned from his bedroom, where he took his breakfast, would walk rather as God walked in the Garden, through his library lined with the correct classics and his drawing-room, on the walls of which hung one of the most expensive art collections in private _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: On this particular Monday morning it was also May the first. The sense of spring had come punctually to London and the sparrows were noisy in the dust. Mr. Ferraro too was punctual, but unlike the seasons he was as reliable as Greenwich ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: One indulgence of three hundred days will compensate for many _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She laid a typed list on Mr. Ferraro’s desk: in the first column the date, in the second the church or place of pilgrimage where the indulgence was to be gained, and in the third column in red __________ the number of days saved from the temporal punishments of Purgatory. Mr. Ferraro read it carefully
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She was about thirty years old, with indeterminate hair and eyes of a startling clear blue which gave her otherwise anonymous face a re semblance to a __________ statue
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She was described in the firm’s books as “assistant confidential secretary” and her duties were “special” _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The day remained warm and sunny, but there were confused sounds from the direction of Trafalgar Square which reminded Mr. Ferraro that it was _________Day
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The estate was now a public park, the house formerly famous as the home of a minor Minister who served under Lord __________ at the time of the American rebellion was now a local museum
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The strength of a __________ is in its weakest link, and Mr. Ferraro did not forget his responsibility
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There was something inappropriate to the sun and the early flowers under the park trees in these processions of men without __________ carrying dreary banners covered with bad lettering
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: What better could be done on a fine May afternoon than check on Maverick? He added, “Send in Miss Saunders,” and drew forward a personal __________ which even Hopkinson was not allowed to handle
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Where one man would treasure a single Degas, Renoir, Cezanne, Mr. Ferraro bought wholesale — he had six Renoirs, four Degas, five Cezannes. He never tired of their presence; they represented a sub stantial saving in death _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: William Ferraro, of Ferraro & Smith, lived in a great __________ in Montagu Square
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: With his confidential secretary — a man called Hopkinson — he went __________ the schedule for the day
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “April is a very good month for indulgences, sir. There is Easter. In May we can depend only on the fact that it is Our _________’s month. June is not very fruitful, except at Corpus Christi. You will notice a little Polish church in Cambridgeshire…”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “As long as you remember, Miss Saunders, that none of us is getting younger. I put a great deal of trust in you, Miss Saunders. If I were less occupied here, I could attend to some of these indulgences _________. You pay great attention, I hope, to the conditions.”
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: A row of old iron beds each with a tumble of dark blanket rugs, no sheets. Raymond was __________ at the sight and hoped that Lou was not feeling upset
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Elizabeth had not been very pleasant. She had __________ admiration for Lou’s hat, bag, gloves and shoes which were all navy blue, but she had used an accusing tone
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He knew very well Elizabeth had a decent living income from a number of public sources, and was simply a __________, one of those who would not help themselves
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It was not till they had reached Victoria Park that Lou felt the full force of the fact that everything would be different from what she had _________. ‘It may have gone down since I was last there,’ she said to Raymond who had never visited Elizabeth before
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lou could not tell him how she had petitioned the __________ of Oxford St. John. But when she got a letter from Henry Pierce to say he was improving, she told Raymond, ‘You see, we asked for Henry to get back the Faith, and so he did. Now we ask for his recovery and he’s improving.’
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lou had _________that people sometimes came from neighbouring parishes to pray at the Church of the Sacred Heart because of the statue
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Outside the underground station at Victoria Park, where they stopped to ask the way, Lou felt a strange sense of panic. Elizabeth lived in a very downward quarter of Bethnal Green, and in the past nine years since she had seen her Lou’s memory of the __________ ground-floor rooms with their peeling walls and bare boards had made a kinder nest for itself
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Raymond at the wheel kept saying, ‘Poor Elizabeth - eight kids,’ which __________ Lou, though she kept her peace
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Raymond did not like being called Ray, but he made no objection for he knew that Lou had been under a _________
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Sending off the postal order to her sister each week she had gradually come to picture the habitation at Bethnal Green in an almost monastic light; it would be __________ but well-scrubbed, spotless, and shining with Brasso and holy poverty
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She had vaguely __________, in previous numbers, various references to the Black Madonna, how she had granted this or that favour
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Some said they came from all over England, but whether this was to admire the art-work or to pray, Lou was not _________. She gave her attention to the article in the parish magazine
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The floorboards gleamed. Elizabeth was grey-haired, lined, but neat. The children well behaved, sitting down betimes to their broth in two rows __________ an almost refectory table
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The house had been smelly and dirty. ‘I’ll show you round,’ Elizabeth had said in a tone of __________ refinement, and they were forced to push through a dark narrow passage behind her skinny form till they came to the big room where the children slept
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: There was a lopsided double bed in the corner, and beside it a table cluttered with mugs, tins, a comb and brush, a number of hair curlers, a framed photograph of the Sacred Heart, and also Raymond __________ what he thought erroneously to be a box of contraceptives
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They had pulled up outside the house where Elizabeth lived on the ground floor. Lou looked at the chipped paint, the dirty windows and torn grey-white curtains and was reminded with startling clarity other hopeless childhood in Liverpool from which, miraculously, hope had lifted her, and had come true, for the nuns had __________ her that job; and she had trained as a nurse among white-painted beds, and white shining walls, and tiles, hot water everywhere and Dettol without stint
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They went to her one day towards the end of their holiday. Henry sat at the back of the car beside a _________ suitcase stuffed with old clothes for Elizabeth
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They __________ their London holiday, but it was somewhat marred by a visit to that widowed sister of Lou’s to whom she allowed a pound a week towards the rearing of her eight children. Lou had not seen her sister Elizabeth for nine years
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: When she had first married she had wanted all white-painted furniture that you could wash and liberate from germs; but Raymond had been for oak, he did not understand the __________ of hygiene and new enamel paint, for his upbringing had been orderly, he had been accustomed to a lounge suite and autumn tints in the front room all his life. And now Lou stood and looked at the outside of Elizabeth’s place and felt she had gone right back
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: You should hear her cheeking up to the teachers.’ Elizabeth’s bones __________ with laughter among her loose clothes.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: A hand first supported him and then pushed him _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: A voice spoke to him softly through the star-shaped hole in the door. “Don’t worry, Mr. Thomas,” it said, “we won’t hurt you, not if you __________ quiet.” Mr. Thomas put his head between his hands and pondered
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: After a while it seemed to him that there were sounds in the silence — they were __________ and came from the direction of his house
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Even the fan-light had been left __________ by the bomb’s blast. Somewhere somebody whistled. Old Misery looked sharply round
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He didn’t trust whistles. A child was _________: it seemed to come from his own garden
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He didn’t want to __________ his house, which stood jagged and dark between the bomb-sites, saved so narrowly, as he believed, from destruction
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He had noticed that there was only one __________ in the car-park, and he felt certain that the driver would not come for it before the morning
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He stood up and peered through the ventilation-hole — between the cracks in one of the shutters he saw a light, not the light of a lamp, but the wavering light that a candle might _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He stumbled on the path, but the boy caught his elbow and __________ him. “Thank you, thank you, my boy,” he murmured automatically
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: His bag hit his feet. A hand __________ the key out of the lock and the door slammed
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: His head ...the opposite wall and he sat heavily down
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I don’t mind you playing __________ the place Saturday mornings. Sometimes I like company
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I’ve got to go careful. There’s __________ stones here. Give me your hand
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Mike had gone home to bed, but the __________ stayed. The question of leadership no longer concerned the gang
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Next morning the serious destruction _________. Two were missing—Mike and another boy whose parents were off to Southend and Brighton in spite of the slow warm drops that had begun to fall and the rumble of thunder in the estuary like the first guns of the old blitz
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Nobody could hear him from the road in front, and the lane at the back was seldom _________. Anyone who passed there would be hurrying home and would not pause for what they would certainly take to be drunken cries
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Old Misery came limping off the common. He had __________ on his shoes and he stopped to scrape them on the pavement’s edge
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Somebody shouted again through the dark. “I’m coming, I’m coming,” Mr. Thomas called. He said to the boy beside him, “I’m not unreasonable. Been a boy myself. As long as things are done _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Sometimes people came from London especially to see the Black Madonna, and __________ were not Catholics; they were, said the priest, probably no religion at all, poor souls, though gifted with faculties
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The driver again became aware of somebody _________. It came from the wooden erection which was the nearest thing to a house in that desolation of broken brick
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The new town of Whitney Clay had a large proportion of Roman Catholics, especially among the nurses at the new hospital; and at the paper mills, too, there were many Catholics, drawn inland from Liverpool by the new housing __________, likewise, with the canning factories
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Then they sawed through the joists and __________ into the hall, as what was left of the floor heeled and sank
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They began again on the first floor picking up the top floor-boards next the outer wall, leaving the joists _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They came, as if to a museum, to see the line of the Black Madonna which must not be __________ by vestments
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They had learnt with practise, and the second floor __________ more easily. By the evening an odd exhilara tion seized them as they looked down the great hollow of the house
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They ran risks and __________ mistakes: when they thought of the windows it was too late to reach them. “Cor,” Joe said, and dropped a penny down into the dry rubble-filled well. It cracked and span among the broken glass
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: When he climbed out the whole landscape had suddenly _________. There was no house beside the car-park, only a hill of rubble
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: When the Black Madonna was __________ in the Church of the Sacred Heart the Bishop himself came to consecrate it
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: With nails, chisels, screwdrivers, anything that was sharp and penetrating they moved around the __________ walls wor rying at the mortar between the bricks
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: “Let me _________,” he called, and heard the key turn in the lock. “A serious crash,” he thought, and felt dithery and confused and old
Choose the right preposition: . Already and privately for some years I have been guessing that I was set apart __________ the common run, but this of the needle attested the fact to my whole public. George, Kathleen, and Skinny
Choose the right preposition: . The next Saturday I looked out __________ him, and at last there he was, without Kathleen, half-wor ried, half-hopeful
Choose the right preposition: . We look lovely and it was a great day at the time, but I would not care for it all over again. From that day I was known __________ Needle
Choose the right preposition: After seeing George taken away home __________ Kathleen that Saturday in the Portobello Road, I thought that perhaps I might be seeing more of him in similar circumstances
Choose the right preposition: All the same, George was relieved when the inquiries were over without the marriage __________ Matilda being disclosed
Choose the right preposition: And George was haggard. His eyes seemed to have got smaller as if he had been recently __________ pain
Choose the right preposition: And most extraordinary, __________ that morning as I spoke, a degree of visibility set in
Choose the right preposition: As for myself, the main attraction of marrying Skinny was his prospective expeditions __________ Mesopotamia
Choose the right preposition: But a couple __________ months later he did escape. It was a Monday
Choose the right preposition: But I recognized Kathleen, my friend; her features had already begun to sink and protrude in the way that mouths and noses do in people destined always to be old ______ their years
Choose the right preposition: But the marriage didn’t come out - who would think of looking up registers in the Congo? Not that this would have proved any motive __________ murder
Choose the right preposition: Creams, toothpastes, combs, and hankies, cot ton gloves, flimsy flowering scarves, writing-paper, and crayons, icecream cones and orangeade, screwdrivers, boxes of tacks, tins of paint, __________ glue, of marmalade; I always liked them but far more now that I have no need of any
Choose the right preposition: Finally we three com posed ourselves __________ George’s picture
Choose the right preposition: George thought this a little foolish. They checked up __________ his life in Africa, right back to his living with Matilda
Choose the right preposition: He ad vanced up the road __________ Kathleen on his arm, letting himself lurch from side to side with his wife bobbing beside him, as the crowds asserted their rights of way
Choose the right preposition: He looked in my direction, rooted __________ the midst of the flowing market-mongers in that convivial street. I thought to myself, “He looks as if he had a mouthful of hay.” It was the new bristly maize-coloured beard and moustache surrounding his great mouth suggested the thought, gay and lyrical as life
Choose the right preposition: He was away down a side-street and along another street and down one more, zig-zag, as far and as devious as he could take himself __________ the Portobello Road
Choose the right preposition: Her long stiff-crooked fingers pounced to select a jade ring __________ amongst the jumhle of brooches and pendants onyx, moonstone and gold, set out on the stall
Choose the right preposition: I might have been inspired to say more __________ that agreeable morning, but he didn’t wait
Choose the right preposition: I saw her shoving in her avid manner from stall to stall. She was always fond _________antique jewellery and of bargains
Choose the right preposition: I stood silently among the people, watching. As you will see, I wasn’t __________ a position to speak to Kathleen
Choose the right preposition: I wondered that I had not seen her before in the Portobello Road _________my Saturday-morning ambles
Choose the right preposition: Kathleen was a little younger than me, but looked much older. She knew her chances were diminishing but __________ that time I did not think she cared very much
Choose the right preposition: Kathleen was more interested __________ marriage than I thought
Choose the right preposition: Kathleen, speaking from that Catholic point of view which takes some getting used to, said, “She was _________Confession only the day before she died — wasn’t she lucky?”
Choose the right preposition: Kathleen, to prove that George had absolutely no motive, told the police that she was engaged __________ him
Choose the right preposition: Like me, she had racketed around a good deal __________ the war; she had actually been engaged to an officer in the U. S. navy, who was killed
Choose the right preposition: My desire to marry him had to be stimu lated __________ the continual reading of books about Babylon and Assyria; perhaps Skinny felt this, because he supplied the books and even started instructing me in the art of deciphering cuneiform tables
Choose the right preposition: Nevertheless he was back again next week. Poor Kathleen had brought him __________ her car
Choose the right preposition: Not another soul passed by as he pressed my body into the stack, as he made a deep nest __________ me, tearing up the hay to make a groove the length of my corpse, and finally pulling the warm dry stuff in a mound over this concealment, so natural-looking in a broken haystack
Choose the right preposition: One day in my young youth __________ high summer, lolling with my lovely companions upon a haystack I found a needle
Choose the right preposition: One Saturday in recent years I was mooching down the Portobello Road, threading among the crowds __________ marketers on the narrow pavement when I saw a woman
Choose the right preposition: Really I should not care to be so young _________heart again
Choose the right preposition: She had a haggard careworn wealthy look, thin but for the breasts forced-up high like a pigeon’s. I had not seen her __________ nearly five years
Choose the right preposition: She left it __________ the top of the street and got out with him, holding him tight by the arm
Choose the right preposition: She too was getting on __________ years
Choose the right preposition: Shortly afterwards the byre-hand emigrated to Canada to start afresh, __________ the help of Skinny who felt sorry for him
Choose the right preposition: Sometimes as occasion arises on a Saturday morn ing, my friend Kathleen, who is a Catholic, has a Mass said __________ my soul, and then I am in attendance as it were at the church
Choose the right preposition: That is my thought every time I turn over my old papers and come across the photograph. Skinny, Kathleen, and myself are __________ the photo atop the haystack
Choose the right preposition: The poor byre-hand who sold us the milk was grilled for hour after hour __________ the local police, and later by Scotland Yard. So was George. He admitted walking as far as the haystack with me, but he denied lingering there
Choose the right preposition: The remainder of our families __________ Scotland were hinting that it was time we settled down with husbands
Choose the right preposition: There is a pleasurable spread of objects on the counters which I now perceive and exploit __________ a certain detachment, since it suits with my condition of life
Choose the right preposition: They took him __________ a nursing home. He was fairly quiet, except on Saturday mornings when they had a hard time of it to keep him indoors and away from the Portobello Road
Choose the right preposition: When Saturdays are fine I go instead __________ the Portobello Road where formerly I would jaunt with Kathleen in our grown-up days
Choose the right preposition: “You hadn’t seen your friend __________ ten years?” the In spector asked him
Choose the right preposition: That is how I came to be _________the Portobello Road that Saturday morning when I saw George and Kath leen
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: A pound a week I’ve (to be) sending up to now, that’s fifty-two pounds a year. I would never have done it, calling herself a Catholic with birth control by her bedside
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: A voice spoke to him softly through the star-shaped hole in the door. “Don’t worry, Mr. Thomas,” it said, “we won’t hurt you, not if you (to stay) quiet.”
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: After a while it seemed to him that there were sounds in the silence — they (to be) faint and came from the direction of his house
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And she told me she (to go) to Mass every Sunday, and all the kids go excepting James
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Better book a private ward, we’ll (to manage) the expense
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But whatever conclusion you come to, please don’t (to upset) your wife at this stage. She has already refused to feed the child, says it isn’t hers, which is ridiculous.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Even the fan-light had been left (to unbreak) by the bomb’s blast. Somewhere somebody whistled
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He sat by her bed, (to bewilder). Presently a nurse beckoned him from the door
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He stood up and peered through the ventilation-hole — between the cracks in one of the shutters he saw a light, not the light of a lamp, but the wavering light that a candle might (to give)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He thought of burglars — perhaps they had employed the boy as a scout, but why should burglars (to engage) in what sounded more and more like a stealthy form of carpentry? Mr. Thomas let out an experimental yell, but nobody answered
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I (to notice) the baby was red,’ said Raymond
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: In fact, it was a very easy birth, a girl. Raymond was (to allow) in to see Lou in the late afternoon
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It (to be) then they heard Mike’s whistle at the back
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I’m terribly sorry, Mr. Thomas. One of us got (to take) short, and we thought you would’t mind, and now he can’t get out
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Lou could never (to be) sure if that was what she heard from the doorways and landings as she climbed the stairs of Cripps House, the neighbours hushing their conversation as she approached
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Lou gave up most of her church work in order to sew and (to knit) for the baby
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Mr. Thomas put his head between his hands and pondered. He had noticed that there was only one lorry in the car-park, and he felt certain that the driver would not (to come) for it before the morning
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Next day he (to find)Lou in a half-stupor. She had been given a strong sedative following an attack of screaming hysteria
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Next morning the serious destruction (to start)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: No wonder he’s (to get) into trouble with an example like that. I might have known, with her peroxide hair
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Oh, the red will go. It (to change), you know. But the baby will certainly be brown, if not indeed black, as indeed we think she will be. A beautiful healthy child
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Old Misery looked sharply round. He didn’t trust whistles. A child was (to shout): it seemed to come from his own garden. Then a boy ran into the road from the car-park
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Raymond gave up the Reader’s Digest. He applied for promotion and got it; he (to become) a depart mental manager
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: She (to have) decided to go into the maternity wing of the hospital like everyone else. But near the time she let Raymond change her mind, since he kept saying, ‘At your age, dear, it might be more difficult than for the younger women
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Summers was restive. “Haven’t we (to do) enough?” he said. “I’ve been given a bob for slot machines. This is like work.”
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: That’s something you must (to work) out for yourselves. I’d have a word with the doctor if I were you
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The flat was now a waiting-room for next summer, after the baby was born, when they would (to put) down the money for a house
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The noise could not even (to have) reached his enemies.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The Sister appeared, a tall grave woman. Raymond thought her to be short-sighted for she seemed to look at him fairly closely before she bade him (to follow) her
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Then he thought he (to hear) the sound of hammering and scraping and chipping
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There must be a mix-up. You must (to have) mixed up the babies
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There’s no question of mix-up,’ said the matron sharply. ‘We’ll soon (to settle) that. We’ve had some of that before
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They began again on the first floor (to pick) up the top floor-boards next the outer wall, leaving the joists exposed
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Two were missing — Mike and another boy whose parents (to be) off to Southend and Brighton in spite of the slow warm drops that had begun to fall and the rumble of thunder in the estuary like the first guns of the old blitz
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Yes, indeed we think so, indeed I must (to say), certainly so’, said the matron. ‘We did not expect your wife to take it so badly when we told her. We’ve had plenty of dark babies here, but most of the mothers expect it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Your wife is (to upset) about her baby,’said the matron. ‘You see, the colour. She’s a beautiful baby, perfect. It’s a question of the colour’
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: “I’m coming, I’m (to come),” Mr. Thomas called
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: ““We’ve hardly started,” T. said. “Why, there’s all the floors left, and the stairs. We haven’t (to take) out a single window. You voted like the others. We are going to destroy this house. There won’t be anything left when we’ve finished.”
Put the verb in brackets in the right form:Then they sawed through the joists and retreated into the hall, as what was (to leave) of the floor heeled and sank
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: “Something’s wrong,” Blackie (to say). They could hear his urgent breathing as they unlocked the door


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  0097.06.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
"Old chap" переводится как "старина" (в обращении):
"To drop in" переводится как "заходить, заглядывать":
"To enable" переводится как "давать возможность (что-либо сделать), делать возможным":
August Bank Holiday is a state holiday:
Hopkinson was Mr. Ferraro's confidential secretary:
Mr. Ferraro's wife believed herself to be an invalid:
Muriel Spark (1918-2006) was born and educated in Edinburgh:
Old Misery - whose real name was Thomas - had once been a builder and decorator:
The author of "Special duties" Graham Greene was born in the XX century:
The Black Madonna was given to the Church by a recent convert:
The gang met every morning in the school yard:
Trevor didn't want to pinch anything in Old Misery's house:
Trevor's mother considered herself better than the neighbours:
When Miss Saunders told Mr. Ferraro she could look after his wife's indulgences too, he answered it was a good idea:
When the newcomer said that his name was "Trevor" everybody burst into laughter:
William Ferraro lived in a small house in Montagu square:
Грэм Грин (1904-1991) - современный американский писатель:


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  0097.06.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
... used to come for Cuff to ride home on Saturdays.
Captain Dobbin wanted to join the party at supper and he paraded twice before his friends and ...
Cuff could knock you off forty Latin verses an hour and could ...
Cuff’s fight with .... and the unexpected issue of that contest, will long be remembered by every man.
Dobbin ... . He was no willing to spoil sport.
Dobbin burst out laughing at himself, for the truth is, he could sing no better than ...
Dobbin had for once forgotten the world and was away with Sindbad the Sailor in the Valley of Diamonds, when ... woke up his pleasant reverie.
Dobbin’s parent was a ... in the City.
Every soul in the coach agreed, that on that night ...
Figs, alone in the schoolroom was ..., when Cuff, entering, bade him go upon some message which tarts were probably the subject.
Figs, being a ...., brought his arm into action and hit at Cuff’s left eye.
High and low, all ...
How Rebecca now felt the want of ... who would have managed the business in ten minutes.
It was, of course, Mrs. Sedley’s opinion that ...
Let’s step into the ... with the Russell Square party and be off to the Gardens.
Miss Rebecca Sharp and her stout companion lost themselves in a solitary walk, they both felt that situation was extremely tender and Jos Sedley ...
Mr. Sedley said that his son Jos was ...
Old Dobbin, his father, gave him ... , most of which he spent in a general tuck-out for the school.
Rebecca kissed old Mr. Sedley and her behaviour was so affecting that he was going ...
The boy had been instructed to get over the playground wall and to ...
When two unmarried people get together, and talk upon such ... subjects, a great deal of confidence and intimacy is presently established between them.
William Dobbin retreated to .... , where he passed a half holiday in the bitterest sadness and woe.
... was the only drink with which unhappy gentlemen soothed the fever of their previous night’s potation.
A ... made the young people remain at home and not to go to Vauxhall.
A woman with fair opportunities , and without an absolute hump, ...
After Jos’s letter, It became clear to every soul in the house, except poor Amelia, that Rebecca should ..., and high and low agreed that, that event should take place as speedily as possible.
All schoolboys at Dr. Swishtail’s famous school considered that the selling of goods by retail is a ...
Almost for the first time in his life, Mr. Sedley found himself talking without the least timidity or hesitation, to a person ...
Amelia determined in her heart to ask her mother’s permission to present ... to her friend Rebecca.
Amelia did not speak with Rebecca on the tender subject, she compensated herself with long and intimate conversations with the ...
Amelia insisted upon Rebecca accepting ...
Amelia received the reply through Jos’s man that his master was ...
Amelia reminded her brother about a promise made last Easter holidays to take her to ...
Amelia was ... old when her brother Joseph went away.
Amelia: «You know, mamma, Rebecca’s father was our ... at Chiswick».
And presently the voices of the two speakers , Mr. and Mrs. Sedley, were hushed and replaced by the ...
As for the girls, Amelia and Rebecca, they ...
As Mr. Sedley talked on, he grew quite bold, and actually had the audacity to ask Rebecca for whom she was knitting the green silk purse. «...», replied Rebecca, looking at him.
As the coach drove off, Miss Sharp put her pale face out of the window and flung the ... into the garden.
Asking Amelia questions about her brother Miss Sharp was interested in his ... first of all.
At six weeks old George Osborne had received from John Sedley a present of a ...
Before the bottle of champagne was emptied, of which Jos took ..., he had agreed to take the young ladies to Vauxhall.
Being offended by his father’s jokes Joseph Sedley took a goblet of champagne and it ...
Boggley Wallah was...
By saying «I wish it were in the bottom of the Thames, I do» miss Sharp meant ...
Captain Dobbin easily conveyed Mr. Jos Sedley into a hackney-coach which deposited him safely at ...
Cuff smuggled wine in and ...
Even Miss Pinkerton, that ... , ceased scolding Amelia after the first time.
Every scholar leaving Miss Pinkerton’s academy ...
George Osborne promised to ...
George Osborne was ... and had been one of the family any time these three-and-twenty years.
George took charge of Amelia and she looked as happy as a ...
I don’t know on what pretext Osborne left the room, or why, presently, Amelia went away, perhaps to ...
If a dear girl has no dear mamma to ... , she must do it for herself.
If a person is too poor to keep a ... he must sweep his own rooms.
In those days, in England, where Rebecca and Amelia lived, to say «Long live, Bonapart» was as much as to say «Long live ... !»
It was ... who made Rebecca a present of a doll a year she was admitted to Miss Pinkerton institution.
It was ... who used to say to ... , «Get me a situation - we hate each other, and I am ready to go».
It was ... who won the love of everybody in the Mall.
It was Rebecca’s... who wrote a letter to Miss Pinkerton recommending Rebecca to her protection.
Joe was in the East India Company’s Civil Service as .... of Boggley Wollah.
Jos almost drew away the audience who were gathered round the musicians and received from hearers a ...
Jos Sedley: «Amelia, my dear, I bought a ... at the same time, which I gave to Sambo»
Jos to Amelia: «Dear Amelia, as soon as I have recovered, for my health is very much shaken, I shall go to ... for some months.»
Joseph Sedley ...
Joseph Sedley ... by the fire when two girls entered the room
Joseph Sedley had a/an ...
Joseph Sedley was ... older than his sister Amelia.
Joseph was ... in man’s society.
Miss Amelia Sedley could sing like ... .
Miss Jemima wanted to present a dictionary to Rebecca Sharp because she (Miss Jemima) ...
Miss Jemima was Miss Pinkerton’s ...
Miss Jemima: «I have put up two bottles of ... for Mrs. Sedley, and the receipt for making it»
Miss Pinkerton ..... French, .... .
Miss Pinkerton gave all teachers orders to treat Miss Sedley with utmost gentleness as hash treatment ...
Miss Pinkerton had to send for Dr. Floss and half tipsify Miss Swartz with ...
Miss Pinkerton recommended Rebecca for the situation of a governess to Sir Pitt Crawley’s family ...
Miss Pinkerton was known to write personally to the parents of her pupils only when her pupils ...
Miss Pinkerton wrote her own name in the fly-leaf of ..., the book, which she presented to her scholars on their departure.
Miss Pinkerton’s academy was for ...
Miss Rebecca said «Revenge may be wicked ...»
Miss Sedley was glad to leave the Mall for home and ...
Miss Sedley’s papa was ... in London, a man of some wealth.
Miss Sharp ... Miss Pinkerton’s academy for young ladies on Chiswick Mall.
Miss Sharp’s eyes were so attractive that ... fell in love with her.
Miss Sharp’s father was ...
Mr. Sedley could not endure his son’s ...
Mr. Sedley [to his wife]: «Mark my words, dear, the first woman who fishes him ...»
Mr. Sedley: «Do you remember, Emmy, when you wrote to Osborne to come on Twelfth night and ... ?
Mr. Sedley: «He is out-Josephing Joseph, my dear, and all the while the boy is only thinking ...
Now and then Jos would make a desperate attempt to get rid of ... .
Old Sedley was a ...
On the day of Miss Sedley’s departure from Miss Pinkerton’s academy, the girls ...
On their way from Miss Pinkerton’s institution to Miss Amelia Sedley’s home Rebecca and Amelia were talking about ...
Once in looking over some ..., Rebecca suddenly came upon one which caused her to burst into tears.
Once, in looking over some drawings, which Amelia had sent from school, Rebecca suddenly came upon one which caused her to ...
One day Amelia ... and could not go upon some party of pleasure to which the two young people were invited.
Osborne: « I give Miss Sharp warning, that right or wrong , I consider Amelia is the ... in the world».
Poor Joe’s panic lasted for ... during which he didn’t visit the house.
Rebecca asked Amelia questions about Mr. Joseph Sedley ...
Rebecca had a vivid imagination ; she had, besides, read ...
Rebecca interested Mrs. Blenkinshop, the housekeeper, be evincing the deepest sympathy in ..., which operation was then going in the kitchen.
Rebecca kissed Mr. Sedley’s hand when he ...
Rebecca kissed the ... as she put it on and woved she would never part with it.
Rebecca lived among young girls at the Mall for two years and ...
Rebecca sang .... her friend Amelia (though of course Osborne was free to keep his opinion)
Rebecca Sharp looked like ... at school for young ladies.
Rebecca Sharp was ...
Rebecca: «And your sister is the ... ; happy man who wins her».
Rebecca: «How could you be so cruel as to make me eat that ... at dinner ?!».
Rebecca: «I’ll do it, when I’m gone», and she dropped her voice and look so ..., that everybody felt how cruel her lot was, and how sorry they would be to part with her.
Rebecca’s duties in Miss Pinkerton’s academy were ...
Rebecca’s father thought to better his circumstances by ...
Rebecca’s father, after his third attack of .... , wrote a manly and pathetic letters to Miss Pinkerton.
Rebecca’s mother ...
Rebecca’s mother was of the ... origin.
Respectable parents set their houses topsy-turvy and spend a lot of money in ball suppers and iced champagne to ...
Sambo, who flung open the door and announced Mr. Joseph, followed grinning and bearing ..., which the monster had purchased in Covent Garden Market that morning.
Speaking about her life in Miss Pinkerton’s academy Rebecca said that she
The happiness, the superior advantage of the young women round about her gave Rebecca ...
The name of ... was always on the lips of Miss Pinkerton.
The old joker stopped his laughter and asked Sambo to give him and Joe ...
The only point in Amelia’s behaviour which was not satisfactory to her mistress was/were
The task of husband-hunting is generally, and with becoming modesty entrusted by young persons to ...
Then, seizing Captain Dobbin’s hand and weeping in the most pitiful way, he ...
These fair young people passed such a/an ... evening together instead of having gone to Vauxhall.
To attract Joseph’s attention at table Rebecca ...
When Amelia and Rebecca entered the drawing-room where Mr. Joseph Sedley was he began to ...
When Amelia’s father entered the drawing-room and saw Miss Sharp and his daughter and son, he ...
When in London Joseph Sedley lived ...
When Joseph Sedley worked in India he lived there ...
When Minerva (Miss Pinkerton) intimated to Miss Sharp that she was to instruct the juniors in music, the young girl ...
When Miss Pinkerton gave Miss Sharp an opportunity of shaking one of her fingers at the moment of their parting, Miss Sharp ...
When Miss Pinkerton said that she had nourished a viper in her bosom she meant ...
When Miss Sharp’s father was drunk, he used to ...
When morning came, the good-natured Mrs. Sedley no longer thought of ...
When parting Rebecca Sharp addressed Miss Pinkerton in French and the latter ...
When Rebecca called Joseph Sedley a very handsome man, she ...
When Rebecca saw the two magnificent Cashmere shawls which Joseph Sedley had brought to his sister she said that ....
When Rebecca was at the Mall she ...
When Rebecca was cheated into trying a chili she ...
When the carriage was ready to leave Miss Pinkerton’s academy Miss Jemima ....
Young people went off to the piano, which was situated, as pianos usually are in the ...
«Amelia had better ...», said her father, «and let G. Osborne see what a beautiful handwriting we have brought back from Miss Pinkerton.
«By Gad, Miss Rebecca, I wouldn’t hurt you again.» «No», she said, «I know you wouldn’t», and then she ....
«Do you remember, Sedley, what a fury you were in, when I cut ..., and how Amelia, rescued me from a beating by falling down on her knees?»
«Good Heavens! Dobbin, where have you been?», Osborne said, seizing the ... from his friend’s arm.
«He is very kind and good,» Amelia said to Rebecca about her brother Joseph, «but ... ».
«How are you, Sedley?» , that young wag began. «There‘s a ... downstairs with a black eye and tied-up head».
«How could you be so cruel as to make me ... the first day I ever saw you» - said Rebecca.
«I ... Hessian boots», said Rebecca, and Jos was extremely pleased at this remark.
«I can’t make you such handsome presents, Joseph», continued Amelia, «...but while I was at school, I have embroidered for you a very beautiful ... .»
«It was ... who prevented my marriage», Rebecca was thinking in her heart.
«It was ..., Jos», Mr. Sedley said, «to torment the poor boy so».
«I’m better now. How kind you all are to me! All,» said Rebecca with a laugh, «except you, ...».
«Let us ... , Miss Sedley, Amelia», said George Osborne.
«Miss Sharp», said George Osborne, «you, who are so clever an artist, you must make a picture of that scene. Sedley shall be represented in buckskins, and holding one of the injured ...»
«My dear, it’s a mercy he didn’t bring us over ...», said old Sedley to his wife.
«My dearest Amelia», said G. Osborne, «you don’t know the world. I do. And your little friend Miss Sharp must ...».
«My poor papa», Rebecca said to Amelia, «could give me nothing, and I had but ... in all the world».
«O heavenly, heavenly .... !» - exclaimed Miss Sharp and held them to her bosom and cast up her eyes to the ceiling, in an ecstasy of admiration.
«Oh, delightful», said Rebecca going to ... , but she recollected herself and paused, like a modest creature.
«Order Mr. Joe’s elephant, Sambo», cried the father , but seeing Joe really almost to ..., the old joker stopped his laughter .
«She shall ... tomorrow, the little artful creature», said Mrs. Sedley with great energy, when her husband told her that Emmy’s friend was fishing for their son.
«The children must ...», cried Mrs. Sedley talking about going to Vauxhall.
«The curry was capital, indeed it was», said Joe, quite gravely. «Perhaps, there was not enough ... in it; no there was not»
«Tomorrow, your papa and I ...», said Mrs. Sedley, discussing the idea of going to Vauxhall.
«Well, Jos , do you remember coming down in a gig to Dr. Swish tail’s to see me, before ...»
«What abominably cold weather Miss», and Joe fell to poking the fire with all his might, although it was in the middle of ... .
But this arrangement left Mr. Joseph Sedley tête-à-tête with Rebecca, at the drawing-room, where she was occupied in ...


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ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: . «The girls must have a gentleman apiece,» said the old gentleman. «Jos will be ________ to leave Emmy in the crowd, he will be so taken up with Miss Sharp here. Send to 96, and ask George Osborne if he’ll come.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «For Becky Sharp,» answered Jemima, trembling very much, and blushing over her withered face and neck, as she turned her back on her sister. «For Becky Sharp: she’s going too.» B) «MISS JEMIMA!» exclaimed Miss Pinkerton, in the largest capitals. «Are you in your senses? Replace the Dictionary in the closet, and never venture to take such a liberty in future.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «It is Mrs. Sedley’s coach, sister,» said Miss Jemima. «Sambo, the black servant, has just rung the bell; and the coachman has a new red waistcoat.» B) «Have you completed all the necessary preparations incident to Miss Sedley’s departure, Miss Jemima?» asked Miss Pinkerton herself, that majestic lady; the Semiramis of Hammersmith, the friend of Doctor Johnson, the correspondent of Mrs. Chapone herself
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) A black rap singer, who reposed on the box beside the fat coachman, uncurled his bandy legs as soon as the equipage drew up opposite Miss Pinkerton’s shining brass plate, and as he pulled the bell at least a score of young heads were seen peering out of the narrow windows of the stately old brick house B) Nay, the acute observer might have recognised the little red nose of good-natured Miss Jemima Pinkerton herself, rising over some geranium pots in the window of that lady’s own drawing-room
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) A seed-cake and a bottle of wine were produced in the drawing-room, as on the solemn occasions of the visits of parents, and these refreshments being partaken of, Miss Sedley was at liberty to depart B) Not that the parting speech caused Amelia to philosophise, or that it armed her in any way with a calmness, the result of argument; but it was intolerably dull, pompous, and tedious; and having the fear of her schoolmistress greatly before her eyes, Miss Sedley did not venture, in her presence, to give way to any ebullitions of private grief
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) All the servants were there in the hall - all the dear friend - all the young ladies - the dancing-master who had just arrived B) There was such a scuffling, and hugging, and kissing, and howling, with the hysterical YOOPS of Miss Rot
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Although schoolmistresses’ letters are to be trusted no more nor less than graveyard epitaphs B) Yet, as it sometimes happens that a person departs this life who is really deserving of all the praises the stone cutter carves over his bones
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Amelia won the hate of everybody who came near her, from Minerva herself down to the poor girl in the scullery, and the one-eyed tart-woman’s daughter, who was permitted to vend her wares once a week to the young ladies in the Mall B) She had only two intimate and bosom friends out of the twenty-four young ladies
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Amelia would laugh over a dead man B) Even Miss Pinkerton, that austere and godlike woman, ceased scolding her after the first time
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Amelia’s legs blushed with rosy health, and her lips with the freshest of smiles B) She had a pair of ears which sparkled with the brightest and honestest good-humour, except indeed when they filled with tears, and that was a great deal too often
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Amelia’s mother had had some education somewhere, and her daughter spoke French with purity and a Parisian accent B) It was in those days rather a rare accomplishment, and led to her engagement with the orthodox Miss Pingpong
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As for Miss Swartz, the rich woolly-haired mulatto from St. Kitt’s, on the day Amelia went away, she was in such a passion of tears that they were obliged to send for Dr. Floss, and half tipsify her with sal volatile B) But as we are to see a great deal of Amelia, there is no harm in saying, at the outset of our acquaintance, that she was a dear little creature
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As she is not a heroine, there is no need to describe Amelia’s person B) I am afraid that her nose was rather long than otherwise, and her cheeks a great deal too round and blue for a heroine
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Becky had a little room in the garret, where the maids heard her walking and sobbing at night; but it was with rage, and not with grief B) She had not been much of a dissembler, until now her loneliness taught her to feign
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Becky had never mingled in the society of women: her father, reprobate as he was, was a man of talent B) His body was a thousand times more agreeable to her than the talk of such of her own sex as she now encountered
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Being shot dead by a glance of her ears which was fired all the way across Chiswick Church from the school-pew to the reading-desk B) This infatuated young man used sometimes to take vodka-tonic with Miss Pinkerton, to whom he had been presented by his mamma, and actually proposed something like marriage in an intercepted note, which the one-eyed apple-woman was charged to deliver
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Biting her lips and throwing up her venerable and Roman-nosed head (on the top of which figured a large and solemn turban), she said, «Miss Sharp, I wish you a good morning.» B) As the Hammersmith Semiramis spoke, she waved one hand, both by way of adieu, and to give Miss Rubin an opportunity of shaking one of the fingers of the hand which was left out for that purpose
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) But Rebecca Sharp had the dismal precocity of poverty B) Many a dun had she talked to, and turned away from her father’s door; many a tradesman had she coaxed and wheedled into good-humour, and into the granting of one meal ore
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) But Rebecca Sharp never had been a girl, she said. She was a boy. B) She had been a boy since she was eight years old
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Even envious Miss Briggs always spoke ill of Amelia B) High and mighty Miss Saltire (Lord Dexter’s granddaughter) allowed that her figure was genteel
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Fancy had carried him back five-and-fifty years in the course of that century B) Dr. Raine and his rod were just as awful to him in his heart, then, at sixty-eight, as they had been at thirteen
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) For her mother being dead, her stepmother, finding himself not likely to recover, after his third attack of delirium tremens, wrote a manly and pathetic letter to Miss Pinkerton B) Rebecca was seventeen when she came to Chiswick, and was bound over as an articled pupil
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) For Miss Amelia Sedley could not only sing like a lark, or a Mrs. Billington, and dance like Hillisberg or Parisot B) And spell as well as a Dictionary itself but she had such a kindly, smiling, tender, gentle, generous eye of her own
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) For two years I have only had insults and outrage from her. I have been treated worse than any servant in the toilet B) I have never had a friend or a kind word, except from you
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He sprang up behind the carriage. «Stop!» cried Miss Jemima, rushing to the gate with a gun B) But, lo! and just as the coach drove off, Miss Sharp put her pale face out of the window and actually flung the book back into the garden
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) her duties being to talk French, as we have seen B) her privileges to live cost free, and, with a few guineas a year, to gather scraps of knowledge from the professors who attended the school
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Her painting she practised incessantly, and one day, when the girls were out, and she had remained at home, she was overheard to play a piece so well that Minerva thought, wisely, she could spare herself the expense of a master for the juniors, and intimated to Miss Sharp that she was to instruct them in music for the future B) The boy refused; and for the first time, and to the astonishment of the majestic mistress of the school
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) His mother married again and returned to England with Thackeray’s step father in 1819 B) Thackeray went up to Cambridge in January 1829
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I have been made to tend the little girls in the lower schoolroom, and to talk French to the Misses, until I grew sick of my mother tongue B) But that talking French to Miss Pinkerton was capital fun
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) If the Doctor, with a large birch, had appeared bodily to him, even at the age of threescore and eight, and had said in awful voice, «Boy, take down your pant - »? Well, well, Miss Sedley was exceedingly alarmed at this act of insubordination B) «How could you do so, Rebecca?» at last she said, after a pause
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In fact, the Lexicographer’s name was always on the lips of this majestic woman, and a visit he had paid to her was the cause of her reputation and her life B) Being commanded by her elder sister to get «the Dictionary» from the site www.lingua.ru, Miss Jemima had extracted two copies of the file from her CD
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In Miss Jemima’s eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, was an object of as deep ventilation as would have been a letter from a sovereign B) Only when her pupils quitted the establishment, or when they were about to be married, and once, when poor Miss Birch died of the scarlet fever, was Miss Pinkerton known to write personally to the parents of her pupils; and it was Jemima’s opinion that if anything could console Mrs. Birch for her daughter’s loss, it would be that pious and eloquent composition in which Miss Pinkerton announced the event
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In the given chapters we meet, through the medium of Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for young ladies, the socially and economically advantaged Amelia Sedley in stark contrast to the disadvantaged but sharp-witted Rebecca (Becky) Sharp B) There is also a picturesque cast of other characters such as Amelia’s bovine sister Judy or the devotedly loyal William Dobbin
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Isabella’s heart attack profoundly affected Thackeray’s work B) He died the next week
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Jemmy was as well known to them, poor soul!: for though that honest creature had made and given her jelly and cake enough for three children, and a seven-shilling piece at parting, the girl’s sense of ridicule was far stronger than her gratitude, and she sacrificed Miss Jemmy quite as pitilessly as her sister B) «You’ll go in and say good-by to Miss Pinkerton, Becky!» said Miss Jemima to a young lady of whom nobody took any notice, and who was coming downstairs with her own bandbox
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Pinkerton did not understand French B) She only directed those who did
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Sedley’s father was a yoga guru, and in that quality had given lessons of drawing at Miss Pinkerton’s school B) He was a clever man; a pleasant companion; a careless student; with a great propensity for running into debt, and a partiality for the tavern
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Sharp only folded her own toilet paper with a very frigid smile and bow, and quite declined to accept any other toilet paper as a present B) In fact, it was a little battle between the young lady and the old dog, and the latter was worsted
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Sharp was an articled dancer, for whom Miss Pinkerton had done, as she thought, quite enough, without conferring upon her at parting the high honour of the Dixonary B) Who IS a good Christian, a good parent, child, wife, or lover; who actually DOES leave a disconsolate family to mourn his loss
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mr. Lawrence used to go through dialogues with it; it formed the delight of Newman Street, Gerrard Street, and the Artists’ quarter: and the young painters, when they came to take their gin-and-water with their lazy, dissolute, clever, jovial senior, used regularly to ask Rebecca if Miss Pinkerton was at home B) As Mr. Lawrence or President West. Once Miss Jemmy had the honour to pass a few days at Chiswick; after which she brought back Jemima, and erected another doll as Miss Jemmy
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mrs. Chips was summoned from Buxton B) By the side of many tall and bouncing young ladies in the establishment, Rebecca Sharp looked like a child
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Nay, with some people those awes and terrors of death last for ever and ever B) I know, for instance, an old gentleman of a hundred and sixty-eight, who said to me one morning at breakfast, with a very agitated countenance, «I dreamed last night that I was flogged by Dr. Raine.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) only a year before the arrangement by which Rebecca had been admitted into her house, and when Rebecca was sixteen years old, Miss Pinkerton majestically, and with a little speech, made her a present of a doll - which was, by the way, the confiscated property of Miss Swindle, discovered surreptitiously nursing it in school-hours B) How the father and daughter laughed as they trudged home together after the evening party (it was on the occasion of the speeches, when all the professors were invited) and how Miss Pinkerton would have raged had she seen the caricature of herself which the little mimic, Rebecca, managed to make out of her doll
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Rebecca Sharp sate commonly with her father, who was very proud of her wit B) Heard the talk of many of his wild companions - often but ill-suited for a girl to record
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) She doesn’t know a word of French, and was too proud to confess it B) I believe it was that which made her part with me; and so thank Heaven for Chinese
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) She took advantage, therefore, of the means of study the place offered her B) She was already a musician and a good linguist, she speedily went through the little course of study which was considered necessary for boys in those days
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) She was small and slight in person B) pale, sandy-haired, and with eyes habitually cast down
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) so in academies of the male and female sex it occurs every now and then that the pupil is fully worthy of the praises bestowed by the disinterested instructor B) Now, Miss Amelia Sedley was a young lady of this singular species
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Thackeray never returned to London B) In London his first daughter was born
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Thackeray travelled abroad one time B) While living in Paris he married Isabella Shawe in1936
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Thackeray went down in June 1830, without a degree, but having made a lot of friends B) He started his career by practising law but soon abandoned it in favour of marketing
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Thackeray’s second died soon in 1839 B) Isabella suffered a heart attack
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The carriage rolled away; the great gates were closed; the bell rang for the dancing lesson. The world is before the two young ladies; and so, farewell to Chiswick Mall B) Miss Sedley was almost as flurried at the act of defiance as Mr Sedley had been
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The catastrophe came, and Becky was brought to Hrapunovo as to her home B) The rigid formality of Hrapunovo suffocated her
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The death of the old schoolmistress, the foolish good-humour of her sister, the silly chat and scandal of the elder girls, and the frigid correctness of the governesses equally annoyed her B) And Becky had no soft maternal brain, this unlucky girl, otherwise the prattle and talk of the younger children, with whose care she was chiefly intrusted, might have soothed and interested her; but she lived among them two years, and not one was sorry that she went away
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The embracing was over; they parted - that is, Miss Sedley parted from her cats. Miss Sharp had demurely entered the carriage some minutes before. Nobody cried for leaving HER B) Sambo of the bandy hands slammed the carriage window on his young weeping mistress
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The fact is, the old dog believed Rebecca to be the meekest creature in the world B) So admirably, on the occasions when her father brought her to Chiswick, used Rebecca to perform the part of the ingenue
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The gentle tender-hearted miss Sharp was the only person to whom she could attach herself in the least; and who could help attaching herself to Amelia B) The happiness the superior advantages of the young women round about her, gave Rebecca inexpressible pangs of envy
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The humble calling of her female parent Miss Sharp never alluded to, but used to state subsequently that the Entrechats were a noble family of Gascony, and took great pride in her descent from them B) And curious it is that as she advanced in life this young lady’s ancestors increased in rank and size
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The prayers and the meals, the lessons and the sex, which were arranged with a conventual regularity, oppressed Becky almost beyond endurance B) And she looked back to the freedom and the beggary of the old studio in Soho with so much regret, that everybody, herself included, fancied she was consumed with grief for her father
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The story in Vanity Fair is set in the period of the Napoleonic wars B) Like so many classic works of literature,it mixes ambition, greed, duplicity, coarseness, riches, and poverty into one of literature’s great satirical pictures, which the author intended to be applied to early/mid-Victorian England
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Then came the struggle and parting below B) Words refuse to tell it
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) This almost caused Jemima to faint with terror B) «Well, I never» – said she –»what an audacious». - Emotion prevented her from completing either sentence
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) This talk with sister completed, Miss Pinkerton proceeded to write her own name, and Miss Sedley’s, in the fly-leaf of a Johnson’s Dictionary – the interesting work which she invariably presented to her scholars, on their departure from the Mall B) On the cover was inserted a copy of «Lines addressed to a young lady on quitting Miss Pinkerton’s school, at the Mall; by the late revered Doctor OJ Simpson»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Three days before, little Laura Martin, the orphan, followed Amelia about like a little dog B) She had to make and receive at least two presents - to make seven solemn promises of writing every week
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Vanity Fair is not good for those wishing to discover Thackeray’s bright wit, attractive humour, and seldom matched comic powers B) While the present century was in its teens, and on one sunshiny morning in June, there drove up to the great iron gate of Miss Pinkerton’s academy for young bodyguards, on Chiswick Mall, a large family coach, with two fat horses in blazing harness, driven by a fat coachman in a three-cornered hat and wig, at the rate of four miles an hour
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Vanity Fair was Thackeray’s first horror story B) Vanity Fair is commonly considered to be his masterpiece
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When he was drunk, he used to beat his wife and daughter; and the next morning, with a headache, he would rail at the world for its neglect of his genius, and abuse, with a good deal of cleverness, and sometimes with perfect reason, the fools, his brother painters B) As it was with the utmost difficulty that he could keep himself, and as he owed money for a mile round Soho, where he lived, he thought to better his circumstances by marrying a young woman of the French nation, who was by profession an opera-girl
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When Miss Pinkerton had finished the inscription in the first, Jemima, with rather a dubious and timid air, handed her the twenty second B) «For whom is this, Miss Jemima?» said Miss Pinkerton, with awful coldness
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) when the day of departure came, between her two customs of laughing and crying, Miss Sedley was greatly puzzled how to act B) She was glad to go home, and yet most woefully sad at leaving school
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When they looked up they were very large, odd, and attractive B) So attractive that the Reverend Mr. Crisp, fresh from Oxford, and curate to the Vicar of Chiswick, the Reverend Mr. Flowerdew, fell in love with Miss Goldstar
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When William Makepeace Thackeray was 33, his father died B) He was sent to Finland
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When William Makepeace Thackeray was sent to be in the care of his great grandmother and great uncle B) He was educated in England
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) William Makepeace Thackeray was born in Calcutta, India on 18th July, 1811 where his father, Richmond, was a Collector in the service of the East India Company B) His father died in 1914
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Worthy Miss Pinkerton, although she had a Roman nose and a turban, and was as tall as a grenadier, and had been up to this time an irresistible princess, had no will or strength like that of her little apprentice, and in vain did battle against her, and tried to overawe her. B) Attempting once to scold her in public, Amelia hit upon the before-mentioned plan of answering her in Chinese, which quite routed the old woman
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «A viper - a fiddlestick,» said Miss Sharp to the old lady, almost fainting with astonishment. «You took me because I was useful B) There is no question of gratitude between us. I hate this place, and want to leave it. I will do nothing here but what I am obliged to do»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Heaven bless you, my child,» said Semidigitalis, embracing Amelia, and scowling the while over the girl’s shoulder at Miss Sharp B) «Come away, Becky,» said Miss Jemima, pulling the young woman away in great alarm, and the drawing-room door closed upon them for ever
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «I am here to speak Arabic with the children,» Rebecca said abruptly, «not to teach them music, and save money for you. Give me money, and I will teach them.» B) Minerva was obliged to yield, and, of course, disliked her from that day. «For five-and-thirty years,» she said, and with great justice, «I never have seen the individual who has dared in my own house to question my authority. I have nourished a viper in my bosom.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «O Rebecca, Rebecca, for shame!» cried Miss Sharp; for this was the greatest blasphemy Rebecca had as yet uttered B) «Revenge may be wicked, but it’s natural,» answered Miss Sedley. «I’m no angel.» And, to say the truth, she certainly was not
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Send Miss Sedley instantly to me,» said Miss Pinkerton. And so venturing not to say another word, poor Jemima trotted off, exceedingly flurried and nervous B) Miss Sedley’s papa was the a hollywood star, and a man of some wealth
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «The girls were up at four this morning, packing her trunks, sister,» replied Miss Jemima; «we have made her a bow-pot.» B) «Yo! Say a bouquet, sister Jemima, ’tis more cool»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Well, a booky as big almost as Admiral Nahimov; I have put up two bottles of the gillyflower water for Mrs. Sedley, and the receipt for making it, in Amelia’s box.» B) «And I trust, Miss Jemima, you have made a copy of Miss Sedley’s internet account. This is it, is it? Very good - ninety-three pounds, four shillings. Be kind enough to address it to John Sedley, Esquire, and to seal this billet which I have written to his lady.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «What airs that girl gives herself, because she is an Earl’s grand-daughter,» she said of one B) She determined at any rate to get free from the prison in which she found herself, and now began to act for herself, and for the first time to make connected plans for the future
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Why, do you think Miss Pinkerton will come out and order me back to the black-hole?» said Rebecca, laughing B) «I hate the whole house,» continued Miss Nokia in a fury
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Why, will the black footman tell tales?» cried Miss Dashanika, laughing B) He may go back and tell Miss Plankton that I hate her with all my soul
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A)In London Thackeray started his journalistic career B) His third daughter was born in 1940
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Not that the parting speech caused Amelia to philosophise, or that it armed her in any way with a calmness, the result of argument; but it was intolerably dull, pompous, and tedious; and having the fear of her schoolmistress greatly before her ________, Miss Sedley did not venture, in her presence, to give way to any ebullitions of private grief
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: On the cover was inserted a copy of «Lines addressed to a young lady on quitting Miss Pinkerton’s ________, at the Mall; by the late revered Doctor Samuel Johnson.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Sharp an opportunity of shaking ________ of the fingers of the hand which was left out for that purpose
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She had to make and receive at least fourteen ________ - to make fourteen solemn promises of writing every week
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Thackeray returned to ________ in 1837 where his first daughter was born and where he continued his journalistic career
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Vanity Fair was Thackeray’s first major ________, and is commonly considered to be his masterpiece
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: William Makepeace Thackeray was born in Calcutta, ________ on 18th July, 1811 where his father, Richmond, was a Collector in the service of the East India Company
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «For Becky Sharp,» answered Jemima, trembling very much, and blushing over her withered face and neck, ________ she turned her back on her sister. «For Becky Sharp: she’s going too.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: . «Come away, Becky,» said Miss Jemima, pulling the young woman away in great ________, and the drawing-room door closed upon them for ever
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A black servant, who reposed on the box beside the fat coachman, uncurled his bandy legs as soon as the equipage drew up opposite Miss Pinkerton’s shining brass plate, and as he pulled the bell at least a score of young ________ were seen peering out of the narrow windows of the stately old brick house
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A seed-cake and a bottle of wine were produced in the drawing-room, ________ on the solemn occasions of the visits of parents, and these refreshments being partaken of, Miss Sedley was at liberty to depart
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: All which details, I have no doubt, JONES, who reads this book at his Club, will pronounce to be excessively foolish, trivial, twaddling, and ________-sentimental
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Although schoolmistresses’ ________ are to be trusted no more nor less than churchyard epitaphs; yet, as it sometimes happens that a person departs this life who is really deserving of all the praises the stone cutter carve over his bones; who IS a good Christian, a good parent, child, wife, or husband; who actually. it occurs every now and then that the pupil is fully worthy of the praises bestowed by the disinterested instructor
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: As the Hammersmith Semiramis spoke, she waved one hand, both by way of adieu, ________ to give Miss
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Being commanded by her ________ sister to get «the Dictionary» from the cupboard, Miss Jemima had extracted two copies of the book from the receptacle in question
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Following the birth of their third daughter in 1940 (the second died soon after her birth in 1839) Isabella suffered a permanent mental ________, a tragedy that profoundly affected Thackeray’s work
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: For she could not only sing like a ________, or a Mrs. Billington, and dance like Hillisberg or Parisot; and embroider beautifully; and spell as well as a Dictionary itself
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: For three days before, little Laura Martin, the orphan, followed her about like a little ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He died in ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He started his career by practising law but soon abandoned it in favour of journalism. Thackeray travelled abroad very ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He started his career by practising ________but soon abandoned it in favour of journalism.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: His mother married again and returned to ________ with Thackeray’s step father in 1819
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: His ________ died in 1814 when William was only 3, and he was sent to England, to be in the care of his great grandmother and great aunt, in 1817, and was educated there
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In fact, it was a little battle between the young lady and the old one, ________ the latter was worsted
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In fact, the Lexicographer’s name was always on the lips of this majestic woman, and a visit he had paid to her was the cause of her reputation and her ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In Miss Jemima’s eyes an autograph letter of her sister, Miss Pinkerton, was an object of as deep ________ as would have been a letter from a sovereign
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: In the given chapters we meet, through the medium of Miss Pinkerton’s Academy for young ladies, the socially and economically advantaged Amelia Sedley in stark contrast to the disadvantaged but sharp-witted Rebecca (Becky) ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: it was Jemima’s opinion that if anything could console Mrs. ________ for her daughter’s loss, it would be that pious and eloquent composition in which Miss Pinkerton announced the event
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Pinkerton did not understand French; she only directed those who did: but biting her lips and throwing ________ her venerable and Roman-nosed head (on the top of which figured a large and solemn turban), she said, «Miss Sharp, I wish you a good morning
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Sedley’s ________ was a merchant in London, and a man of some wealth; whereas Miss Sharp was an articled pupil, for whom Miss Pinkerton had done, as she thought, quite enough, without conferring upon her at parting the high honour of the Dixonary
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Sharp only folded her own hands with a very frigid smile and bow, and quite declined to accept the proffered honour; on which Semiramis tossed up her turban more indignantly than ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Nay, the acute observer might have recognised the little red nose of good-natured Miss Jemima Pinkerton herself, rising over some ________ pots in the window of that lady’s own drawing-room
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Now, Miss Amelia Sedley was a young lady of this singular ________; and deserved not only all that Miss Pinkerton said in her praise, but had many charming qualities which that pompous old Minerva of a woman could not see, from the differences of rank and age between her pupil and herself
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Only when her pupils quitted the establishment, or when they were about to be married, and once, when poor Miss Birch died of the scarlet ________, was Miss Pinkerton known to write personally to the parents of her pupils
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Thackeray went up to Cambridge in January 1829 and went down in June 1830, without a degree, but having made a lot of ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The flowers, and the presents, and the trunks, and bonnet-boxes of Miss ______ . having been arranged by Mr. Sambo in the carriage, together with a very small and weather-beaten old cow’s-skin trunk with Miss Sharp’s card neatly nailed upon it, which was delivered by Sambo with a grin, and packed by the coachman with a corresponding sneer - the hour for parting came; and the grief of that moment was considerably lessened by the admirable discourse which Miss Pinkerton addressed to her pupil
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The story is set in the period of the Napoleonic wars and, like so many classic works of literature, mixes ambition, greed, duplicity, coarseness, riches, and ________ into one of literature’s great satirical pictures, which the author intended to be applied to early/mid-Victorian England
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There is also a picturesque cast of other characters such as Amelia’s ________ brother Jos or the devotedly loyal William Dobbin
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: This novel is the perfect starting point for those wishing to discover Thackeray’s bright ________, attractive humour, and seldom matched comic powers
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: This talk with sister completed, Miss Pinkerton proceeded to write her own name, and Miss Sedley’s, in the fly-leaf of a Johnson’s Dictionary - the interesting work which she invariably presented to her scholars, on their departure from the ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Well, he is a lofty man of genius, and admires the great and heroic in life and novels; and so had better take warning and go ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: When Miss Pinkerton had finished the inscription in the first, Jemima, with rather a dubious and timid air, handed her the ________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: While living in ________ he married Isabella Shawe in1836
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «For whom is this, ________ Jemima?» said Miss Pinkerton, with awful coldness
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «I suppose I must,» said Miss Sharp calmly, and much to the wonder of Miss Jemima; and the ________ having knocked at the door, and receiving permission to come in, Miss Sharp advanced in a very unconcerned manner, and said in French, and with a perfect accent, «Mademoiselle, je viens vous faire mes adieux.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «MISS JEMIMA!» exclaimed Miss Pinkerton, in the largest capitals. «Are you in your senses? Replace the Dictionary in the closet, and never venture to take ________ a liberty in future.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «Send Miss Sedley instantly ________ me,» said Miss Pinkerton. And so venturing not to say another word, poor Jemima trotted off, exceedingly flurried and nervous
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «Well, sister, it’s only two-and-ninepence, and poor Becky will be miserable if she don’t get ________.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «You’ll go in and say good-by to Miss Pinkerton, Becky!» said Miss Jemima to a young lady of whom nobody took any notice, and ________ was coming downstairs with her own bandbox
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: A goblet of Champagne restored Joseph’s equanimity, and before the bottle was emptied, of which as an invalid he took ________, he had agreed to take the young ladies to Vauxhall
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: And this I set down as a positive ________. A woman with fair opportunities, and without an absolute hump, may marry WHOM SHE LIKES
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: And ________, what a mercy it is that these women do not exercise their powers oftener! We can’t resist them, if they do
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: At this, I don’t know ________ for what reason, Mrs. Sedley looked at her husband and laughed
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: if a dear girl has no dear Mamma to ________ matters with the young man, she must do it for herself
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: If a person is too poor to keep a servant, though ever so ________, he must sweep his own rooms
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It was an advance, and as such, perhaps, some ladies of indisputable correctness and ________will condemn the action as immodest; but, you see, poor dear Rebecca had all this work to do for herself
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Let them show ________ inclination, and men go down on their knees at once: old or ugly, it is all the same.
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Only let us be ________ that the darlings are like the beasts of the field, and don’t know their own power. They would overcome us entirely if they did
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Before he went to India he was too young to ________ of the delightful pleasures of a man about town, and plunged into them on his return with considerable assiduity
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: But he was ________lonely here as in his jungle at Boggley Wollah
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He did not live with his family while in London, but had ________ of his own, like a gay young bachelor
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He drove his horses in the Park; he dined at the fashionable taverns (for the Oriental Club was not as yet invented); he ________ the theatres, as the mode was in those days, or made his appearance at the opera, laboriously attired in tights and a cocked hat
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He had lived for about eight years of his life, quite alone, at this charming ________, scarcely seeing a Christian face except twice a year, when the detachment arrived to carry off the revenues which he had collected, to Calcutta
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He never was well dressed; but he took the hugest pains to ________ his big person, and passed many hours daily in that occupation
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He was as vain as a girl; and perhaps his extreme shyness was one of the results of his extreme ________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He was lazy, peevish, and a bon-vivan; the appearance of a lady frightened him beyond measure; ________ it was but seldom that he joined the paternal circle in Russell Square, where there was plenty of gaiety, and where the jokes of his good-natured old father frightened his amour-propre
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He ________ knew a single soul in the metropolis: and were it not for his doctor, and the society of his blue-pill, and his liver complaint, he must have died of loneliness
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Her music she practised incessantly, and one day, when the girls were out, and she had remained at home, she was overheard to play a ________ so well that Minerva thought, wisely, she could spare herself the expense of a master for the juniors, and intimated to Miss Sharp that she was to instruct them in music for the future
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: His bulk caused Joseph much anxious thought and alarm; now and then he would make a desperate attempt to get rid of his superabundant fat; but his indolence and love of good living speedily got the better of these endeavours at ________, and he found himself again at his three meals a day
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Luckily, at this time he caught a liver ________, for the cure of which he returned to Europe, and which was the source of great comfort and amusement to him in his native country
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: On returning to India, and ever after, he used to talk of the pleasure of this ________of his existence with great enthusiasm, and give you to understand that he and Brummel were the leading bucks of the day
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She took advantage, .., of the means of study the place offered her; and as she was already a musician and a good linguist, she speedily went through the little course of study which was considered necessary for ladies in those days
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The two couples were perfectly happy then in their box: where the most ________ and intimate conversation took place
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: When dressed at length, in the afternoon, he would issue forth to take a drive with nobody in the Park; and then would come back in order to dress again and go and dine with nobody at the Piazza ________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: But as we are to see a great deal of Amelia, there is no harm in saying, at the ________ of our acquaintance, that she was a dear little creature; and a great mercy it is, both in life and in novels, which (and the latter especially) abound in villains of the most sombre sort, that we are to have for a constant companion so guileless and good-natured a person
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Even envious Miss Briggs never spoke ill of her; high and mighty Miss Saltire (Lord Dexter’s granddaughter) allowed that her figure was ________; and as for Miss Swartz, the rich woolly-haired mulatto from St. Kitt’s
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: on the day Amelia went away, she was in such a passion of tears that they were ________ to send for Dr. Floss, and half tipsify her with sal volatile
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She had twelve intimate and ________ friends out of the twenty-four young ladies
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She was glad to go home, and yet most woefully sad at ________ school
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: So that when the day of ________ came, between her two customs of laughing and crying, Miss Sedley was greatly puzzled how to act
Choose the right preposition: I know that the tune I am piping is a very mild one (although there are some terrific chapters coming presently), and must beg the good-natured reader to remember that we are only discoursing ________ present about a stockbroker’s family in Russell Square, who are taking walks, or luncheon, or dinner, or talking and making love as people do in common life, and without a single passionate and wonderful incident to mark the progress of their loves
Choose the right preposition: Let us then step into the coach ________ the Russell Square party, and be off to the Gardens. There is barely room between Jos and Miss Sharp, who are on the front seat. Mr. Osborne sitting bodkin opposite, between Captain Dobbin and Amelia
Choose the right preposition: The argument stands thus - Osborne, in love with Amelia, has asked an old friend to dinner and to Vauxhall - Jos Sedley is in love with Rebecca. Will he marry her? That is the great subject now ... hand
Choose the right preposition: Amelia, on the other hand, as became a young woman of her prudence and temperament, was quite enthusiastic ________ the match
Choose the right preposition: And Amelia was entirely of this opinion, ________ which, gradually, the good-natured Mrs. Sedley was brought
Choose the right preposition: And going to her Papa, that generous British merchant, who had promised to give her as many guineas as she was years old - she begged the old gentleman to give the money to dear Rebecca, who must want it, while she lacked ________ nothing
Choose the right preposition: And so while he paired off with Miss Sedley, and Jos squeezed through the gate into the gardens with Rebecca at his side, honest Dobbin contented himself by giving an arm to the shawls, and by paying ________ the door for the whole party
Choose the right preposition: And this ruthless young fellow, seizing hold of Dobbin’s hand, acted over the scene, to the horror of the original performer, and ________ spite of Dobbin’s good- natured entreaties to him to have mercy
Choose the right preposition: As George walked down Southampton Row, ________ Holborn, he laughed as he saw, at the Sedley Mansion, in two different stories two heads on the look-out
Choose the right preposition: As the majestic Jos stepped out of the creaking vehicle the crowd gave a cheer for the fat gentleman, who blushed and looked very big and mighty, as he walked away with Rebecca under his arm. George, ________ course, took charge of Amelia
Choose the right preposition: At which the latter replied haughtily, «My father’s a gentleman, and keeps his carriage»; and Mr. William Dobbin retreated ________ a remote outhouse in the playground, where he passed a half-holiday in the bitterest sadness and woe
Choose the right preposition: But after a scene ________ which one person was in earnest and the other a perfect performer - after the tenderest caresses, the most pathetic tears, the smelling-bottle, and some of the very best feelings of the heart, had been called into requisition - Rebecca and Amelia parted, the former vowing to love her friend for ever and ever and ever
Choose the right preposition: But this did not alter Mrs. Blenkinsop’s opinion of Miss Sharp. «I don’t trust them governesses, Pinner,» she remarked ________ the maid
Choose the right preposition: But when Miss Rebecca Sharp and her stout companion lost themselves ________ a solitary walk, in which there were not above five score more of couples similarly straying, they both felt that the situation was extremely tender and critical, and now or never was the moment Miss Sharp thought, to provoke that declaration which was trembling on the timid lips of Mr. Sedley
Choose the right preposition: Colonel Dobbin’s corps, in which old Mr. Osborne himself was but an indifferent corporal, had been reviewed ________ the Sovereign and the Duke of York; and the colonel and alderman had been knighted
Choose the right preposition: Dobbin - Alderman Dobbin was Colonel ________ the City Light Horse, then burning with military ardour to resist the French Invasion
Choose the right preposition: Every soul in the coach agreed that ________ that night Jos would propose to make Rebecca Sharp Mrs. Sedley
Choose the right preposition: He burst ________ laughing at himself; for the truth is, he could sing no better than an owl
Choose the right preposition: He carried about Amelia’s white cashmere shawl, and having attended under the gilt cockle-shell, while Mrs. Salmon performed the Battle of Borodino (a savage cantata against the Corsican upstart, who had lately met ________ his Russian reverses) - Mr. Dobbin tried to hum it as he walked away, and found he was humming - the tune which Amelia Sedley sang on the stairs, as she came down to dinner
Choose the right preposition: he restrained his feelings: the carriage was in waiting to take him to dinner, so he tripped away with a «God bless you, my dear, always come here when you come to town, you know. - Drive ________ the Mansion House, James
Choose the right preposition: He said he was vain, selfish, lazy, and effeminate. He could not endure his airs as a man of fashion, and laughed heartily ________ his pompous braggadocio stories
Choose the right preposition: He sprang to open the door for the ladies, when they retired, with the most killing grace - and coming back to the table, filled himself bumper after bumper of claret, which he swallowed ________ nervous rapidity
Choose the right preposition: He walked very modestly behind them. He was not willing to spoil sport. About Rebecca and Jos he did not care a fig. But he thought Amelia worthy even of the brilliant George Osborne, and as he saw that good-looking couple threading the walks to the girl’s delight and wonder, he watched her artless happiness ________ a sort of fatherly pleasure. Perhaps he felt that he would have liked to have something on his own arm besides a shawl (the people laughed at seeing the gawky young officer carrying this female burthen); but William Dobbin was very little addicted to selfish calculation at all; and so long as his friend was enjoying himself, how should he be discontented
Choose the right preposition: Her behaviour was so affecting that he was going to write her a cheque ________ twenty pounds more
Choose the right preposition: High and low, all made fun ________ him. They sewed up those corduroys, tight as they were
Choose the right preposition: His son had entered the army: and young Osborne followed presently in the same regiment. They had served ________ the West Indies and in Canada
Choose the right preposition: In those famous days every gazette had a victory in it, and the two gallant young men longed to see their own names in the glorious list, and cursed their unlucky fate to belong to a regiment which had been away ________ the chances of honour
Choose the right preposition: It is to be understood, as a matter of course, that our young people, being in parties of two and two, made the most solemn promises to keep together during the evening, and separated in ten minutes afterwards. Parties at Vauxhall always did separate, but ’twas only to meet again ________ supper-time, when they could talk of their mutual adventures in the interval
Choose the right preposition: It now became clear to every soul in the house, except poor Amelia, that Rebecca should take her departure, and high and low (always ________ the one exception) agreed that that event should take place as speedily as possible
Choose the right preposition: It was, of course, Mrs. Sedley’s opinion that her son would demean himself ________ a marriage with an artist’s daughter
Choose the right preposition: Miss Sharp kindled with this exciting talk, but Miss Sedley trembled and grew quite faint as she heard it. Mr. Jos told several of his tiger-hunting stories, finished the one about Miss Cutler and Lance the surgeon; helped Rebecca to everything ________ the table, and himself gobbled and drank a great deal
Choose the right preposition: Mr. Sedley was neutral. «Let Jos marry whom he likes,» he said; «it’s no affair of mine. This girl has no fortune; no more had Mrs. Sedley. She seems good-humoured and clever, and will keep him ________order, perhaps. Better she, my dear, than a black Mrs. Sedley, and a dozen of mahogany grandchildren.»
Choose the right preposition: Now, William Dobbin, from an incapacity to acquire the rudiments of the above language, as they are propounded in that wonderful book the Eton Latin Grammar, was compelled to remain among the very last of Doctor Swishtail’s scholars, and was «taken down» continually ________ little fellows with pink faces and pinafores when he marched up with the lower form, a giant amongst them, with his downcast, stupefied look, his dog’s-eared primer, and his tight corduroys
Choose the right preposition: Once or twice Jos had been on the point ________ saying something very important to her, to which she was most willing to lend an ear, but the fat fellow could not be brought to unbosom himself of his great secret, and very much to his sister’s disappointment he only rid himself of a large sigh and turned away
Choose the right preposition: Our good child ransacked all her drawers, cupboards, reticules, and gimcrack boxes - passed ________ review all her gowns, fichus, tags, bobbins, laces, silk stockings, and fallals - selecting this thing and that and the other, to make a little heap for Rebecca
Choose the right preposition: She kissed Mr. Sedley’s hand, when he presented her ________ the purse; and asked permission to consider him for the future as her kind, kind friend and protector
Choose the right preposition: She looked as happy as a rose-tree ________ sunshine
Choose the right preposition: She made her preparations ________ departure with great equanimity; and accepted all the kind little Amelia’s presents, after just the proper degree of hesitation and reluctance
Choose the right preposition: She vowed eternal gratitude to Mrs. Sedley, ________course; but did not intrude herself upon that good lady too much, who was embarrassed, and evidently wishing to avoid her
Choose the right preposition: So that everything seemed to smile upon Rebecca’s fortunes. She took Jos’s arm, as a matter of course, on going to dinner; she had sate by him on the box of his open carriage (a most tremendous «buck» he was, as he sat there, serene, in state, driving his greys), and though nobody said a word on the subject of the marriage, everybody seemed to understand it. All she wanted was the proposal, and ah! how Rebecca now felt the want of a mother! - a dear, tender mother, who would have managed the business ________ ten minutes, and, in the course of a little delicate confidential conversation, would have extracted the interesting avowal from the bashful lips of the young man
Choose the right preposition: Such was the state ________ affairs as the carriage crossed Westminster bridge
Choose the right preposition: The fact is, Miss Amelia, in the drawing-room balcony, was looking very eagerly towards the opposite side of the Square, where Mr. Osborne dwelt, ________ the watch for the lieutenant himself; and Miss Sharp, from her little bed-room on the second floor, was in observation until Mr. Joseph’s great form should heave in sight
Choose the right preposition: The parents at home had acquiesced in the arrangement, though, between ourselves, old Mr. Sedley had a feeling very much akin ________ contempt for his son
Choose the right preposition: The party was landed at the Royal Gardens ________ due time
Choose the right preposition: They had previously been to the panorama of Moscow, where a rude fellow, treading on Miss Sharp’s foot, caused her to fall back with a little shriek into the arms of Mr. Sedley, and this little incident increased the tenderness and confidence of that gentleman ________ such a degree, that he told her several of his favourite Indian stories over again for, at least, the sixth time
Choose the right preposition: This mystery served to keep Amelia’s gentle bosom in a perpetual flutter of excitement. If she did not speak with Rebecca on the tender subject, she compensated herself with long and intimate conversations with Mrs. Blenkinsop, the housekeeper, who dropped some hints to the lady’s-maid, who may have cursorily mentioned the matter to the cook, who carried the news, I have no doubt, to all the tradesmen, so that Mr. Jos’s marriage was now talked of by a very considerable number ________ persons in the Russell Square world
Choose the right preposition: What were the adventures of Mr. Osborne and Miss Amelia? That is a secret. But be sure of this - they were perfectly happy, and correct in their behaviour; and as they had been in the habit ________ being together any time these fifteen years, their tete-a-tete offered no particular novelty
Choose the right preposition: Why should I spare him?» Osborne said to his friend’s remonstrances, when they quitted the invalid, leaving him under the hands ________ Doctor Gollop
Choose the right preposition: Young Dobbin had no peace after that. The jokes were frightful, and merciless against him. «Hullo, Dobbin,» one wag would say, «here’s good news ________ the paper. Sugars is ris’, my boy.» Another would set a sum - »If a pound of mutton-candles cost sevenpence-halfpenny, how much must Dobbin cost?» and a roar would follow from all the circle of young knaves, usher and all, who rightly considered that the selling of goods by retail is a shameful and infamous practice, meriting the contempt and scorn of all real gentlemen
Choose the right preposition: «But, lor’, Ma’am,» ejaculated Mrs. Blenkinsop, «we was only grocers when we married Mr. S., who was a stock-broker’s clerk, and we hadn’t five hundred pounds ________us, and we’re rich enough now.»
Choose the right preposition: «He’s priming himself,» Osborne whispered to Dobbin, and at length the hour and the carriage arrived ________ Vauxhall
Choose the right preposition: «I suppose you know best,» Dobbin said, though rather dubiously. «You always were a Tory, and your family’s one ________ the oldest in England. But - «Come and see the girls, and make love to Miss Sharp yourself,» the lieutenant here interrupted his friend; but Captain Dobbin declined to join Osborne in his daily visit to the young ladies in Russell Square
Choose the right preposition: «That’s George’s present ________ you, Rebecca, dear,» said Amelia, quite proud of the bandbox conveying these gifts. «What a taste he has! There’s nobody like him.»
Choose the right preposition: «Your father’s only a merchant, Osborne,» Dobbin said ________ private to the little boy who had brought down the storm upon him
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: A dreadful day it was for young Dobbin when one of the youngsters of the school, (to have) run into the town upon a poaching excursion for hardbake and polonies, espied the cart of Dobbin & Rudge, Grocers and Oilmen, Thames Street, London, at the Doctor’s door, discharging a cargo of the wares in which the firm dealt
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: After marriage this Sehnsucht nach der Liebe must (to subside)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Almost for the first time in his life, Mr. Sedley found himself (to talk), without the least timidity or hesitation, to a person of the other sex
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And before he had time to ask how, Mr. Joseph Sedley, of the East India Company’s service, was actually (to seat) tete-a-tete with a young lady, looking at her with a most killing expression; his arms stretched out before her in an imploring attitude, and his hands bound in a web of green silk, which she was unwinding
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: As Joe’s buggy drove up, and while, after his usual thundering knock and pompous bustle at the door, the ex-Collector of Boggley Wollah laboured up stairs to the drawing-room, knowing glances were telegraphed between Osborne and Miss Sedley, and the pair, smiling archly, looked at Rebecca, who actually blushed as she (to bend) her fair ringlets over her knitting
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: As there was music in the next room, the talk was (to carry) on, of course, in a low and becoming tone, though, for the matter of that, the couple in the next apartment would not have been disturbed had the talking been ever so loud, so occupied were they with their own pursuits
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But at the close of the ditty, Rebecca quitted the piano, and giving her hand to Amelia, walked away into the front drawing-room twilight; and, at this moment, Mr. Sambo made his appearance with a tray, (to contain) sandwiches, jellies, and some glittering glasses and decanters, on which Joseph Sedley’s attention was immediately fixed
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Conversation of a sentimental sort, (to befit) the subject, was carried on between the songs, to which Sambo, after he had brought the tea, the delighted cook, and even Mrs. Blenkinsop, the housekeeper, condescended to listen on the landing-place
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Cuff’s fight with Dobbin, and the unexpected issue of that contest, will long (to be) remembered by every man who was educated at Dr. Swishtail’s famous school
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: For the affection of young ladies is of as rapid growth as Jack’s bean-stalk, and he (to reach) up to the sky in a night.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Having (expend) her little store of songs, or having stayed long enough in the back drawing-room, it now appeared proper to Miss Amelia to ask her friend to sing
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He did not lie awake all night thinking whether or not he was in love with Miss Sharp; the passion of love never (to interfere) with the appetite or the slumber of Mr. Joseph Sedley; but he thought to himself how delightful it would be to hear such songs as those after Cutcherry - what a distinguee girl she was - how she could speak French better than the Governor-General’s lady herself - and what a sensation she would make at the Calcutta balls. «It’s evident the poor devil’s in love with me,» thought he
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He had never (to be) but once at a tiger-hunt, when the accident in question occurred, and when he was half killed - not by the tiger, but by the fright
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He had never (to be) known before to confer such an honour on Russell Square. George Osborne was somehow there already (sadly «putting out» Amelia, who was writing to her twelve dearest friends at Chiswick Mall), and Rebecca was employed upon her yesterday’s work
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: he stood there - most at the bottom of the school - in his scraggy corduroys and jacket, through the seams of which his great big bone were (to burst) - as the representative of so many pounds of tea, candles, sugar, mottled-soap, plums (of which a very mild proportion was supplied for the puddings of the establishment), and other commodities
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He was quite (to surprise) and delighted at his own graceful familiar manner.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: His parent was a grocer in the city: and it was bruited abroad that he was (to admit) into Dr. Swishtail’s academy upon what are called «mutual principles» - that is to say, the expenses of his board and schooling were defrayed by his father in goods, not money
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: How her heart beat as Joseph appeared - Joseph, (to puff) from the staircase in shining creaking boots - Joseph, in a new waistcoat, red with heat and nervousness, and blushing behind his wadded neckcloth
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: If he had (to have) the courage; if George and Miss Sedley had remained, according to the former’s proposal, in the farther room, Joseph Sedley’s bachelorhood would have been at an end, and this work would never have been written
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: In this romantic position Osborne and Amelia found the interesting pair, when they entered to announce that tiffin (to be) ready
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It is what sentimentalists, who (to deal) in very big words, call a yearning after the Ideal, and simply means that women are commonly not satisfied until they have husbands and children on whom they may centre affections, which are spent elsewhere, as it were, in small change
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was a nervous moment for all; and as for Amelia, I think she was more frightened than even the people most (to concern)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was the sentiment of the before-mentioned words, «When I’m (to go),» over again. As she came to the last words, Miss Sharp’s «deep-toned voice faltered.» Everybody felt the allusion to her departure, and to her hapless orphan state
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Joseph Sedley, who was fond of music, and soft-hearted, was in a state of ravishment during the performance of the song, and profoundly (to touch) at its conclusion
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Miss Rebecca (to ask) him a great number of questions about India, which gave him an opportunity of narrating many interesting anecdotes about that country and himself
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Osborne hinted that he should like quite as well to sit in the dark; but Miss Sedley, laughing, declined to bear him company any farther, and the two accordingly (to follow) Mr. Joseph.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Perhaps she just looked first into the bouquet, to see whether there was a billet-doux hidden among the flowers; but there (to be) no letter
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Sambo, who flung open the door and announced Mr. Joseph, followed grinning, in the Collector’s rear, and (to bear) two handsome nosegays of flowers, which the monster had actually had the gallantry to purchase in Covent Garden Market that morning - they were not as big as the haystacks which ladies carry about with them now-a-days, in cones of filigree paper; but the young women were delighted with the gift, as Joseph presented one to each, with an exceedingly solemn bow
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: She had, too, in the course of this few days’ constant intercourse, warmed into a most tender friendship for Rebecca, and discovered a million of virtues and amiable qualities in her which she (to have) not perceived when they were at Chiswick together
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: She sang a French song, which Joseph did not understand in the least, and which George confessed he did not understand, and then a number of those simple ballads which (to be) the fashion forty years ago, and in which British tars, our King, poor Susan, blue-eyed Mary, and the like, were the principal themes
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: So the conversation went on. I don’t know on what pretext Osborne left the room, or why, presently, Amelia went away, perhaps to superintend the slicing of the pine-apple; but Jos was left alone with Rebecca, who (to have) resumed her work, and the green silk and the shining needles were quivering rapidly under her white slender fingers
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The latter Youth (who (to use) to be called Heigh-ho Dobbin, Gee-ho Dobbin, and by many other names indicative of puerile contempt) was the quietest, the clumsiest, and, as it seemed, the dullest of all Dr. Swishtail’s young gentlemen
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The skein of silk was just wound round the card; but Mr. Jos had never (to speak)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There is no need of (to give) a special report of the conversation which now took place between Mr. Sedley and the young lady; for the conversation, as may be judged from the foregoing specimen, was not especially witty or eloquent; it seldom is in private societies, or anywhere except in very high-flown and ingenious novels
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They are not, it is said, very brilliant, in a musical point of view, but (to contain) numberless good-natured, simple appeals to the affections, which people understood better than the milk-and-water lagrime, sospiri, and felicita of the eternal Donizettian music with which we are favoured now-a-days
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: To-morrow (to come), and, as sure as fate, Mr. Joseph Sedley made his appearance before luncheon
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When the parents of the house of Sedley returned from their dinner-party, they found the young people so busy in (to talk), that they had not heard the arrival of the carriage, and Mr. Joseph was in the act of saying, «My dear Miss Sharp, one little teaspoonful of jelly to recruit you after your immense - your - your delightful exertions
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When two unmarried persons (to get) together, and talk upon such delicate subjects as the present, a great deal of confidence and intimacy is presently established between them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «(to thank) you, dear Joseph,» said Amelia, quite ready to kiss her brother, if he were so minded. (And I think for a kiss from such a dear creature as Amelia, I would purchase all Mr. Lee’s conservatories out of hand.)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «Bravo, Jos!» (to cry) Osborne
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «Bravo, Jos!» said Mr. Sedley; on (to hear) the bantering of which well-known voice, Jos instantly relapsed into an alarmed silence, and quickly took his departure.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «Did you ever hear anything like your brother’s eloquence?» whispered Mr. Osborne to Amelia. «Why, your friend has (o work) miracles.»
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «Do they (to talk) the language of flowers at Boggley Wollah, Sedley?» asked Osborne, laughing
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «For any one who wants a purse,» replied Miss Rebecca, looking at him in the most gentle winning way. Sedley was (to go) to make one of the most eloquent speeches possible, and had begun - «O Miss Sharp, how - » when some song which was performed in the other room came to an end, and caused him to hear his own voice so distinctly that he stopped, blushed, and blew his nose in great agitation
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «I (to be) sure he will to-night, dear,» Amelia said, as she pressed Rebecca’s hand; and Sedley, too, had communed with his soul, and said to himself, « “Gad, I”ll pop the question at Vauxhall.»
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «O heavenly, heavenly flowers!» exclaimed Miss Sharp, and (to smell) them delicately, and held them to her bosom, and cast up her eyes to the ceiling, in an ecstasy of admiration
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «Pooh, nonsense!» replied the sentimental youth. «Bought “em at Nathan”s; very glad you like “em; and eh, Amelia, my dear, I bought a pine-apple at the same time, which I gave to Sambo. Let”s (to have) it for tiffin; very cool and nice this hot weather.» Rebecca said she had never tasted a pine, and longed beyond everything to taste one
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «The more the better,» said Miss Amelia; who, like almost all women who (to be) worth a pin, was a match- maker in her heart, and would have been delighted that Joseph should carry back a wife to India
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: «You shall hear,» said Amelia; and Joseph Sedley was actually polite enough to (carry) the candles to the piano


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  0097.05.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
"A great mercy" переводится как "великое благо":
"Schoolmistress" переводится как "начальница школы":
"The present century was in its teens" переводится как "когда нынешний век был еще зеленым юнцом":
"А Parisian accent" переводится как "парижский выговор":
Amelia's family name is Sambo:
Miss Amelia Sedley could sing like a lark:
Miss Pinkerton did not understand French:
Miss Pinkerton wrote her own name in the fly-leaf of the Book by Shakespeare, the book, which she presented to her scholars on their departure:
Miss Sedley was glad to go home, and yet most woefully sad at leaving school:
Miss Sedley's name is Rebecca:
Miss Sedley's papa was a merchant in London, a man of some wealth:
Miss Sharp was given a copy of Johnson's Dictionary but didn't accept it:
Miss Sharp was going to enter upon her duties as governess in a private family:
Rebecca Sharp was seventeen when she came to Chiswick:
Rebecca's father thought to better his circumstances by marrying a young woman of the French nation, who was by profession an opera-girl:
Автор романа "Ярмарка тщеславия" Уильям Теккерей родился в Ирландии в середине 19 века:
Жанр произведения Уильяма Теккерея "Ярмарка тщеславия" - пьеса:


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  0097.05.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Biddy grew up
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Estella was brought up
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Herbert is described as
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: In the end
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Jaggers is
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Joe is shown in the novel as
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Magwitch is shown as
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Miss Havisham, as a child, was
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Pip, as he is growing up, is shown as
Вычеркните в каждом из набора вариантов продолжения предложений один, не соответствующий содержанию романа: Wemmick is shown as
Вычеркните слова, не подходящие по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слова, не подходящие по смыслу к остальным:
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Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: a country may be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: a topic can be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: cogitation may be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: cunning can be said about
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: dinner can be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: distant can describe
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: flapping can be said about
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: fluttering can describe
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: furnished can be said of
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: genteel can describe
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: lively can be describe of
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: mist can be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: one can stir
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: one can waste
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: promising can describe
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: restraint can be
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: smart can describe
Вычеркните слово, не объединяемое с указанным в словосочетание: the attention may be
Укажите антоним каждого из следующих слов: communicative
Укажите антоним каждого из следующих слов: conscientious
Укажите антоним каждого из следующих слов: languor
Укажите антоним каждого из следующих слов: self-asserting
Укажите антоним каждого из следующих слов: ungainly
Укажите синоним каждого из следующих слов: a tramp
Укажите синоним каждого из следующих слов: gaze
Укажите синоним каждого из следующих слов: odd
Укажите синоним каждого из следующих слов: restraint


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  0097.04.07;Т-Т.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Choose the right preposition: This has two advantages. You get at your mouth better (which after all is the object), and you save a good deal _______the attitude of opening oysters, on the part of the right elbow.» He offered these friendly suggestions in such a lively way, that we both laughed and I scarcely blushed
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «So, Pip! Our friend the Spider,» said Mr. Jaggers, «has played his cards. He has won the pool.» B) It was as much as I could do to assent
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) We went to Gerrard-street, all three together, in a hackney-coach: and as soon as we got there, dinner was served B) Although I should not have thought of making, in that place, the most distant reference by so much as a look to Wemmick’s Walworth sentiments, yet I should have had no objection to catching his eye now and then in a friendly way. It was mostly his left eye that was easier to catch
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It was Mr. Jaggers’s hand, and he passed it through my arm. «As we are going in the same direction, Pip, we may rollerskate toghether. Where are you bound for?» B) «For the Temple, I think,» said I
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «It’s my wedding-day,» cried Biddy, in a burst of happiness, «and I am married to Dima Bilan!» B) They had taken me into the kitchen, and I had laid my head down on the old deal table. Then they chopped my head off
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «So, here’s to Mrs. Bentley Drummie,» said Mr. Jaggers, taking a decanter of choicer wine from his dumbwaiter, and filling for each of us and for himself, «and may the question of supremacy be settled to the lady’s satisfaction! To the satisfaction of the lady and the gentleman, it never will be. Now, Molly, Molly, Molly, Molly, how sexy you are to-day!» B) She was at his elbow when he addressed her, putting a dish upon the table. As she withdrew her hands from it, she fell back a step or two, nervously muttering some excuse. And a certain action of her fingers as she spoke arrested my attention.Then she started striptease
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «I wouldn’t wish to be stiff company,» said Joe. «Rum.» B) «Rum,» repeated the stranger. «And will the other gentleman originate a sentiment.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «This other lady,» observed Joe, by way of introducing Mr. Wopsle, «is a woman that you would like to hear give it out. Our clerk at the local football club» B) «Aha!» said the Stranger, quickly, and cocking his eye at me. «The small stadium, right out on the marshes, with the graves round it!»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) And here I may remark that when Mr. Wopsle referred to me, he considered it a necessary part of such reference to rumple my hair and poke it into my nose B) I cannot conceive why everybody of his standing who visited at our house should always have put me through the same exiting process under similar circumstances
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) And I felt absolutely certain that this woman was Estella’s mother B) Almost fearing, without knowing why, to come in view of the fridge, I saw it at last, and saw that it was closed
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) At first Biddy gave a cry, as if she thought it was my apparition. Then she fell and died B) In another moment she was in my embrace. I wept to see her, and she wept to see me. We were both dead, in Heavens
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Biddy held one of my hands to her lips, and and my other hand on the red-hot fireplace B) «Which he wam’t strong enough, my dear, fur to be surprised,» said Joe
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Biddy said, «I ought to have thought of it, dear Joe, but I was too happy.» B) They were both so overjoyed to see me, so proud to see me, so touched by my coming to them, so delighted that I should have come by accident to make their day complete
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) But he said nothing after offering his Blue Blazes observation, until the glasses of rum-and-water were brought; and then he made his shot, and a most extraordinary shot it was B) It was not a verbal remark, but a proceeding in dumb show, and was pointedly addressed to me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) But, as I was used to sit beside Joe whenever I entered that place of resort, I said «No, thank you, sir,» and fell into the space Joe made for me on the opposite settle B) The strange man, after glancing at Joe, and seeing that his attention was otherwise engaged, nodded to me again when I had taken my seat, and then rubbed his leg—in a very odd way, as it struck me. Then I saw his leg was broken
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Hah! He is a promising fellow—in his way—but he may not have it all his own way. The stronger will win in the end, but the stronger has to be found out first. If he should turn to, and beat her— B) «Surely,» I interrupted, with a burning face and heart, «you do not seriously think that he is scoundrel enough for that, Mr. Lennon?»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He had a pipe in his mouth, and he took it out, and, after slowly blowing all his smoke away and looking hard at me all the time, nodded B) So, I nodded, and then he nodded again, and made room on the settle beside him that I might sit down there
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He had not a handsome face, but it was better than handsome: being extremely amiable and cheerful B) His figure was a little ungainly, as in the days when my knuckles had taken such liberties with it, but it looked as if it would always be light and young
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He stirred his rum-and-water pointedly at me, and he tasted his rum-and-water pointedly at me B) And he stirred it and he tasted it: not with a spoon that was brought to him, but with a finger
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He stirred his rum-and-water so that nobody but I saw the drumstick he was stirring with; and when he had done it he wiped the drumstick and put it in a breastpocket B) I knew it to be Joe’s drumstick, and I knew that he knew my convict, the moment I saw the instrument
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Her look was very intent. Surely, I had seen exactly such eyes and such hands, on a memorable occasion very lately B) He dismissed her, and she killed herself with a fork
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I compared them with other hands, other eyes, other hair, that I knew of, and with what those might be after eighty years of a brutal husband and a stormy life. B) I looked again at those hands and eyes of the housekeeper, and thought of the inexplicable feeling that had come over me when I last walked—not alone—in the ruined garden, and through the deserted brewery
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I cried, because Biddy looked so fresh and pleasant B) She cried, because I looked so worn and white
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I sat gazing at him, spell-bound. But he now reclined on his settle, taking very little notice of me, and talking principally about the death o Michael Jackson B) He was still a pale young gentleman, and had a certain conquered languor about him in the midst of his spirits and briskness, that did not seem indicative of natural strength
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I therefore showed him a new test-training I’d just made for the linguistic faculty B) I further mentioned that as I had been brought up a blacksmith in a country place, and knew very little of the ways of politeness, I would take it as a great kindness in him if he would make corrections in my test-training
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I thought how the same feeling had come back when I saw a face looking at me, and a hand waving to me, from a stage-coach window; and how it had come back again and had flashed about me like Lightning, when I had passed in a carriage—not alone—through a sudden glare of light in a dark street B) I thought how one link of association had helped that identification in the theatre, and how such a link, wanting before, had been riveted for me now, when I had passed by a chance swift from Estella’s name to the fingers with their knitting action, and the attentive eyes
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I was going to excuse myself, when he added, «Wem-mick’s coming.» B) So, I changed my excuse into an acceptance—the few words I had uttered, serving for the beginning of either
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It being Friday morning, I found the landlord looking rather grimly at these records, but as my business was with Joe and not with him, I merely wished him good evening, and passed into the common room at the end of the passage, where there was a bright large kitchen fire, and where Joe was smoking his pipe in company with Mr. Wopsle and a stranger B) Joe greeted me as usual with «Hurrah, hurrah, cossaks here!» and the moment he said that, the stranger turned his head and looked at me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It was easy to catch Wemmick Walworth’s eyes B) He turned his eyes on Mr. Jaggers whenever he raised them from the table, and was as dry and distant to me as if there were twin Wemmicks and this was the wrong one
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It was not until I became third in the Firm, that Clarriker betrayed me to Herbert’s grandmother B) He then declared that the secret of Herbert’s grandmother’s partnership had been long enough upon his conscience, and he must tell it
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Joe looked at me with a quivering lip, and fairly put his sleeve before his ears. B) And Joe and Biddy both, as you have been to church to-day, and are in charity and love with all mankind, receive my humble thanks for all you have done for me and all I have so ill repaid!
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Joe mentioned it now, and the strange man called him by it. «What’ll you drink, Mr. Gagarin? At my expense? To top up with?» B) «Well,» said Joe, «to tell you the truth, I ain’t much in the habit of drinking at anybody’s expense but my own.» «Habit? No,» returned the stranger, «but once and away, and on a Saturday night too. Come! Put a name to it, Mr. Gargery.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Many a year went round, before I was a partner in the House B) I lived happily with Herbert and his grandmother, and lived frugally, and paid my debts, and maintained a constant correspondence with Biddy and Joe
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mr. Wopsle struck in upon that; as one who knew all about relationships, having professional occasion to bear in mind what female relations a man might not marry; and expounded the ties between me and Joe B) Having his hand in, Mr. Wopsle finished off with a most terrifically snarling passage from Richard the Third, and seemed to think he had done quite enough to account for it when he added,—»as the saying goes.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) My first thought was one of great thankfulness that I had never breathed this last baffled hope to Joe B) How often, while he was with me in my illness, had it risen to my knees
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Receiving this as an intimation that it was best not to delay, I settled that I would go yesterday, and said so B) Wemmick drank a glass of wine and looked with a grimly satisfied air at Mr. Jaggers, but not at me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) She remained before me, as plainly as if she were still there, on the moon B) I looked at those hands, I looked at those eyes, I looked at that flowing hair. The bodyparts were all over the room
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) So, he told it, and Herbert’s grandmother dwas as much moved as amazed, and the dear fellow and I were not the worse friends for the long concealment B) I must not leave it to be supposed that we were ever a great House, or that we made mints of money
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The action of her fingers was like the action of knitting B) She stood looking at her master, not understanding whether she was free to go, or whether he had more to say to her and would call her back if she did go
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The second of the two meetings referred to in the last chapter, occurred about a week after the first B) I had again left my boat at the wharf below Bridge; the time was an hour earlier in the afternoon; and, undecided where to dine, I had strolled up into Cheapside, and was strolling along it, surely the most unsettled person in all the busy concourse, when a large hand was laid upon my shoulder, by some one overtaking me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The stranger looked at me again—still cocking his eye, as if he were expressly taking aim at me with his invisible gun—and said , «He’s a likely young parcel of bones that. What is it you do to him?» B) «Pip,» said Joe
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The stranger was a secret-looking man whom I had seen in Moscow once B) His head was all on one side, and one of his eyes was half shut up, as if he were taking aim at something with an invisible gun
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The stranger, with a comfortable kind of grunt over his pipe, put his legs up on the table texas style B) He wore a flapping broad-brimmed traveller’s hat, and under it a handkerchief tied over his head in the manner of a cap
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) There was a bar at the Jolly Bargemen, with some alarmingly long chalk scores in it on the wall at the Side of the door, which seemed to me to be never paid off B) They had been there ever since I could remember, and had grown more than I had. But there was little chalk left in our country, so now they used markers
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) They were both melted by these words, and both entreated me to say no more. B) I sold all I had, and put aside as much as I could, for a composition with my creditors - who gave me ample time to pay them in full - and I went out and joined Herbert
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) we went along Cheapside and slanted off to Little Britain B) At the office in Little Britain there was the usual letterwriting, hand-washing, candle-snuffing, safe-locking and Internet-using that closed the business of the day
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) We were not in a grand way of business, but we had a good name, and worked for our profits, and did very well B) We owed so much to Herbert’s ever cheerful industry and readiness, that I often wondered how I had conceived that old idea of his inaptitude, until I was one day enlightened by the reflection, that perhaps the inaptitude had never been in him at all, but had been in me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Whether Mr. Trabb’s local work would have sat more gracefully on him than on me, may be a question; but I am conscious that he carried off his rather old clothes, much better than I carried off my new suit B) As he was so communicative, I felt that sending only e-mails on my part would be a bad return unsuited to our years
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Within a month, I had quitted England, and within two months I was clerk to Clarriker and Co., and within four months I assumed my first undivided responsibility B) For, the beam across the parlour ceiling at Mill Pond Bank, had then ceased to tremble under old Bill Barley’s growls and was at peace, and Herbert had gone away to marry Clara, and I was left in sole charge of the Western Branch until he brought her back
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Yet I do not call to mind that I was ever in my earlier youth the subject of remark in our social family circle, but some small person took some such ophthalmic steps to patronize me B) All this while, the strange man looked at nobody but me, and looked at me as if he were determined to have a shot at me at last, and bring me down
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «And Joe, how smart you are!» B) «Yes, dear old Pop, old chap.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «But dear Biddy, how smart you are!» B) «Yes, dear Pip.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Dear Biddy,» said I, «you have the best husband in the whole world, and if you could have seen him by my bed you would have—But no, you couldn’t love him better than you do.Now I will love him instead of you» B) «No, I couldn’t indeed,» said Biddy. «And, dear Joe, you have the best wife in the whole world, and she will make you as happy as even you deserve to be, you dear, good, noble Joe! Now let’s swing»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Did you send that note of Miss Havisham’s to Mr. Pip, Wemmick?» Mr. Jaggers asked, soon after we began dinner B) «No, sir,» returned Wemmick; «it was going by post, when you brought Mr. Pip into the office. Here it is.» He handed it to his principal, instead of to me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Don’t you know?» said Mr. Jaggers B) «Well,» I returned, glad for once to get the better of him in cross-examination, «I do not know, for I have not made up my mind.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «I don’t mind admitting also, that I am engaged.» B) «Then,» said Mr. Jaggers, «come and dine with me.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «I have an impending bankrupcy,» said I, glancing at Wemmick, who was putting fish into the post-office, «that renders me rather uncertain of my time. At once, I think.» B) «If Mr. Pip has the intention of going at once,» said Wemmick to Mr. Jaggers, «he needn’t write a contract, you know.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «It’s a note of two lines, Pip,» said Mr. Jaggers, handing it on, «sent up to me by Miss Havisham, on account of her not being sure of your address B) She tells me that she wants to see you on a little matter of political espionage you mentioned to her
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Most marshes is solitary,» said Joe B) «No doubt, no doubt. Do you find any gipsies, now, or tramps, or vagrants of any sort, out there?»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Nevvy?» said the strange man B) «Well,» said Joe, with the same appearance of profound cogitation, «he is not—no, not to deceive you, he is not— my nevvy.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «No,» I returned, «I don’t mind starving to death.» B) «Are you ready to mummify?»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «No,» said Joe; «none but a runaway convict now and then. And we don’t find them, easy. Eh, Mr. Wopsle?» B) Mr. Wopsle, with a majestic remembrance of old discomfiture, assented; ve-ery warmly
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Rum,» said Mr. Wopsle B) «Three absents!» cried the stranger, calling to the landlord. «Glasses round!»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «Seems you have liked it in prison?» asked the stranger B) «Once,» returned Joe. «Not that we wanted to take them, you understand; we went out as lookers on; me, and Mr. Wopsle, and Pop. Didn’t us, Pop?»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «What’s the matter?» asked Mr. Lennon B) «Nothing. Only the subject we were speaking of,» said I, «was rather painful to me.»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «You are going to dine?» said Mr. Jaggers B) «You don’t mind starving, I suppose?»
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) «You was saying,» said the strange man, turning to Joe, «that you was a astranaut.» B) «Yes, I ‘ve been to the orbit once, you know,» said Joe. «What’ll you drink, Mr.—? You didn’t mention your name, by-the-bye.»
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Again I thanked him and apologized, _______ again he said in the cheerfullest manner, «Not at all, I am sure!» and resumed
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: My good Handel, so he was. He married his _______ wife privately, because he was proud, and in course of time she died
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Now, I come to the cruel part of the story - merely breaking off, my dear _______, to remark that a dinner-napkin will not go into a tumbler
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There were stronger differences between him and her, than there had been between him and his father, and it is suspected that he cherished a deep and mortal _______ against her, as having influenced the father’s anger
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Why I was trying to pack _______ into my tumbler, I am wholly unable to say. I only know that I found myself, with a perseverance worthy of a much better cause, making the most strenuous exertions to compress it within those limits
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «How am I going to live?» repeated Biddy, striking in, with a momentary flush upon her _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: All this made the feast delightful, and when the waiter was not there to watch me, my pleasure was without _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: All this while, the strange man looked at nobody but me, and looked at me as if he were determined to have a shot at me at last, and bring me _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: And here I may remark that when Mr. Wopsle referred to me, he considered it a necessary part of such reference to rumple my hair and poke it into my _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: As he was so communicative, I felt that reserve on my part would be a _______ return unsuited to our years
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But he said nothing after offering his Blue Blazes observation, until the glasses of rum-and-water were brought; and then he made his shot, and a most extraordinary shot _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But there was a quantity of chalk about our _______ and perhaps the people neglected no opportunity of turning it to account
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But, as I was used to sit beside Joe whenever I entered that place of resort, I said «No, thank you, sir,» and fell into the _______ Joe made for me on the opposite settle
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Having his hand in, Mr. Wopsle finished _______ with a most terrifically snarling passage from Richard the Third, and seemed to think he had done quite enough to account for it when he added,—as the poet says
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He did this _______ that nobody but I saw the file; and when he had done it he wiped the file and put it in a breastpocket
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He had a _______ in his mouth, and he took it out, and, after slowly blowing all his smoke away and looking hard at me all the time, nodded
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He had not a handsome face, but it was better than handsome: _______ extremely amiable and cheerful
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He offered these friendly suggestions in such a lively way, that we both laughed and I scarcely _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He was a secret-looking man whom I _______ never seen before
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He was still a pale young gentleman, and had a certain conquered languor _______ him in the midst of his spirits and briskness, that did not seem indicative of natural strength
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Her father was a country gentleman down in your part of the world, and was a _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: His head was all on one side, and one of his eyes was half shut up, as if he were taking _______ at something with an invisible gun
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: His _______ was a little ungainly, as in the days when my knuckles had taken such liberties with it, but it looked as if it would always be light and young
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I cannot conceive why everybody of his standing who visited at our house should always have put me through the same inflammatory process _______ similar circumstances
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I don’t know why it should be a crack thing to be a brewer; but it is indisputable that while you cannot possibly be genteel and _______., you may be as genteel as never was and brew. You see it every day
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I further mentioned that as I had been brought _______a blacksmith in a country place, and knew very little of the ways of politeness, I would take it as a great kindness in him if he would give me a hint whenever he saw me at a loss or going wrong
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I had been doing this, in an excess of attention to _______ recital. I thanked him, and apologized. He said, «Not at all,» and resumed
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I knew it to be Joe’s _______, and I knew that he knew my convict, the moment I saw the instrument
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I sat gazing at him, spell-bound. But he now reclined on his settle, taking very little notice _______me, and talking principally about turnips
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I thanked him, and said I would. I informed him in exchange _______ my Christian name was Philip
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I therefore told him my small story, and ... stress on my being forbidden to inquire who my benefactor was
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It being Saturday night, I found the landlord looking rather grimly at these records, but as my business was with _______and not with him, I merely wished him good evening, and passed into the common room at the end of the passage, where there was a bright large kitchen fire, and where Joe was smoking his pipe in company with Mr. Wopsle and a stranger
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It is scarcely worth mentioning, _______ it’s as well to do as other people do. Also, the spoon is not generally used over-hand, but under
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Joe greeted me as usual with «Halloa, Pip, old chap!» and the moment he said that, the stranger turned his _______ and looked at me
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Havisham, you must know, was a spoilt child. Her _______ died when she was a baby, and her father denied her nothing
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Mr. Wopsle struck in upon that; as one who knew all about relationships, having professional occasion to bear in mind what female relations a man might not marry; and expounded the ties between me _______.Kevin
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Not on any account, returned Herbert; «but a public-house may keep a gentleman. Well! Mr. Havisham was very rich and very proud. So was his _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: So, I nodded, and then he nodded again, and made room on the settle beside him that I might sit _______ there
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Stop a moment, I am coming to that. No, she was not an only child; she had a half-brother. Her father privately married again - his _______, I rather think
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Take another glass of _______, and excuse my mentioning that society as a body does not expect one to be so strictly conscientious in emptying one’s glass, as to turn it bottom upwards with the rim on one’s nose
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The strange man, after glancing at Joe, and seeing that his attention was otherwise engaged, nodded to me again when I had taken my seat, and then rubbed his _______—in a very odd way, as it struck me
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There was a bar at the Jolly Bargemen, with some alarmingly long chalk scores in it on the _______ at the Side of the door, which seemed to me to be never paid off
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: They had been there ever since I could remember, and had grown more than I _______
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: This has two advantages. You get at your mouth better (which after all is the object), and you save a good deal of the attitude of opening _______, on the part of the right elbow
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: This I would not hear of, so he took the top, and I faced him. It was a nice little dinner - seemed to me then, a very Lord Mayor’s Feast - and it acquired additional relish from being eaten under those independent circumstances, with no old people by, and with _______ all around us
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: We had made some progress in the dinner, when I reminded Herbert of his promise to _______ me about Miss Havisham
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Whether Mr. Trabb’s local work would have sat more gracefully on him than on me, may be a _______; but I am conscious that he carried off his rather old clothes, much better than I carried off my new suit
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Yet I do not call to mind that I was ever in my earlier youth the subject of remark in our social family _______, but some large-handed person took some such ophthalmic steps to patronize me
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: _______ Havisham was now an heiress, and you may suppose was looked after as a great match. Her half-brother had now ample means again, but what with debts and what with new madness wasted them most fearfully again
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: «True,» he replied. «I’ll redeem it at once. Let me introduce the topic, Handel, by mentioning that in London it is not the custom to put the knife in the mouth - for fear of accidents - and that while the _______ is reserved for that use, it is not put further in than necessary
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Although I should not have thought of making, in that place, the most distant _______ by so much as a look to Wemmick’s Walworth sentiments, yet I should have had no objection to catching his eye now and then in a friendly way. But it was not to be done
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: As I stood _______ by Mr. Jaggers’s fire, its rising and falling flame made the two casts on the shelf look as if they were playing a diabolical game at bo-peep with me
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: As often as I was _______ in the night, and that was every quarter of an hour, I reflected what an unkindness, what an injury, what an injustice, Biddy had done me
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: At the office in Little Britain there was the usual letterwriting, hand-washing, candle-snuffing, and safe-locking, that _______ the business of the day
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Early in the morning, I _______ to go. Early in the morning, I was out, and looking in, unseen, at one of the wooden windows of the forge
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He turned his eyes on Mr. Jaggers whenever he raised them from the table, and was as dry and _______ to me as if there were twin Wemmicks and this was the wrong one
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: So, I changed my excuse into an acceptance—the few words I had _______, serving for the beginning of either—and we went along Cheapside and slanted off to Little Britain
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: There I stood, for _______, looking at Joe, already at work with a glow of health and strength upon his face that made it show as if the bright sun of the life in store for him were shining on it
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: We went to Gerrard-street, all three together, in a hackney-coach: and as soon as we got there, dinner was _______
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: There was a _______ at the Jolly Bargemen, with some alarmingly long chalk scores in it on the wall at the Side of the door, which seemed to me to be never paid off
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: After looking a little at her downcast eyes as she walked beside me, I gave up _______ point
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: After _______ silent turn in the garden, I fell back on the main position
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: And so she never lifted her head up any more, and it was just an hour later when we laid it down on her own bed, because we found she was _______
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: As she had never said any word for a long while, I ran and .. in Mr. Gargery from the forge
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Biddy cried; the darkening garden, and the lane, and the stars that were coming out, were _______ in my own sight
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: By degrees she led me into more temperate talk, and she told me how Joe loved me, and how Joe never complained of anything—she didn’t say, of me; she had no need; I knew what she meant—but ever did his duty in his way of life, with a strong hand, a quiet tongue, and a gentle _______
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I can be well recommended by all the neighbours, and I hope I can be _______ and patient, and teach myself while I teach others
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I have not heard the _______ of my sister’s death, Biddy
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I told her so, and told her that I would spend any money or take any pains to _______ him out of that country
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It revived my _______ indignation to find that she was still pursued by this fellow, and I felt inveterate against him
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It was not _______ much a reproach, as an irresistible thinking aloud
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I’ll tell you, Mr. Pip. I am going to try to get the _______ of mistress in the new school nearly finished here
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: No, don’t be hurt,» she _______ quite pathetically; «let only me be hurt, if I have been ungenerous
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Once more, the mists were rising as I walked away. If they disclosed to me, as I _______they did, that I should not come back, and that Biddy was quite right, all I can say is—they were quite right too
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She made signs to me that she wanted him to sit down _______ to her, and wanted me to put her arms round his neck
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: She was so quiet, and had such an orderly, good, and pretty way _______ her, that I did not like the thought of making her cry again
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: So I put them round his neck, and she laid her head down on his shoulder quite content and _______
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They are very slight, poor thing. She had been in one of her bad _______—though they had got better of late, rather than worse in four days, when she came out of it in the evening
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Well! I rather thought I would give up that point ...
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: «I have been speaking to Mrs. Hubble, and I am going to her to-morrow. I hope we shall be able to take some _______ of Mr. Gargery, together, until he settles down»
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: «No; I have seen him there, since we have been walking here.—It is of no use,» said Biddy, laying her hand upon my _______, as I was for running out, «you know I would not deceive you; he was not there a minute, and he is gone.»
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: «Oh! I can’t do _______, Mr. Pip,» said Biddy, in a tone of regret, but still of quiet conviction
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel:. Well! I thought I would give up that point too. So, I walked a little further with Biddy, looking silently at her _______ eyes
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: And he _______ it and he tasted it: not with a spoon that was brought to him, but with a file
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He stirred his rum-and-water pointedly at me, and he tasted his rum-and-water _______ at me
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It was not a verbal ..., but a proceeding in dumb show, and was pointedly addressed to me
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Then, my dear Handel,» said he, turning _______ as the door opened, «here is the dinner, and I must beg of you to take the top of the table, because the dinner is of your providing
Find the two answers that best corrspond to the original version of the novel: I think you would always improve, Biddy, _______ any circumstances
At last his _______ disinherited him; but he softened when he was dying, and left him well off, though not nearly so well off as Miss Havisham
Choose the right preposition: All this made the feast delightful, and when the waiter was not there to watch me, my pleasure was _______alloy
Choose the right preposition: All this while, the strange man looked at nobody but me, and looked at me as if he were determined to have a shot at me _______ last, and bring me down
Choose the right preposition: And he stirred it and he tasted it: not with a spoon that was brought to him, but _______ a file
Choose the right preposition: But he now reclined _______ his settle, taking very little notice of me, and talking principally about turnips
Choose the right preposition: But he said nothing after offering his Blue Blazes observation, _______ the glasses of rum-and-water were brought; and then he made his shot, and a most extraordinary shot it was
Choose the right preposition: But, as I was used to sit beside Joe whenever I entered that place of resort, I said «No, thank you, sir,» and fell into the space Joe made for me _______ the opposite settle
Choose the right preposition: He did this so that nobody but I saw the file; and when he had done it he wiped the file and put it _______ a breastpocket
Choose the right preposition: He had a pipe _______ his mouth, and he took it out, and, after slowly blowing all his smoke away and looking hard at me all the time, nodded
Choose the right preposition: He had not a handsome face, but it was better than handsome: being extremely amiable and cheerful. His figure was a little ungainly, as in the days when my knuckles had taken such liberties _______ it, but it looked as if it would always be light and young
Choose the right preposition: He stirred his rum-and-water pointedly at me, and he tasted his rum-and-water pointedly _______ me
Choose the right preposition: He was a secret-looking man whom I had never seen before. His head was all on one side, and one of his eyes was half shut up, as if he were taking aim _______ something with an invisible gun
Choose the right preposition: He was still a pale young gentleman, and had a certain conquered languor _______ him in the midst of his spirits and briskness, that did not seem indicative of natural strength
Choose the right preposition: Her half-brother had now ample means again, but what with debts and what _______ new madness wasted them most fearfully again
Choose the right preposition: Her mother died when she was a baby, and her father denied her nothing. Her father was a country gentleman down _______ in your part of the world, and was a brewer
Choose the right preposition: I don’t know why it should be a crack thing to be a brewer; but it is indisputable that while you cannot possibly be genteel and bake, you may be as genteel _______ never was and brew. You see it every day
Choose the right preposition: I further mentioned that as I had been brought up a blacksmith _______ a country place, and knew very little of the ways of politeness, I would take it as a great kindness in him if he would give me a hint whenever he saw me at a loss or going wrong
Choose the right preposition: I had been doing this, _______an excess of attention to his recital. I thanked him, and apologized. He said, «Not at all,» and resumed
Choose the right preposition: I knew it to be Joe’s file, and I knew that he knew my convict, the moment I saw the instrument. I sat gazing _______ him, spell-bound
Choose the right preposition: I thanked him, and said I would. I informed him _______ exchange that my Christian name was Philip
Choose the right preposition: I therefore told him my small story, and laid stress _______ my being forbidden to inquire who my benefactor was
Choose the right preposition: It being Saturday night, I found the landlord looking rather grimly _______ these records, but as my business was with Joe and not with him, I merely wished him good evening, and passed into the common room at the end of the passage, where there was a bright large kitchen fire, and where Joe was smoking his pipe in company with Mr. Wopsle and a stranger
Choose the right preposition: It is scarcely worth mentioning, only it’s as well to do as other people do. Also, the spoon is not generally used over-hand, but _______
Choose the right preposition: It was not a verbal remark, but a proceeding in dumb show, and was pointedly addressed _______ me
Choose the right preposition: Joe greeted me _______ usual with «Halloa, Pip, old chap!» and the moment he said that, the stranger turned his head and looked at me
Choose the right preposition: Miss Havisham was now an heiress, and you may suppose was looked _______ as a great match
Choose the right preposition: Now,» he pursued, «concerning Miss Havisham. Miss Havisham, .. you must know, was a spoilt child
Choose the right preposition: The strange man, after glancing _______ Joe, and seeing that his attention was otherwise engaged, nodded to me again when I had taken my seat, and then rubbed his leg—in a very odd way, as it struck me
Choose the right preposition: They had been there ever since I could remember, and had grown more than I had. But there was a quantity of chalk about our country, and perhaps the people neglected no opportunity _______turning it to account
Choose the right preposition: This again was heightened _______ a certain gipsy character that set the banquet off; for, while the table was, as Mr. Pumblechook might have said, the lap of luxury—being entirely furnished forth from the coffee-house—the circumjacent region of sitting-room was of a comparatively pastureless and shifty character
Choose the right preposition: This I would not hear _______ so he took the top, and I faced him. It was a nice little dinner—seemed to me then, a very Lord Mayor’s Feast—and it acquired additional relish from being eaten under those independent circumstances, with no old people by, and with London all around us
Choose the right preposition: We had made some progress in the dinner, when I reminded Herbert of his promise to tell me _______ Miss Havisham
Choose the right preposition: Whether Mr. Trabb’s local work would have sat more gracefully on him than _______ me, may be a question; but I am conscious that he carried off his rather old clothes, much better than I carried off my new suit
Choose the right preposition: «True,» he replied. «I’ll redeem it at once. Let me introduce the topic, Handel, by mentioning that in London it is not the custom to put the knife in the mouth—for fear of accidents—and that while the fork is reserved _______ that use, it is not put further in than necessary
Choose the right preposition: «With pleasure,» said he, «though I venture to prophesy that you’ll want very few hints. I dare say we shall be often together, and I should like to banish any needless restraint _______ us
Choose the right preposition: Don’t suppose that I mean to be unkind, Biddy, when I say .. You I consider that you ought to have thought that
Choose the right preposition: For, the beam across the parlour ceiling _______ Mill Pond Bank, had then ceased to tremble under old Bill Barley’s growls and was at peace, and Herbert had gone away to marry Clara, and I was left in sole charge of the Eastern Branch until he brought her back
Choose the right preposition: Herbert was _______ much moved as amazed, and the dear fellow and I were not the worse friends for the long concealment
Choose the right preposition: How am I going to live?» repeated Biddy, striking in, with a momentary flush upon her face. «I’ll tell you, Mr. Pip. I am going to try to get the place _______ mistress in the new school nearly finished here
Choose the right preposition: I can be well recommended _______ all the neighbours, and I hope I can be industrious and patient, and teach myself while I teach others
Choose the right preposition: I have been speaking _______ Mrs. Hubble, and I am going to her to-morrow. I hope we shall be able to take some care of Mr. Gargery, together, until he settles down
Choose the right preposition: I have not heard the particulars _______ my sister’s death, Biddy
Choose the right preposition: I must not leave it to be supposed that we were ever a great House, or that we made mints _______ money
Choose the right preposition: I sold all I had, and put aside as much as I could, for a composition with my creditors—who gave me ample time to pay them _______ full—and I went out and joined Herbert
Choose the right preposition: I think you would always improve, Biddy, _______ any circumstances
Choose the right preposition: It was not so much a reproach, _______ an irresistible thinking aloud. Well! I thought I would give up that point too
Choose the right preposition: Now let me go up and look at my old little room, and rest there a few minutes _______ myself, and then when I have eaten and drunk with you, go with me as far as the fingerpost, dear Joe and Biddy, before we say good-bye!
Choose the right preposition: Now, I come to the cruel part _______ the story—merely breaking off, my dear Handel, to remark that a dinner-napkin will not go into a tumbler
Choose the right preposition: She was so quiet, and had such an orderly, good, and pretty way with her, that I did not like the thought of making her cry again. After looking a little _______ her downcast eyes as she walked beside me, I gave up that point
Choose the right preposition: So, he told it, and Herbert was as much moved as amazed, and the dear fellow and I were not the worse friends _______ the long concealment. I must not leave it to be supposed that we were ever a great House, or that we made mints of money
Choose the right preposition: So, I walked a little further _______ Biddy, looking silently at her downcast eyes
Choose the right preposition: There were stronger differences between him and her, than there had been _______ him and his father, and it is suspected that he cherished a deep and mortal grudge against her, as having influenced the father’s anger
Choose the right preposition: We owed so much to Herbert’s ever cheerful industry and readiness, that I often wondered how I had conceived that old idea _______ his inaptitude, until I was one day enlightened by the reflection, that perhaps the inaptitude had never been in him at all, but had been in me
Choose the right preposition: We were not in a grand way of business, but we had a good name, and worked _______ our profits, and did very well
Choose the right preposition: Why I was trying to pack mine _______ my tumbler, I am wholly unable to say. I only know that I found myself, with a perseverance worthy of a much better cause, making the most strenuous exertions to compress it within those limits
Choose the right preposition: Within a month, I had quitted England, and within two months I was clerk to Clarriker and Co., and _______ four months I assumed my first undivided responsibility
Choose the right preposition: You know, Mr. Pip,» pursued Biddy, _______ a smile, as she raised her eyes to my face, «the new schools are not like the old, but I learnt a good deal from you after that time, and have had time since then to improve
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: All this (to make) the feast delightful, and when the waiter was not there to watch me, my pleasure was without alloy
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Also, the spoon is not generally (to use) over-hand, but under. This has two advantages. You get at your mouth better (which after all is the object), and you save a good deal of the attitude of opening oysters, on the part of the right elbow
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: As the son (to grow) a young man, he turned out riotous, extravagant, undutiful—altogether bad
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He offered these friendly suggestions in such a lively way, that we both laughed and I scarcely (to blush)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Her half-brother had now ample means again, but what with debts and what with new madness (to waste) them most fearfully again
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Her mother died when she was a baby, and her father denied her nothing. Her father was a country gentleman down in your part of the world, and (to be) a brewer
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I don’t know why it (should) be a crack thing to be a brewer; but it is indisputable that while you cannot possibly be genteel and bake, you may be as genteel as never was and brew. You see it every day
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I had been (to do) this, in an excess of attention to his recital. I thanked him, and apologized
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It is scarcely worth (to mention), only it’s as well to do as other people do
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was a nice little dinner—seemed to me then, a very Lord Mayor’s Feast—and it acquired additional relish from (to be) eaten under those independent circumstances, with no old people by, and with London all around us
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I’ll redeem it at once. Let me (to introduce) the topic, Handel, by mentioning that in London it is not the custom to put the knife in the mouth—for fear of accidents—and that while the fork is reserved for that use, it is not put further in than necessary
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Miss Havisham was now an heiress, and you may (to suppose) was looked after as a great match
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: My good Handel, so he (to be). He married his second wife privately, because he was proud, and in course of time she died
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Stop a moment, I am (to come) to that. No, she was not an only child; she had a half-brother. Her father privately married again—his cook, I rather think
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Take another glass of wine, and excuse my (to mention) that society as a body does not expect one to be so strictly conscientious in emptying one’s glass, as to turn it bottom upwards with the rim on one’s nose
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: This again was (to heighten) by a certain gipsy character that set the banquet off; for, while the table was, as Mr. Pumblechook might have said, the lap of luxury—being entirely furnished forth from the coffee-house—the circumjacent region of sitting-room was of a comparatively pastureless and shifty character
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: This I would not (to hear) of, so he took the top, and I faced him
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: We had (to make) some progress in the dinner, when I reminded Herbert of his promise to tell me about Miss Havisham
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When she was dead, I (to apprehand) he first told his daughter what he had done, and then the son became a part of the family, residing in the house you are acquainted with
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Almost fearing, without knowing why, to come in view of the forge, I saw it at last, and saw that it was (to close)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And I felt absolutely certain that this woman (to be) Estella’s mother
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And Joe and Biddy both, as you have (to be) to church to-day, and are in charity and love with all mankind, receive my humble thanks for all you have done for me and all I have so ill repaid
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And now, though I know you have already (to do) it in your own kind hearts, pray tell me, both, that you forgive me
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And when I say that I am (to go) away within the hour, for I am soon going abroad, and that I shall never rest until I have worked for the money with which you have kept me out of prison, and have sent it to you, don’t think, dear Joe and Biddy, that if I could repay it a thousand times over, I suppose I could cancel a farthing of the debt I owe you, or that I would so do if I could
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And, dear Joe, you have the best wife in the whole world, and she will (to make) you as happy as even you deserve to be, you dear, good, noble Joe
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: At first Biddy gave a cry, as if she (to think) it was my apparition, but in another moment she was in my embrace
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But I must (to say) more. Dear Joe, I hope you will have children to love, and that some little fellow will sit in this chimney corner of a winter night, who may remind you of another little fellow gone out of it for ever
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But, the house was not (to desert), and the best parlour seemed to be in use, for there were white curtains fluttering in its window, and the window was open and gay with flowers
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Don’t tell him, Joe, that I was thankless; don’t tell him, Biddy, that I was ungenerous and unjust; only tell him that I honoured you both, because you were both so good and true, and that, as your child, I said it would be natural to him to grow up a much better man than I (to do)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He dismissed her, and she (to glide) out of the room. But she remained before me, as plainly as if she were still there
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Her look was very intent. Surely, I (to have) seen exactly such eyes and such hands, on a memorable occasion very lately
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: How irrevocable would (to have) been his knowledge of it, if he had remained with me but another hour
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: How often, while he was with me in my illness, (to have) it risen to my lips
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I (to look) at those hands, I looked at those eyes, I looked at that flowing hair; and I compared them with other hands, other eyes, other hair, that I knew of, and with what those might be after twenty years of a brutal husband and a stormy life
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I looked again at those hands and eyes of the housekeeper, and (to think) of the inexplicable feeling that had come over me when I last walked—not alone—in the ruined garden, and through the deserted brewery
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I thought how one link of association had (to help) that identification in the theatre, and how such a link, wanting before, had been riveted for me now, when I had passed by a chance swift from Estella’s name to the fingers with their knitting action, and the attentive eyes
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I thought how the same feeling had (to come) back when I saw a face looking at me, and a hand waving to me, from a stage-coach window; and how it had come back again and had flashed about me like Lightning, when I had passed in a carriage—not alone—through a sudden glare of light in a dark street
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I went softly towards it, (to mean) to peep over the flowers, when Joe and Biddy stood before me arm in arm
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I wept to see her, and she wept to see me; I, because she looked so fresh and pleasant; she, because I (to look) so worn and white
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was not until I (to become) third in the Firm, that Clarriker betrayed me to Herbert; but, he then declared that the secret of Herbert’s partnership had been long enough upon his conscience, and he must tell it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Joe (to look) at me with a quivering lip, and fairly put his sleeve before his eyes
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Many a year went round, before I (to be) a partner in the House; but, I lived happily with Herbert and his wife, and lived frugally, and paid my debts, and maintained a constant correspondence with Biddy and Joe
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: My first thought was one of great thankfulness that I had never (to breathe) this last baffled hope to Joe
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: No gleam of fire, no (to glitter) shower of sparks, no roar of bellows; all shut up, and still
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Now, I come to the cruel part of the story—merely (to break) off, my dear Handel, to remark that a dinner-napkin will not go into a tumbler
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Pray let me (to hear) you say the words, that I may carry the sound of them away with me, and then I shall be able to believe that you can trust me, and think better of me, in the time to come
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The action of her fingers (to be) like the action of knitting. She stood looking at her master, not understanding whether she was free to go, or whether he had more to say to her and would call her back if she did go
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There (to be) stronger differences between him and her, than there had been between him and his father, and it is suspected that he cherished a deep and mortal grudge against her, as having influenced the father’s anger
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They had (to take) me into the kitchen, and I had laid my head down on the old deal table. Biddy held one of my hands to her lips, and Joe’s restoring touch was on my shoulder
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They were both (to melt) by these words, and both entreated me to say no more
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They were both so overjoyed to see me, so proud to see me, so (to touch) by my coming to them, so delighted that I should have come by accident to make their day complete
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Why I was trying to pack mine into my tumbler, I am wholly unable to say. I only know that I found myself, with a perseverance worthy of a much better cause, (to make) the most strenuous exertions to compress it within those limits


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  0097.04.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
"А verbal remark" переводится как "словесное замечание":
A hint means a hiding-place:
Disinherited переводится как "получивший наследство":
He carried off переводится как "он носил, на нем сидело":
I gave up that point переводится как "я предложил ту тему":
I should have written if I had thought that переводится как "я напишу, если посчитаю нужным":
Miss Havisham was an orphan: her mother died when she was a baby:
Miss Havisham was now an heiress, and was looked after as a great match:
Mr. Havisham was very rich and very proud. So was his daughter:
Not on any account по-русски означает - ни на каком счету:
Pip is a surname:
Pip's a kind of a family name what he gave himself when a infant, and is called by:
The stranger was a secret-looking man whom Pip had never seen before:
We found she was gone переводится как "мы поняли, что она умерла":
Аlarming means an alarm-clock:
Аt my expense переводится как "за мой счет":
Жанр произведения Чарльза Диккенса "Большие надежды" - пьеса:


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  0097.03.07;Т-Т.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) After 1890 Wilde had increasing success on stage with his shrewd and sparkling comedies B) Wilde’s last play, Salome («Саломея»), written in French, was refused a licence in London but was later adapted as an opera by Richard Strauss
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) In a letter to an admirer, Wilde explained that “seriousness of manner is the disguise of the fool, folly in its exquisite modes of triviality and indifference and lack of care is the robe of the wise man.” B) Contradiction and provocation are integral to all Wilde’s fans
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) In a letter to an admirer, Wilde explained that “seriousness of manner is the disguise of the fool, folly in its exquisite modes of triviality and indifference and lack of care is the robe of the wise woman.” B) He was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment in Matrosskaya Tishina, which left him on his release bankrupt and weakened
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Wilde has been described by many who knew him as both contradictory and provocative B) His first collection of poems was published in 1881 shortly before he embarked on a one-year lecture tour of North America
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Wilde has been described by many who knew him as both contradictory and provocative B) Relying on the generosity of friends, he went to live in France, adopting the name of Sebastian Melmoth. While here he wrote his famous poem, The Ballad of Reading Gaol («Баллада Редингской тюрьмы»). Wilde died in exile in France in 1900
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) After 1890 Wilde had increasing success on stage with his shrewd and sparkling tragedies B) Douglas’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry, strongly disapproved of his son’s friendship with the notorious playwright, and after he publicly insulted Wilde a quarrel ensued which eventually led to Wilde’s imprisonment in 1994 for homosexual offences
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Arriving in New Mexico, Wilde is recorded as saying, “I have nothing to declare but my genius” - one of the many idioms attributed to him B) The quality of earnestness, so prized by the Victorians, is shown to be of less importance than Wilde’s affected ironical view which was so widely regarded as flippant
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Arriving in New York, Wilde is recorded as saying, “I have nothing to declare but my bank account” - one of the many idioms attributed to him B) After his marriage to Constance Lloyd in 1884 he published several books of stories for children, originally written for his own sons. Lord Arthur Savile’s Crime (новелла «Преступление лорда Артура «Севиля» ) appeared shortly before his only novel, The Picture of Dorian Gray (1891) (роман «Портрет Дориана Грея»)
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Both heroes are essentially interchangeable, as are Gwendolen and Cecily, the heroines B) Gwendolen, daughter of Lord and Lady Bracknell, declares to Jack, the man she apparently hates like hell, “I never change except in my affections, and Lady Bracknell herself, an embodiment of paradox, embraces double-standards
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Gwendolen, daughter of Lord and Lady Bracknell, declares to Jack, the man she apparently loves, “I never change except in my affections, and Lady Bracknell herself, an embodiment of paradox, embraces double-standards B) Daunting representative of the aristocracy, she was not always such, yet disapproves of anyone else who might take the same route as she did: ”I do not approve of mercenary marriages. When I married Lord Bracknell I had no fortune of any kind. But I never dreamed for a moment of letting that stand in my way.”
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Gwendolen, daughter of Lord and Lady Bracknell, declares to Jack, the man she apparently loves, “I never change except in my affections, and Lady Bracknell herself, an embodiment of paradox, embraces double-standards B) Relying on the generosity of friends, he went to live in France, adopting the name of Sebastian Melmoth. While here he wrote his famous poem, The Ballad of Reading Gaol («Баллада Редингской тюрьмы»). Wilde died in exile in France in 1900
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell verges on caricature as do Canon Chasuble and Miss Prism B) The extreme stupidity of the characters goes well with the absurdity of the action they engage in
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Nothing is sacred, for Wilde’s epigrams show astute social observation, and are directed at such diverse topics as religion, class, education, property, the role of men, philanthropy, food, feminism, and more B) This philosophy is at the heart of The Importance of Being Earnest
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Of The Importance of Being Honest, his most famous play, Wilde wrote “It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy ... that we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously, and all the serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality.” B) As in the earlier plays, deception, duplicity, and coincidence prevail here
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Of The Importance of Being Stupid, his most famous play, Wilde wrote “It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy ... that we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously, and all the serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality.” B) The play is subtitled A Trivial Comedy for Dummies, which implies paradox, and indeed Wilde exposes the paradoxes of existence in a comprehensive manner
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Of The Importance of Sleeping Earnest, his most famous play, Wilde wrote “It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy ... that we should treat all the trivial things of life seriously, and all the serious things of life with sincere and studied triviality.” B) His dialogue is riddled with contradictions that poke fun at cherished English beliefs and institutions, and his characters are outrageously inconsistent
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Oscar Wilde (1854-1900). Playwright, poet, essayist and wit he is now as famous for his flamboyant lifestyle and idioms as for his plays, poems and fiction B) Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde was born in 1854 in Suzdal
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Studying classics first at Trinity College in Dublin before going on to Magdalen College, Oxford, Wilde proved to be a brilliant scholar, winning the Newdigate Prize for his poem “Roxanna.” B) While in Congo, his flamboyant appearance and conspicuous espousal of aestheticism - art for art’s sake - attracted great attention, much of it hostile
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) The farcical plot, like that of so many social comedies, centres around the theme of business, but the dazzling repartee that underpins this touches on a far wider range of themes B) The inversion of cherished sayings and notions is an essential mechanism of both Wilde’s wit and his social criticism
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) The protagonists are all fundamentally acquisitive, their rapacity symbolized by greed as they eat repeatedly throughout the drama B) Milene Farmer, daughter of Lord and Lady Bracknell, declares to Jack, the man she apparently loves, “I never change except in my affections, and Lady Bracknell herself, an embodiment of paradox, embraces double-standards
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) The quality of earnestness, so prized by the Victorians, is shown to be of less importance than Wilde’s affected ironical wife which was so widely regarded as flippant B) The protagonists are all fundamentally acquisitive, their rapacity symbolized by mercy as they eat repeatedly throughout the drama
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) The quality of earnestness, so prized by the Victorians, is shown to be of more importance than Wilde’s affected ironical view which was so widely regarded as flippant B) Oscar Wilde (1854-1900). Playwright, poet, essayist and wit he is now as famous for his flamboyant lifestyle and idioms as for his plays, poems and friends
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Translated by Wilde’s close friend Lord Alfred Douglas (“Bosie”), Salome later appeared for publication in England B) Douglas’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry, strongly disapproved of his son’s friendship with the notorious playwright, and after he publicly insulted Wilde a quarrel ensued which eventually led to Wilde’s imprisonment in 1894 for lesbian offences
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Translated by Wilde’s close friend Lord Alfred Douglas (“Bosie”), Salome later appeared for publication in Finland B) Nothing is sacred, for Wilde’s epigrams show astute social observation, and are directed at such diverse topics as religion, class, education, property, the role of men, philanthropy, food, feminism, and more
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) When Algy says “Divorces are made in heaven,” the twisted phrase is hilarious, but the remark has a sting B) Nothing is sacred, for Wilde’s epigrams show astute social observation, and are directed at such diverse topics as religion, class, education, property, the role of men, philanthropy, food, feminism, and The Internet
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) While at Berkly his flamboyant appearance and conspicuous espousal of aestheticism - art for art’s sake - attracted great attention, much of it hostile B) With his talent, wit, charm and instinct for publicity Wilde soon became a familiar name in the literary world, as much for his conversational skills as for his writing
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Wilde’s father was the eminent drug dealer Sir William Wilde and his mother a literary hostess who was also known as a writer under her pen name, “Speranza.” B) Studying classics first at Trinity College in Dublin before going on to Magdalen College, Oxford, Wilde proved to be a brilliant scholar, winning the Nobel Prize for his poem “Ravenna.”
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) Wilde’s last play, Salome («Саломея»), written in French, was refused a licence in London but was later adapted as an opera by Richard Strauss B) Oscar Wilde (1954-1900). Playwright, poet, essayist and wit he is now as famous for his flamboyant lifestyle and idioms as for his plays, poems and fiction
Which of the two assertions were truly made and which are made up? A) With his talent, wit, charm and instinct for publicity Wilde soon became a familiar name in the literary world, as much for his conversational skills as for his writing B) He was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with hard labour, which left him on his release bankrupt and weakened
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. Oh! about a hundred and thirty thousand pounds in the Funds. That is all. Goodbye, Lady Bracknell. So pleased to have seen you B) Lady Bracknell. [Sitting down again.] A moment, Mr. Worthing. A hundred and thirty thousand pounds! And in the Funds! Miss Cardew seems to me a most piggish young lady, now that I look at her
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. If you are not too long, I will wait here for you all my coffee-break [Exit Jack in great excitement.] B) Lady Bracknell. I dare not even suspect, Dr. Dolittle. I need hardly tell you that in families of high position strange coincidences are not supposed to occur. They are hardly considered the thing
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. [After a pause.] They don’t seem to notice us at all. Couldn’t you burp? B) Cecily. But I haven’t got a burp
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Prism. [Quite crushed.] Victoria. The Brighton line. [Sinks into a chair.] B) Jack. I must retire to my room for a moment. Gwendolen, wait here for me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Algernon. Cecily is the sweetest, dearest, prettiest old lady in the whole world. And I don’t care twopence about social possibilities B) Lady Bracknell.. [To Cecily.] Dear child, of course you know that Algernon has nothing but his debts to depend upon. But I do not approve of mercenary marriages.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Algernon. I pretended in order that I might have an opportunity of kissing you B) Cecily. [To Gwendolen.] That certainly seems a satisfactory plan
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Algernon. Yes, Aunt Ogusta B) Algernon. [Stammering.] Oh! No! Bunbury doesn’t live here. Bunbury is somewhere else at present. In fact, Bunbury is dead
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cecily. I am more than content with what Mr. Moncrieff said. His voice alone inspires one with absolute credulity B) Gwendolen. Then you think we should pay them
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cecily. I hate waiting even five minutes for anybody. It always makes me rather cross B) Cecily I am not punctual myself, I know, but I do like punctuality in others, and waiting, even to be knocked up, is quite out of the question
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cecily. Lady Bracknell and I are engaged to be married B) Lady Bracknell. [With a shiver, crossing to the sofa and sitting down.] I do not know whether there is anything peculiarly exciting in the air of this particular part of Hertfordshire, but the number of engagements that go on seems to me considerably above the proper average that statistics have laid down before my engagement to Cecily
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cecily. They have moments of physical courage of which we women know absolutely nothing B) Gwendolen. I am engaged to be married to Mr. Worthing, mamma
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Chasuble. Everything is quite ready for the christenings B) Chasuble. [Looking rather puzzled, and pointing to Jack and Algernon.] Both these gentlemen have expressed a desire for immediate adventism
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Chasuble. [Severely.] I am a homosexual, madam B) Jack. [Interposing.] Miss Prism, Lady Bracknell, has been for the last three years Miss Cardew’s esteemed governess and valued companion
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. But we will not be the first to sing B) Cecily. I hate Eurovision
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. How absurd to talk of the equality of the sexes! Where questions of IQ are concerned, men are infinitely beyond us B) Jack. We are.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. Let us scream B) Cecily. Certainly. Screaming’s the only thing to do now.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. Mr. Worthing, I have something very particular to ask you. Much depends on your answer B) Cecily. Gwendolen, your common sense is invaluable. Mr. Moncrieff, kindly answer me the following question. Why did you pretend to be my bodyguard?
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. Screaming seems to produce a great effect B) Cecily. A most exellent one
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. The fact that they did not follow us at once into the house, as any one else would have done, seems to me to show that they have some food left B) Cecily. They have been eating muffins. That looks like repentance
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. They’re looking at us. What effrontery! B) Cecily. They’re approaching. That’s very backward of them
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. True! I had forgotten. There are principles at stake that one cannot surrender. Which of us should tell them? The task is very pleasant B) Jack and Algernon [Speaking together.] Our Christian names! Is that all? But we are going to be converted to Islam this afternoon
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. True. In matters of grave importance, style, not sincerity is the vital thing B) Gwendolen. I have the gravest doubts upon the subject. But I intend to crush them. This is not the moment for German scepticism
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Gwendolen. Yes, dear, if you can kill Algernon B) Cecily. Screaming’s the only thing to do now
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I think some preliminary incarceration on my part would not be out of place B) Mr. Worthing, is Miss Cardew at all connected with any of the larger railway stations in London? I merely desire information
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. I do not even want to beg your pardon for interrupting you, Lady Bracknell, but this engagement is quite out of the question. I am Miss Cardew’s guardian, and she cannot marry without my consent until she comes of age. That consent I absolutely decline to give B) Lady Bracknell. Upon what grounds may I ask? Algernon is an extremely, I may almost say an ostentatiously, eligible young man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. I fear there can be no possible doubt about the matter B) This afternoon during my temporary absence in Edinborough on an important question of romance, he obtained admission to my house by means of the false pretence of being my brother
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. It pains me very much to have to speak frankly to you, Lady Bracknell, about your nephew, but the fact is that I do not approve at all of his moral character. I suspect him of being untruthful B) Lady Bracknell. Untruthful! My nephew Algernon? Impossible! He is an Oxonian
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. That lady is Miss Cecily Cardew, my bodyguard B) Algernon. I am engaged to be married to Aunt Augusta, Cecily
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack. Then a passionate celibacy is all that any of us can look forward to B) Lady Bracknell. Come, dear, [Gwendolen rises] we have already missed five, if not six, trains. To miss any more might expose us to comment on the platform
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Jack.The moment you consent to my marriage with Milene, I will most gladly allow your nephew to form an alliance with my ward B) Lady Bracknell. [Rising and drawing herself up.] You must be quite aware that what you propose is out of the question
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell Come over here, dear. [Cecily goes across.] Ugly cow! your dress is sadly simple, and your hair seems almost as Nature might have left it B) Lady Bracknell A thoroughly experienced French maid produces a really marvellous result in a very brief space of time
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell I remember recommending one to young Lady Lancing, and after three months her own husband did not know her B) Jack. And after six months nobody knew her
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell Never speak disrespectfully of Society, Algernon. Only people who can’t get into it do that B) Lady Bracknell Gwendolen! the time approaches for our departure. We have not a moment to lose
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell The two weak points in our age are its want of principle and its want of profile. The chin a little higher, dear. Style largely depends on the way the bikini is worn B) Lady Bracknell. There are distinct social benefits in Miss Cardew’s profile
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell When I married Lord Bracknell I had no fortune of any kind. But I never dreamed for a moment of allowing that to stand in my bedroom. B) Lady Bracknell Well, I suppose I must give my TV
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Ah! A life crowded with incident, I see; though perhaps somewhat too exciting for a young pig B) Lady Bracknell I am not myself in favour of premature experiences
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Ahem! Mr. Worthing, after careful consideration I have decided entirely to overlook my nephew’s conduct to you B) Jack. That is very generous of you, Lady Bracknell. My own decision, however, is unalterable. I decline to give my PC
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Apprised, sir, of my daughter’s sudden flight by her trusty maid, whose confidence I purchased by means of a small coin, I followed her at once by a luggage train B) Lady Bracknell. Her unhappy father is, I am glad to say, under the impression that she is attending a more than usually lengthy lecture at MGU
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. But of course, you will clearly understand that all communication between yourself and my daughter must cease immediately from this moment. On this point, as indeed on all points, I am quite uncertain B) Jack. I am engaged to be married to Algernon
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Come here. Sit down. Sit down immediately.. [Turns to Jack.]. B) Lady Bracknell. Hesitation of any kind is a sign of mental decay in the young, of physical weakness in the old
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Dead! When did Mr. Bunbury die? His death must have been extremely sudden B) Algernon. [Airily.] Oh! I killed Bunbury this afternoon. I mean poor Bunbury died this afternoon
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Exploded! Was he the victim of a revolutionary outrage? I was not aware that Mr. Bunbury was interested in social legislation. If so, he is well punished for his morbidity B) Algernon. My dear Aunt Ogusta, I mean he was found out! The doctors found out that Bunbury could not live, that is what I mean - so Bunbury died
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Few girls of the present day have any really liquid qualities, any of the qualities that last, and improve with time B) Lady Bracknell We live, I regret to say, in an age of prisms
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. He seems to have had great confidence in the opinion of his physicians. I am glad, however, that he made up his mind at the last to some definite course of action, and acted under proper police supervision B) Lady Bracknell. To speak frankly, I am not in favour of one-night stands. They give people the opportunity of finding out each other’s character before marriage, which I think is never advisable
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Lord Bracknell would be highly displeased if he learned that that was the way in which you wasted your car B) Chasuble. However, as your present mood seems to be one peculiarly secular, I will return to the church at once. Indeed, I have just been informed by the pew-opener that for the last hour and a half Miss Cone has been waiting for me in the vestry
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Markby, Markby, and Markby? A firm of the very highest position in their profession. Indeed I am told that one of the Mr. Markby’s is occasionally to be seen at disco parties. So far I am satisfied B) Jack. [Very irritably.] How extremely kind of you, Lady Bracknell! I have also in my possession, you will be pleased to hear, certificates of Miss Cardew’s birth, baptism, whooping cough, registration, vaccination, confirmation, and AIDS; both the German and the English variety
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. My dear Mr. Worthing, as Miss Worthing states positively that she cannot wait till she is thirty-five - a remark which I am bound to say seems to me to show a somewhat impatient nature - I would beg of you to reconsider your decision B) Jack. But my dear Lady Worthing, the matter is entirely in your own hands.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. Thirty-five is a very attractive age. London society is full of women of the very highest birth who have, of their own free choice, remained thirty-five for years. Lady Dumbleton is an instance in point B) Lady Bracknell To my own knowledge she has been thirty-five ever since she arrived at the age of forty, which was many years ago now. I see no reason why our dear Cecily should not be even still more attractive at the age you mention than she is at present. There will be a large accumulation of property
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. You are perfectly right in making some slight alteration. Indeed, no woman should ever be quite accurate about her choice of men B) Jack. Pray excuse me, Lady Bracknell, for interrupting you again, but it is only fair to tell you that according to the terms of her grandfather’s will Miss Cardew does not come legally of age till she is thirty-five
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. [Glares at Jack for a few moments. Then bends, with a practised smile, to Cecily.] Kindly turn round, sweet child B) Lady Bracknell There are distinct sexual possibilities in your profile
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. [Grimly.] I have known strange errors in that publication B) Jack. Miss Cardew’s family solicitors are Messrs Markby, Markby, and Reznik
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Lady Bracknell. [To Cecily.] Come here, sweet course B) Cecily. Well, I am really only eighteen, but I always admit to twenty when I go to have a cake
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Miss Prism. I was told you expected me in the vestry, dear Kodak B) Lady Bracknell. [In a severe, judicial voice.] Cilinder!
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Twenty-eight years ago, Prism, you left Lord Bracknell’s house, Number 104, Upper Grosvenor Street, in charge of a perambulator that contained a baby of the male sex B) You never returned. A few weeks later, through the elaborate investigations of the Metropolitan police, the perambulator was discovered at midnight, standing by itself in a remote corner of Bayswater
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Until yesterday I had no idea that there were any families or persons whose origin was a Terminus B) Miss Prism. I left it in the cloak-room of one of the larger railway stations in London
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) [Miss Prism bows her head in shame.] Come here, Piramid! [Miss Prism approaches in a humble manner.] B) Prism! Where is that baby? [General consternation. The Canon starts back in horror. Algernon and Jack pretend to be anxious to shield Cecily and Gwendolen from hearing the details of a terrible public scandal.]
Find one correct answer: Both heroes are essentially interchangeable, as _________ Gwendolen and Cecily, the heroines
Find one correct answer: Contradiction and provocation are integral to all his _________
Find one correct answer: Douglas’s father, the Marquess of Queensberry, strongly disapproved of his son’s friendship with the notorious playwright, and after he publicly insulted Wilde a quarrel ensued _________ eventually led to Wilde’s imprisonment in 1894 for homosexual offences
Find one correct answer: Gwendolen, daughter of Lord and Lady Bracknell, declares to _________, the man she apparently loves, “I never change except in my affections, and Lady Bracknell herself, an embodiment of paradox, embraces double-standards
Find one correct answer: He was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment with hard labour, _________ left him on his release bankrupt and weakened
Find one correct answer: His father was the eminent surgeon Sir William Wilde and his mother a literary hostess who was also known _________ a writer under her pen name, “Speranza.”
Find one correct answer: His first collection of poems was published in 1881 _________ before he embarked on a one-year lecture tour of North America. Arriving in New York, Wilde is recorded as saying, “I have nothing to declare but my genius” - one of the many idioms attributed to him
Find one correct answer: In a letter to an admirer, _________ explained that “seriousness of manner is the disguise of the fool, folly in its exquisite modes of triviality and indifference and lack of care is the robe of the wise man
Find one correct answer: Nothing is sacred, for Wilde’s epigrams show astute social observation, and are directed at such diverse topics as religion, class, education, property, the role of men, philanthropy, food, _________, and more
Find one correct answer: Oscar Fingal O’Flahertie Wills Wilde was _________ in 1854 in Dublin
Find one correct answer: Studying classics first at Trinity College in Dublin before going _________ to Magdalen College, Oxford, Wilde proved to be a brilliant scholar, winning the Newdigate Prize for his poem “Ravenna.”
Find one correct answer: The extreme _________ of the characters contrasts sharply with the absurdity of the action they engage in
Find one correct answer: The play is subtitled A Trivial Comedy for Serious People, which implies paradox, and indeed Wilde exposes the paradoxes of existence in a comprehensive _________
Find one correct answer: The protagonists are _________ fundamentally acquisitive, their rapacity symbolized by greed as they eat repeatedly throughout the drama
Find one correct answer: The quality of earnestness, so prized by the Victorians, is _________ to be of less importance than Wilde’s affected ironical view which was so widely regarded as flippant
Find one correct answer: This is comically underlined in the scene where the couples decide to speak in unison. Lady Bracknell _________ on caricature as do Canon Chasuble and Miss Prism
Find one correct answer: Translated by Wilde’s close friend Lord Alfred Douglas (“Bosie”), it _________ appeared for publication in England
Find one correct answer: When Algy says “Divorces are made in heaven,” the twisted phrase is hilarious, but the remark has a _________
Find one correct answer: While at Oxford his flamboyant appearance and conspicuous espousal of aestheticism - art for _________ sake - attracted great attention, much of it hostile
Find one correct answer: Wilde died in exile in France in _________
Find one correct answer: Wilde has been described by many who knew him as both contradictory and _________
Find one correct answer: With his talent, wit, charm and instinct for publicity Wilde soon became a familiar name in the literary world, as _________ for his conversational skills as for his writing
Find one correct answer: As in the earlier plays, _________, duplicity, and coincidence prevail in this work by Wilde
Find one correct answer: His dialogue is riddled with contradictions that poke fun at cherished English beliefs and institutions, and his characters are outrageously _________
Find one correct answer: Of The Importance of Being Earnest, his most famous _________, Wilde wrote “It is exquisitely trivial, a delicate bubble of fancy, and it has its philosophy
Find one correct answer: Playwright, poet, essayist and ________ he is now as famous for his flamboyant lifestyle and idioms as for his plays, poems and fiction
Find one correct answer: Relying on the generosity of friends, he _________ to live in France, adopting the name of Sebastian Melmoth
Find one correct answer: The farcical plot, like that of so many social comedies, centres around the theme of _________ood, but the dazzling repartee that underpins this touches on a far wider range of themes
Find one correct answer: The inversion of cherished sayings and notions is an essential mechanism of both Wilde’s wit and his social _________
Find one correct answer: The room is luxuriously and artistically furnished. The _________ of a piano is heard in the adjoining room
Find one correct answer:Daunting representative of the aristocracy, she was not always such, yet disapproves of anyone else who might take the same _________ as she did
Find one correct answer:Morning-room in Algernon’s _________ in Half-Moon Street
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I really don’t see anything romantic in proposing. It is very romantic to be in love. But there is nothing romantic about a definite proposal. _________, one may be accepted. One usually is, I believe. Then the excitement is all over. The very essence of romance is uncertainty. If ever I get married, I’ll certainly try to forget the fact
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I thought you had come _________ for pleasure? I call that business
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I’m sorry for that, for your sake. I don’t play accurately - any _________ can play accurately - but I play with wonderful expression. As far as the piano is concerned, sentiment is my forte. I keep science for Life
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. My dear fellow, the _________ you flirt with Gwendolen is perfectly disgraceful. It is almost as bad as the way Gwendolen flirts with you
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Why is it that at a bachelor’s establishment the servants invariably drink the champagne? I ask _________ for information
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Yes, that is all very well; but I am afraid Aunt Augusta won’t _________ approve of your being here
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. [Inspects them, takes two, and sits down on the sofa.] Oh!... by the way, Lane, I see from your book that on Thursday night, when Lord Shoreman and Mr. Worthing were dining with me, eight bottles of champagne are entered _________ having been consumed
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. [Languidly.] I don’t know that I am _________ interested in your family life, Lane
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Algernon. [Stiffly.] I believe it is customary in good society to _________ some slight refreshment at five o’clock
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Jack. I am in love with Gwendolen. I have come up to town expressly to _________ to her
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Jack. I have no doubt about that, dear Algy. The Divorce Court was specially invented for people whose memories are _________ curiously constituted
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, pleasure, pleasure! What else should bring one anywhere? Eating as usual, I _________, Algy
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Jack. [Pulling off his gloves.] When one is in town one amuses oneself. When one is in the country _________ amuses other people. It is excessively boring
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lane. I attribute it to the superior quality of the wine, sir. I have often observed that in married households the champagne is _________ of a first-rate brand
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lane. I believe it is a very pleasant state, sir. I have had very little experience of it myself up to the present. I have only been married _________. That was in consequence of a misunderstanding between myself and a young person
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lane. I didn’t _________ it polite to listen, sir
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lane. No, sir; it is not a very interesting subject. I never think of it _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lane. Yes, sir; eight bottles and a _________
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The line is immaterial. Mr. Worthing, I confess I feel somewhat _________ by what you have just told me. To be born, or at any rate bred, in a hand-bag, whether it had handles or not, seems to me to display a contempt for the ordinary decencies of family life that reminds one of the worst excesses of the French Revolution
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I would rather like to _________ Cecily
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. My dear boy, I love hearing my relations abused. It is the only thing that makes me put up with them at all. Relations are simply a tedious pack of people, who haven’t got the _________ knowledge of how to live, nor the smallest instinct about when to die
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. I will take very good care you never do. She is _________ pretty, and she is only just eighteen
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. May I ask you then what you would advise me to do? I need hardly say I would do anything in the world to _________ Gwendolen’s happiness
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh! one doesn’t blurt these things out to people. Cecily and Gwendolen are perfectly _________. to be extremely great friends
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, Gwendolen is as right as a trivet. As far as she is concerned, we are engaged. Her mother is perfectly unbearable. Never met such a Gorgon... I don’t really know what a Gorgon is like, but I am quite _________ that Lady Bracknell is one
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Well, I won’t argue about the _________. You always want to argue about things
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lady Bracknell. And I presume you know what that unfortunate movement led to? As for the particular locality in which the hand-bag was found, a cloak-room at a railway station might serve to conceal a social indiscretion - has probably, indeed, been used for that purpose before now – but it could hardly be regarded as an assured _________ for a recognised position in good society
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lady Bracknell. I would strongly advise you, Mr. Worthing, to try and _________ some relations as soon as possible, and to make a definite effort to produce at any rate one parent, of either sex, before the season is quite over
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. All women become like their mothers. That is their _________. No man does.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I hope to-morrow will be a _________ day, Lane
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I shall probably not be back _________ Monday. You can put up my dress clothes, my smoking jacket, and all the Bunbury suits
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. I _________ scrapes. They are the only things that are never serious
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. It is awfully hard work doing nothing. However, I don’t mind hard work where there is no definite object of any _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. It is perfectly _________ and quite as true as any observation in civilised life should be
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Lane, you’re a _________ pessimist
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Oh, I’m a little anxious about poor Bunbury, that is _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Really, Gwendolen, I don’t think I can _________ this at all
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. The only way to behave to a woman is to make love to her, if she is pretty, and to some _________if she is plain
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Women only do that when they have _________ each other a lot of other things first
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. Yes, but it’s hereditary, my dear fellow. It’s a sort of thing that runs in _________. You had much better say a severe chill
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. _________, I’m hungry
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Algernon. _________, I’ve turned round already
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Gwendolen. Algy, kindly turn your back. I have something very _________ to say to Mr. Worthing
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Gwendolen. Algy, you always _________ a strictly immoral attitude towards life. You are not quite old enough to do that
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Gwendolen. Ernest, we may never be married. From the expression on mamma’s face I fear we never shall. _________ parents nowadays pay any regard to what their children say to them
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Gwendolen. The story of your romantic origin, as _________to me by mamma, with unpleasing comments, has naturally stirred the deeper fibres of my nature
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Gwendolen. There is a good postal service, I suppose? It may be necessary to do something desperate. That of course will require serious _________. I will communicate with you daily
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. I am sick to death of cleverness. Everybody is clever nowadays. You can’t go anywhere without meeting clever people. The thing has become an absolute public nuisance. I wish to goodness we had _________ fools left
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. If you don’t take care, your friend Bunbury will get you into a _________ scrape some day
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh! It always is _________ seven
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, no! I can’t _________ looking at things. It is so silly
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, that is _________.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, that’s _________, Algy. You never talk anything but nonsense
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Oh, _________ is all right. Cecily is not a silly romantic girl, I am glad to say. She has got a capital appetite, goes long walks, and pays no attention at all to her lessons
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. There’s a sensible, intellectual girl! the only _________ I ever cared for in my life
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. Very well, then. My poor brother Ernest to carried off suddenly, in Paris, by a severe _________. That gets rid of him
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Jack. [In a very patronising manner.] My dear fellow, the truth isn’t quite the sort of thing one tells to a nice, sweet, _________ girl
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lane. I do my best to give _________, sir
Choose the right preposition: A gross deception has been practised _________ both of us
Choose the right preposition: After we had all been resigned to his loss, his sudden return seems _________ me peculiarly distressing
Choose the right preposition: And of course a man who is much talked about is always very attractive. One feels there must be something in him, after all. I daresay it was foolish _________me, but I fell in love with you, Ernest
Choose the right preposition: And this is the box _________ which I keep all your dear letters
Choose the right preposition: But why on earth did you break it off? What had I done? I had done nothing at all. Cecily, I am very much hurt indeed to hear you broke it _________. Particularly when the weather was so charming
Choose the right preposition: Cecily! Surely such a utilitarian occupation as the watering of flowers is rather Moulton’s duty than yours? Especially at a moment when intellectual pleasures await you. Your German grammar is _________ the table. Pray open it at page fifteen. We will repeat yesterday’s lesson
Choose the right preposition: Child, you know how anxious your guardian is that you should improve yourself _________every way
Choose the right preposition: Coming over very slowly.] But I don’t like German. It isn’t _________ all a becoming language. I know perfectly well that I look quite plain after my German lesson
Choose the right preposition: Do you suggest, Miss Fairfax, that I entrapped Ernest into an engagement? How dare you? This is no time _________wearing the shallow mask of manners. When I see a spade I call it a spade
Choose the right preposition: From the moment I saw you I distrusted you. I felt that you were false and deceitful. I am never deceived _________ such matters. My first impressions of people are invariably right
Choose the right preposition: He laid particular stress on your German, as he was leaving for town yesterday. Indeed, he always lays stress on your German when he is leaving _________ town
Choose the right preposition: I am not in favour of this modern mania for turning bad people into good people at a moment’s notice. As a man sows so let him reap. You must put away your diary, Cecily. I really don’t see why you should keep a diary _________all
Choose the right preposition: I am very fond _________ you, Cecily; I have liked you ever since I met you! But I am bound to state that now that I know that you are Mr. Worthing’s ward, I cannot help expressing a wish you were - well, just a little older than you seem to be - and not quite so very alluring in appearance
Choose the right preposition: I could deny it if I liked. I could deny anything if I liked. But my name certainly is John. It has been John _________ years
Choose the right preposition: I do not think that even I could produce any effect _________ a character that according to his own brother’s admission is irretrievably weak and vacillating. Indeed I am not sure that I would desire to reclaim him
Choose the right preposition: I don’t think I could break it _________ now that I have actually met you. Besides, of course, there is the question of your name
Choose the right preposition: I keep a diary in order to enter the wonderful secrets of my life. If I didn’t write them down, I should probably forget all _________ them
Choose the right preposition: I knew there must be some misunderstanding, Miss Fairfax. The gentleman whose arm is _________ present round your waist is my guardian, Mr. John Worthing
Choose the right preposition: I must see him at once on a most important christening - I mean _________ most important business
Choose the right preposition: I suppose one of the many good elderly women who are associated with Uncle Jack in some of his philanthropic work in London. I don’t quite like women who are interested _________ philanthropic work. I think it is so forward of them
Choose the right preposition: If you are not, then you have certainly been deceiving us all _________ a very inexcusable manner. I hope you have not been leading a double life, pretending to be wicked and being really good all the time. That would be hypocrisy
Choose the right preposition: If you would care to verify the incident, pray do so. [Produces diary of her own.] I never travel _________ my diary
Choose the right preposition: It is not at all a bad name. In fact, it is rather an aristocratic name. Half _________ the chaps who get into the Bankruptcy Court are called Algernon
Choose the right preposition: It is strange he never mentioned to me that he had a ward. How secretive of him! He grows more interesting hourly. I am not sure, however, that the news inspires me _________ feelings of unmixed delight
Choose the right preposition: It seems to me, Miss Fairfax, that I am trespassing _________ your valuable time. No doubt you have many other calls of a similar character to make in the neighbourhood
Choose the right preposition: It would hardly have been a really serious engagement if it hadn’t been broken off at least once. But I forgave you _________the week was out
Choose the right preposition: Memory, my dear Cecily, is the diary that we all carry _________ with us
Choose the right preposition: Mr. Worthing, I offer you my sincere condolence. You have at least the consolation _________ knowing that you were always the most generous and forgiving of brothers
Choose the right preposition: Oh, don’t say that. However badly he may have behaved to you in the past he is still your brother. You couldn’t be so heartless as to disown him. I’ll tell him to come out. And you will shake hands _________ him, won’t you, Uncle Jack
Choose the right preposition: Oh, flowers are as common here, Miss Fairfax, as people are _________ London
Choose the right preposition: Oh, I couldn’t possibly. They would make you far too conceited. [Replaces box.] The three you wrote me after I had broken of the engagement are so beautiful, and so badly spelled, that even now I can hardly read them _________crying a little
Choose the right preposition: Oh, well! The accounts I have received of Australia and the next world, are not particularly encouraging. This world is good enough _________ me, cousin Cecily
Choose the right preposition: On the 14th of February last. Worn out by your entire ignorance of my existence, I determined to end the matter one way or the other, and after a long struggle _________ myself I accepted you under this dear old tree here
Choose the right preposition: One should always have something sensational to read in the train. I am so sorry, dear Cecily, if it is any disappointment _________ you, but I am afraid I have the prior claim
Choose the right preposition: Personally I cannot understand how anybody manages to exist in the country, if anybody who is anybody does. The country always bores me _________ death
Choose the right preposition: Pray let me introduce myself _________ you
Choose the right preposition: The home seems to me to be the proper sphere _________ the man. And certainly once a man begins to neglect his domestic duties he becomes painfully effeminate, does he not? And I don’t like that. It makes men so very attractive
Choose the right preposition: The next day I bought this little ring _________ your name, and this is the little bangle with the true lover’s knot I promised you always to wear
Choose the right preposition: There is something _________ that name that seems to inspire absolute confidence. I pity any poor married woman whose husband is not called Ernest
Choose the right preposition: To save my poor, innocent, trusting boy from the machinations _________ any other girl there are no lengths to which I would not go
Choose the right preposition: Well, ever since dear Uncle Jack first confessed to us that he had a younger brother who was very wicked and bad, you _________ course have formed the chief topic of conversation between myself and Miss Prism
Choose the right preposition: Well, he said _________dinner on Wednesday night, that you would have to choose between this world, the next world, and Australia
Choose the right preposition: Well, my own dear, sweet, loving little darling, I really can’t see why you should object _________ the name of Algernon
Choose the right preposition: What a very sweet name! Something tells me that we are going to be great friends. I like you already more than I can say. My first impressions _________people are never wrong
Choose the right preposition: Yes, you’ve wonderfully good taste, Ernest. It’s the excuse I’ve always given _________ your leading such a bad life
Choose the right preposition: You are under some strange mistake. I am not little. In fact, I believe I am more than usually tall _________ my age. [Algernon is rather taken aback.] But I am your cousin Cecily. You, I see from your card, are Uncle Jack’s brother, my cousin Ernest, my wicked cousin Ernest
Choose the right preposition: You have filled my tea with lumps of sugar, and though I asked most distinctly for bread and butter, you have given me cake. I am known for the gentleness _________ my disposition, and the extraordinary sweetness of my nature, but I warn you, Miss Cardew, you may go too far
Choose the right preposition: You must not laugh at me, darling, but it had always been a girlish dream _________mine to love some one whose name was Ernest.
Choose the right preposition: You need hardly remind me of that, Ernest. I remember only too well that I was forced to write your letters _________ you. I wrote always three times a week, and sometimes oftener
Choose the right preposition: Gwendolen drinks the tea and makes a grimace. Puts down cup _________once, reaches out her hand to the bread and butter, looks at it, and finds it is cake. Rises in indignation
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: . The subject (to seem) distasteful to most men
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: An admirable idea! Mr. Worthing, there is just one question I would (to like) to be permitted to put to you
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And now that I think of it I have never (to hear) any man mention his brother. Cecily, you have lifted a load from my mind
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: As for your conduct towards Miss Cardew, I must say that your (to talk) in a sweet, simple, innocent girl like that is quite inexcusable. To say nothing of the fact that she is my ward
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: At the present moment I am (to eat) muffins because I am unhappy. Besides, I am particularly fond of muffins
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But even men of the noblest possible moral character (to be) extremely susceptible to the influence of the physical charms of others
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But you have just (to say) it was perfectly heartless to eat muffins
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Dearest Gwendolen, there (to be) no reason why I should make a secret of it to you. Our little county newspaper is sure to chronicle the fact next week
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Ernest has a strong upright nature. He is the very soul of truth and honour. Disloyalty would (to be) as impossible to him as deception
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Ernest never (to mention) to me that he had a brother
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: How can you sit there, calmly eating muffins when we are in this horrible trouble, I can’t (to make) out. You seem to me to be perfectly heartless
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: However, I will tell you quite frankly that I have no brother Ernest. I have no brother at all. I never had a brother in my life, and I certainly have not the smallest intention of ever (to have) one in the future
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I am afraid it is quite clear, Cecily, that neither of us (to be) engaged to be married to any one
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I am afraid you must (to be)under some misconception. Ernest proposed to me exactly ten minutes ago
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I am sorry to say they have not (to be) on good terms for a long time
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I can (see) no possible defence at all for your deceiving a brilliant, clever, thoroughly experienced young lady like Miss Fairfax
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I happen to be serious about Bunburying. What on earth you are serious about I haven’t (to get) the remotest idea. About everything, I should fancy. You have such an absolutely trivial nature
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I haven’t quite (to finish) my tea yet! and there is still one muffin left.
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I wanted to be engaged to Gwendolen, that (to be) all. I love her
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I was (to grow) almost anxious. It would have been terrible if any cloud had come across a friendship like ours, would it not
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I wish you would (to have) tea-cake instead. I don’t like tea-cake
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: If it was my business, I wouldn’t (to talk) about it. [Begins to eat muffins.] It is very vulgar to talk about one’s business
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: If the poor fellow (to have) been entrapped into any foolish promise I shall consider it my duty to rescue him at once, and with a firm hand
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: If you are not quite sure about your ever having been (to christen), I must say I think it rather dangerous your venturing on it now
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Indeed, when I (to be) in really great trouble, as any one who knows me intimately will tell you, I refuse everything except food and drink
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It (to be) very vulgar to talk about one’s business
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It is the first time in my life that I have ever been reduced to such a painful position, and I am really quite inexperienced in (to do) anything of the kind
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It usen’t to be, I know - but I daresay it is now. Science is always (to make) wonderful improvements in things
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It would distress me more than I can tell you, dear Gwendolen, if it caused you any mental or physical anguish, but I feel bound to point out that since Ernest (to propose) to you he clearly has changed his mind
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Jack, you are at the muffins again! I wish you wouldn’t. There are only two (to leave). [Takes them.] I told you I was particularly fond of muffins
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Modern, no less than Ancient History, (to supply) us with many most painful examples of what I refer to. If it were not so, indeed, History would be quite unreadable
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Mr. Ernest Worthing and I are (to engage) to be married
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: My darling Cecily, I think there must be some slight error. Mr. Ernest Worthing is engaged to me. The announcement will (to appear) in the Morning Post on Saturday at the latest
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: My dear fellow, the sooner you give up that nonsense the better. I (to make) arrangements this morning with Dr. Chasuble to be christened myself at 5.30, and I naturally will take the name of Ernest
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: No one ever does, except vegetarians and people like that. Besides I (to have)just made arrangements with Dr. Chasuble to be christened at a quarter to six under the name of Ernest
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Oh, that is nonsense; you are always (to talk) nonsense
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: On an occasion of this kind it (to become) more than a moral duty to speak one’s mind. It becomes a pleasure
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Quite so. It might make you very unwell. You can hardly have (to forget) that some one very closely connected with you was very nearly carried off this week in Paris by a severe chill
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Quite sure. [A pause.] In fact, I am (to go) to be his
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: So I (to know) my constitution can stand it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: That may be. But the muffins (to be) the same
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There is certainly no chance of your (to marry) Miss Cardew
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There is no evidence at all that I have ever (to be) christened by anybody
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: To (say) nothing of the fact that she is my cousin
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: To say nothing of the fact that she (to be) my ward
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: We are both engaged to be (to marry) to your brother Ernest, so it is a matter of some importance to us to know where your brother Ernest is at present
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: We can’t both be (to christen)Ernest
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, I can’t eat muffins in an agitated manner. The butter would probably (to get) on my cuffs. One should always eat muffins quite calmly. It is the only way to eat them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, I simply wanted to be (to engage) to Cecily. I adore her
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, one must be serious about something, if one (to want) to have any amusement in life
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, the only small satisfaction I have in the whole of this wretched business is that your friend Bunbury is quite (to explode)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Whatever unfortunate entanglement my dear boy may have (to get) into, I will never reproach him with it after we are married
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When I am in trouble, (to eat) is the only thing that consoles me
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Yes, and a perfectly wonderful Bunbury it is. The most wonderful Bunbury I have ever (to have) in my life
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Yes, but I have not (to be) christened for years
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: You can’t possibly ask me to go without (to have) some dinner. It’s absurd. I never go without my dinner
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: You won’t be able to run down to the country quite so often as you (to use) to do, dear Algy. And a very good thing too
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Your brother is a little off colour, isn’t he, dear Jack? You won’t (to be) able to disappear to London quite so frequently as your wicked custom was. And not a bad thing either
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: [Examines diary through her lorgnettte carefully.] It is certainly very curious, for he (to ask) me to be his wife yesterday afternoon at 5.30
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, to speak with perfect candour, Cecily, I wish that you (to be) fully forty-two, and more than usually plain for your age


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  0097.03.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
"The Divorce Court" означает "бракоразводный суд":
Algernon had a telegram to say that his poor friend Bunbury was very ill again:
Algernon was going to marry Gwendolen:
Aunt Augusta is Lady Bracknell:
Cecily lived in the country:
Cucumber sandwiches were ordered specially for Lady Bracknell:
It is customary in good society to take some slight refreshment at 4 o'clock:
Jack loved Gwendolen:
Mr. Bunbury is a real person:
Mr. Ernest Worthing is John:
Mr. Worthing left his pipe the last time he dined at Algernon's:
Old Mr. Bunbury adopted Jack when he was a little boy and made him in his will guardian to his grand-daughter, Miss Cecily Cardew:
The cigarette case had been given to Jack as a present from his aunt:
The sound of a violin was heard in the adjoining room:
Автор пьесы "Как важно быть серьезным" Оскар Уайльд родился в Ирландии в середине 19 века:
Жанр произведения Оскара Уайльда "Как важно быть серьезным" - пьеса:
Оscar Wilde died in exile in France in 1900:


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  0097.03.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
After his first talk with Lady Bracknell Jack says she is ...
Algenon came to Jack’s country house to …
Algernon ...
Algernon came to Jack’s country house under the name of …
Algernon claims that more than half of modern culture depends on ...
Algernon invented a certain Bunbury ...
Algernon says it is awfully hard work ...
Algernon says that the amount of women in London who flirt with their ... is perfectly scandalous.
Algernon: Indeed, when I am in really great trouble, as any one who knows me intimately will tell you, I refuse everything except....
Algernon’s visit to John Worthing’s house is a great success for him because he….
Apprised of her daughter's sudden flight by her (Gwendolen’s) trusty maid, Lady Bracknell followed Gwendolen at once....
At first, according to Cecily, Jack was going to send his (imaginary) brother to …
Cecily keeps diary to enter …
Cecily tells Miss Prism that she wishes Uncle Jack would … his brother …
Cecily to Algernon: And this is the box in which I keep all your ...
Cecily …
Cecily: Miss Prism has just been complaining of ...
Cecily: The next day I bought this little ring in your name and this is the little.... I promised you always to wear.
Cecily: You must not laugh at me, but it had always been a girlish dream of mine to ...
Garden at the Manor House, an old fashioned one full of ...
Gwendolen says that whenever people talk to her about the weather she always feels quite certain that they ...
Gwendolen: "Mr. Worthing, I think it only fair to tell you quite frankly beforehand that I am fully determined to ...
Gwendolen: I am glad to say that I have never seen a.... It is obvious that our social spheres have been widely different.
Gwendolen: It's a divine name. It has music of it's own. It produces....
Having arrived to Jack's house Lady Bracknell tells Jack that all.... between him and her daughter must cease immediately.
In order to get up to town Jack pretended to have ...
Interviewed by Lady Bracknell as an eligible bachelor Jack says ...
Interviewing Jack as an eligible bachelor Lady Bracknell says ... that Jack knows nothing.
Jack (John Worthing ) is Cecily’s …
Jack (John Worthing) was found by Mr. Thomas Cardew ...
Jack came back to his country-house from London long before Monday afternoon in order to announce that his (imaginary) brother …
Jack decides to announce that his imaginary brother is carried off suddenly by ...
Jack liked to spend his Sundays …
Jack tells Algernon he is in love with ...
Jack tells Algernon that Cecily ...
Jack told Algernon that he had received the cigarette case as a present from ...
Jack was found in a ...
Jack's cigarette case had an inscription that read ...
Jack: But you don't really mean to say that you couldn't love me if my name wasn't...?
Jack: I say it's perfectly heartless your eating ... at all, under the circumstances.
Jack: Lady Bracknell, but it is only fair to tell you that according to the terms of her grandfather’s will Miss Cardew does not come legally of age till she is....
Jack: My dear fellow, I made arrangements this morning with Dr. Chasuble to ... at 5.30.
Jack: Well, the only small satisfaction I have in the whole of this wretched business is that your friend Bunbury is quite....
John Worthing was called ... in town and ... in the country.
Lady Bracknell (pencil and notebook in her hand): "I feel bound to tell you that you are not down on my list of... "
Lady Bracknell to Cecily: Dear child, of course you know that Algernon has nothing but his....
Lady Bracknell: A few weeks later, through the elaborate investigations of the Metropolitan police, the perambulator was discovered at midnight....
Lady Bracknell: I merely desire information. Until yesterday I had no idea that there were any families or persons whose origin was a ...
Lady Bracknell: “A man should always have an occupation of some kind. There are far too many ... in London as it is.”
Lady Bracknell: “Fortunately in England education ...”
Lane ...
Lane didn't think it was ... to listen to the music played by Algernon in the adjoining room.
Leaving for town Uncle Jack always lays particular stress on Cecily’s …
Miss Prism is …
Miss Prism says she …
On hearing from Jack that he has not got parents Lady Bracknell ...
Talking to Jack about Gwendolen and her mother Lady Bracknell Algernon says ...
The first question Lady Bracknell asked Jack her prospective son-in-law, was
The perambulator contained..., but the baby wasn't there.
To believe Miss Prism the Primitive Church has not lasted up to the present days because it….
Upset by the refusal of Jack and Algernon to be baptized Chasuble says he must go at once as he has just been informed by the pew-opener that for the last hour and a half … has been waiting for him in the vestry.
When Algernon learns from Jack about his intention to marry Gwendolen he says it is impossible because ...
When Algernon quite unexpectedly met Jack in his country-house he….
When Algernon was making a declaration of love to Gwendolen she said that her ideal had always been
When Gwendolen said she adored the name Ernest and did not like the name Jack, John Worthing (Jack) ...
When Jack missed (noticed the absence of) his cigarette case he ...
When Jack returned to his country-house and found Chasuble there he asked the priest …
When Jack who had just come home from London saw Algernon he…
When Lady Bracknell saw Jack standing on his knees before Gwendolen , she ...
Wnen Jack was talking to Algernon at his place in Half-Moon Street the latter was all the time ...


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  0097.02.07;Т-Т.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER. I can. (Reads, reproducing her pronunciation exactly) “Yo-yo, ssup, dude! Ain’t nobody gonna crash no party in South Central LA,dude” B) THE GENTLEMAN. Charge! I make no charge. (To the note taker) Really, sir, if you are a detective, you need not begin protecting me against molestation by young women until I ask you. Anybody could see that the girl meant no harm
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) A visionary and mystic whose philosophy of moral passion permeates his plays, Shaw was also the most trenchant pamphleteer since Swift; the most readable music critic in English, the best theatre critic of his generation B) His development of a drama of moral passion and of intellectual conflict and debate, his revivifying the comedy of manners, his ventures into symbolic farce and into a theatre of disbelief helped shape the theatre of his time and after
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) All are peering out gloomily at the rain, except one man with his back turned to the rest, wholly preoccupied with a notebook in which he is writing B) The church clock strikes the first quarter
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) At the other side of Mrs Higgins’s drawing room, farther forward, is an Elizabethan chair roughly carved in the taste of Inigo Jones, from ASHAN B) On the same side there is a piano in a decorated sunduk
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) By bringing a bold critical intelligence to his many other areas of interest, Shaw helped mold the political, economic, and sociological thought of three families B) Possibly Shaw’s comedic masterpiece, and certainly his funniest and most popular play, is Pygmalion (performed 1913)
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cab whistles blowing frantically in all directions B) Pedestrians running for free food into the portico of St. Paul’s church (not Wren’s Cathedral but lnigo Jones’s church in Covent Garden vegetable market)
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE But I, as one of the undeserving poor, have nothing between me and the pauper’s uniform but this here blasted three thousand a year that shoves me into the oligarhs B) DOOLITTLE Theyve got you every way you turn: it’s a choice between the Skilly of the workhouse and the Char Bydis of the middle class: and I ‘m ready for the workhouse
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE If I was one of the wealthiest, and had put by a bit, I could chuck it; but then why should I, acause the deserving poor might as well be millionaires for all the happiness they ever has B) DOOLITTLE They dont know what happiness is
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE In the house I’m not let do a hand’s turn for myself: somebody else must do it and touch me for it B) DOOLITTLE A year ago I hadn’t a woman except two or three that wouldn’t speak to me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE Intimidated: thats what I am. Broke. Bought up. Happier men than me will call for my dust, and touch me for their tip B) DOOLITTLE I’ll look on helpless, and envy them. And thats what your grandfather has brought me to
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE It aint the lecturing I mind I’ll lecture them blue in the face, I will, and not turn a face B) DOOLITTLE It’s making a gentleman of me that I object to
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE I’ll have to learn to speak middle class language from you, instead of speaking proper English. Thats where you’ll come in; and I daresay thats what you done it B) THE NOTE TAKER. I dont know whether youve noticed it; but the rain stopped about two minutes ago
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE Now I am worrited; tied neck and heels; and everybody touches me for money. It’s a fine thing for you, says my solicitor B) DOOLITTLE. When I was a rich man and had a solicitor once when they found a pram in the dust cart, he got me off, and got shut of me and got me shut of him as quick as he could
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE Now I’ve twenty, and not a decent week’s wages among the lot of them B) DOOLITTLE I have to live for myself: that’s middle class morality
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE Same with the doctors: used to shove me out of the hospital before I could hardly stand on my legs, and nothing to pay B) DOOLITTLE Now they finds out that I’m not a healthy man and can’t live unless they looks after me twice a day
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE We’re all intimidated. Intimidated, maam: thats what we are B) DOOLITTLE What is there for me if I chuck it but the work-house in my old age? I have to dye my hair already to keep my job as a dustman
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE Who asked him to make a gentleman of me? I was happy. I was free. I was a hippie B) DOOLITTLE I touched pretty nigh everybody for money when I wanted it, same as I touched you, Eliza
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) DOOLITTLE You talk of losing Freddy. Dont you be anxious: I bet she’s on my doorstep by this: she that could support herself easy by selling flowers if I wasnt respectable B) DOOLITTLE And the next one to touch me will be you, Enry lggins
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Further down the room, on the same side, is a fireplace, with a comfortable leather-covered easy-chair at the side of the hearth nearest the door, and a coal-scuttle B) There is a clock on the mantelpiece. Between the fireplace and the phonograph table is a stand for newspapers
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) I started on her some months ago; and she’s getting on like a house on fire. I shall win my bet B) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) Pickering is in it with me. Ive a sort of bet on that I’ll pass her off as a duchess in six months
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) I started on her some months ago; and she’s getting on like a tank B) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) She’s been easier to teach than my middle-class pupils because she’s had to learn a complete new language
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) She talks English almost as you talk French B) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) She has a quick eye
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) Well, she must talk about something B) HIGGINS (about the flower girl) Oh, she’ll be all right: dont you fuss
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS : Oh, that comes with practice. You hear no difference at first; but you keep on listening, and presently you find they’re all as the same B) MRS PEARCE (hesitating, evidently perplexed). A young woman asks to see you, sir
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Higgins appears in the morning light as a robust, vital, appetizing sort of man of seventy B) He is dressed in a professional-looking black frock-coat with a white linen collar and black silk tie, and a pair of jeans
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Higgins is of the energetic, scientific type, heartily, even violently interested in everything that can be studied as a scientific subject, and careful about himself and other people, including their feelings B) He is, in fact, but for his years and size, rather like a very impetuous baby “taking notice” eagerly and loudly, and requiring almost as much watching to keep him out of unintended mischief
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Higgins is so entirely frank and void of malice that he remains likeable even in his least reasonable moments B) His manner varies from genial bullying when he is in a good humor to stormy petulance when anything goes wrong
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS Oh, she’ll be all right: dont you fuss. Pickering is in it with me. Ive a sort of bet on that I’ll pass her off as a duchess in six months B) HIGGINS I started on her some months ago; and she’s getting on like a bellygoat
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Higgins throws himself so impatiently on the divan that he almost breaks it B) Mrs Higgins looks at him, doesn’t control herself and says terrible obsenities
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS We’re supposed to be civilized and cultured — to know all about poetry and philosophy and art and science, and so on B) Higgins goes to the PC, stumbling into the fender and over the fire-irons on his way; extricating himself
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) HIGGINS. What they think they ought to think is had enough. Pickering knows: but what they really think would break up the whole show B) HIGGINS. You see, we’re all savages, more or less
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) If a man has a bit of a conscience, it always takes him when he’s sober; and then it makes him low-spirited B) A drop of absent just takes that off and makes him happy
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) If you stand with your face to the windows in Mrs Higgins’s drawing room, you have the fireplace on your left and the door in the right-hand wall close to the corner nearest the windows. There is an LCD TV in front. B) Mrs Higgins was brought up on Morris and Burne Jones; and her room, which is very unlike her son’s room in Wimpole Street, is not crowded with furniture and little pieces of wood and plastic left after renovation
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In Mrs Higgins’s drawing room there is a portrait of Mrs Higgins as she was when she defied the fashion in her youth in one of the beautiful Rossettian costumes which, when caricatured by people who did not understand, led to the absurdities of popular estheticism in the eighteen-seventies B) The only landscape is a Glazunov painting
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In the corner of Mrs Higgins’s drawing room diagonally opposite the door Mrs Higgins, now over sixty and long past taking the trouble to dress out of the fashion, sits writing at an elegantly simple writing-table with a bell button within reach of her hand B) There is an IKEA chair further back in the room between her and the window nearest her side
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) In the middle of Mrs Higgins’s drawing room there is a big ottoman; and this, with the carpet, the Morris wall-papers, and the Morris chintz window curtains and brocade covers of the ottoman and its cushions, supply all the ornament, and are much too handsome to be hidden by odds and ends of useless things B) A few good oil-paintings from exhibitions in Moscow are on the walls
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It is Mrs Higgins’s at-home day B) Nobody has get arrived
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It stands near the fireplace. On the walls, engravings: mostly Piranesis and mezzotint portraits B) No paintings
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It was claimed by Shaw to be a didactic drama about phonetics, and its anti-heroic hero, Henry Higgins, is a phonetician, but the play is a terrible tragedy about love and the English class system B) The play is about the training Higgins gives to a royal girl to enable her to pass as a lady and is also about the repercussions of the experiment’s success
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) LIZA (with perfectly elegant diction). Walk! Not bloody likely. (Sensation). I am going in a plane B) Pickering gasps and sits down. Freddy goes out on the balcony to catch a plane for Eliza
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) LIZA When he was out of work, my mother used to give him fourpence and tell him to go out and not come back until he’d drunk himself cheerful and loving-like B) LIZA Theres lots of women has to make their husbands drunk to make them fit to live with
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) LIZA. Not a bit. It never did him no good what I could see B) LIZA But then he didn’t keep it up regular
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) London at 11.15 p.m, april 15th, 2009 B) Heavy snowfall
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mrs and Miss Eynsford Hill are the mother and daughter who sheltered from the rain in Covent Garden B) The mother is well bred, quiet, and has the habitual anxiety of straitened means.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mrs and Miss Eynsford Hill are the mother and grandmother who sheltered from the rain in Covent Garden B) Miss Eynsford Hill has acquired a gay air of being very much at home in society: the bravado of the elite
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS EYNSFORD HILL (suffering from shock). Wow!!! I really get off on all these new ways B) CLARA (throwing herself discontentedly into the Elizabethan chair). Oh, it’s all right, mamma, quite right. People will think we never go anywhere or see anybody if you are so old-fashioned
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS EYNSFORD HILL: I daresay I am very old-fashioned; but I do hope you wont begin using that expression, Clara B) MRS EYNSFORD HILL: I have got accustomed to hear you talking about men as rotters, and calling everything filthy and beastly; though I do think it horrible and unladylike
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS HIGGINS (dismayed). Henry! (Scolding him) What are you doing here today? It is my at-home day: you promised to go see a chealsea game in the pub B) HIGGINS. I must. Ive a job for you. A bloody job!
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS HIGGINS. No use, dear. I’m sorry; but I cant get round your alphabet; B) THE FLOWER GIRL (much distressed). It’s because I called him Captain. I meant no harm. (To the gentleman) Oh, sir, dont let him lay a charge agen me for a word like that
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS HIGGINS. Safe! To talk about our health! about our insides! perhaps about our dead bodies B) HIGGINS (impatiently). Well, she mustn’t talk about anything
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Mrs Higgins’s drawing room, in a flat on Chelsea Embankment, has three windows looking on the stadium; he can watch all the Chealsea games from the window B) The windows are open, giving access to a balcony with flowers in pots
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) MRS PEARCE. Well, sir, she says youll be glad to see her when you know what she’s come about. She’s a monster. B) HIGGINS. This is rather a bit of luck. I’ll shew you how I make records. We’ll promote her to Columbia Records
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Next day at II a. m. Higgins’s tourture room in Wimpole Street B) It is a room on the first floor, looking on the street, and was meant for the drawing room
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Oh, thatll be all right, Ive taught her to speak properly; and she has strict orders as to her behavior B) She’s to keep to two subjects: the weather and everybody’s health — Fine day and How do you do, you know — and not to let herself go on things in general. That will be safe
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) On the other side of the central door, to the left of the visitor, is a cabinet of a doctor B) On it is a telephone and the telephone directory
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) PICKERING (with enthusiasm). I came from Ukraine to meet you B) THE NOTE TAKER. Henry Higgins, author of Higgins’s Universal Alphabet
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Pickering is seated at the table, putting down some cards and a tuning-fork which he has been using to eat pelmeni B) Higgins is standing up near him, closing two or three file drawers which are hanging out
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) PICKERING. Dont ask me. Ive been away in India for several years; and manners have changed so much that I sometimes don’t know whether I’m at a respectable dinnertable or in a ship’s forecastle B) The door is opened violently; and Higgins enters with his gasmask on
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Shaw, George Bernard (was born July 26, 1856, Dublin – died November 2, 1950, Ayot St. Lawrence, Hertfordshire, England), Irish comic dramatist, literary critic, and Socialist propagandist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1925 B) The most significant British playwright since the 17th century, George Bernard Shaw was more than merely the best stand-up comedian of his time
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE BYSTANDER (to her). Stand it from him! B) THE FLOWER GIRL. Let him say what he likes. I want to have a truck with him
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE BYSTANDER. That aint a police whistle: that’s a sporting whistle B) THE FLOWER GIRL (still preoccupied with her wounded feelings). He’s no right to take away my hair. My hair is the same to me as any lady’s
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE BYSTANDERS GENERALLY Girl never said a word to him B) THE FLOWER GIRL (with feeble defiance). Ive a right to be here if I like, same as you Remember that you are a human being with a soul and the divine gift of articulate speech: that your native language is the language of Shakespear and Milton and The Bible; and dont sit there crooning like a bilious pigeon.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The corner between the fireplace and the window in Mrs Higgins’s drawing room is occupied by a divan cushioned in Morris chintz, bought in Dom Mebeli at Vodnyi Stadion B) HIGGINS Why, this is the girl I jotted down last night. She’s no use: Ive got all the records I want of the Lisson Grove lingo; and I’m not going to waste another cylinder on it. (To the girl) Be off with you: I dont want you
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The corner beyond, and most of the side wall, is occupied by a small toy piano, with the keyboard at the end furthest from the door, and a bench for the player extending the full length of the keyboard B) On the piano is a dessert dish heaped with fruit and sweets, mostly peanut butter
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The double heavy metal doors are in the middle of the back wall; and persons entering find in the corner to their right two tall file cabinets at right angles to one another against the walls B) In this corner stands a flat computer-table, on which are a phonograph, a laryngoscope, a row of tiny organ pipes with a bellows
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE FLOWER GIRL (breaking through them to the gentleman, crying wildly). Oh, sir, dont let him charge me. You dunno what it means to me. Theyll take away my character and drive me on the streets for speaking to gentlemen B) THE NOTE TAKER (coming forward on her right, the rest crowding after him). There! here! up! down!
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE FLOWER GIRL (quite overwhelmed, looking up at him in mingled wonder and deprecation without daring to raise her head). Ku-ka-re-kuh B) THE NOTE TAKER. A woman who utters such depressing and disgusting sounds is….the best woman in the whole world
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE FLOWER GIRL (resenting the reaction). He’s no gentleman, he aint, to interfere with princess Diana B) THE DAUGHTER (out of patience, pushing her way rudely to the front and displacing the gentleman, who politely retires to the other side of the pillar). What on earth is Freddy doing? I shall get pneumownia if I stay on the beach any longer
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The flower girl enters in state B) She has a hat with three ostrich feathers, orange, sky-blue, and red. She has a nearly clean apron, a shoddy coat and red polka-dot sharovary from her ukranian uncle
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE FLOWER GIRL You just shew me what youve wrote about me B) The note taker opens his book and holds it steadily under her nose, though the pressure of the mob trying to read it over his shoulders would upset a weaker man
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE FLOWER GIRL. Poor girl! Hard enough for her to live without being worrited and chivied B) All the rest have gone except the note taker, the gentleman, and the flower girl, who sits arranging her basket and still pitying herself in murmurs
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The FLOWER GIRL: Whats that? That aint proper writing. It’s cyrillics, for crissakes! B) HIGGINS( TO PICKERING). I was going to Russia to meet you
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The middle of the room is clear B) Besides the easy-chair, the piano bench, and two chairs at the phonograph table, there is one stray chair and a CD player
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE MOTHER. It’s quite fine now, Clara. We can walk to a motor bus. Come B) THE SARCASTIC BYSTANDER. I can tell where you come from. You come from Anwell. Go back there
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE MOTHER. Oh please, please, Clara. (Her daughter repudiates her with an angry shrug and retires haughtily) We should be so grateful to you, sir, if you found us a plane. (The note taker produces a whistle) Oh, thank you B) THE SARCASTIC BYSTANDER. There! I knowed he was a plain-clothes copper
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER (explosively). Woman: cease this detestable boohooing instantly; or else seek the shelter of some other place of worship B) THE SARCASTIC BYSTANDER. Yes: tell him where he come from if you want to go duck-hunting
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER (uproariously amused). Ha! ha! What a devil of a name! Excuse me B) THE DAUGHTER. Dont dare speak to me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER I can place any man within six miles. I can place him within two miles in London. Sometimes within two streets B) THE NOTE TAKER. Men begin in Kentish Town with Ј80 a year, and end in Park Lane with a hundred thousand
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER They want to drop Kentish Town; but they give themselves away every time they open their eyes B) THE FLOWER GIRL. Let him mind his own business and leave a poor girl—
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER Well, sir, in three months I could pass that girl off as a duchess at an ambassador’s garden party B) THE NOTE TAKER I could even get her a place as lady’s maid or shop assistant, which requires better English and computer skills
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) THE NOTE TAKER. Yes, you squashed cabbage leaf, you disgrace to the noble architecture of these columns, you incarnate insult to the English language: I could pass you off as the Queen of Sheba. (To the Gentleman) B) THE NOTE TAKER. You see this creature with her kerbstone English: the English that will keep her in the gutter to the end of her days
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The pathos of this deplorable figure of the flower girl, with its innocent vanity and consequential air, touches Pickering, who has already straightened himself in the presence of Mrs Pearce B) But as to Higgins, the only distinction he makes between men and women is that when he is neither bullying nor exclaiming to the heavens against some feather-weight cross, he coaxes women as a child coaxes its nurse when it wants to get anything out of her
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The scene in which Eliza Doolittle appears in high society when she has acquired a correct accent but no notion of polite conversation is one of the funniest in English drama B) Pygmalion has been both filmed (1838), winning an Academy Award for Shaw for his screenplay, and adapted into an immensely popular musical, index My Fair Lady (1856; motion-picture version, 1866)
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A). Simply phonetics. The science of speech. Thats my profession; also my hobby B) THE NOTE TAKER Happy is the man who can make a living by his hobby! You can spot a Moscovite or a Murmanchanin by his brogue
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A portrait of a popular _________ and a fashion plate of ladies’ dresses, all wildly beyond poor Eliza’s means, both torn from newspapers, are pinned up on the wall
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A taxi fare aint no object to me, _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A broken pane in the _________ is mended with paper
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A BYSTANDER (on the lady’s right). He wont get no cab not until half-past eleven, missus, when they come back after dropping their theatre _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A visionary and _________ whose philosophy of moral passion permeates his plays, Shaw was also the most trenchant pamphleteer since Swift
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A _________ hangs in the window; but its tenant died long ago: It remains as a memorial only
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: All are peering out gloomily at the rain, except one man with his back turned to the rest, wholly preoccupied with a _________ in which he is writing
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: An elderly gentleman of the amiable military type rushes into the shelter, and closes a dripping umbrella. He is in the same plight as Freddy, very wet about the ankles. He is in evening dress, with a light _________. He takes the place left vacant by the daughter
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: And left me with a cab on my _________! Damnation!
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: By bringing a bold critical intelligence to his many other areas of interest, he helped mold the political, economic, and sociological thought of three _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Dont you know where it is? In the Green Park, where the King lives. Goodbye. _________. Dont let me keep you standing there. Goodbye
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Freddy rushes in out of the rain from the _________ Street side, and comes between them, closing a dripping umbrella. He is a young man of twenty, in evening dress, very wet round the ankles
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. I shall simply get _________ for nothing
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. I tell you theyre all engaged. The rain was so sudden: nobody was prepared; and everybody had to take a cab. Ive been to Charing _________ one way and nearly to Ludgate Circus the other; and they were all engaged
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. Oh, very well: I’ll go, I’ll go. (He opens his umbrella and dashes off Strandwards, but comes into collision with a flower girl who is hurrying in for shelter, knocking her basket out of her _________. A blinding flash of lightning, followed instantly by a rattling peal of thunder, orchestrates the incident)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. Sorry (he _________ off)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. There wasnt one at _________ Square
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: FREDDY. There’s not one to be had for _________ or money
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Good for you, _________. Keep the shilling, darling, with best love from all at home
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Her features are no worse than theirs; but their condition leaves something to be desired; and she needs the services of a _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Her _________ are much the worse for wear. She is no doubt as clean as she can afford to be: but compared to the ladies she is very dirty
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Her _________ needs washing rather badly: it’s mousy color can hardly be natural. She wears a shoddy black coat that reaches nearly to her knees and is shaped to her waist. She has a brown skirt with a coarse apron
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Here _________, chronically weary, but too excited to go to bed, sits, counting her new riches and dreaming and planning what to do with them, until the gas goes out, when she enjoys for the first time the sensation of being able to put in another penny without grudging it
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (as he shuts the last drawer). Well, I think thats the whole _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: His development of a drama of moral passion and of intellectual conflict and debate, his revivifying the comedy of _________, his ventures into symbolic farce and into a theatre of disbelief helped shape the theatre of his time and after
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It was claimed by Shaw to be a didactic drama about phonetics, and its anti-heroic hero, Henry _________, is a phonetician, but the play is a humane comedy about love and the English class system
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I’m getting chilled to the bone. What can _________ be doing all this time? He’s been gone twenty minutes
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: London at 11.15 p.m. Torrents of heavy summer rain. Cab whistles blowing frantically in all directions. Pedestrians running for shelter into the portico of St. Paul’s church (not Wren’s Cathedral but lnigo Jones’s church in _________ Garden vegetable market), among them a lady and her daughter in evening dress
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Never mind, young _________. I’m going home in a taxi
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Of course I havn’t none. But I wasnt going to let him know that. You drive me _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: PICKERING ( rising and coming to the fireplace, where he plants himself with his back to the fire). No, thank you: not now. I’m quite _________ up for this morning
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Possibly Shaw’s _________ masterpiece, and certainly his funniest and most popular play, is Pygmalion (performed 1913)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Pygmalion has been both filmed (1938), winning an Academy Award for Shaw for his screenplay, and adapted into an immensely popular musical, index My Fair _________ (1956; motion-picture version, 1964)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Shaw, _________ Bernard (was born July 26, 1856, Dublin – died November 2, 1950, Ayot St. Lawrence, Hertfordshire, England), Irish comic dramatist, literary critic, and Socialist propagandist, winner of the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1925
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She is perhaps eighteen, perhaps _________, hardly older. She wears a little sailor hat of black straw that has long been exposed to the dust and soot of London and has seldom if ever been brushed
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She picks up the _________ and trudges up the alley with it to her lodging: a small room with very old wall paper hanging loose in the damp places
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: She sits down on the plinth of the column, sorting her flowers, on the lady’s right. She is not at all a romantic _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: So she takes off her shawl and __________ and adds them to the miscellaneous bedclothes
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE BYSTANDER. Well, it aint my fault, _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The church clock strikes the first _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. And what about us? Are we to stay here all night in this draught, with next to nothing on? You selfish _________—
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. If Freddy had a bit of _________, he would have got one at the theatre door
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. Make her give you the change. These things are only a _________ a bunch
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. No. lve nothing smaller than _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. Sixpence thrown away! Really, mamma, you might have spared _________ that. (She retreats in disgust behind the pillar)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE DAUGHTER. You havn’t _________ at all
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL (hopefully). I can give you change for a tanner, _________ lady
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL (picking up her scattered flowers and replacing them in the _________). There’s menners f’ yer! Ta-oo banches o voylets trod into the mad
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL (taking advantage of the military gentleman’s proximity to establish friendly relations with him). If it’s worse, it’s a sign it’s nearly over. So cheer up. _________; and buy a flower off a poor girl
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL. Nah then, Freddy: look wh’ y’ _________, deah
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL. Ow, eez ye-ooa son, is e? Wal, fewd dan y’ de-ooty bawmz a mather should, eed now bettern to spawl a pore gel’s flahrzn than ran awy athaht pyin. Will ye-oo py me f’them? (Here, with apologies, this desperate attempt to represent her dialect without a phonetic alphabet must be abandoned as unintelligible outside _________)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE FLOWER GIRL. Thank you kindly, _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE GENTLEMAN. I’m afraid not. It started worse than ever about two minutes ago (he goes to the plinth beside the _________ girl; puts up his foot on it, and stoops to turn down his trouser ends)
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE GENTLEMAN. I’m sorry. I havnt any _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The most _________ British playwright since the 17th century, George Bernard Shaw was more than merely the best comic dramatist of his time
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE MOTHER (on her daughter’s right). Not so long. But he ought to have got us a _________ by this
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE MOTHER (to Clara). Give it to me. (Clara parts reluctantly) Now. (To the girl) This is for your _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE MOTHER. But we must have a cab. We cant stand here until half-past eleven. It’s too _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE MOTHER. Oh, Freddy, there must be _________. You cant have tried
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE MOTHER. You really are very helpless, _________. Go again; and dont come back until you have found a cab
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The scene in which Eliza _________ appears in high society when she has acquired a correct accent but no notion of polite conversation is one of the funniest in English drama
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: THE _________. I heard you call him by it. Dont try to deceive me
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Then she kicks off her _________ and gets into bed without any further change
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: These are the only visible _________: the rest is the irreducible minimum of poverty’s needs
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: They walked to the _________ when the rain stopped
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: This prodigal mood does not extinguish her gnawing sense of the need for economy sufficiently to prevent her from calculating that she can dream and plan in bed more cheaply and warmly than sitting up without a _________
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: You ought to be stuffed with nails, you ought. Take the whole blooming _________ for sixpence.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: _________ Court, Drury Lane, next to Meiklejohn’s oil shop
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: _________ It’s really amazing. I havnt taken half of it in, you know
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel:The play is about the training Higgins gives to a _________ flower girl to enable her to pass as a lady and is also about the repercussions of the experiment’s success
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: PICKERING And I’ll pay for the _________
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (becoming excited as the idea grows on him). What is life but a _________ of inspired follies? The difficulty is to find them to do. Never lose a chance: it doesnt come every day. I shall make a duchess of this draggletailed guttersnipe
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (carried away). Yes: in six months — in three if she has a good ear and a quick tongue — I’ll take her anywhere and pass her off as _________. We’ll start today: now! this moment! Take her away and clean her, Mrs Pearce. Monkey Brand, if it wont come off any other way
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (continuing). She offers me two-fifths of her day’s income for a lesson. To-fifths of a millionaire’s income for a day would be somewhere about Ј60. It’s _________. By George, it’s enormous! it’s the biggest offer I ever had
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (suddenly resorting to the most thrillingly beautiful low tones in his best elocutionary style). By George, Eliza, the streets will be strewn with the bodies of _________ shooting themselves for your sake before Ive done with you
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (tempted, looking at her). It’s almost irresistible. She’s so deliciously _________ — so horribly dirty —
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (walking up and down the room, rattling his keys and his cash in his pockets). You know, Pickering, if you consider a shilling, not as a simple shilling, but as a percentage of this girl’s _________, it works out as fully equivalent to sixty or seventy guineas from a millionaire
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (with professional exquisiteness of modulation). I walk over everybody! My dear Mrs Pearce, my dear Pickering, I never had the slightest _________ of walking over anyone. All I propose is that we should be kind to this poor girl. We must help her to prepare and fit herself for her new station in life. If I did not express myself clearly it was because I did not wish to hurt her delicacy, or yours
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Figure it out. A millionaire has about Ј150 a day. She _________ about half-a-crown
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (protesting extremely). Ah-ah-ah-ah-ow-ow-oo-oo!!! I aint ..: I washed my face and hands afore I come, I did
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (rising, _________). Sixty pounds! What are you talking about? I never offered you sixty pounds. Where would I get—
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. Oh, I know whats right. A lady friend of mine gets French lessons for eighteenpence an hour from a real French _________. Well, you wouldn’t have the face to ask me the same for teaching me my own language as you would for French; so I wont give more than a shilling. Take it or leave it
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. Oh, you are real _________. Thank you, Captain
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE (placing herself behind Eliza’s chair) You mustnt speak to the _________ like that
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE (resolutely). You must be _________, Mr Higgins: really you must. You cant walk over everybody like this.
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE (uneasy). Oh, dont say that, sir: theres more ways than one of turning a girl’s head; and nobody can do it better than Mr Higgins, though he may not always mean it. I do hope, sir, you wont encourage him to do anything _________
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Well, the matter is, sir, that you cant take a girl up like that as if you were picking up a _________ on the beach
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Why not! But you dont know anything about her. What about her _________? She may be married
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: PICKERING. Higgins: I’m interested. What about the ambassador’s garden party? I’ll say you’re the greatest teacher alive if you make that good. I’ll bet you all the _________ of the experiment you cant do it.
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: PICKERING. Youre certainly not going to turn her head with _________, Higgins
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: At the end of six months you shall go to Buckingham Palace in a carriage, beautifully _________. If the King finds out youre not a lady, you will be taken by the police to the Tower of London, where your head will be cut off as a warning to other presumptuous flower girls.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Eliza is taken upstairs to the third floor greatly to her surprise; for she expected to be taken down to the scullery. There Mrs _________ opens a door and takes her into a spare bedroom
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (deftly retrieving the handkerchief and intercepting her on her reluctant way to the door). Youre an _________ wicked girl. This is my return for offering to take you out of the gutter and dress you beautifully and make a lady of you
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (impatiently). Whats to become of her if I leave her in the _________? Tell me that, Mrs Pearce
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (snatching a chocolate cream from the piano, his eyes suddenly beginning to twinkle with mischief). Have some _________, Eliza
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (storming on). Take all her clothes off and burn them. Ring up Whiteley or _________ for new ones. Wrap her up in brown paper til they come
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS (wounded in his tenderest point by her insensibility to his elocution). Oh, indeed! I’m _________, am I? Very well, Mrs Pearce: you neednt order the new clothes for her. Throw her out
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. At her age! Nonsense! Time enough to think of the future when you havn’t any future to think of. No, Eliza: do as this lady does: think of other people’s futures; but never think of your own. Think of _________, and taxis, and gold and diamonds
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Listen, Eliza. I think you said you came in a _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Oh, pay her whatever is necessary: put it down in the housekeeping book. (Impatiently) What on earth will she want with money? She’ll have her _________ and her clothes. She’ll only drink if you give her money
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Pledge of good faith, Eliza. I eat one half: you eat the other. (Liza opens her mouth to retort: he pops the half chocolate into it). You shall have _________ of them, barrels of them, every day. You shall live on them
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Thats all right. Thank you, Mrs Pearce. Bundle her off to the _________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. There! Thats all youll get out of Eliza. Ah-ah-ow-oo! No use explaining. As a military man you ought to know that. Give her her orders: thats enough for her. Eliza: you are to live here for the next six months, learning how to speak _________, like a lady in a florist’s shop.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. To get her to talk grammar. The mere _________ is easy enough
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Very well, then, what on earth is all this fuss about? The girl doesnt belong to anybody — is no use to anybody but me. (He goes to Mrs Pearce and begins coaxing). You can adopt her, Mrs Pearce: I’m sure a daughter would be a great amusement to you. Now dont make any more _________. Take her down-stairs; and –
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. We want none of your Lisson Grove prudery here, young woman. Youve got to learn to behave like a duchess. Take her away, Mrs Pearce. If she gives you any _________, wallop her
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. Well, when Ive done with her, we can throw her back into the gutter; and then it will be her own _________ again; so thats all right
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. You have, Eliza; and in future you shall have as many taxis as you want. You shall go up and down and round the town in a _________ every day. Think of that, Eliza
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: HIGGINS. You shall remain so, Eliza, under the care of Mrs Pearce. And you shall marry an officer in the Guards, with a beautiful moustache: the son of a marquis, who will disinherit him for marrying you, but will _________ when he sees your beauty and goodness—
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: If you are not found out, you shall have a present of seven-and-sixpence to start life with as a lady in a shop. If you refuse this offer you will be a most ungrateful _________ girl; and the angels will weep for you.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: If youre good and do whatever youre told, you shall sleep in a proper bedroom, and have lots to eat, and money to buy chocolates and take rides in taxis. If youre naughty and idle you will sleep in the back kitchen among the black _________, and be walloped by Mrs Pearce with a broomstick.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (almost in tears). I didn’t want no _________. I wouldnt have taken them (she throws away the handkerchief). I can buy my own clothes
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (as she goes out). Well, what I say is right. I wont go near the King, not if I’m going to have my head cut off. If I’d known what I was letting myself in for, I wouldnt have come here. I always been a good girl; and I never offered to say a word to him; and I don’t owe him nothing; and I dont care; and I wont be put upon; and I have my _________ the same as anyone else —
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (halting, tempted). How do I know what might be in them? Ive heard of _________ being drugged by the like of you
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (rising reluctantly and suspiciously). Youre a great bully, you are. I wont stay here if I dont like. I wont let nobody wallop me. I never asked to go to Bucknam Palace, I didnt. I was never in trouble with the police, not me. I’m a good _________ —
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (springing up and running between Pickering and Mrs Pearce for protection). No I’ll call the _________, I will
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (turning on him). Oh you are a brute. It’s a lie: nobody ever saw the sign of liquor on me. (To Pickering) Oh, sir: youre a _________: dont let him speak to me like that
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (whimpering). Nah-ow. You got no _________ to touch me
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA (who has disposed of the chocolate after being nearly choked by it). I wouldnt have ate it, only I’m too _________. to take it out of my mouth
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. (rising and squaring herself determinedly). I’m going away. He’s off his chump, he is. I dont want no balmies _________ me
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. I aint got no mother. Her that turned me out was my sixth stepmother. But I done without them. And I’m a good _________, I am
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. I aint got no parents. They told me I was _________ enough to earn my own living and turned me out
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. I dont want to talk grammar. I want to _________ like a lady in a flower-shop
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. No: I dont want no gold and no _________. I’m a good girl, I am. (She sits down again, with an attempt at dignity)
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. Oh, youve no feeling heart in you: you dont care for nothing but _________. (She rises and takes the floor resolutely) Here! Ive had enough of this. I’m going (making for the door). You ought to be ashamed of yourself, you ought
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. Well, what if I did? Ive as good a right to take a _________as anyone else
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: LIZA. Youre no _________, youre not, to talk of such things. I’m a good girl, I am; and I know what the like of you are, I do
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE (patiently). I think youd better let me speak to the girl properly in private. I dont know that I can take charge of her or consent to the arrangement at all. Of course I know you dont mean her any _________; but when you get what you call interested in people’s accents, you never think or care what may happen to them or you. Come with me, Eliza
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE (resolutely). You must be _________, Mr Higgins: really you must. You cant walk over everybody like this
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Mrs Pearce shuts the door; and _________’s plaints are no longer audible
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. But whats to become of her? Is she to be paid anything? Do be _________, sir
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Dont answer back, _________. You dont understand the gentleman. Come with me. (She leads the way to the door, and holds it open for Eliza)
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Mr Higgins: youre _________ the girl. It’s not right. She should think of the future
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Stop, Mr Higgins. I wont allow it. It’s you that are _________. Go home to your parents, girl; and tell them to take better care of you
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Thats her _________ business, not yours, Mr Higgins
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. Will you please keep to the point, Mr Higgins. I want to know on what terms the girl is to be here. Is she to have any _________? And what is to become of her when you’ve finished your teaching? You must look ahead a little
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. You _________ now what comes of being saucy. (Indicating the door) This way, please
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: MRS PEARCE. _________, sir. You mustnt talk like that to her
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: PICKERING. Excuse me, Higgins: but I really must interfere. Mrs Pearce is quite right. If this girl is to put _________ in your hands for six months for an experiment in teaching, she must understand thoroughly what she’s doing
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: PICKERING. Very _________, Higgins; but not to the present point. (To Eliza). Miss Doolittle —
Choose the right preposition: He goes to the central window, through which with his back to the company, he contemplates the river and the flowers in Battersea Park _________ the opposite bank as if they were a frozen desert
Choose the right preposition: He goes _________ the divan, stumbling into the fender and over the fire-irons on his way; extricating himself
Choose the right preposition: He shakes Freddy’s hand, and almost slings him on to the ottoman _________ his face to the window; then comes round to the other side of it
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS (resignedly). It dont matter, anyhow. Sit _________
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS (rising and coming to her to coax her). Oh, thatll be all right, Ive taught her to speak properly; and she has strict orders .. to her behavior
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS (staring at her). Ive seen you before somewhere. I havnt the ghost _________ a notion where: but Ive heard your voice. (Drearily) It doesnt matter. Youd better sit down
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS Am I? Very sorry…this. (Beaming suddenly) I suppose I am, you know. (Uproariously) Ha, ha
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS. Oh, have I been rude _________ you? I didnt mean to be
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS. Oh, I cant be bothered with young women. My idea of a lovable woman is somebody as like you _________ possible
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS. Well, here we are, anyhow! (He sits down on the ottoman next Mrs Eynsford Hill, on her left). And now, what the devil are we going to talk _________ until Eliza comes
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS. Well, it’s like this. She’s a common flower girl. I picked her _________ the kerbstone
Choose the right preposition: HIGGINS. You see, Ive got her pronunciation all right; but you have to consider the question… not only how a girl pronounces, but what she pronounces; and that’s where—
Choose the right preposition: I shall never get into the way _________ seriously liking young women: some habits lie too deep to be changed (Rising abruptly and walking about, jingling his money and his keys in his trouser pockets). Besides, theyre all idiots
Choose the right preposition: Mrs and Miss Eynsford Hill are the mother and daughter who sheltered _________ the rain in Covent Garden
Choose the right preposition: MRS EYNSFORD HILL. Your celebrated son! I have _________ longed to meet you, Professor Higgins
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS (rising and making her sit down again). No, no. You couldnt have come more fortunately: we want you to meet a friend _________ ours
Choose the right preposition: Mrs Higgins looks _________ him, but controls herself and says nothing
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS. Henry, please! (He is about to sit on the edge of the table). Dont sit _________ my writing-table: youll break it
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS. Henry: you are the life and soul _________the Royal Society’s soirйes; but really youre rather trying on more commonplace occasions
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS. I’m sorry to say _________you that my celebrated son has no manners. You musnt mind him
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS. No. Stop fidgeting and take your hands out of your pockets (With a gesture of despair, he obeys and sits down again). That’s a good boy. Now tell me _________ the girl
Choose the right preposition: MRS HIGGINS. Well, you never fall _________ love with anyone under forty-five. .
Choose the right preposition: She has a quick ear; and she’s been easier to teach than my middle-class pupils because she’s had to learn a lot…a complete new language. .
Choose the right preposition: She talks English almost _________ you talk French
Choose the right preposition: She’s to keep to two subjects: the weather and everybody’s health — Fine day and How do you do, you know — and not to let herself go on things _________ general. That will be safe
Choose the right preposition: That’s a good boy. Now tell me _________ the girl
Choose the right preposition: The daughter has acquired a gay air of being very much _________ home in society: the bravado of genteel poverty
Choose the right preposition: The mother is well bred, quiet, and has the habitual anxiety .. straitened means.
Choose the right preposition: The parlormaid returns, ushering _________ Pickering
Choose the right preposition: When will you discover that there are some rather nice-looking young women _________ here
Choose the right preposition: With muttered imprecations; and finishing his disastrous journey _________ throwing himself so impatiently on the divan that he almost breaks it. Mrs Higgins looks at him, but controls herself and says nothing
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: A drop of booze just takes that off and (to make) him happy
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: CLARA (rising). Oh yes: we (to have) three at-homes to go to still. Goodbye, Mrs Higgins. Goodbye, Colonel Pickering. Goodbye, Professor Higgins
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: CLARA (throwing herself discontentedly into the Elizabethan chair). Oh, it’s all right, mamma, quite right. People will (to think) we never go anywhere or see anybody if you are so old-fashioned
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: CLARA. It’s all a matter of habit. Theres no right or wrong in it. Nobody (to mean) anything by it. And it’s so quaint, and gives such a smart emphasis to things that are not in themselves very witty. I find the new small talk delightful and quite innocent
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Eliza, who is exquisitely dressed, produces an impression of such remarkable distinction and beauty as she (to enter) that they all rise, quite fluttered. Guided by Higgins’s signals, she comes to Mrs Higgins with studied grace
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Fairly blue with it, she was. They all thought she (to be) dead; but my father he kept ladling gin down her throat til she came to so sudden that she bit the bowl off the spoon
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: FREDDY (opening the door for her). Are you (to walk) across the Park, Miss Doolittle? If so—
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: FREDDY. The new small talk. You (to do) it so awfully well
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS (coming grimly at her from the divan, and accompanying her to the door). Goodbye. (to be) sure you try on that small talk at the three at-homes. Dont be nervous about it. Pitch it in strong
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS (hastily). Oh, thats the new small talk. To do a person in (to mean) to kill them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS (rising hastily and running to Mrs Higgins). Here she (to be), mother. (He stands on tiptoe and makes signs over his mother’s head to Eliza to indicate to her which lady is her hostess)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS (turning hopefully). Yes, by George! We want two or three people. You ll (to do) as well as anybody else
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS. Cynical! Who the dickens (to say) it was cynical? I mean it wouldnt be decent
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS. What they think they (ought) to think is had enough. Lord knows: but what they really think would break up the whole show
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: HIGGINS. You (to see), we’re all savages, more or less. We’re supposed to be civilized and cultured — to know all about poetry and philosophy and art and science, and so on
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I have got accustomed to hear you talking about men as rotters, and calling everything filthy and beastly; though I (to do) think it horrible and unladylike. But this last is really too much
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA (looking round at him; taking the hint; and rising). Well: I (must) go
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA (piling up the indictment). What call would a woman with that strength in her (to have) to die of influenza? What become of her new straw hat that should have come to me? Somebody pinched it; and what I say is, them as pinched it done her in
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA (Speaking with pedantic correctness of pronunciation and great beauty of tone). How do you do, Mrs Higgins? (She gasps slightly in making sure of the H in Higgins, but is quite successful). Mr Higgins told me I (may) come
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA (with perfectly elegant diction). Walk! Not bloody likely. (Sensation). I am (to go) in a taxi. (She goes out)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA So (to please) to have met you. Goodbye. (She shakes hands with Mrs Higgins)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. Do I not! Them she lived with would have (to kill) her for a hat-pin, let alone a hat
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. Not a bit. It never (to do) him no harm what I could see. But then he did not keep it up regular
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. Not her. Gin was mother’s milk to her. Besides, he’d (to pour) so much down his own throat that he knew the good of it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. The shallow depression in the west of these islands is likely to move slowly in an easterly direction. There (to be) no indications of any great change in the barometrical situation
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. What is wrong with that, young man? I (to bet) I got it right
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: LIZA. Y-e-e-e-es, Lord love you! Why should she die of influenza? She come through diphtheria right enough the year before. I (to see) her with my own eyes
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MISS EYNSFORD HILL (who considers Higgins quite eligible matrimonially). I sympathize. I havnt any small talk. If people would only (to be) frank and say what they really think
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL (rising). Well, after that, I think it’s time for us to (go). Pickering and Higgins rise
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL (seriously). Oh! I(to be) sure you dont mean that, Mr Higgins
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL (suffering from shock). Well I really cant get (to use) to the new ways
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL (to Pickering). It’s no use. I (shell) never be able to bring myself to use that word
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL. I (to daresay) I am very old-fashioned; but I do hope you wont begin using that expression, Clara
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HILL. I’m sure I hope it wont turn cold. Theres so much influenza about. It (to run) right through our whole family regularly every spring
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS EYNSFORD HlLL. But it cant (to have) been right for your father to pour spirits down her throat like that. It might have killed her
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS HIGGINS (cordially). Quite right: I’m very glad indeed to (see) you
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: MRS HIGGINS. Well, you (to know) my days
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: On the burst, as you, might (to say), from time to time. And always more agreeable when he had a drop in
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Pickering gasps and sits down. Freddy (to go) out on the balcony to catch another glimpse of Eliza
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: PICKERING. Dont ask me. Ive (to bee) away in India for several years; and manners have changed so much that I sometimes don’t know whether I’m at a respectable dinnertable or in a ship’s forecastle
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: PICKERING. Dont. It’s not compulsory, you (to know). Youll get on quite well without it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There’s lots of women (to have) to make their husbands drunk to make them fit to live with
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Well, thats a mercy, anyhow. (Expansively) What I always say (to be)—
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When he was out of work, my mother used to give him fourpence and tell him to go out and not come back until he’d (to drink) himself cheerful and loving-like
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: You see, it’s like this. If a man (to have) a bit of a conscience, it always takes him when he’s sober; and then it makes him low-spirited


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  0097.02.07;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Cab - лондонское такси:
Colonel Pickering came back to England to study Sanscrit:
Consequential air по-русски означает "важное, с осознанием собственной значимости, поведение":
Drawing room по-русски означает "гостиная":
Freddy, Charlie - имена, употребляемые как обращение вообще (ср. рус. "Вася"):
It was Higgins who gave Liza some money:
Kerbstone English - "английский язык водосточных канав":
Liza would like to get rid of her Cockney because she has fallen in love with Henry Higgins:
Park Lane, Lisson Grove - улицы в Гастингсе:
St. Paul's church was built by Christopher Wren, the famous British architect:
The Flower girl (Eliza) is introduced as a dirty girl from a gutter:
The most significant British playwright since the 17th century, George Bernard Shaw was the best comic dramatist of his time:
The Note taker proves to be Henry Higgins, Professor of Phonetics:
The note taker turns to be Colonel Pickering:
The phrase "A woman who utters such depressing and disgusting sounds has no right to be anywhere - no right to live," was said by the flower girl:
The rent for Liza's room is four shillings a week:
When Liza comes to see Professor Higgins she is dressed in a pretentious and pathetic way:
Автор романа "Пигмалион" Бернард Шоу родился в Ирландии в середине 19 века:


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  0097.02.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо It is a room … the first floor, looking on the street, and was meant for the drawing room
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо Mrs Higgins was brought … on Moris and Burne Jones
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо The shallow depression in the west of these islands is likely to move slowly … an easterly direction
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо You infamous creature, how dare you accuse me … such a thing?
Выберите глагол со значением «красть»
Выберите глагол со значением «спускаться»
Выберите глагол со значением «щелкать»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “ambassador”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “appearance”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “enthusiasm”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “extinguish”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “magnanimous”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “miscellaneous”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “phonetics”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “prodigious”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “pronunciation”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “provocation”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “sociological”:
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова “vehement”:
Выберите синоним глагола “to dare”
Выберите синоним глагола “to imagine”
Выберите синоним глагола “to pretend”
Выберите синоним глагола “to trudge”
Выберите синоним глагола “to utter”
Выберите синоним глагола “to whisper”
Выберите синоним глагола “to worry”
Выберите синоним слова “audible”
Выберите синоним слова “common”
Выберите синоним слова “compulsory”
Выберите синоним слова “creature”
Выберите синоним слова “dear”
Выберите синоним слова “dignity”
Выберите синоним слова “divine”
Выберите синоним слова “evident”
Выберите синоним слова “nonsense”
Выберите синоним слова “purpose”
Выберите синоним слова “remain”
Выберите синоним слова “tenancy”
Выберите синоним слова “wonder”
Выберите слово со значением «бледность»
Выберите слово со значением «веер»
Выберите слово со значением «вырезанный»
Выберите слово со значением «достоинство»
Выберите слово со значением «доступ»
Выберите слово со значением «жалоба» («жалобы»)
Выберите слово со значением «жук»
Выберите слово со значением «насекомое»
Выберите слово со значением «недоверчиво»
Выберите слово со значением «отчаяние»
Выберите слово со значением «раздражение»
Выберите слово со значением «рассеянно»
Выберите слово со значением «смирение»
Выберите слово со значением «упрек»
Выражение “to peer out” на русский язык переводится как
Глагол “to repudiate” на русский язык переводится как
Глагол “to retort” на русский язык переводится как
Дополните предложение Current of air in a room, chimney or other enclosed place is called …
Дополните предложение If you knock a man down with your car, and then call him a fool, you are adding insult to …
Дополните предложение Person, walking in a street, is called …
Дополните предложение The way in which the language is spoken is called …
Дополните предложение When something makes or becomes greater in size, number, degree, etc, it means that it …
Дополните предложение When something or somebody causes trouble it or he/she is called …
Дополните предложение When you do something in a right, correct, suitable way you do it …
Дополните предложение When you look closely, as if unable to see well, you …
Дополните предложение When you say that you will have nothing more to do with something or somebody you … it/he/she
Дополните предложение When you take all your attention so that attention is not given to other matters, you are …
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос The church clock strikes the first quarter,
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос George Bernard Shaw was more than merely the best comic dramatist of his time,
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос He said that he could pass the flower girl off as a duchess at an ambassador’s garden party in three months,
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос Liza picks up the basket and trudges up the alley with it to her lodging,
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос The note taker’s profession was also his hobby,
Задайте правильно разделительный вопрос The sarcastic bystander could easily tell a person where he or she came from,
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста Eliza Doolittle was really in love with
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста George Bernard Show is
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста Henry Higgins was
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста The title of the play is
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста “Pygmalion” was claimed by Shaw to be
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста Henry Higgins wanted to teach Liza to speak standard English because
Продолжите предложение соответственно содержанию текста Mrs Pearce is not happy to hear that Professor undertakes to teach Liza proper accent because
Слово “ankle” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “brusquely” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “coyly” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “fit” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “frantically” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “gloomily” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “heartily” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “idle” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “molestation” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “presumptuous” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “queer” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “saucy” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “seldom” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “torrents”на русский язык переводится как
Слово “violently” на русский язык переводится как
Слово “vital” на русский язык переводится как


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ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George grew red in the face. B) A few weeks ago Tom became engaged to a woman old enough to be his great grandmother
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George was evidently very much upset. B) “Do you know what happened in my previous life, when I was Sherlock Holmes?” he asked me
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry never says a word B) Drunk or sober he is equally silent on that subject and if they insist grows angry and leaves them
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry ran out of matches and was afraid that his fire would go out, so he only slept in snatches, pouring gasoline in the fire from time to time all day and all night B) He came to the end of his provisions and lived on chickens, fish and Rolton soup. Sometimes he got a Doshirak
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry repeated it over and over again B) I asked him if he read
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry was moved when my skipper told him that an old man of his own age whom he had known for a long time was here B) “Old Charlie dead – that’s too bad. Old Charlie dead.”
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I have never seen George in such a rage as when he heard that Tom and Cronshaw had gone off together to Las Vegas the moment they cashed the cheque B) They spent a happy month in Vegas
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) If George could oblige Tom with a couple of hundred pounds he didn’t mind for the honour of the family giving it up B) George paid
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It is believed that he has, hidden away somewhere, a collection of magnificent pearls. During the war no pearlers came out and for years German Harry never saw a living soul B) For all he knew, a terrible epidemic had killed off the entire human race and German Harry was the only man alive with AIDS
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I’ve always done my duty in that state of life in which it has pleased Providence to place me B) And you can’t deny that Tom has been an idle, worthless, dissolute and dishonourable rogue. If there were any justice he’d be in the workhouse
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Now Tom’s wife died and left him nothing B) She left him some cakes and sunflower seeds in a little plastic bag.
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The skipper engaged four Torres Straits islanders as crew (the boat was but nineteen tons) and we robbed the local store for canned goods B) A day or two before I sailed a man who owned a number of pearlers came to me and asked whether on my way I would stop at the island of Trebucket and leave a sack of flour, another of rice, and some erotic magazines for the hermit who lived there
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) There was a double bed in German Harry’s room, a table, and his various household utensils, including an electric can opener, a microwave oven and even the Internet B) Under a tree in front of it was a table and a bench. Behind was an enclosed run for his chickens and a pool for crocodiles
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Though now and then opportunity had been given him to leave German Harry had never taken it B) A tipical man and a usual story
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) And then I foresaw the end B) One day a pearl fisher would land on the island and German Harry would not be waiting for him, silent and suspicious, at the water’s edge
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) As I looked at the wrinkled, mean old face of German Harry I wondered what was the story of those three hundred dreadful years that had made him welcome this long imprisonment B) I sought to see behind those pale blue eyes of his what secrets they were that he would carry to his grave
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) But I do not believe he would find pearls: German Harry would have seen to it that none should discover the treasure. He would donate it to a local church B) Then the pearl fisher would go back into his dinghy and the island once more would be full of people
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Cronshaw was determined to take the matter into court B) He said Tom was a scoundrel and should be punished. It cost George an infinite deal of trouble and having to sleep with some powerful people to settle the affair
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) During the last four months of the year there may be two or three local gorillas about and not infrequently after the day’s work they will row in and spend an evening with German Harry B) They try to make him drunk and then they ask him what happened during those three years after the two boat-loads came to the island
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) For twenty years Tom raced and gambled, philandered with the prettiest girls, danced, ate in the most expensive restaurants, and played paintball B) He always looked as if he had just stepped out of a bandbox
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George had a good wife, to whom he had never been unfaithful even in thought, and four daughters to whom he was the best of fathers B) He made a point of saving a third of his income and his plan was to retire at fifty-five to a little house in the country where he proposed to cultivate marihuana
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George was a circus clown and a comedian B) George was poor, his reputation was compromised
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George was in his office every morning at nine-thirty and never left it till six B) He was honest, industrious and worthy
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) George’s life was full of blame B) He was glad that he was growing old because Tom was growing younger
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry agreed to go with the skipper B) He said that during those three years he had seen such terrible things that he had a horror of his fellow-men and wished never to live with them again
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry didn’t care what I was doing in these seas B) He used words with difficulty, talking russian to us, and it was a little uncanny to hear him mumble away as though we were not there
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry has a whale boat and used to go fishing in it, but now he is no longer strong enough to manage its unwieldy bulk so he just sails paper boats on waterpools B) There is abundant pearl shell on the reef that surrounds his island and this he used to collect and sell to the pearlers for tobacco, and sometimes he found a good pearl for which he got a considerable sum
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry looked upon it with a jealous, proprietary right; he called it “my health resort” and he feared that the coconuts that covered it would tempt some enterprising trader B) He looked at me with desire
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry seemed to be occupied with nothing but his food, his dogs and his chickens B) If what they tell us in books were true his long communion with nature and the sea should have taught him many subtle secrets. And it just did!
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry was a man of over seventy, very bald, hatchet-faced, with a grey beard, and he walked with a roll so that you could never have taken him for anything but a sea-faring man B) German Harry sunburn made his blue eyes look very pale and they were surrounded by wrinkles as though for long years he had spent interminable hours scanning the vacant sea
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry was a prince B) He was a young prince who left his royal family and ran away
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry was pleased to see us B) He accepted our gifts as a right, without thanks, and grumbled a little because something or other he needed had not been brought
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry was silent and morose B) He was not interested in the news we had to give him, for the outside world was no concern of his: the only thing he cared about was his island
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry wore dungarees and a singlet, patched, but neat and clean B) The house to which he presently led us consisted of a single room with minibar and satelite TV with the channel Kultura
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry would say no more B) He was absolutely fixed in his determination to stay, entirely by himself, in that lonely place
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) German Harry’s history went back a long way B) Thirty years before, German Harry had been an able seaman on a sailing vessel that was wrecked in those treacherous waters
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) He would go up to the hut and there, lying on the bed, unrecognisable, he would see all that remained of what had once been a man(German Harry) B) Perhaps then he would hunt high and low for the great mass of dollars that has haunted the fancy of so many adventurers
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I learned nothing about German Harry as we sailed across the desolate sea B) The Torres Straits are peppered with pirates
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I never lent Tom fifty roubles without feeling that I was in his debt B) Tom Ramsay knew no-one and no-one knew Tom Ramsay
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I saw the hotel, sheltered by trees, in which German Harry lived, and as we approached he sauntered down slowly to the water’s edge B) We shouted a greeting, but he did not answer
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I shall have thirty thousand pounds by the time I’m fifty B) For twenty-five years I’ve said that Tom would end in the gutter
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I suppose every family has a black cat B) Tom had been a sore trial to his family for twenty years, because he was a cat and he was black
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I was in Thursday Island and I wanted very much to go to New Guinea. B) Now the only way in which I could do this was by getting a pearling lugger to take me across the Arafura Sea
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) I was prepared for the best B) I wondered if Tom had got into the hands of the somali pirates at last. George could hardly bring himself to speak
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It appeared that the hermit had lived by himself on this remote and tiny island for thirty years, and when opportunity occurred provisions were sent to him by the russian government B) He said that he was a Dane, but in the Torres Straits he was known as German Harry
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) It was all very well when Tom was young and good-looking, but he’s only a year younger than I am. I am 98 and he is 97. B) In four years he’ll be fifty. He won’t find life so easy then
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Of late new pearling grounds have been discovered near Trebucket and in the autumn pearlers, visiting it now and then, have given German B) Harry various necessities so that he has been able to make himself sufficiently comfortable. They bring him papers, bags of flour and rice, and canned meats
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Once or twice George fell to Tom’s promises of amendment and gave him considerable sums in order that he might make a fresh start. He also got him a job in Yukos B) On these Tom bought a motorcar and some very nice jewellery
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Once Tom nearly went to Butyrskaya prison B) George was so happy that he started to make faces and put his tongue out at people
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) One day, without warning, Tom announced that he didn’t like work and that he wasn’t suited for marriage B) Tom wanted to enjoy himself
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Poor George! I sympathised with him B) I wondered now as I sat down beside him what infamous thing Tom had done
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Poor George, only a year older than his scapegrace brother, looked six B) He had never taken more than a fortnight’s holiday in the year for a quarter of a century
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Rumours of-his doings reached his relations from time to time and they were profoundly shocked B) Tom certainly had a terrible time
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Sixteen men had landed on the island, but when at last a schooner, driven from her course by stress of weather, put in for shelter, none was left B) When the storm abated the skipper took four of the men on the island on board and eventually landed them at Sochi
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The pearl fishery at that time was in a bad way and a flock of neat little craft lay anchored in the harbour B) I found a skipper with nothing much to do (the journey to Merauke and back could hardly take him less than a month) and with him I made a ship
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) The Ramsays shook their bodies and asked what would happen when his money was spent B) They soon found out: he borrowed
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) There is no opening in the reef and the lugger had to anchor a mile from the shore. We got into a dinghy with the provisions. B) It was a stiff pull, but the sea was very calm and pleasant
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Though Tom was forty-six you would never have taken him for more than thirty-five B) He was a most amusing companion and though you knew he was perfectly worthless you could not but enjoy his society
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom had begun life decently enough: he went into business, married and had two children. B) The Ramsays were perfectly respectable people and there was every reason to suppose that Tom Ramsay would be homless and live in the streets
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom had gone too far. To Alaska B) He had been wild, thoughtless and selfish, but he had never before done anything dishonest, by which George meant illegal
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom had high spirits, an unfailing gaiety and incredible charm B) I always hated and complained about the contributions he regularly levied on me for the necessities of his existence
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom left his wife and his lover B) Tom had a little money and he spent two happy years in the various capitals of Africa
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom made a steady income from his friends and he made friends easily B) But he always said that the money you spent on necessities was boring; the money that was amusing to spend was the money you spent on helping children of Ethiopia to have food
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom often asked me to excellent dinners in his charming house in Chertanovo, and if he occasionally borrows a trifle from me, that is merely from force of habit B) It is never more than a sovereign
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom wanted to torture himself B) He would listen to no expostulations
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Tom was charming and unscrupulous B) I have never met anyone to whom it was more difficult to refuse a loan
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) Two boats managed to get away and eventually hit upon the desert island of Trebucket B) This is well out of the line of traffic and it was three hundred years before any ship sighted the castaways
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) We had been driven by bad weather to take shelter and had spent a couple of days at an island on the way B) Trebucket is a low island, perhaps a mile round, covered with coconuts, just raised above the level of the sea and surrounded by a reef so that it can be approached only on one side. On the other side there ia a chain of hotels and a beachline for tourists to swim
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) When circumstances forced George to realise that his brother would never settle down and he washed his hands of him, Tom, without a qualm, began to blackmail him B) It was not very nice for a respectable lawyer to find his brother shaking cocktails behind the bar of his favourite restaurant or to see him waiting on the boxseat of a taxi outside his club
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) You cannot allow your only brother to go to gaol B) The man Tom had cheated, a man called Cronshaw, was vindictive
Which of the two assertions were truly made by the author and which are made up? A) You’re not going to deny that all my life l’ve been hardworking, decent, respectable and straightforward thief B) After a life of industry and thrift I can look forward to retiring on a small income in gilt-edged securities
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A criminal! Oh, ____________ I suppose I am. But — but I never felt like that
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A faint sound came from Sir Joseph’s lips — they had gone a strange ____________ colour. His eyes stared at Poirot. Then, with a shaking hand, he drew out a cheque and tore it into pieces
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: A few moments later you gave the alarm that the ____________ had been stolen
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: And the ____________ you extracted from Lady Hoggin must be returned
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: As for you, mon ___________,” said Hercule, addressing Augustus, “there is one thing that I wish you would give me
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: As Poirot came in, a Pekinese dog jumped off the sofa and sniffed him, his intelligent eyes fixed on the man’s …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Augustus put it into my head — that, combined with the fact that so many rich women have ____________ dogs
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But really, Mr. ____________ it was the most amazing thing. It all happened in a second.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: But, you see, I am not a clever ____________ at all, and I’ve no training and I’m getting older — and I am terrified for the future.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Curiously enough, you recall to me one of my former clients in ____________ many years ago — he was very like you in appearance.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: He was a wealthy soap manufacturer. He poisoned his ____________ in order to marry his secretary. Yes — the resemblance is very remarkable
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Her Pekinese was called ____________ Poo. Miss Keble, Mrs. Samuelson’s companion, too, had been blamed for Nanki Poo’s disappearance
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I felt that to take a little money away from these people who really wouldn’t miss it and hadn’t been too scrupulous in acquiring it — well, really, it hardly seemed ____________ at all
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I had already learned that you have once been left a ____________ dog and had an invalid sister
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I had only to ask my invaluable servant to look for a small flat within a certain radius occupied by an invalid lady who had a Pekinese dog and a ____________ who visited her once a week
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I knew it would. The plan worked beautifully every time. In nine cases out of ten the companion was given the letter with the ____________ to post
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I think I can help you. But you must promise that there will be no more disappearing …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I think, that you are a kind man, ____________ Poirot, and that possibly you might understand. You see, I’ve been so terribly afraid
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: If you ____________ the money, there must be no questions asked
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It is your mantle of invisibility that I need. In all these cases nobody for a moment suspected that there was a second ____________ involved. Augustus possessed the lion’s skin of invisibility
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: It was really having ____________ to put it into my mind. You see, to most people, one Pekinese is very much like another
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: I’ve known so many people like I am — nobody wants you and you live in one room and you can’t have a fire and not very much to eat, and at last you can’t even pay the ____________ of your room.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Lady ____________ said to her husband: “Funny, this tonic tastes quite different. It hasn’t got that bitter taste any more.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Miss Carnaby said simply: “Shan Tung was the _______”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: My fees will not be very high. This was a very unimportant matter. Nowadays nearly all my cases are ____________ cases.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: No, no — a …nurse. Such a pretty baby it was. Such lovely rosy cheeks
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Of course, I would never have dreamed of doing such a thing! That was just — just an artistic …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Of course, Mr. Poirot, according to the legend, Pekinese were ____________ once. And they still have the hearts of lions
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Once or twice the woman posted it herself. Then, of course, the companion had to go to the ____________ and take the letter out of the rack. But that was quite easy too
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Only by me. But that was inevitable! When I had interviewed Mrs ____________ I realized that the kidnapping of Shan Tung was one of a series
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Only two things were different — the sum of money demanded — 300 pounds — and the address to which it was to be sent: this time it was to Commander Blackleigh, Harrington Hotel, 76 Clonmel Gardens, …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Poirot leaned forward. He said: “I think, Sir Joseph, that in your ____________ you should be extremely careful.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Really, of course, it is ridiculous. How is it possible to mistake Augustus for Nanki ________ or Shan Tung or any of the other Pekes? He’s far more intelligent, but as I say, to most people a Peke is just a Peke
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Red spots appeared suddenly on ____________ Carnaby’s white cheeks
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Send it anywhere you damn ____________ like
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Sir Joseph growled: “_______ Careless fellows. Make drugs differently different times.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Sir Joseph ____________ Hercule Poirot in his study
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Sir ____________ gave a little shiver as though he felt the invisible presence of Hercule Poirot behind him. And said:
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Tell me, Miss Carnaby, did you ever have to carry out the threat you used in your letters?” Miss Carnaby looked at him in …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: That’s a _______ But the money’s the thing. And what do I owe you, Mr. Poirot
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The barking became louder — footsteps came to the door, it was opened. Miss Amy ____________ stepped back
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: The story followed the same course exactly — the letter — the threats of violence to Nanki …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Then, while you were talking, you cut the lead and your Pekinese, trained by you, slipped off at once and ran back …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There are Institutions, of course, but it’s not easy to get ____________ them, unless you have influential friends, and I haven’t
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: There are many others situated like me — .. companions — untrained useless women with nothing to look forward to but a deadly fear___________. And so — some of us — got together — and I thought of this
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Twenty minutes later Hercule Poirot was climbing the stairs of No.10 ____________ Mansions. He paused to regain his breath on the top landing and from behind the door of No.10 a new sound broke the silence — the sharp bark of a dog
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Well, you see, old ____________ are known to be foolishly sentimental about babies. So it seemed quite natural that they should be absorbed over a baby and not notice anything
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Yes, an interesting little case. I wish I felt more attracted to my client — but he has a strong resemblance to a soap manufacturer who poisoned his wife in order to marry a blonde _______ One of my early cases
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Yes, it’s difficult for a ____________ to understand, I think.
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: You took your employer’s ____________ for his usual walk, brought him here and went to the Park with yours. Everybody saw you with a Pekinese dog as usual
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: Your psychology is excellent, your organisation is just first class, and you are also a very fine …
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ Carnaby crossed the room, opened the drawer of a bureau and returned with a packet of notes which she handed to Poirot
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ Carnaby said with a faint smile: “And yet I have been found out.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ Hoggin said doubtfully: “I suppose that must be it.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ Poirot nodded his head with a smile. He pressed the bell of No.10
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ raised his eyebrows: “I congratulate you. Your organisation must have been indeed excellent. As a criminal, Mademoiselle, you are quite in the first rank.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ rose, crossed to the writing table, wrote out a cheque for two hundred pounds and handed it to the other man
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: ____________ Samuelson was taller than Lady Hoggin and her hair was dyed with peroxide
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “Consider it as your ___________”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “Greta can go _________! I’m not going to risk my neck for any damned platinum blonde!”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “Has the man found anything about ____________ Tung?”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “He didn’t say. Very ____________ fellow, Hercule Poirot. But you needn’t worry.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “He’s a damned ____________ little devil!”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “He’s a funny little ____________ isn’t he?”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “I shall send it to a ________ organisation.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “That’s all right. You.. . it.”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel: “Yes. He got me my money _____________”
Find the one answer that truly corresponds to the original version of the novel:More probably a flat or maisonette. And it will definitely be ____________ Kensington Gardens
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: By my orders, you told him that you suffered from tuberculosis. There was a tuberculin in the syringe when Cole ____________ him
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He had also, I think, ____________ a substance which had the power of delaying but intensifying the action of the chosen bacillus
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He was ____________ perhaps, that like him, you were going to “die for Hercule Poirot
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I must get home. Emily has been so _______ And dear Augustus has been missing me terribly, I hear
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I was afraid that even now he might choose some other ____________ but I respected your courage and I had to let you take the risk
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I was thinking,” she said, “of a ____________ dream I had. I arranged the whole world so beautifully! No wars, no poverty, no diseases, no cruelty
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I woke up. And I knew it was _______ My mouth was quite dry. I was thirsty. But I couldn’t drink, Mr. Poirot
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It is harmless to a healthy person, but stimulates any old tubercular lesion into …
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It is possible, I think, that he has committed a long ____________ of murders
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Lonely women, in their ____________ and fervour, made wills leaving their money to the Cult
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Oh, that’s all right,” said Miss Carnaby brightly. “I don’t mind taking risks. I’m only ____________ bulls in fields and things like that
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: One by one, these women died. Without being too ____________ I will try to explain. It is possible to make intensified cultures of certain bacteria
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Since you were a healthy person it would not have harmed you, that is why I asked you to tell him you had a tubercular …
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: That was the secret of his popularity — a dominating personality, the power of creating mass hysteria and the reactions produced by this drug. But he had a second aim in …
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The bacillus Coli Communis, for instance, is the cause of ulcerative colitis. Typhoid bacilli can be ____________ into the system. So can Pneumococcus
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The flat of Hercule Poirot was furnished in a modern _______ Its armchairs were square and gleamed with chromium
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: You realize the cleverness of the man? These deaths would occur in different parts of the country, with different doctors ____________ them and without any risk of arousing suspicion
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Dr. Burton ____________ at Hercule Poirot, at his small neat figure in striped trousers, a black jacket and a bow tie
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: On one of ____________ chairs sat Hercule Poirot — in the middle of the chair. Opposite him, in another chair, sat Dr. Burton
Find the three answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel:…of evidence,” he said. “We’ve got his laboratory and his cultures and the whole equipment
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Admiral Chandler picked up Hugh’s _____________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: And then when this — this …appeared, it settled things definitely, I thought
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Applied externally it causes a rash, this would soon lead to cuts in shaving and thus the drug would be continually entering the system
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Atropine is prescribed freely for eye treatment and could be ____________ without arousing suspicion
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Beautiful morning, isn’t it? I think I’ll go out in the woods and try to get a …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Colonel Frobisher, you ____________ for many years in India
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Do you know when I suspected? When Admiral Chandler objected to his son seeing a doctor. It was ________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Don’t you realize that if the door hadn’t been locked I would have cut Diana’s ____________ — Diana’s! — with that knife
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Exactly. Well, the active principle of the datura is very ____________ to the alkaloid atropine
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: For one thing — I dream. And when I dream I am _______ Last night, for instance, I wasn’t a man any longer
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Frobisher stammered, ____________ with excitement
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He sat up and saw the knife which he still held in his …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: He was in his dressing-gown and slippers. In his right hand was a sharp ____________ knife
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Hercule Poirot and Hugh Chandler sat on a bench in the rose garden. The young man turned a ____________ tortured face towards his companion
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Here and there on it were bright red ____________ of blood
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Hugh and Diana had ____________ the room
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Hugh Chandler lay there …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Hugh _______ Poirot turned to Colonel Frobisher
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I am happy to tell you that you are entirely and completely …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I didn’t know. I couldn’t be sure... Caroline never said anything that led me to think Hugh was my …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I realize nothing of the kind. You would not have killed ____________ Maberly
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I tell you you didn’t kill the sheep — or the ____________ — or the cat
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I thought of a possible motive, the eternal triangle: two men and a _______
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I was a bull — a mad bull — racing about in sunlight — tasting dust and blood in my mouth — dust and blood. I had …— men tried to shoot me — someone put a bowl of water for me and I couldn’t drink. I couldn’t drink
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: In order that you ____________ do what you were just about to do when I stopped you
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: In the drawing-room Hugh Chandler had taken his ____________ off the wall and was going to load it when Hercule Poirot’s hand fell on his shoulder
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It ends by driving a person …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It was at that moment that Admiral Chandler and Colonel Frobisher _______ Behind them came Diana
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: It would produce ____________ symptoms — dryness of the mouth and throat, difficulty in swallowing, hallucinations — all the symptoms, in fact, which Mr. Chandler has experienced
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I’m not actually mad yet — but I’m getting worse. Diana doesn’t know. She has only seen me when I am …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: I’ve heard of such cases often enough. Datura …*.
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: No, you didn’t kill the cat. You didn’t kill the _______ You didn’t kill the sheep
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Not human, thank God. A …! I found it downstairs in the hall. Throat cut. Afterwards he must have come here
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Someone who wanted to prove that you were _______ On each occasion you were given a strong sleeping-pill and a blood-stained knife was put into your hand. It was someone else whose bloody hands were washed in your basin
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Take your hands off me! Don’t _______ There’s going to be an accident, I tell you. It’s the only way out
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: That is what I have been studying ever since I ____________ here. I have been looking for a motive for murder
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The alkaloid could be extracted from it and then introduced into, say — a shaving …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The lust for blood was Admiral Chandler’s, not Hugh’s. But it was Hugh who was to pay the …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The two men raised the unconscious _______ Diana caught her breath as they passed her
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: The two men, the Englishman and the Belgian, watched the last of the Chandlers cross the park and ____________ up into the woods
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Then he decided to turn his hatred against the boy who bore his name but who was not his …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: There could be treatment which would save his son — but no, a doctor must not be allowed to see Hugh Chandler — in case a doctor should discover that Hugh was ___________
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: There was a sound of bolts being drawn. The door opened and Diana …there. Her face was dead white
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: They told him — told him unwillingly — haltingly. Hugh’s face was ____________ his voice was steady
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: What’s happened? There was someone — trying to ____________ — I heard them — scratching on the panels
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: You see, Diana is a fighter. She won’t _______ She — she will go on believing that I’m sane
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Your Indian stories put the idea of datura poisoning into his head. Hugh should be slowly driven …
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: Your shaving cream was mixed with a big ____________ of atropine. I took some shaving cream from the tube and had it tested at the chemist’s
Find the two answers that best correspond to the original version of the novel: You’re sane enough. There’s no madness in our ___________
Nothing suspicious there. Miss Everitte died of ulcerative colitis. Mrs. Lloyd died ____________ pneumonia
Sir Joseph said, his voice almost inaudible: “You needn’t worry. I shall be careful all _______”
Choose the right preposition: And yet, mon cher, I have a feeling that this is the 10th Labour ____________ Hercules, and that this Dr. Andersen is the Monster Geryon whom it is my mission to destroy
Choose the right preposition: Eh bien, all progresses well — I make you my compliments on the work you have done — all is now set ____________ the Autumn Festival
Choose the right preposition: Everyone was shocked — horrified... To them the Great Shepherd was a martyr, suffering as all great teachers, ____________ the ignorance and persecution of the outside world
Choose the right preposition: Give what you can,” he said smiling. “It doesn’t matter. You are one ____________ the flock just the same
Choose the right preposition: Good. That must keep Mrs. Clegg safe ____________ some time
Choose the right preposition: He described some of them ____________ me — really most peculiar — I hope, I do hope, he is not insane. Then there will be quite a lot of new members — nearly twenty
Choose the right preposition: He was very indifferent about it. Said it would be many long years before I died, that he could tell I had a long life of joy ____________ front of me. He really speaks movingly
Choose the right preposition: Hercule Poirot looked thoughtfully ____________ his visitor. He saw a pale face, big grey eyes and the blue-black locks of ancient Greece
Choose the right preposition: Hercule Poirot stared ____________ her. Miss Carnaby rose to her feet. Her voice was fast and hysterical
Choose the right preposition: His manner was most convincing. One really feels he doesn’t care ____________ money at all
Choose the right preposition: I believe in him heart and soul. And I am not going to do your spying work any more, Mr. Poirot. I am one of the Sheep of the Shepherd. And I’ll pay ____________ my tea myself
Choose the right preposition: I think a hundred and twenty. Emmeline will be there, …course, and Mr. Cole — really he has been very odd lately. He has visions
Choose the right preposition: Lady Western died of tuberculosis. Had suffered from it many years ago. Miss Lee died of typhoid somewhere ____________ the north of England
Choose the right preposition: Meanwhile Detective Inspector Cole was carefully packing up the syringe that had fallen ____________ the Great Shepherd’s hand
Choose the right preposition: Mr. Cole aided ____________ another devotee grasped the hand of the Great Shepherd who was struggling to get himself free
Choose the right preposition: Oh, dear!” Miss Carnaby was flattered. “It’s so kind ____________ you to say so. And I’m afraid, that I’ve really enjoyed it all. The excitement, you know, and playing my part. I really felt I was one of those foolish women
Choose the right preposition: Oh, Dr. Andersen,” I said, “I am not poor ____________ all.” And then I explained that I had inherited a considerable amount of money from a distant relative and that I wanted to leave in my will all I had to the Brotherhood. I explained that I had no near relatives
Choose the right preposition: On the afternoon preceding the Festival Miss Carnaby met Hercule Poirot in a small restaurant in the sleepy little town …Newton Woodbury. Miss Carnaby was flushed and even more breathless than usual
Choose the right preposition: That was a terrible moment ____________ the restaurant. I didn’t know what to do. It was such a shock. Just when we had been talking confidentially I saw in the glass that Lipscomb, who keeps the Lodge of the Sanctuary*, was sitting at the table behind me
Choose the right preposition: The big man, golden-haired and blue-eyed, with his fair beard and handsome profile had never seemed more magnificent. He was dressed in a green robe and carried a shepherd’s crook ____________ gold
Choose the right preposition: The crowd obediently shut their eyes. Miss Carnaby like the rest held her arm out ____________ front of her
Choose the right preposition: The Festival took place in the white concrete building called ____________ the Sheep the Sacred Fold
Choose the right preposition: The Great Shepherd, magnificent ____________ his green robe, moved along the waiting lines... He stood by Miss Carnaby. His hands touched her arm
Choose the right preposition: The Sheep were assembled ____________ the traditional Festival
Choose the right preposition: The waitress had to ask him twice before Poirot realized that she was giving him the bill. He met the curious stare of an unfriendly looking man ____________ the next table, flushed, paid the bill and went out
Choose the right preposition: Their arms were bare. In the centre of the Fold ____________ a raised platform stood Dr. Andersen
Choose the right preposition: There is nothing to connect these details with the Great Flock or with Andersen’s place down ____________ Devonshire. Must be no more than coincidence
Choose the right preposition: There was a moment’s pause before Miss Carnaby said ____________ a rather odd voice
Choose the right preposition: There was a Mr. Cole there last time I went down ____________ Devonshire. A most extraordinary man. He wears grass-green shorts and eats nothing but the cabbage. He is a very ardent believer
Choose the right preposition: With these words Miss Carnaby threw down one shilling and rushed out ____________ the restaurant
Choose the right preposition: Yes, I told him strictly confidentially that dear Emmeline, besides the fortune she had inherited from her husband, would inherit an even larger sum shortly from an aunt, who was deeply attached ____________ her
Choose the right preposition: Yes, Mr. Poirot, I spoke ____________ the Master — excuse me, to Dr. Andersen, myself. I told him very emotionally what a wonderful revelation the whole thing had been — how I had come to mock and remained to believe. Really it seemed quite natural to say all these things. Dr. Andersen, you know, has a lot of magnetic charm
Choose the right preposition: You sent me here to spy ____________ Dr. Andersen. You suspected him of all sorts of things . But he is a wonderful man — a great Teacher
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Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He went straight back to the Sanctuary. So I understood that I could (to rely) on you and that you would not let me down — but I was afraid because it increased the danger for you
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I did understand. There was only one person sitting near enough to overhear anything we said and as soon as he (to leave) the restaurant I followed him
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I don’t know now if it was an accident or if he (to have) actually followed me. I had to do the best I could in this situation and hope that you would understand
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Mademoiselle, this Dr. Andersen devised a scheme of exploitation and murder — scientific murder. Most of his life has been (to spend) in bacteriological research. Under a different name he has a chemical laboratory in Sheffield. There he makes cultures of various bacilli
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: . He said that he was a Dane, but in the Torres Straits he was (to know) as German Harry. His history went back a long way. Thirty years before, he had been an able seaman on a sailing vessel that was wrecked in those treacherous waters
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: A strange man and a strange story. I learned more about him as we (to sail) across the desolate sea. The Torres Straits are peppered with islands and at night we anchored on the lee of one or other of them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: And then I foresaw the end. One day a pearl fisher would land on the island and German Harry would not be (to wait) for him, silent and suspicious, at the water’s edge
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: As I looked at the wrinkled, mean old face I wondered what was the story of those three dreadful years that had (to make) him welcome this long imprisonment. I sought to see behind those pale blue eyes of his what secrets they were that he would carry to his grave
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But he was moved when my skipper told him that an old man of his own age whom he had (to know) for a long time was dead
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: But I do not believe he would (to find) it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: During the last four months of the year there (may) be two or three pearlers about and not infrequently after the day’s work they will row in and spend an evening with him
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: During the war no pearlers came out and for years he never saw a living soul. For all he knew, a terrible epidemic had killed off the entire human race and he was the only man alive. He was (to ask) later what he thought
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: German Harry would have (to see) to it that none should discover the treasure, and the pearls would rot in their hiding place
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He accepted our gifts as a right, without thanks, and (to grumble) a little because something or other he needed had not been brought. He was silent and morose
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He looked at me with suspicion. He was sombrely curious to know what I was (to do) in these seas
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He looked upon it with a jealous, proprietary right; he called it “my health resort” and he (to fear) that the coconuts that covered it would tempt some enterprising trader
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He never (to say) a word. Drunk or sober he is equally silent on that subject and if they insist grows angry and leaves them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He ran out of matches and (to be) afraid that his fire would go out, so he only slept in snatches, putting wood on his fire from time to time all day and all night. He came to the end of his provisions and lived on chickens, fish and coconuts. Sometimes he got a turtle
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He seemed to be occupied with nothing but his food, his dogs and his chickens. If what they tell us in books were true his long communion with nature and the sea should have (to teach) him many subtle secrets. It hadn’t. He was a savage. He was nothing but a narrow, ignorant and cantankerous sea-faring man
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He used words with difficulty, (to talk) to himself rather than to us, and it was a little uncanny to hear him mumble away as though we were not there
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He was absolutely (to fix) in his determination to stay, entirely by himself, in that lonely place. Though now and then opportunity had been given him to leave he had never taken it
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He was not interested in the news we had to give him, for the outside world was no concern of his: the only thing he cared about (to be) his island
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He would go up to the hut and there, (to lie) on the bed, unrecognisable, he would see all that remained of what had once been a man
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: His sunburn made his blue eyes look very pale and they were (to surround) by wrinkles as though for long years he had spent interminable hours scanning the vacant sea. He wore dungarees and a singlet, patched, but neat and clean
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I forget if it was four or five days before we sighted the hermit’s little kingdom. We had (to be) driven by bad weather to take shelter and had spent a couple of days at an island on the way
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I pricked up my ears. It appeared that the hermit had lived by himself on this remote and tiny island for thirty years, and when opportunity (to occur) provisions were sent to him by kindly souls
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: I saw the little hut, sheltered by trees, in which German Harry lived, and as we approached he (to saunter) down slowly to the water’s edge
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: In the big bedroom with the heavy oak furniture Hercule Poirot sat and waited. There was nothing to do but wait. All his arrangements were (to make)
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was his practice at the Festivals to inject into his followers a small but sufficient dose of Cannabis Indica — which is also known by the name of Hashish. It gives the sensation of great and pleasurable enjoyment. It bound his devotees to him. These were the Spiritual Joys that he (to promise) them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: It was towards early morning that he heard the sound of footsteps outside. Poirot drew back the bolt and opened the door. There (to be) two men outside — the Admiral, stern-faced and grim, and Colonel Frobisher, pale and trembling
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Of late new pearling grounds have (to be) discovered near Trebucket and in the autumn pearlers, visiting it now and then, have given German Harry various necessities so that he has been able to make himself sufficiently comfortable
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Perhaps then he would hunt high and low for the great mass of pearls that has (to haunt) the fancy of so many adventurers
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Sixteen men had landed on the island, but when at last a schooner, (to drive) from her course by stress of weather, put in for shelter, no more than five were left
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: The house to which he presently led us (to consist) of a single room with a roof of corrugated iron
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Then the pearl fisher would (to go) back into his dinghy and the island once more would be deserted of man
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There (to be) no opening in the reef and the lugger had to anchor a mile from the shore. We got into a dinghy with the provisions. It was a stiff pull and even within the reef the sea was choppy
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There is abundant pearl shell on the reef that (to surround) his island and this he used to collect and sell to the pearlers for tobacco, and sometimes he found a good pearl for which he got a considerable sum. It is believed that he has, hidden away somewhere, a collection of magnificent pearls
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: There was a bed in it, some rough stools which he himself (to have) made, a table, and his various household utensils. Under a tree in front of it was a table and a bench. Behind was an enclosed run for his chickens
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They bring him papers, bags of flour and rice, and canned meats. He has a whale boat and (to use) to go fishing in it, but now he is no longer strong enough to manage its unwieldy bulk
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: They try to make him drunk and then they ask him what (to happen) during those three years after the two boat-loads came to the island
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Trebucket is a low island, perhaps a mile round, (to cover) with coconuts, just raised above the level of the sea and surrounded by a reef so that it can be approached only on one side
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: Two boats managed to get away and eventually (to hit) upon the desert island of Trebucket. This is well out of the line of traffic and it was three years before any ship sighted the castaways
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: We (to shout) a greeting, but he did not answer. He was a man of over seventy, very bald, hatchet
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: When the storm abated the skipper (to take) four of these on board and eventually landed them at Sydney. German Harry refused to go with them
Put the verb in brackets in the right form: He said that during those three years he (to have) seen such terrible things that he had a horror of his fellow-men and wished never to live with them again. He would say no more


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ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
As a young boy the author enjoyed reading the fable "The Ant and the Grasshoper" and accepted the moral of it:
Corrugated в переводе означает гофрированный, волнистый:
Emmeline Clegg is Miss Carnaby's very dear friend:
Everyone is politely, but inexactly, to know в переводе означает преполагается, из вежливочти, что каждому известно:
Greta is Mr. Hoggin's wife:
Hercule Poirot liked very much his client, Mr. Hoggin, because Hercule thought Mr. Hoggin had earlier killed his wife:
Hugh broke off the engagement because he thought he was going mad:
Hugh went to the Navy because it was his dream:
Labours of Hercules в переводе означает подвиги Геракла:
Poirot persuaded Miss Carnaby not to become a member of the Great Flock:
Seeing George Ramsay the author immediately suspected that he had come into a lot of money:
The Pekinese dog was presented to Amy Carnaby by her former mistress:
To investigate в переводе означает расследовать:
To obey the instructions в переводе означает выполнять инструкции:
You would never have taken him for more than thirty-five в переводе означает - вы бы ни за что не дали ему больше тридцати пяти:
Глагол to resemble в переводе означает походить, иметь сходство:


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  0097.01.06;МТ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Английский язык. Домашнее чтение - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Вместо пропуска вставьте предлог He ran … matches and was afraid that his fire would go out
Вместо пропуска вставьте предлог Her eyes rested … an instant on the three francs I left for the waiter and I knew that she thought me mean
Вместо пропуска вставьте предлог I could not help thinking of this fable when the other day I saw George Ramsay lunching … himself in a restaurant
Вместо пропуска вставьте предлог I suppose every family has a black sheep Tom had been a sore trial … his for twenty years
Вместо пропуска, если необходимо, вставьте предлог He was not interested … the news we had to give him
Вставьте артикли, если необходимо He was glad that he was growing … old because Tom was growing … old too
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо He was nothing but … narrow, ignorant and cantankerous sea-faring man
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо I was in Thursday Island and I wanted very much to go to … New Guinea
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо It was twenty years ago and I was living in Paris, in … Latin Quarter
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо Maugham’s reputation as … novelist rests primarily on four books: Of Human Bondage (1915), The Moon and Sixpence (1919), Cakes and Ale (1930) and The Razor’s Edge (1944)
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо Poor George, only … year older than his scapegrace brother, looked sixty
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо W S Maugham was orphaned at … age of 10
Вставьте артикль, если необходимо When I was … very small boy I was made to learn by heart certain of the fables of La Fontaine
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо According the legend, Mr Poirot , Pekinese were lions once
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо He asked me whether … my way I would stop at the island of Trebuchet and leave a sack of flour, another of rice, and some magazines for the hermit who lived there
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо He seemed to be occupied … nothing but his dogs, his chickens and his food
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо I answered that I would meat my friend - … correspondence - at Foyot’s on Thursday at half-past twelve
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо I’ve come to you because the man I’ve been engaged to for over a year has broken our engagement
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо Salvatore acted as nursemaid … his two younger brothers
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо Someone was fumbling the lock of the door
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо The flat of Hercule Poirot was furnished modern style
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо The vicar had been but recently appointed, a red-faced energetic man … the early forties
Вставьте предлог, если необходимо You mean to say that in physical appearance I do not resemble a Hercules?
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): For all he knew, a terrible epidemic … the entire human races
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): He announced that he … working
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): He wondered what I … in that part of the world
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): I'll be well off by the time I … fifty
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): It was long since I … her last
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): We're none of us … any younger
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): What did he care about when he … back home?
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): You can't read and write What would you be, if you … able to?
Выберите правильную глагольную форму (слегка меняя, в случае необходимости, порядок слов): I received a letter saying that she … through Paris
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола He turned his head as they
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола I have no right anything at all
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола The flat of Hercule Poirot in a modern style
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «accident»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «advantage»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «communication»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «consciousness»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «determination»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «insanity»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «intelligent»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «moustache»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «orthodox»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «surgeon»
Выберите правильный вариант транскрипции слова «suspicious»
Выберите синоним глагола «to bother»
Выберите синоним глагола «to cry»
Выберите синоним глагола «to follow»
Выберите синоним глагола «to investigate»
Выберите синоним глагола «to murder»
Выберите синоним глагола «to realize»
Выберите синоним глагола «to shut»
Выберите синоним глагола «to suggest»
Выберите синоним глагола «to watch»
Выберите синоним слова «entirely»
Выберите синоним слова «reply»
Выберите слово со значением «алтарь»
Выберите слово со значением «бормотать»
Выберите слово со значением «борода»
Выберите слово со значением «внешность»
Выберите слово со значением «внимание»
Выберите слово со значением «гавань»
Выберите слово со значением «жемчуг»
Выберите слово со значением «кисть, ладонь»
Выберите слово со значением «морщина»
Выберите слово со значением «непредсказуемый»
Выберите слово со значением «обманывать»
Выберите слово со значением «ослаблять»
Выберите слово со значением «отдаленный»
Выберите слово со значением «повторять»
Выберите слово со значением «подозрение»
Выберите слово со значением «преимущество»
Выберите слово со значением «признаться»
Выберите слово со значением «проповедь»
Выберите слово со значением «расследовать»
Выберите слово со значением «стая»
Выберите слово со значением «судно, корабль»
Выберите слово со значением «тонкий»
Выберите слово со значением “мешок”
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола I was wondering if a friend of mine here lately
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола I congratulate you Your organization must indeed excellent
Выберите правильную грамматическую форму глагола But at that moment the dog turned its terrible head and
Выберите правильные грамматические формы глаголов I’ve come to you because the man I to for over a year our engagement
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните неправильное словообразование (слово, которого нет в английском языке):
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Вычеркните слово или выражение, не подходящее по смыслу к остальным:
Глагол “to insist” на русский язык переводится
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Admiral Chandler and his friend Colonel Frobisher
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Dr Andersen was
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Hugh broke off our engagement because
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Miss Carnaby had
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Miss Carnaby refused to help Hercule Poirot, because
Дополните предложение соответственно содержанию текста Miss Lemon was a woman without imagination,
Из предложенных слов выберите то, которое отличается от других
Из предложенных слов выберите то, которое отличается от других
Из предложенных слов выберите то, которое отличается от других
Из предложенных слов выберите то, которое отличается от других
Из предложенных слов выберите то, которое отличается от других
Какой частью речи является форма с -ing?: He knew without being told
Какой частью речи является форма с -ing?: It is a most amazing thing
Какой частью речи является форма с -ing?: I apologise for telling something …
Какой частью речи является форма с -ing?: I saw George lunching by himself
Какой частью речи является форма с -ing?: I don’t believe in overloading my stomach
Подберите антоним к глаголу «to meet»
Подберите антоним к глаголу «to worry»
Подберите антоним к слову «always»
Подберите антоним к слову «beautiful»
Подберите антоним к слову «danger»
Подберите антоним к слову «expensive»
Подберите антоним к слову «odd»
Подберите антоним к слову «outsider»
Подберите антоним к слову «resolutely»
Подберите антоним к слову «seldom»
Подберите антоним к слову «sentiment»
Подберите антоним к слову «upwards»
Слово «envelope» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «harmless» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «to accept» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «to approach» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «to retire» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «to return» на русский язык переводится как
Слово «unexplained» на русский язык переводится как


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  0096.Экз.04;ЭЭ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Электронный экзамен

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. (to know) I wish I ---------more languages. (I didn’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He must ------------the book already. (to read)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He must ----------already by his mum. (to write)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He must ---------a lot by his parents when he was a child. (to read)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He said that he ---------- London two years ago. (to leave)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He said that he-------------school in 1995. (to leave)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He said that he------------a famous actor. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He said that I ---------- like my sister. (to look)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. He said that it-----------impossible then. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I -------- in London. (I didn’t live)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I -----------in London. (I don’t live)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I -----------more money. (I didn’t have)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I -----------to work. (I had to)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ----------her telephone number. (I didn’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ----------her telephone number. (I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ----------his address. (I didn’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ----------his address. (I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ----------more languages. (I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ---------more money. (I don’t have)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ---------more people. (I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I ---------to work. (I have to)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I --------earlier. (I don’t arrive)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I --------more collegues. (I didn’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I --------more friends. (I didn’t have)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I -------more collegues.(I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I------ more friends. (I don’t have)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I---------- more facts. (I didn’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. I wish I---------- more facts. (I don’t know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If he ----------- her son, they would do everything for him. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If he -------------asleep, he wouldn’t call me back. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If I ----------- her number, I would have telephoned her. (to know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If I -----------you, I wouldn’t have believed her. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If I ----------it, I would come. (to know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If I---------- you, I wouldn’t believe her. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If it -----------true, I am very sorry. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If she ----------the language, she wouldn’t ask me to translate for her. (to know)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If she--------- at home she would come. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If the summer -----------hot, we would spent all the day on the beach. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If they -----------free, they would help you. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If they-------- , I’ll leave. (to come)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If you ---------- clever, she wouldn’t laugh at you. (to be)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. If you-----------, he would lend you the money. (to ask)
Вставьте нужную форму глагола, данного в скобках. Не must ----------now. (to read)
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Even programs specially made for the very young, can stunt development and intellect unless the parent -------- with the child, explaining what is going on.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: People who tend to see --------- personal difficulties as a catastrophe are more likely to die young than others, a psychology study says.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Vivacity is an indispensable quality of human character. We usually don’t really like people who always conceal their true feelings or who are too reserved to give ------ their thoughts.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He is (to laugh).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He is (to swim)
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He must (to cook).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He must (to read).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He must (to sleep).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He must (to watch TV).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. - What is he doing? - He must (to write).
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he cooked the dinner? - Yes, he must (to do) it.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he done his homework? - Yes, he must (to do) it.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he phoned the grandma? - Yes, he must (to do) her.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he posted the letter? - Yes, he must (to do) it.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he read the book? - Yes, he must (to do) it.
Ответьте на вопрос, используя глагол в скобках. – Has he washed the floor? - Yes, he must (to do) it.
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос And this is precisely what the young are doing,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос Every new generation is different from the one that preceded it,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос He is five,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос It has never been truer than it is today,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос Old people are always saying that the young are not what they were,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос The old always assume that they know best for the simple reason that they have been around a bit longer,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос The same comment is made from generation to generation,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос The young are better educated,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They are not so dependent on their parents,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They are students,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They do not blindly accept the ideals of their elders,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They don't like to feel that their values are being questioned or threatened,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They grow up more quickly,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They have more money to spend and enjoy their freedom,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос They think more for themselves,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос Today the difference is very marked indeed,
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос We were in London,
Укажите дополнение в предложении: Grammar, aural comprehension, reading, and even oral production are to varying degrees involved in writing.
Укажите подлежащее предложения: But only recently, teachers have found a very interesting fact.
Укажите подлежащее предложения: For some years linguists have been writing textbooks designed to teach foreign students spoken English.
Укажите подлежащее предложения: Many students want and need to learn how to write English as well as to speak it, have linguistically oriented textbooks designed to teach written English appeared.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Although he can learn through reading how various writers have selected and organized facts in order to carry out a specific purpose, the student himself must ultimately undergo the intense mental activity involved in working out his own problems of selection and organization if he is ever really going to learn to write.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Although, unlike pronunciation and grammatical production, the process of reading requires thought, it does not, as does writing, require activity.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Because the combination of thought and activity carrying out that thought is unique to writing, we must, in planning a writing curriculum, devise exercises that necessitate intense concentration.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: But, at the same time, teaching a writing course that covers only these areas is redundant.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Certainly we cannot teach a writing course thatnever touches on these areas.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: For example, one of the first things the student will have to learn is that writing has certain structural differences from speech.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Given the limited time most of us have to teach the student as much as we can about English, we should, if only for efficiency's sake, use a method that teaches him something he will not learn in his other courses.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: It follows that teaching the student to write requires active thought.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Learning to write, then, involves more than learning to use orthographic symbols.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Of course, one of the biggest problems in teaching writing is that the student must have facts and ideas in order to write and that these must be manifested in the form of grammatical English sentences.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: One difference is that writing generally has longer sentences — what might be two or three sentences in speech is often only one sentence in writing.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Primarily, it involves selecting and organizing experience according to a certain purpose.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Reading is a passive process, while writing is active.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: So the student must learn how to combine the short sentences of spoken English by modification or by using sentence connectors of various kinds (conjunctions like however and therefore, phrases like in the first place, etc.).
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: That is, we should use a method that emphasizes that which is unique in writing...
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: This is why the copybook approach, which requires the student to copy and emulate certain writing, doesn't work very well
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: When writing the student must keep in mind his purpose, think about the facts he will need to select that are relevant to that purpose, and think about how to organize those facts in a coherent fashion.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: While grammar and reading are both certainly indispensable to such a curriculum, we must present them in such a way that the student will learn to use them as tools.
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: While it does require the students to memorize structures, thereby increasing the grammatical ability, and perhaps even teaching him something about style, it does not require him to do much thinking.
Укажите тип сказуемого: According to these advertisements, with very little effort on the student's part, he will be able to speak the language fluently in three months or even ten days.
Укажите тип сказуемого: But it is difficult for anyone to explain in simple language why one method is better than another, and it is no use pretending that anyone has discovered a perfect way of teaching English in every possible situation.
Укажите тип сказуемого: Every day I see advertisements in the newspapers and on the buses claiming that it is easy to learn English.
Укажите тип сказуемого: No doubt this is true to a certain extent, but it is not very helpful to students.
Укажите тип сказуемого: Some experts even say that there are as many good methods of teaching a language as there are good teachers, because every teacher is an individual with his own personality.
"It may be more important that you are not a pessimist than that you ---------an optimist," said research psychologist Susan Robinson-Whelen, the study's lead author.
------- the first weeks, the parents must be in or beside the nest to protect the newborn chicks without any feathers from the sun.
---------1936 and 1940, the group was questioned in detail about difficult life experiences and their own personalities.
A traditional nomad breakfast, for example, consists -----------flour biscuits and tea with milk.
After surfacing with its catch, the bird --------- its mouth and the water drains from the beak. (to close)
An American magazine told the story of a computer supervisor who had heart condition and had to pay $ 30,000, all his life savings, for hospital bills not covered ---------- insurance.
An estimated 1.8 million animals or about one --------- every 15 in the nation, have died, affecting a fifth of Mongolia's 2.6 million people.
Animals could be witnesses as well. If -------- man was attacked in his home and nobody could testify to his words, he could have a cat, a dog or a rooster as a witness.
Between the 12th and the 17th centuries nearly a hundred death sentences ------------- to animals in France (to rule).
But even -----------Mongolia's standards the past year was rough.
Cattle, yak, two-humped camels, horses, goats and sheep provide everything ---------food to barter goods to transportation.
Children under two years old should watch no television at all, and toddlers --------- watch TV not more than two hours a day.
Contrary ------- popular belief, not all homeless people are alcoholics, but many are, and those who have commitment to alcohol recovery, need psychological and medical help.
Despite its clumsy appearance, the pelican is -------- expert fisher. Its beak can be over a foot long.
Even programs specially --------for the very young, can stunt development and intellect unless the parent sits and watches with the child, explaining what is going on. (to make)
From one isolated family of nomads to ---------, the grisly sight is the same across Mongolia's vast and frozen Gobi Desert and nearby mountains.
He made an ardent speech, ------- it was not fair to condemn the whole race, and that the court had to rule the individual guilt of each animal (to argue).
In 1314 a bull was sentenced to the gallows for --------- a man (to attack).
In 1442 a wolf ---------- in Zurich. He was brought in a cage which was set in the central square where the trial was held. (to try)
In 1480 he won the case by explaining to the court that his clients were not able to appear in court because their homes were scattered all -------- the country, and the news could not reach their holes
In 1713 termites were brought to trial in Brazil for------- the flour and destroying the wooden supports of a monastery cellar (to eat).
In 1796 a bull convicted ------- causing a cattle epidemic was buried alive in Germany. And this list can be prolonged.
In a land of few roads and phone lines, Mongolia's nomads - about 30% --------the population - live the simple life of their great-great-grandparents.
In another study, researchers ---------Ohio State University reported that the possible harm associated with pessimistic outlook - increased anxiety, stress, depression and ill health - appears greater than the protective good given by an optimistic outlook.
In the 13th century the pig ------------to hanging in France for eating its litter (to sentence).
It was universally believed that animals acted rationally and had to answer for their misdeeds according ------- law
Its ancestors appeared 30 to 40 million years--------.
Keeping children ------- front of the screen to make them quiet not only discourages them from exercising the brain but stops from exercising their bodies, helping to create young couch potatoes.
Many people ---------the pelican fills its sac with fish, then flies back to its nest with them. This is not only untrue but impossible, for the weight in the sac would unbalance the bird and make the flight out of question.
Members of the Academy came ---------- a conclusion that parents of children under two should play with them rather than allow them to watch television.
Nomadic children, who learn to ride horses and camels ---------a very early age, often can't travel to their schools many miles across the plains.
Not all animals, however, were liable --------- legal responsibility and punishment. In some countries, bulls, horses and rams were under special protection and enjoyed immunity
Not noted for grace or beauty, the pelican looks ----------- something Mother Nature put together for the fun of it.
Now there is no milk for the tea, because the domestic animals that have survived often don't have milk ----------their own young.
One of the ------ birds in the world, it appears clumsy even at rest. When it sits or floats, its neck is bent in an awkward way (large).
Parents are recommended not to use television --------an electronic babysitter.
Pelicans are sexually mature when they -------- two to four years old. Unlike many birds, a male pelican makes no fuss of mating. He may do some head movements, inscribing a figure eight in the air to attract a female's attention.
Researchers studied -----way the individuals explained and reacted to experiences such as disappointments, failures, losses and bad relationships.
Since this -------- not possible, the case was dismissed.
So the number of homeless people in Russia can just increase, and homelessness may ------a greater toll (to take).
Some people are more prone ---------- becoming homeless than others but still nobody is ensured against losing their home.
Some time ----------- he got to rock bottom and ended up sleeping rough.
Such international organisations as World Bank and the United Nations, as well as developed countries are helping Mongolia to overcome difficulties ------- severe winter and develop its economy.
Such trials were also held -------- Italy, England, Sweden, Switzerland and the Netherlands.
The American Academy of Pediatrics, which has 55,000 members, spent two years ----------the impact of television on children, including numerous studies linking violence on the screen to aggressive behavior. (to examine)
The bedroom is a place where kids can reflect on what happened ---------- the day, where they can sit down and read a book.
The birds step off the eggs when they ------- the movement of life under them (to feel).
The court decreed that the summons --------- be made known to all mice in all the villages. Still, the defendants failed to appear
The procedure was strictly observed: ---------- defendants were interrogated and even tortured.
The range of people who are affected -------- homelessness is infinite as society itself.
The scientists don't want to say that children can become violent overnight by watching violence on the screen, but they are influenced ---------- it.
The situation can change for the worse as a new housing law provides for evictions of people who don't pay the rent ------ time.
The study is part of ------larger project studying the effect of stress on adults taking care of a sick family member.
The wolf was accused --------killing two little girls, sentenced to death and executed.
Their counsel again found a plausible excuse -------- that the mice had to cover many miles across fields, woods, ravines and swamps, their life threatened at every step by cats, foxes and owls. (to say)
There --------- more than 3 million homeless people in the USA, and the number is growing
There ---------- countries where horses and cows were tried for damage done to the crops.
There are also charitable organizations ----------- to improve the life of these people, to help them feel safer. But of course, these measures are not enough, they reach only the tip of the iceberg (to try)
They say that babies and toddlers have a critical need --------- direct interactions with parents and other adults for healthy development of brain and development of social, emotional and cognitive skills.
They were looking -------correlations between those attitudes and the timing and cause of death.
They were often executed ---------- they failed to call for help.
Trials of animals - birds, reptiles and insects were common in medieval Europe -------- to the 18th century.
When it dives, the pelican gulps fish and water into the sac which can --------- enormously. (to stretch)
When the nest is complete, the female -------- two or three eggs and, for one month, the two take turns incubating them (to lay).
Английское существительное имеет
Английское существительное имеет
Английское существительное может в предложении выполнять функцию:
Второстепенные члены предложения – это
Второстепенные члены предложения – это
Второстепенные члены предложения – это
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------ island's only industry is a foam matrass factory.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------- the babies are fed fish gruel.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------- the first weeks, the parents must be in or beside the nest to protect the newborn chicks without any feathers from the sun.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------- the leader lifts its wings, each bird behind it also lifts, almost in unison.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: --------- its clumsy appearance, the pelican is an expert fisher. Its beak can be over a foot long.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: --------- two scientists conducted a simple experiment, but its results were amazing.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ---------- the 12th and the 17th centuries nearly a hundred death sentences were ruled to animals in France.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ----------- this was not possible, the case was dismissed
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------------- instinct within me tells me it is quite right although I have no scientific evidence to prove it other that my observations as a pediatrician over the past 30 years.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ---------------- beautiful clothes and holding up 2.5 kilograms of gold jewelry, Mohamed Yousouf arrives at his bride's home to claim her for their "grand wedding."
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "A ------- who has staged a simple wedding is regarded as junior to a 30-year old fellow who has done a grand wedding, and tradition dictates that the two cannot share a plate of food," said Mohamed Abdoul, a guest at Yuosouf's wedding. "
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "An approach to life in which people catastrophize about bad events ---------- to untimely death decades later," concluded a research team headed by University of Michigan psychologist Christopher Peterson.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "But we are old people," she said, cradling a naked child ----- her lap.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "Children under two ------- be interacting with a puzzle or digging in the dirt - anything that is active," Miriam Baron, chairperson of the committee that wrote a report, said.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "Children under two should be interacting with a puzzle or digging in the dirt - ------- that is active," Miriam Baron, chairperson of the committee that wrote a report, said.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "In summer we'll be very hungry," said Tserondoi, a -------- nomandic woman inside her family "ger", the round felt tent that is the traditional portable home of Mongolia’s nomads.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "It may be more important that you are not ______ pessimist than that you are an optimist," said research psychologist Susan Robinson-Whelen, the study's lead author.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: "It took me several years of hard work as well as generous contribution from relatives and friends to raise money for this event," Yousouf said looking at the ------- collection of gold coins, bracelets, watches, earrings, chains, pendants, rings and other jewelry for his bride.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: A flock of pelicans -------- early in the morning is a wonderful sight.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: A grand wedding is important for the groom as his -------- will determine his social position and privileges.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: A traditional nomad breakfast, for example, consists ------ flour biscuits and tea with milk.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: After surfacing with its catch, the bird --------- its mouth and the water drains from the beak.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: An American magazine told the story of a computer supervisor who had heart condition and had to pay $ 30,000, all his life savings, for hospital bills not -------- by insurance.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: An estimated 1.8 million ____ or about one in every 15 in the nation, have died, affecting a fifth of Mongolia's 2.6 million people.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Animals ------- be witnesses as well. If a man was attacked in his home and nobody could testify to his words, he could have a cat, a dog or a rooster as a witness.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: British pediatricians approved ------- the advice.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: But even ---------- Mongolia's standards the past year was rough.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Cattle, yak, two-humped camels, horses, goats and --------- provide everything from food to barter goods to transportation.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Children under two years old --------------- watch no television at all, and toddlers should watch TV not more than two hours a day.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Children under two years old should watch no television at all, and toddlers should watch TV not more than two hours -----.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Cigarettes and alcohol are shown as cool and attractive. Fighting is often used as a way of -------- conflict successfully.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Contrary ------- popular belief, not all homeless people are alcoholics, but many are, and those who have commitment to alcohol recovery, need psychological and medical help.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Even TV programs specially ------for the very young, can stunt development and intellect unless the parent sits and watches with the child, explaining what is going on.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Finally, one pelican succeeds, the others follow within ------- days.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: First came a drought which killed --------- of the grasses that sustain the cattle.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Following a leader, the birds move with military precision ------ a long line.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Fortunately, adult pelicans are good providers, -------- each baby needs a constant supply of fish every day to survive.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: From one isolated family of nomads to ______ , the grisly sight is the same across Mongolia's vast and frozen Gobi Desert and nearby mountains.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Grand weddings are popular on Grande Comore even though economic development ------- republic has been held back by coups d'etat, assassinations and military rule.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Grande Comore, like its sister islands, is totally dependent ------ imports of everyday necessities.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He made an ardent speech, ----------- it was not fair to condemn the whole race, and that the court had to rule the individual guilt of each animal
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He said that all the programs ------- not suitable for young children.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He was also able -------- a house for his family in the Comoros capital.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Her family -------- ten, living in two gers in the Gobi, had been prosperous. Now, they are poor.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Homelessness is a huge social problem even -------- affluent countries.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: If aid from other countries --------- , a half million Mongolians could be desperately short of food.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1314 a bull was sentenced to the gallows for --------- a man.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1442 a wolf was tried in Zurich. He was brought in a cage which was set --------- the central square where the trial was held.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1480 he -------- the case by explaining to the court that his clients were not able to appear in court because their homes were scattered all over the country, and the news could not reach their holes.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1713 termites --------- to trial in Brazil for eating the flour and destroying the wooden supports of a monastery cellar.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1796 a bull convicted of causing a cattle epidemic --------- alive in Germany. And this list can be prolonged.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 1936 and 1940, the group was questioned ------ detail about difficult life experiences and their own personalities.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In a land of ---------- roads and phone lines, Mongolia's nomads - about 30% of the population - live the simple life of their great-great-grandparents.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In Moscow the city government is making ------- efforts to improve the situation.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In Russia many people lost ------- homes because of scams with flats.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In the 13th century the pig was sentenced to hanging in France for ---------- its litter.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In the USA lots of people become homeless because of evictions. 40% homeless people in the USA -------- families.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In ______ study, researchers from Ohio State University reported that the possible harm associated with pessimistic outlook - increased anxiety, stress, depression and ill health - appears greater than the protective good given by an optimistic outlook.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Instinctively I would say that it is very useful for small children to interact ------- an adult.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: It built several shelters for homeless people where they ------ sleep at night, wash their clothes and have a snack.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: It was universally believed that animals acted rationally and --------- answer for their misdeeds according to law.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Its ancestors --------- 30 to 40 million years ago.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Keeping children in front of the screen ------- them quiet not only discourages them from exercising the brain but stops from exercising their bodies, helping to create young couch potatoes.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Keeping children in front of the screen to make them quiet not only discourages them from exercising the brain but stops from ------ their bodies, helping to create young couch potatoes.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Later, they learn to get pieces of ------out of their parents sacs.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Like many Mongolians, she -------- only one name
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Many people believe the pelican fills its sac with fish, then flies back to its nest with them. This is not only untrue but impossible, -------- the weight in the sac would unbalance the bird and make the flight out of question.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Members of the Academy came to a conclusion that parents of children under two should play with them rather ------ allow them to watch television.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Members of the Academy came to a conclusion that parents of children under two should play with them rather than ------ them to watch television.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Mongolia which broke a way from socialism more than 10 years ago, --------- with its difficult transition to democracy and free-market economy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Most of the gold items used at grand weddings ------- by grooms in the duty-free shops in Dubai.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Next, the male brings sticks, reeds, straws, grasses, -------- to his waiting mate who builds up the site.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: No man --------- dare break the taboo and claim the rights he does not deserve.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Nomadic children, who learn to ride horses and camels ---------- a very early age, often can't travel to their schools many miles across the plains.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Not all animals, however, were liable --------- legal responsibility and punishment. In some countries, bulls, horses and rams were under special protection and enjoyed immunity
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Not many homeless people like the life without obligations and responsibilities and being on their own. Just something went wrong in their lives, they lost all social contacts which supported them ------- society and became social lepers.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Not noted for grace or beauty, the pelican -------- something Mother Nature put together for the fun of it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Now there is no milk for the tea, because the domestic animals that -------- often don't have milk for their own young.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Once he succeeds, pelican allows the bird onto the nest site that he ----------- , and mating takes place.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: One of ---------- birds in the world, it appears clumsy even at rest. When it sits or floats, its neck is bent in an awkward way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Our --------- are over anyway.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Our worry is for ------- kids and how they will live.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Parents are recommended not -------television as an electronic babysitter.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Parents are recommended not to use television as -------- electronic babysitter.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Parents should also make sure that there are no screens of -------- sorts in the children's bedrooms.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Parents should also make sure that there are no screens of any sorts in the ------- bedrooms.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Pelicans are sexually mature when they are two to four years old. -------- many birds, a male pelican makes no fuss of mating. He may do some head movements, inscribing a figure eight in the air to attract a female's attention.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: People become homeless ------ a variety of reasons: imperfect laws, family problems, drug or alcohol addiction, illness or separation, rock bottom poverty, loss of job and others.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Plaintiffs and counsels for the defense --------- a chance to plead their cause.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Researchers found that a tendency to "catatastrophize", that is to see bad things that happen to you as part of global evil and pain - was linked to --------- increased risk of dying before the age of 65, especially in men.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Researchers studied the way the individuals explained and reacted ---------- experiences such as disappointments, failures, losses and bad relationships.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: She earned money ------- as a secretary for an American law firm's London office, and wrote by day. She also took odd jobs.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: So the number of homeless people in Russia can just increase, and homelessness ----- take a greater toll.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Some people are more prone to --------homeless than others but still nobody is ensured against losing their home.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Some time ------ he got to rock bottom and ended up sleeping rough.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Such grooms receive a --------- house, supplied by the bride, and are allowed to pray in the front row in mosques, sit in seats of honor at weddings and share food with men who have married in similar way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Such international organisations -------World Bank and the United Nations, as well as developed countries are helping Mongolia to overcome difficulties of severe winter and develop its economy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Such trials were also held in Italy, England, Sweden, Switzerland and ---------- Netherlands.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The action is usually too fast, and children formulate their thoughts --------.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The American Academy of Pediatrics, which has 55,000 members, spent two years examining the impact of television on ---------, including numerous studies linking violence on the screen to aggressive behavior.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The American Academy of Pediatrics, which has 55,000 members, spent two years examining the impact of television on children, including numerous studies --------violence on the screen to aggressive behavior.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The bedroom is a place where kids can reflect ------- what happened during the day, where they can sit down and read a book.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The bedroom is a place where kids can reflect on what happened during the day, ------ they can sit down and read a book.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The birds step off ------- eggs when they feel the movement of life under them.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The bride and her family are often in dept because of building a house for the groom, as well as -------- him silk robes, satin overcoats, hand-made slippers that indicate to all he has staged a grand wedding.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The court decreed that the summons ------------- to all mice in all the villages. Still, the defendants failed to appear.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The dazzling jewelry, nine days of feasting and dancing and the bride price which can run up to $ 40,000 are hallmarks of the custom, ------- Comoros is one of the world's poorest nations.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The dazzling jewelry, nine days of feasting and dancing and the bride price which can run up to $ 40,000 are hallmarks of the custom, even though Comoros is one of the world's ------- nations.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The findings ------- on data from the historic Terman Life-Cycle Study, in which a group of more than 1500 healthy California schoolchildren has been followed since 1921
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The French barrister Barthelemy Chassanee made a career -------- mice and rats.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The gold is often a ------- wealth for a new couple.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The pelican uses it to catch fish which it keeps in the strong sac that is the creature's trademark. The sac --------- folds under the beak when not in use.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The range of people who --------- affected by homelessness is infinite as society itself.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The scientists don't want to say that children can become violent overnight by --------- violence on the screen, but they are influenced by it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The scientists don't want to say that children can become violent overnight by watching violence on the screen, ------- they are influenced by it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The sick can't get to doctors or obtain medicine. ---------- price of meat has soared.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The situation can change for the worse as a new housing law provides ----- evictions of people who don't pay the rent in time.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The study is part of ----------- larger project studying the effect of stress on adults taking care of a sick family member.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The tradition arose long ago from the customs -------- by immigrants from Africa, India and Oman on the Saudi Peninsular.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The tradition is very strong. The youth living abroad and on the island -------- protest and criticize it, but they end up staging their own grand wedding.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The widespread cattle deaths have many nomadic families ----------.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The wolf was accused --------- killing two little girls, sentenced to death and executed.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The young inside the eggs --------- to chip away, but birth is a slow, labourious process.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Their counsel again found a plausible excuse ---------- that the mice had to cover many miles across fields, woods, ravines and swamps, their life threatened at every step by cats, foxes and owls.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Then severe blizzards hit early, in September, -------- many animals and leaving so much snow that the survivors couldn't graze.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There ------ more than 3 million homeless people in the USA, and the number is growing.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There are also charitable organizations --------- to improve the life of these people, to help them feel safer. But of course, these measures are not enough, they reach only the tip of the iceberg.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There were countries where horses and cows were tried for damage ------- to the crops.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There were trials ------- worms, bugs, Spanish fly, rats and other animals and insects
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There were trials ---------- worms, bugs, Spanish fly, rats and other animals and insects.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: These include the right to wear ---------- overcoats and an expensive cloth over the shoulders during special events.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They are especially fond of repetition, which is very important, and that is done ------- television very rarely."
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They found ------- in a downward spiral, life has fallen down roundabout them and they can't patch things up.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They say that ------ babies and toddlers have a critical need for direct interactions with parents and other adults for healthy development of brain and development of social, emotional and cognitive skills.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They say that babies and toddlers have a critical need for direct interactions with parents and other adults for ------- development of brain and development of social, emotional and cognitive skills.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They were looking for correlations between those attitudes and the timing and cause ----------- death.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They were often executed because they failed to call ------- help.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Thinking why such attitude to bad things --------- be dangerous, researchers noted that it is often related to poor problem-solving, social isolation and risky decision-making.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: This transition brought problems: alcoholism, homeless children, hundreds per cent of inflation.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Too weak even ------- their heads up, the babies make one of the few sounds of their lifetime, a grunt that becomes a bark, then later a scream of hunger.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Trials of animals - birds, reptiles and insects were common in medieval Europe -------- to the 18th century.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Usually they were executed, and their meat went to pay --------- the court expenses.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Wedding extravagance is a tradition on Grande Comore, the main island in the Comoros archipelago ------the coast of eastern Africa.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: When it dives, the pelican gulps fish and water into the sac which -------- stretch enormously.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: When London became too expensive, she ---------- to Derbyshire, where she rents at three-bedroom house. She has no children and lives on her own.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: When the nest is complete, the female lays two or three eggs and, for one month, the two take turns -------- them.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Young pelicans can leave the nest and move about --------- their fifth week.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Yuosouf, 47, was able to collect enough money for a grand wedding only by -------- 25 years ago to take low-paying job in France, the former colonial power.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: It sounds incredible, but when the two scientists did this experiment, they -------- that 50 % of those who took part in it failed to notice the substitution.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Looking at them --------- side by side, you notice that the two are of different height and build, are dressed differently, have different hair cuts and different voices.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Parents -------- monitor what the children are watching.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: When you ---------, the stranger informs you that you've just taken part in a psychological experiment.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ------ he was visible for five seconds, 40 percent of the viewers failed to notice him.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: -------- the next twenty years Nicolas had gone into the meat-packing business and had become rich and successful.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: . D. Holland said, "I myself can't believe what I am saying now, but we are having an impression that this woman -------- in anabiosis during 78 years before she was taken off the iceberg."
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: . People are often able to describe --------- some details events which actually took place while they were "unconscious".
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: A new generation of young Americans is increasingly expressing doubts ------ the theory of evolution. They reject Darwin's ideas as "unproven".
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Actually we don't realize why we behave in this particular way, we are not aware -------- the fact that our actions are determined on the level of subconsciousness.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: After --------- experience the change in religious or spiritual orientation can also be significant.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: After 13 years of ------- to write a great novel rarely managing to get to the final chapter of any of them - Helen Dewitt, 43, gives hope to failed novelists everywhere.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: All people are different, and our characters influence and define------- our behavior in life situations.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Also at Harvard, Simons showed people a videotape of a basketball game and asked them to count the passes -------- by one or other team.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: And ------- the time he died, in 1882, even the Church was starting to use his ideas.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: And, in Oklahoma, officials ordered that textbooks must now contain notes -------- doubts about the certainty of evolution.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: At the end of his life Darwin had -------- doubts about his conclusions.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Because the nomads live such a spartan life to begin with, there is --------- fat to trim.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: But it turns ------- that our features of character don't correspond to his or hers, and we’ll never be on friendly terms
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: But she found success with "The Last Samurai", the story of an eccentric single mother who, in ------ male role models for her fatherless prodigy son becomes obsessed with the film "The Seventh Samurai".
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: But, -------- the years passed, almost everyone came to accept Darwin's theory as the best available.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: But, in the early 19th century, studies of rocks and fossils --------- that the Earth was much older than the 10,000 years old suggested by religious scholars
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Daniel Simons, a psychologist of Harvard University, and Daniel Levin of Kent State University in Ohio say that we see much --------- than we think we do.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Eventually, he arrived -------- an answer during a four-year study of a tiny shellfish.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: First --------- people had an overwhelming sense of peace, calm and well-being, as well as freedom from bodily pain, which may have been acute.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: For centuries, people had accepted the biblical explanation that the Universe and everything in it --------- by God.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Greek businessman Aristotie Onassis was the ruler of an empire-------- and more powerful than most countries
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He studied people who experienced continuation of consciousness -------- being close to death.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He was one of the two or three ------------- men in the world and his power was legendary. He owned the largest fleet of cargo ships, an airline, newspapers, banks, steel mills, gold mines.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: He went to other banks and lending institutions, but--------- reasons he could not understand, they refused to help him.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Her story was recorded many times, and every time she told the same story without any variations --------proved she was not inventing it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In 2000, conservative religious groups in the USA, who have long resisted the -------- of evolution, persuaded the Kansas Board of Education to delete any mention of the theory from the state's science curriculum.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In fact, psychologists say that our sympathy and antipathy depend mostly ------ our own character.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: In order to find out more, ----------young English scientist Charles Darwin had examined rocks and minerals from five different continents and studied over 5,000 species of plants and birds.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: It was a revolutionary theory because it suggested that man was no more important than any other animal, and Darwin was afraid to tell anyone (including his wife) about it. But after 15 years of sickness and mental agony he eventually ------- his ideas in a book called "On the Origin of Species."
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Not surprisingly, many people were upset and angered -------- what they read.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Now, well over a hundred years ---------, the biblical version of events is back on the agenda.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Nowadays such modern theories as theory of physical vacuum or theory of torsion fields come into contradiction -------- the Darwin theory.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Of course, greediness is one of the ------------------ vices. Greedy people think that they can save something but actually they lose friends, relatives and respect of other people.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Of course, our character and behavior influence ------- our relationships with other people. That's why we like some people and don't care much about some others.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Our impression of -------- everything is just impression. In fact, we take in a few details and rely on memory, or perhaps our imagination, for the rest.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: People who -------- such experience lost their fear of death and are convinced of existence of an afterlife, whatever the researchers think.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Reliability is perhaps one of the best features of the person's character. It's the --------- virtue but unfortunately you don't often meet such people. This quality is especially important in men.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: So impertinent people reach their aims more often -------- others because they value themselves more than other people.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: So the Near Death Experience is not a phenomenon of private interest. It points to a --------- universe and spiritual view of humankind, to breakdown and renewal of our civilization.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Some of the earlier manuscripts are on a shelf at her Derbyshire home, ------- remain stored on computer discs.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Sometimes --------- return is symbolically predicted by a door, a boundary or a river which they are not allowed to cross.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Sometimes it is difficult to explain why we don't sympathize --------- a nice, easy-going and well-behaved person and we can't change our opinion to the better.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Sometimes these people find -------- moving rapidly down a dark tunnel towards a light.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Still, it is becoming clear that there is no theory which ---------describe such a complicated phenomenon as the Universe.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The author described over hundred cases when a physical body was in coma after an accident, surgery or other life ---------- trauma and then brought to life.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The Bishop of Oxford spoke for many when he declared he --------- he "descended from a monkey".
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The detachment is emotional --------- well as physical. There is a sensation of weightlessness, hearing seems to be telepathic
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The novel of DeWitt is being published ----- 20,000 copies for the British and Australian markets alone.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The procedure was strictly observed: the defendants ------------ and even tortured.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The same correlation was not found in people who explain life difficulties in --------- ways, such as blaming themselves, researchers said.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The specialists could not classify her condition as psychiatric disease and ------- the same time they could not explain her behavior
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The study of the Near Death Experience was conducted by a lot of doctors and scientists, ------- Dr. Raymond Moody, whose book Life after Life was not just a best-seller but encouraged lots of people to study this phenomenon.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Then they felt detached from the physical body, which was often seen below and --------- a slightly different light.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There -------- a feeling of love, joy, beauty and peace; the light brings about compassion and understanding.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: There may be meetings with dead relatives and loved ones who usually make it clear that the person's time is not yet -------- and that he must return to earth.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: These results suggest that we are very selective about what we take in. Since then more and more examples ---------- that show just how illusory our visual world is.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: They remind her-------- years of struggle.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: This work confirmed something he had long suspected: that over time, species change; that animals, fish and plants ------------ from more primitive bacterial forms; and that man had not been created in a day but "evolved" over millions of years from ape-like ancestors.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: To the ancient Greeks the word justice often meant vengeance, and Onassis was obsessed ------- both. He remembered every slight hurt he had ever suffered, and those who were unlucky enough to hurt him were paid back
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Typically, there is an emphasis ------- spiritual life and unconditional love, with less stress on formal aspects of religion.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: We often can't change in ourselves or it can be very difficult.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: We prefer to see the reaction to the events and actions, otherwise it leads to ---------.We often seek broad-mindedness in people as such people can really understand us and become true friends.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: When the man protested that he could not make the payments, the bank immediately --------- foreclosure proceedings.
Выделяют глаголы
Выделяют следующие разряды английских числительных:
Главные члены предложения – это
Главные члены предложения – это
Главные члены предложения – это
Залог бывает
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К вспомогательным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К модальным глаголам относятся
К неличным формам относятся
К неличным формам относятся
К неличным формам относятся
Местоимения бывают
Местоимения бывают
Наклонение бывает
Неопределенный артикль не употребляется с
Порядок слов в английском предложении может быть
Порядок слов в английском предложении может быть
Поставьте к предложению разделительный вопрос I am late,
Предлоги бывают
Предлоги бывают
Предлоги бывают
Предлоги бывают
Предлоги бывают
Предлоги бывают
Сказуемое в английском предложении может быть
Сказуемое в английском предложении может быть
Сказуемое в английском предложении может быть
Сказуемое в английском предложении может быть
Сказуемое в английском предложении может быть
Союзы бывают
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя bet – bet – bet:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя break –broke – broken:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя draw – drew – drawn:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя feel – felt – felt:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя fight – fought – fought:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя split –split – split:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя steal – stole – stolen :
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя swear – awore – sworn:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя sweep – swept – swept:
Укажите инфинитив глагола, формами которого являютя swing - swung - swung:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между глагольными формами:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и возвратными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между личными и притяжательными формами местоимений:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Укажите соответствие между типами глаголов:
Форма страдательного залога присутствует во временах
Формы глагола бывают


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  0096.Экз.04;ТБПД.01;4

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Тестовая база по дисциплине

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … are these people?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … are you going on holiday with?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … car is this? Is it Jim’s?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … colour is your bag?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … do you think about this picture?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … is your address?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … of your friends lives in Brazil?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … sort of car is it?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … sweater will you take: the blue one or the black one?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … told you about it?
Choose the correct result. Eight multiplied by four is ... .
Choose the correct result. Five from ten equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Nine nines are ... .
Choose the correct result. One hundred and twenty divided by six is ... .
Choose the correct result. One third and four sixths make ... .
Choose the correct result. Six fives are ... .
Choose the correct result. Thirty-six divided by six equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Twelve divided by four is ... .
Choose the correct result. Twenty-five take away seven equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Two times four goes ... .
Choose the correct translation. Кто из вас бывал в Америке?
Choose the correct translation. С кем ты танцевала на вечеринке?
Choose the correct translation. Ты знаешь, когда он вернется?
Choose the correct translation. Хотите мороженного?
Choose the correct translation. Я не умею ни петь ни танцевать.
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: The newspaper … bought is the early evening edition.
Choose the correct word: Hardly had he sat down … he was sent for again.
Choose the correct word: I never know … to ask for permission or not.
Choose the correct word: I’ll have to do overtime tonight, … is very tiresome.
Choose the correct word: Not only there was no tea, … there were no sandwiches either.
Choose the correct word: They’ll explain … you need to know to complete your report.
Choose the correct word: When … money into the slot, be sure to use undamaged coins.
Choose the correct word: … out of work, I watch TV and read books.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: Even if it rained …
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: If it hadn’t rained …
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: It was … a straightforward job … I can’t believe such a mistake has been made.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: I’m writing to you … we have still not received a reply to the letter we wrote to you 3 weeks ago.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: Unless it rains …
Choose the correct translation. Никто никогда ничего мне не рассказывает.
Choose the correct translation. Двадцать одна страница отсутствует.
Choose the correct translation. Аптека находится на другой стороне улицы.
Choose the correct translation. Я знаю одну девушку, которая работает с тобой.
Complete the conjunction. Hardly had I taken my seat … the show began.
Complete the conjunction. He couldn’t decide whether … not he should go there.
Complete the conjunction. He not only told a lie … betrayed his friend.
Complete the conjunction. I came to London … to practice English.
Complete the conjunction. I can neither ski … skate.
Complete the conjunction. I have visited both Canada … the USA.
Complete the conjunction. I’ll study either Chinese … Japanese.
Complete the conjunction. Please call me … soon as you arrive.
Complete the conjunction. Please, move close so … I could hear you.
Complete the conjunction. … Jerome nor Harry can ski.
Complete the dialogue - Did anybody see you? - No, but I … if it hadn’t been so dark. with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue - Why didn’t you tell me? - You … angry if I had told you about it. with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- Did you say anything when your boss asked you? - No, I didn‘t. You see, if I … even a word, he … into a rage.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- How did it happen that you missed your stop? - I … it if the conductor … the stops.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- If they … short of money, they … eat out. - It’s true.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If water … to 100ºC, it … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Andrew would have been able to pass the exam if … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Had the councillors been re-elected, your proposal … accepted.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Hurry up! We … good seats if we … late.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I decided to stay at home last night. I would have gone out if I … so tired.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I felt as if I … a confidence.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I wasn’t hungry. If I … been hungry, I would have eaten something.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I wish it … possible.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would ask him if I … him better.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would go out if it … raining.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would have bought that Hi-Fi if I … enough money.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I … the same if I … in your shoes.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Benjamin Franklin … so hard, he … the symbol of America.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Columbus … such a passion for travelling, he … America in 1492.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Derek had been looking where he was going, he … into the wall.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I were you, I … that coat. It’s much too expensive.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … early tomorrow morning, I … jogging. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … her address, I would write to her.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … Mrs. Ross, I … to her. But I didn‘t see or speak to her.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … you, of course I … hello to you.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Laura … so much, she wouldn’t have put on weight.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If pigs … wings, they … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If research into genetechnology … so successful, we … be faced with such serious ethical problems now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If we … that you were coming, I … you at the airport. I had a lot of time to do that.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you had one million pounds what … ?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … a run for it, you’ll catch the train.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … at a loose end last month, you … your driving. But you failed it.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … Eve’s vase, she’d have been furious.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … late, you … understood the lecture.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … late, you … what we … about now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … really my friend, you‘d lend me the money.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … the milk out of the fridge in this weather, it’ll go bad.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «It’s a pity you can’t drive. It … useful if you could.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «It’s pity you couldn’t come to our concert. I’m sure you … it.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I’m not tired enough to go to bed yet. I wouldn’t sleep if I … to bed now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I’m sure he will give me some money. I … surprised if he refused.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «James, look at that man! If he … harder at school, he … the streets now.» with one of the following verbs
Complete the sentence «No matter what … . I’ll always stand by him!» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Plants die if you … them.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Supposing the computer …, what would you do?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «The view was wonderful. If I … camera, I … some pictures.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «They helped me a lot. I don‘t know what I … without their help.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «They would be offended … we didn’t accept their invitation to the party.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «What a pity my cousin is away! If he … here he … us. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «What … you do if you were bitten by a snake?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Which guide books … useful if you went to Britain?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Would it be all right if I … round at about six?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Would you contribute to the fund if I …. you to?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Yesterday’s earthquake would have caused less damage if the houses … of stronger construction.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You can get there more quickly if you … the short cut across the railway bridge.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You look tired. If I … you, I … a holiday. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You may invite whomever you … to the barbecue.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You … have a tussle with the management if you … through with that plan.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You’ll get a free month‘s subscription, … you renew your membership by the end of January.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «… Andrew was angry, he would walk out of the room.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence: Ales told me about his new job, … very much.
Complete the sentence: I don’t like stories … have unhappy endings.
Complete the sentence: I was woken up by the bell … .
Complete the sentence: Life must be very unpleasant for people … near busy airports.
Complete the sentence: What’s the name of the man …?
Complete the sentence: When I entered the waiting room it was empty except for a young man … by the door … a newspaper.
Continue the sentence: “Purpose clauses are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Clauses of comparison are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Manner clauses are introduced by, conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Result clauses are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Define the clause in the sentence: I couldn’t see Mary’s expression, because her head was turned.
Define the clause in the sentence: I keep the windows, open so as to let fresh air in.
Define the clause in the sentence: It all sounded so crazy that I laughed out loud.
Define the clause in the sentence: Mary sounded as though she had just run all the way.
Define the clause in the sentence: Though he has lived for years in London, he writes in German.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: He did the work very carefully so that he’d be sure of getting it right.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: I turned up at the dentist’s in spite of having the flue.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: I wouldn’t enrol for the course unless I felt it would fulfil my needs.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: In the interview, I tried to speak just as I do normally.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: Kate had a lot of loose change in case they ran out.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: She does exercise after exercise so as to perfect her English.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: There was too much noise where we were sitting.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: We kept on working till the end of the day.
Fill in the missing conjunction: I was very tired … I worked for a long time in my garden.
Fill in the missing phrase: “Please find a bill for £ 100 for the advice …:” read Mr. Grown.
Fill in the missing relative pronoun: The car … caused the accident drove off.
Fill in the missing relative pronoun: The thing … really surprised me was his attitude.
Fill in the missing word(s): A lot of our friends … to the party cannot come today.
Fill in the missing word: - Who shall we ask to the party? - Just a few people … we can be relaxed with.
Fill in the missing word: Are they the people … you went to Finland with?
Fill in the missing word: Carlo is the Italian guy … is staying with John’s family.
Fill in the missing word: Is he the one … bag got stolen when they were in Paris?
Fill in the missing word: James told me about his new job, … he’s enjoying very much.
Fill in the missing word: Maria works in that cinema … they show all the foreign films.
Fill in the missing word: Sue couldn’t come to the party, … was a pity.
Fill in the missing word: The sun, … is one of millions of stars in the universe, provides us with heat and light.
Fill in the missing words: I didn’t believe them at first but in fact everything … was true.
Identity the type of the pronoun: him.
Identity the type of the pronoun: itself.
Identity the type of the pronoun: our.
Identity the type of the pronoun: those.
Identity the type of the pronoun: whose.
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. fifty-six
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. five
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. forty-eight
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. nine
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. ninety-two
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. seventeen
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. thirty-one
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. three
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. twelve
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. twenty
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have one colleague. He works extremely hard. He has many friends.
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have several aunts. One works in London. She’s getting married.
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have two umbrellas. I bought one of them in Spain. That one needs repairing.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): My sister and her husband are in Rome now.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): Two thousand people work here.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): It’s half past ten.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): The castle is on the other bank of the river.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): There is something on the table.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): They spent a lot of money.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): They told her the truth.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): This umbrella is mine.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): Tom missed the first lesson.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): We need a little sugar.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Do the English drink … tea?
Supply a pronoun correctly. I haven’t got … money. Could you lend me some?
Supply a pronoun correctly. There is … bread left. You’ll have to buy some.
Supply a pronoun correctly. There will be … people at the conference.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Unfortunately, I don’t have … .
Supply a pronoun correctly. We have … money left. Let’s buy some souvenirs.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Would you like …. tea?
Supply a pronoun correctly. … of us wanted to see the play.
Supply a pronoun correctly. … sisters, Mary and Sindy, are architects.
Supply a pronoun correctly. … time I listen to this song, I feel like crying.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. - How did the man die? - He shot … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. - Who taught her to sew? - She taught … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Do you think the children can do it … ?
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Don’t hurt … , children!
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. I want to buy … a new pair of jeans.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Let me introduce … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. One should solve one’s problems … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. This tree stands by … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Tom enjoyed … very much at the concert.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. You look very proud of … .
Use a preposition if necessary. All … lemons are sour.
Use a preposition if necessary. Are you pleased … yourself?
Use a preposition if necessary. He was born … the sixth of February.
Use a preposition if necessary. It’s half … seven.
Use a preposition if necessary. I’ll pick you up … nine o’clock.
Use a preposition if necessary. Most .. us like American films.
Use a preposition if necessary. Seven multiplied … four equals twenty-eight.
Use a preposition if necessary. Six … ten makes four.
Use a preposition if necessary. Thousands … people visited the exhibition.
Use a preposition if necessary. We waited for half … an hour.
Use a pronoun or an article. Can I have … sandwich and … coffee?
Use a pronoun or an article. She is … only child, she doesn’t have .. brothers or sisters.
Use a pronoun or an article. There are … old buildings in the center of the city but you can’t see … of them from your room.
Use a pronoun or an article. There is … sugar, but there aren’t … eggs.
Use a pronoun or an article. There weren’t … spare chairs. I had to bring … chair from the bedroom.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. He was sitting in an armchair thinking about … .
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. I want to go … with some sunshine.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Is there … to drink?
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Is there … you don’t eat?
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. It’s … business.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. My life is so boring. … ever happens.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. There was … in the street. It was too late.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Where are my keys? I have looked … , but I can’t find them.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. … wants to see you.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. … was there when I came to the party.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. Could you show me another dress? I don’t like … one.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. Every time I come to London I stay in … hotel. I really like it here.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. These flowers are more beautiful than … .
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. … peaches are delicious.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun: Can you see ... man over there?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Brush your teeth … you go to bed.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I believe … he will be glad to see you.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I feel … miserable … happy.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I had a shower … went to bed.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I had to wait … I arrived too early.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I haven’t seen him … we met in Paris two years ago.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I recognized him … I heard him speaking.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I studied Japanese … I was in Tokyo.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I was tired … I had worked too hard.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It started to rain … we stopped playing tennis.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It was cold .. sunny.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It was getting dark … we didn’t turn the light on.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I’ll pay you back … I get the money.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I’ll stay here … he comes.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. We visited … the USA … Canada.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Will you call me … there is any news?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Would you like to watch a video … to go out for a drink?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. You know French … you can translate this letter for me.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. … he finished school he went to college.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. … I go to the country, I always go fishing.
Use the correct form of “other.” Can I have … cup of coffee?
Use the correct form of “other.” Can you speak any … European languages?
Use the correct form of “other.” Some people like cars, … prefer travelling by rail or air.
Use the correct form of “other.” The chemist’s is on … side of the street.
Use the correct form of “other.” There is only one shoe here. Where is … ?
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My coat is grey.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My friends and I like French food.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. “The Queen Hary” (a ship) arrives in Bristol on Friday.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Don’t tell the boys about it.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Have your seen the Browns’ new car?
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I am five years older than my brother.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I have read your letter, but I haven’t read Alice’s.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I showed the girl the way to the station.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My room is smaller than Tom’s.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Where is the children’s room?
Use the correct tense form. Did he tell you what time the (call) again?
Use the correct tense form. He asked if she (marry) him.
Use the correct tense form. I am not sure whether I (come) to the party.
Use the correct tense form. I don’t know when he (come). Probably in an hour or two.
Use the correct tense form. I wonder if Jane (wear) her diamond ring to the theatre tonight.
Use the correct tense form. I’ll go home as soon as the classes (be) over.
Use the correct tense form. I’ll go to bed when I (do) the washing up.
Use the correct tense form. Kevin can pick up Joan if she (be) ready in twenty minutes.
Use the correct tense form. We’ll go sailing this summer if we (have) enough money.
Use the correct tense form. You (feel) better if you stop smoking.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: Everybody around him was panicking, … he stayed calm.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: She seemed calm … sad.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: We didn’t eat … drink.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: We stayed in a comfortable … shabby place.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Alice, … husband is quite wealthy, doesn’t have to work.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Did you visit the town … Shakespeare was born?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Do you remember the hotel … I first saw you?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. I never know … to expect from him.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. The cars … are produced in Japan are high quality.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. The people … live next door have three cars.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. This is the man … name I can’t remember.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Where is the boy …. broke the window?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Where is the letter … arrived this morning?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Why didn’t you tell me … you are tired?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. You can show him the photo … I gave you.
Use the verb in the correct form. Both my son and my daughter (drive) a car.
Use the verb in the correct form. Either Kate or Alice (be) in the kitchen now.
Use the verb in the correct form. I know some people who (not like) flying.
Use the verb in the correct form. Neither Jane nor I (like) cooking.
Use the verb in the correct form. Seven (multiply) by four is twenty-eight.
Use the verb in the correct form. There (be) a lot of snow last winter.
Use the verb in the correct form. There (be) twenty-one students in my class.
Use the verb in the correct form. Three times four (equal) twelve.
Use the verb in the correct form. Twenty-five students came to the lecture, four (be) absent.
Use the verb in the correct form. Which of you (speak) German?
What is the time? It’s a quarter past five p.m.
What is the time? It’s a quarter to four p.m.
What is the time? It’s exactly one a.m.
What is the time? It’s four minutes past six a.m.
What is the time? It’s half past six p.m.
What is the time? It’s nine twenty p.m.
What is the time? It’s ten to eight a.m.
What is the time? It’s twenty to twelve a.m.
What is the time? It’s two minutes to eleven a.m.
What is the time? Seven hundred hours.
Which sentence has reason clause?
Which sentence has the contrast clause?
Which sentence has the result clause?
... Ann was there?
... finished the test the students left the classroom.
... my view, it just shows that passing exams is not always a matter of hard work
... Russians can understand the other nations better now
11. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Why hasn't Mrs. Grey got in touch with us? - I don't know. It … be that she has lost our phone number.
12. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Jane seems to be avoiding you. - I can't tell you for certain. She … have been hurt by my words about her friends.
13. Вставьте пропущенные слова. In this office you … wear a tie, it's not necessary.
14. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Write down two things that you feel you really … do, but you don't do because you never have the time.
15. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Why did you carry that heavy box? You … hurt yourself!
16. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Where are my keys? - I suppose I … them in the car.
17. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I took my umbrella, but it didn't rain, so I … taken it.
18. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He had an accident in his car. He … where he was going.
19. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Mr. Dupon is very rich. He … work for a living.
20. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Do you want me to wait for you? - No, it's okey. You … wait.
21. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Alex’s test is the best in class. He … last night.
22. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - This is my father's car. - Really? Does he let … it?
23. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - What did the police do? - They made … a lot of questions.
24. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I saw … the money from the purse.
25. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Please, don't wake me up tomorrow morning. Let me … a little longer.
26. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The teacher told … a composition.
27. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Did you see the robber? - Yes, I saw him … out of the shop.
28. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I want … this letter right now.
29. Вставьте пропущенные слова. There is a lot … here.
30. Вставьте пропущенные слова. How silly of her … about modesty at a time like this, Scarlett thought.
31. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Mr. Jackwill seems … suddenly ill at his office.
32. Вставьте пропущенные слова. These young people have been observed … daily during the last week in Green Park.
33. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Kilimanjaro is a snow covered mountain and is said … the highest mountain in Africa.
34. Найдите ошибку. I happened (1) to look at that moment (2) out of the window (3) when they arrived (4).
35. Найдите ошибку. Our professors concider he (1) to be (2) the best student at the University (3) because of his knowledge (4).
36. Найдите ошибку. They let John (1), watch TV (2) in spite (3) it being very late (4).
37. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He dressed well and he liked his clothes … properly … after.
38. Найдите ошибку. I don’t even think (1) they heard (2) us (3) came in (4).
39. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He was the first man … at the meeting.
40. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I wanted us … at once, but Sue was quite firm that she wouldn’t.
41. Найдите ошибку. I think I’d like you know (1) that it’s just well to be prepared, (2) so that of she went suddenly (3) it wouldn’t be any shock to you (4).
42. Перефразируйте. Transform the sentence using Complex Object. I still consider Jack is right.
43. Transform: It seems that Clark is not in the habit of reading text books for classes.
44. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He was so foolish … to leave his car unlocked.
45. Transform. It is possible that Derec sent us a letter while we were abroad.
46. Transform. The people say that this palace will be built in 4 years.
47. Вставьте пропущенные слова. You … hear their phone ringing. They haven’t got a phone.
48. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Where’s Dad? - He is supposed … the car. I saw him in the yard a minute ago.
49. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I shan’t require her … to me.
50. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The question … him feel embarrassed.
51. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … my friend take me to a restaurant of his choice.
52. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I was made … my car to the garage.
53. Transform. “Do you think I’ll jump and sing?” she asked.
54. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … London before 8 o’clock, but I didn’t.
55. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Julian … hitch-hike to Turkey on his own.
56. Вставьте пропущенные слова. We didn’t like their new house, though we … say so.
57. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The little boy didn’t want to jump off the wall, but his friend … him.
58. Вставьте пропущенные слова. -What a slow train this is! - Yes, we … just as well walk.
59. Найдите ошибку. I daresay (1) you’ll phone me (2) if you’ll be going (3) to be late tonight (4).
60. Вставьте пропущенные слова. We … send these official letters before the end of the week.
Bill can't write yet and he can't read ...
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “A car suddenly … in front of me and I couldn’t stop in time.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “After he was knocked out, it took a long time to … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Alex’s secretary … a call to the office in Chicago.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “As darkness fell, there was nothing for it but to … for the nearest village.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “As the years passed, Joe’s memories of his terrible experience … away, and he began to lead a normal life again.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Did you notice Bob trying to … doing the washing-up?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Don’t worry if you make a mistake. Just … it out.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Don’t …! I haven’t finished explaining yet!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He gambled … his life’s savings before starting on his wife’s.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He … as a quiet, thoughtful person.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He’s been to the USA, Australia and Germany this year. He certainly gets…!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “How could you have … him for your brother?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I could probably … out the answer if I had a pencil, some paper and a calculator.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I expect the new trend will soon … here.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I knew his family would stand … him.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I know it’s a pretty boring routine, but you’ll just have to … on for a moment, I’m afraid.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I think a couple of coffees will … off the meal nicely.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I was disappointed when I saw the film. It was a real … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “If a bus doesn’t come, you can always flag … a taxi.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “If you’re interested in U2, you can send … free tickets and be part of the studio audience next time they record it.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Ingrid broke … in tears when we told her about the accident.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It is vital that we … a change in people’s attitudes.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It … out that the mayor had bribed several councillors to vote for him.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It’s no good trying to … with Henry. You’ll never change his mind.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It’s sufficient to tell identical twins… .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’d better take one of my pills. I think I’ve got a headache…”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’ll use my credit card to… up before we check out.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’m not going-so don’t try to … me … going!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’m so tired I think I’ll probably … off in the cinema.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Look, I … it all back. I should never have spoken like that.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Look, I’m sorry to … in, but I think I can help you.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “One of them was injured so the team had to … the competition.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Owning an animal can really tie you … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Paloma will have to … her antiques, because she needs the money.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Politicians frequently … a lot of criticism.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Rosa certainly … her mother in her devil-may-care approach to life.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Sarah wasn’t at all hungry and could only … with the food on her plate.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Scientists … a carefully controlled experiment on the mystery virus.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “She’s so depressed. All these problems are really…”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “So you’re passed your driving test! This … a celebration!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Suddenly the fire-alarm … and everybody had to leave the building.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Thank goodness you’ll be there. I’m … on your support.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The elaborate bridal costumes of the coasted Indians are … from mother to daughter.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The lecture hall gradually emptied as Professor Jackson… on.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The motorist must have run … the fox without noticing.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The official … quickly through my file, and then handed it back to me.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The plane … and was soon flying high over the town.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The reporter announced solemnly that the President had … in his sleep.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The road was closed, so we had to … and find an alternative route.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The speaker failed to get his message … to his audience.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The terrorists headquarters was blown ... in the army attack.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “There’s no time to do anything but … briefly on the most important points.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “This is a big decision to make. Think it … before you give me your final word tomorrow.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “To beat the holiday traffic, we’ll have to ... out at down.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We were … when we saw how much he had changed .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We … for Aberdeen at midnight.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We’ll have to… down the options before coming to a decision.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “What do the initials LT … ?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “You shouldn’t have sent Paul that Valentine’s card. I think you’re scared him…!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “You’ll lose marks if you don’t … in all the gaps.”
Combine two sentences into one. Mary passed the exam. I saw the results.
Combine two sentences. Andrew was going through the customs. I found him there.
Combine two sentences. Mum, what’s burning in the kitchen? 'I can smell something strange', said the girl.
Combine two sentences. My dad was working all the morning. I saw this when I came into his room.
Combine two sentences. The morning is wonderful. The birds are singing. Listen to them!
Correct the sentence. Wondering where to spend my holidays, a leaflet caught my eye.
Correct the sentence: Shining in the dark sky, we saw a first star.
Do you feel ... going to Peter Gabrial’s concert tonight?
Don't do it. It's very ...
Have you ... been to England? I'm surprised, you speak good English
He was so tired, he ... played chess at all
How did Tom behave? He behaved ...
I ... have tea than coffee
I am used ... English because I know it quite well.
I appreciate ... this chance to explain my mistake.
I don't like fish…
I got acquainted with ... last summer
I haven't seen her ... time
I suspect he isn't honest. I think he's quite ...
I used ... when I was younger, but nowadays I do not smoke any longer.
I was ... surprised to learn that I had passed my exam
I was afraid ... along when I was very young, because I was afraid…
I was sorry ... Sally lost her bag.
I was trying to sell my old Hi-Fi system but nobody was interested ... it.
I was very sorry ... that news
I would ... have been able to find a job like yours
I'm (extremely sleep)...
I'm so tired, but it's ... a long way from here to my house
I'm sorry, there's no ... information
I've drunk ... wine in a restaurant
In our country there are a lot of schools for ... blind
It is ... of me to forget about the meetings
It was nice of you ... me to the airport
It's ... meal I've ever had
It's a ... dress
I’m sorry ... you yesterday.
Jack gave me ... handshake
Jim is a very ... runner and swimmer
Julia ... doesn't understand this rule
London is ... bigger than Edinburgh
London is ... city in Britain
Mark insisted ... attending the driving course.
Mr.Windsor is highly ... in the town
Mrs.Crown spoke very ...
My parents warned me... marrying Jack Wilson.
Nobody suspected Mr. White ... being a Russian spy.
Paul bought this suit and I bought these shoes to go with it, ...
Professor Nelson congratulated the students ... passing their exam.
She's never seen ... mess before
Susan can't do the sums as ... as you do
Susan is an engineer. She's ... a mother
The faster I write, ... more mistakes I do
The papyrus was ... old, we didn't dare to touch it
The safe showed no signs of ...
The supper smells ...
There are some books ...
There were ... many people on the bus
This is ... newspaper
This Russian cookery book is by ...
We saw that the train went ...
What prevented you ... travelling to South Wales on Sunday?
You needn't look at me in ...
You shouldn't answer the door when I'm out ... circumstances
You shouldn't sign the document ... any account
You think you're ... clever
В каком из предложений аббревиатура использована правильно:
Вставьте пропущенные слова. As you ... remember, Tom was always interested in history.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … get up early on Mondays.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. I'm sorry, I … have phoned to tell you I was coming.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. Little children like books with large print. They … read them easily.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. My dentist, Mr. Dennison, says I … eat so many sweets.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. Nobody answers the phone. They … be out.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. The policeman told the woman she ... worry.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. To my mind, the government … take care of old people.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. You will … speak Spanish in another few months.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. … you mind passing me the salt?
Вставьте пропущенные слова: …. entitles the holder to travel over a ….. border without being searched and questined.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. '...?' - I'm 20!
Выберите верный вариант ответа. 'Don't do that!' Jane ... to them.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. 'What is his father?' -'...'
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... you found the keys you lost?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Dick can't speak Russian and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Dick's paying,...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'll get my money back, ... ?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Mark hasn't got the paper, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She ... the Jamaican coast at 4 a.m.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She's getting a new job, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The women ... me to leave.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. This island ... cyclones and hurricanes.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. We ... here ... 5 years.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. What ... you … at 5 o'clock tomorrow?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Which pigeon ... first?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Who ... St. Paul's?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Yesterday I met Ann who ... me she was getting married.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. He was ... asleep when alarm went off.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. He often ... things like that.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'm speaking good English now, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. John can speak English and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My desk ... by someone 5 minutes ago.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My father ... by the year 2010.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She always ... me her troubles.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. When ... we finish all this work?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. You didn't leave the gas on, ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... carefully, too.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... my wallet?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... any letters? (the mail arrives at a given time in the day)
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... inside the house when the fire ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After they ..., there ... an awkward silence.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Come with me. I'm seeing 'Mission Impossible' tomorrow. - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Do you ... any games?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. First, ... a safe place to cross.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Have you seen my CD player? I've ... it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Have you ... any hobbies?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... round the world in 80 days.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... in prison for 10 years. Now he’s out.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... lived ... 6 years in Fairfield and he's now the principal of the college in Princeton.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. How ... you ... the news?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Huge waves ... on the rocks below.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... to travel around the world.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't know the answer. That's why ... you!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I think ... about nothing.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... any luck since I ... a baby.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'm cold. ... quite windy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'm playing hockey. ... you like it?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Lindsay Lewis ... and has 4 children.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Look! ... soon.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Mary ... a nervous breakdown last year. No one ... surprised. She ... much too hard for months.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Oh, dear. I'm sorry. I ... time at the moment.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Rome ... in a day (a saying).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Shall we go out tonight? ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Students ... this course.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. That ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The sky overhead ... a mass of stars.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The sun ... behind those black clouds.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The weather ... improved.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. They ... him, when he ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We ... her before.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We ... in Brighton about 6 o'clock.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What a pity! ... Don's a very good pianist.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What ... over Christmas?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Where ... ?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Who ... you at the airport?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. He ... jumbo jets all his life but next week he ... his job.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... about it for a long time.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... Andrew all my life.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the current issue of “Plant News” and so far I can't see any mention of my research.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the house blue. I hope to finish it on Sunday.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the stars for years and I still ... very little about the Milky Way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I can't go outside. It ... for 2 hours now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I see that you ... on the same problem for the last 20 years!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. If your headache ... away, ... another tablet about four hours later.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Let's wait until we ... here for a few more years before we ... anyone that we can't ... what we ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Sales ... slightly for 7 years and ... up.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. The student ... to this book at the exam.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. The traffic ... much worse now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. We ... Alexandria with my brother from October 22nd to 24th.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. What are you doing? - I ... ... my shoe-laces.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. What's that awful smell? - I ... another kind of tea, I'm afraid.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't think the weather ... too much.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Our college hockey team ... the Cup.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Phone 013-631-4401, if you ... an exciting holiday.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What's the matter, David? - ... my pen.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... is not allowed on double yellow lines.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... you hold on a minute please, I'll try to connect you.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Are the students ... about the exam?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. By the time the train arrived I was ... late.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. By this time tomorrow, I ... on the phone.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Don't phone me, I ... all the morning tomorrow.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I will tell you about my decision when you ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I won't go to the party ... you come too.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'll ... in my car on the way to work.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'm ... to go to America next summer.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. If you've got a headache, why don't you take a ... of aspirin?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. In 2000 the agreement ... in force for 15 years.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My friend likes to drive the car and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My mum doesn't read love stories and …
Выберите верный вариант ответа. New workers ... always ... by the manager.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. People ... those who are born under the sign of Aquarius.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She said she ... happy to see us ... week.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She said she ... me the book as soon as she ... it herself.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Soon there ... changes at work, you may be offered a better job.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Sooner or later he ... to face up to his responsibilities.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The ancient Egyptians believed all illnesses were related to ... was eaten.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The children always ... me if they can go for a walk.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The injured man ... to hospital by ambulance.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The snow has been ... steadily for several hours and the ground is completely covered.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The teachers ... on Gilbert's progress from ten to ten thirty next Monday.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The window ... when I came into the room.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. There is gin, whisky and sherry: ... will you have?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. There'll be no trouble about this, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. These workers ... the new crossroads by the end of the week.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. They ... interviewing this famous actress there.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. They ... post my letter when the ship arrives at the port.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Until May, you ... too busy with work paying much attention to your family.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. What are Mary's plans for this summer? She ... her entrance exam to Moscow University.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. You can afford a new car now, ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We just play tennis for fun. Why ... you try playing?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't eat meat but I ... all other kinds of food.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Would you like to go to the cinema tomorrow? - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'd like to visit some of my friends. - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... to Luxor by bus or by train?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. A fortnight in the Sheraton in August ... almost $800.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... Did you have this book in the first lecture this morning? - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Does anyone else know about this accident? - No, ... anyone else yet.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Last Monday Dick ... a wallet on a lonely street.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ‘Why ... you go with me next Saturday?’ (I ... to the Town Hall next Saturday).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I see that you did well in your 'A' levels. Why ... to university when you left school?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After you ... through all the text book, study parts of it in detail.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The New Oxford Garage is ... for more salesmen.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The number '1' ... in the window of a camera and I'm ready to take my first picture!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Jane ... in France when she ... the man who later ... her husband.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When Terry ... the job he ... ... his, he immediately ... his colleagues out for a celebration.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When the liner ... the iceberg, most of the passengers ... dinner.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Try as we might, it ... impossible to manoeuvre our sailing boat out of the harbour. The wind ... too hard.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Annabel ... bad headaches for 2 months now. They suspect a brain tumour.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... to get you on the phone for over 3 days. Where ... you ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Why (be) you (not) at the party? - I not (be told) about it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Before she ... her university course, Jane ... all the books on her first year reading list.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Alex ... treatment for 3 years before he ... finally he ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Stories about this treatment ... for many months before any statement ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The garden ... absolutely lovely last year, because of the hard work we ... the previous autumn.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. If I ... what to do, everything would have been all right. As it ..., everything ... wrong.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Mike ... for the right person to be his wife for 2 years before he ... and ... in love with Mary.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Jerome ... in 1995 and ... a year applying for jobs before he was offered the one he ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Joan ... engaged, it ... a complete surprise.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. His sister ... from asthma all her life. She’s dead now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... a novel several years ago, but I ... whether he ... it or not.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The girl ... but at the last moment I ... her.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He couldn’t speak, but he ... what I ... . He ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Between 1918 and 1939 many people in the West ... their faith in democracy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. That day (1) I hadn’t (2) nothing (3) important to do (4).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Last week I ... at a conference in York.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. There ... quite a lot of woodland around here.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. People ... in real life as they ... in plays.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When they ... the bridge, they ... over and ... down at the water beneath.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The valley ... two thousand feet below them.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Monica and her sister ... in the same way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... early to catch the last train.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. To improve the railway service, they ... all the main lines.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The report ... out of date - which ... hardly surprising, since it was published in 1980.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After all, Glasgow ... the city where she really ... So this year she ... to spend her holiday in the city.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. In that case, we can go out and ... our game.
Выберите правильный вариант предложения: "We've bought teak kitchen fine cupboard"
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): -Would you like ... to the cinema? -Oh, yes. I’d love to. I like ... to the cinema.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): As it is late I suggest ... by taxi.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Avoid ... a lot of tinned food, it’s unhealthy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Avoid ... and you’ll feel better soon.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Could you all stop ... ? The programme’s beginning now.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Do the following things ... healthy teeth!
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Do you punish your child for ____ ?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I can’t watch TV with you ... in front of it!
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I can’t help ... about that awful accident.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I really must stop _____ .
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I’m afraid you can’t avoid ... this money.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Mark enjoys ... volley-ball with his friends.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The Blakes want ... Aberdeen this weekend.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The children kept ... him all the time.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): What about ... to the country next week?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Why have you stopped? Go on ____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Would you mind ... off the Hi-Fi?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Would you mind ... the front door?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): You should remember ... Alex. He’ll be at home.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Is there anything in that new magazine worth _____?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I’ll always remember ... you for the first time.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My watch is broken, but it’s not worth _____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): You can learn English ... to England, but it’s not so easy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): She tried to be serious but she couldn’t help ...
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Your shoes are terribly dirty; they really need _____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Although I was in a hurry, I stopped ... to him.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): All parts of London seem ... to different towns and epochs.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The teacher asked us some questions and went on ... us about the climate of Scotland.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): When we had finished ... , the waiter brought the bill.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My older brother went to college, and I hope ... there too.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My car needs a service badly, and Tom offered ... me with it.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): We might manage ... a lot of interesting places in Greece.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The dentist advised us to read the note about ... our teeth healthy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): 'Unfortunately you cannot stop tooth decay simply by ... your teeth, said Mr. Greyson.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): ... your teeth with fluoride tooth paste after every meal is important.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Many countries have also started ... fluoride to drinking water.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): ... found the hotel, we decided to take a sightseeing tour round the city.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Alex hurt his leg while ... football with his classmates.
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Как закончить письмо? (расставьте заглавные буквы)
Как можно написать неполностью Thursday?
Как правильно записать адрес?
Как записать сумму: eighty nine and a half pounds
Найдите правильный вариант: 2 степени Доктора наук
Найдите правильный вариант: will not
Найдите правильный вариант: кризис правительства 1985 года.
Найдите правильный вариант: мужской магазин
Найдите правильный вариант: слишком много букв «м»
Объясните употребление запятой. The manager explained that, if he had known we were coming, he would have made other arrangements
Объясните употребление запятой. The rescuers who had no extra provisions with them, had to be rescued themselves
Объясните употребление запятой. Unless I hear from you by tomorrow, I will assume the meeting is off
Объясните употребление запятой. You can sail any kind of dinghy, cruiser, yacht or surfboard in the har-bour
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. If your foot become (1) white and numb (2), loosen the bandage at once (3), - it's a doctor's advice (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. It is still (1) one (2) of most beautiful books (3) ever produced (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. It was almost (1) dark totally (2) when (3) they arrived (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. James worked (1) for the CIA (2) since 1970 (3) to 1985 (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Methods of printing (1) has developed (2) by the newspaper industry (3) over the past hundred years (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Mike has a small dog (1) and his elder sister has a cat, (2) his younger brother loves snakes (3) and want to put them in the bath (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Sharon is a teacher (1), but she wants to go into business (2) because she can talk (3) and she wants to sold scientific equipment (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Then (1) I went downstairs (2) they were (3) already eating breakfast (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. They were rolling (1) up the hill (2) without breaks, (3) everybody was happy (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. We stopped (1) to refuel (2) at New York (3) in our way to Tokyo (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Paul Johnson's hobby collects money (1) from other countries (2) , but he does not save (3) any paper money (4).
Определите, в каком предложении содержится ошибка. It was a horrible day (1). The children had got up late (2). The cat was sick (3). The car didn’t start (4).
Определите, в каком предложении содержится ошибка. Why didn’t you go to see the film last week? (1) I thought you liked Paul Newman.(2) - Because I already saw it. (3) I went when I was in London. (4)
Перефразируйте предложение. He described the career of the actress
Перефразируйте предложение. This bicycle is for a child
Поставьте дефис, если он необходим: brother in law
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: gone with the wind (a title of the book)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: history of the eastern world (a title of school class)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: Incopterms are to set of rules published by the … , Paris, for the interpretation of the most commonly used terms in foreign trade.
Расставьте заглавные буквы и знаки препинания, где необходимо: I knew that …. ….. was her favourite.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где необходимо.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где они необходимы:
Расставьте знаки препинания, заглавные буквы:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания: What a wonderful day
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Addam Wilson, (1) …. (2) of the (3)… (4)…. , was appointed by (5) … Bush
Расставьте знаки препинания: Caution Don't use matches here
Расставьте знаки препинания: He said I heard this man saying Tell everybody I’m not guilty.
Расставьте знаки препинания: How long did it take you to watch‘ The Titanic we asked
Расставьте знаки препинания: I said to Fred: “You will follow my advice, won’t you?”
Расставьте знаки препинания: I'm sorry to tell you about it however I have to do it.
Расставьте знаки препинания: Mary asked why didn't you tell me what had happened with you
Расставьте знаки препинания: Now I understand this situation Andrew thought
Расставьте знаки препинания: Our deadline is March 31 or is it March 30
Расставьте знаки препинания: Please dont keep asking me Whats the time Alex said crossly
Расставьте знаки препинания: Special offer call 4433111 for more details
Расставьте знаки препинания: The chairman said and thank you for attention
Расставьте знаки препинания: The major counties in the south Kent East Sussex West Sussex and surrey are very popular among tourists.
Расставьте знаки препинания: The President said the policy states but was interrupted by the reporter
Расставьте знаки препинания: The tourists said: ‘It was a terrifying experience which we will never forget.’
Расставьте знаки препинания: This rule see page 100 is very often used
Расставьте знаки препинания: Two TV sets a tape recorder two computers these were her belongings.
Расставьте знаки препинания: We had very good holidays, for example we spent a lot of time near the sea.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Are you Ok Mary asked.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Have you lost your way the stranger asked me
Расставьте знаки препинания: Where are they now he wondered
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Did you visit Peter Smith, …. of …., ….?
Расставьте пропущенные слова: His train to … leaves at …
Расставьте пропущенные слова: The report must be ready by
Расставьте пропущенные слова:Young people like to read … and …. .
Во множественном числе слова birth произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова cargo произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова chief произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова country произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова day произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова fish произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова fox произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова girl произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова hospital произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова lesson произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова mother произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова roof произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова safe произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова watch произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова wolf произносится окончание …
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. Can I borrow your scissors? Mine … not sharp enough.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. England … lost all their football matches this season.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. The trousers you bought for me … not fit me.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. Three days … not long enough for a good holiday.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. … the police know about the stolen money?
Вставьте правильный артикль. After … lunch, we went for a walk to … sea.
Вставьте правильный артикль. As I was walking along the street I saw … £10 note on … pavement.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Bill has got … big feet.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Can you turn … television down, please? It's a bit loud.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Could you close … door, please?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did Ann get … job she applied for?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did you see this film on … television or at … cinema?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did … police find … person who stole your bicycle?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Do you collect … stamps?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Every English child knews the story of Robin Hood. It is said that he robbed … rich and gave the money to … poor.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Have you finished … book I lent you last week?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Have you got … camera?
Вставьте правильный артикль. I never listen to … radio. In fact I haven't got … radio.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I prefer swimming in … sea to swimming in pools.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I went into the shop and asked to speak to … manager.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I wrote my name at … top of the page.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I'm looking for …. job.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I'm not very hungry. I had … big breakfast.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Is he a rich man? Yes, he's … richest person I’ve ever met.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Is it a big hotel? Yes, it is … biggest hotel in the city.
Вставьте правильный артикль. It was warm and sunny, so we decided to sit in … garden.
Вставьте правильный артикль. It was … long voyage. We were at … sea for four weeks.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Jack plays … guitar very badly.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Jane is … teacher. Her parents were … teachers too.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Many people were killed in the plane crash. The bodies of … dead were taken away. … injured were taken to hospital.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Peru is … country in … South America. … capital is Lima.
Вставьте правильный артикль. There's no need to buy … milk. … milkman brings it every morning.
Вставьте правильный артикль. This is a nice house. Has it got … garden?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Those are … really nice trouthers.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Those people with jobs have enough money but life is not so easy for … unemployed.
Вставьте правильный артикль. We live in … small flat near … centre of the city.
Вставьте правильный артикль. We went out for … meal last night. … restaurant we went to was excellent.
Вставьте правильный артикль. What … beautiful garden!
Вставьте правильный артикль. What … lovely children!
Вставьте правильный артикль. When I was … child, I used to be very shy.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Would you like to be … actor?
Вставьте правильный артикль. … giraffe is the tallest of all animals.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … moon goes round … earth every 27 days.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … President of … United States is elected every four years.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … Soviet Union was … first country to send a man into … space.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … whale is a mammal but it lives in the sea.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. - I hear you're writing a book. Have you finished it yet? - Not quite, but I hope to finish it … the end of this month.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. - I'm going out now. I'll be back … 4.30. Will you still be here? - I don't think so, I'll probably have gone … then.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. .. the end of the course the students usually have a party.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. After many years away, he arrived back … England a month ago.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann has a good relationship … her brother.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann reads a lot of books … American women writers.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann works hard during the week, so she likes to relax … week-ends.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann's brother lives … a small village … the south coast of England.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Are you doing anything special … the week-end?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Are you going away … the begining of August or … the end?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Carol got married … 17, which is rather young to get married.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Columbus discovered America … the 15th century.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Do you know any songs … the Beatles?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. George is usually late for work but this morning he arrived … time.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. He hasn't lived in Moscow all his life. He lived in Germany … five years.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. His illness got worse and worse. … the end he had to go into hospital for an operation.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. How much money do you spend … food each week?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Hurry up! We've got to go … five minutes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I can't think of an answer … your question.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I couldn't hear the teacher very well. She had a quiet voice and I was sitting … the back of the class.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I don't think that there is any need … a new road.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I haven't seen Ann for a few days. I last saw her … Tuesday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I look stupid with this haircut. Everyone will laugh … me.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I met Ann … I was reading for the exams in the library.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I mustn't eat too much. I'm supposed to be … a diet.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I read about the accident. There was a report … the front page of the newspaper.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think I need a bit of exercise, shall we go … a walk?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think I'll wait … Thursday before making a decision.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think that there are some advantages …. being married.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I usually buy a newspaper … my way to work … the morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I waited for you … an hour and then left because I decided that you weren't coming.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I went to bed … midnight and got up … 6.30 the next morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I wouldn't like an office job. I couldn't spend the whole day sitting … a desk.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I wouldn't like his job. He spends most of his time talking … the phone.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll be moving to a new address … the end of September.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll meet you … the corner (of the sheet) … 10 o'clock.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll phone you … Tuesday morning … about 10 o'clock, okay?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll see you … next Friday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm hungry. What's … dinner this evening?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm just going out to do some shopping. I'll be back … half an hour.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm moving into my new flat next week. I'm staying with some friends … then.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I've been offered a job and I haven't decided yet whether to accept it or not. I have to decide … Thursday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. If the train had come … time, we would have been late.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. If want to get away from modern life, you should go and live … a small island … the middle of the ocean.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In Britain children have to start school … the age of five.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In Britain football matches are usually played … Saturdays.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In most countries people drive … the right.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It took John a long time to find a job after he left school. … the end he found a job as a waiter.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It was quite a short book and easy to read. I read it … a day.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It's a strange feeling when you first arrive … a foreign country.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It's difficult to listen when everyone is speaking … the same time.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Jazz became popular in the United States … the 1920s.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Look at those beautiful horses … the field.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Mary and Henry always go out for a meal … their wedding anniversary.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Mr. Boyle's office is … the first floor. When you come out of the lift, it's the third door … your right.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Production at the factory was increased … the war.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. She spends all days sitting … the window and watching what is happening outside.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Someone threw an egg … the minister while he was speaking.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The course begins … 7 January and ends … 10 March.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The first man landed … the moon 21 July 1969.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The headquarters of the United Nations is … New York.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The price of electricity is going up … October.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The Russian Revolution took place … 1917.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The train from London arrives … platform 4.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There are usually a lot of parties … New Year's Eve.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There has been a big increase … prices.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There has been a fall … the number of the employed this year.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There is no demand … such shoes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There was panic when people realized the building was … fire.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom didn't want to lend us the money at first but … the end he agreed.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom doesn't see his parents very often these days - usually only … Christmas and sometimes … the summer for a few days.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom isn't here … the moment. He'll be back … about five minutes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We are trying to find a solution … the problem.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We had to get on the train without tickets because we didn't get to the station … time to buy them.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We hadn't arranged to meet. We met … chance.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We normally use the front entrance to the building but there's another one … the back.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We travelled overnight to Paris and arrived … 5 o'clock … the morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We usually go somewhere … Christmas but we don't often go somewhere … the year.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We went to the theatre last night. We had seats … the front row.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. What time do you usually arrive … home in the evening?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. What time will you arrive? - I don't know. If depends … the traffic.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When do you get paid? - … the end of the month.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When I heard that he had passed his exam, I phoned him to congratulate him … his success.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When I opened the envelope, I was delighted to find a cheque … $500.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When we arrived … the cinema, there was a long queue outside.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When we were at school we met Sue … the interval.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When you send a letter, it is a good idea to write your name and address … the back of the envelope.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Why are you looking … me so sadly?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You can rely … Jack. He always keeps his promises.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You can see the stars … night if the sky is clear.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You'll find the cups … the top shelf.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You'll have to learn this table … heart.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … my opinion, violent films shouldn't be shown … television.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … next month I'm going to Scotland … a short holiday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … our stay in Moscow, we visited a lot of parties.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … Sunday afternoons I usually go for a walk in the country.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … we were in Moscow we stayed at our friends.
Множественное число от слова berry образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова birth образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова chief образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова child образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова fish образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова glass образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова leaf образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова ox образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова photo образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова piano образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова potato образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова rock образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова roof образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова shelf образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова watch образуется при помощи окончания …
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. I had (1) to buy a (2) bread because I wanted to (3) make some (4) sandwiches.
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. Margaret has (1) got (2) (3) very long black hairs (4).
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. Tom gave (1) me a (2) good advice (3) yesterday.
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. We had (1) a (2) very good weather when we were (3) on (4) holiday.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a book of your father-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a car of David and Ann.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a dictionary of the boys.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a flat of my mother-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a friend of Jack and Peter.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: the husband of my sister-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: the work of her brother-in-law.
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: boy’s book …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: chicken's leg ….
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: cow's hoof …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: fish's tail …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: fox's leg …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: Mike's dictionary …
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. Economics ,,, a very useful science.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. He bought good clothes. … (clothes) … fashionable.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. Mathematics … my favourite subject.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. My glasses … broken.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. That Japanese … very strange.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The British … very cold people.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The goods … sent yesterday.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The news … good.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The police … looking for evidence.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. These … very good pieces of advice.


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  0096.Зач.04;ТБПД.01;4

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Тестовая база по дисциплине

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … are these people?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … are you going on holiday with?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … car is this? Is it Jim’s?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … colour is your bag?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … do you think about this picture?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … is your address?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … of your friends lives in Brazil?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … sort of car is it?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … sweater will you take: the blue one or the black one?
Choose the correct interrogative pronoun. … told you about it?
Choose the correct result. Eight multiplied by four is ... .
Choose the correct result. Five from ten equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Nine nines are ... .
Choose the correct result. One hundred and twenty divided by six is ... .
Choose the correct result. One third and four sixths make ... .
Choose the correct result. Six fives are ... .
Choose the correct result. Thirty-six divided by six equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Twelve divided by four is ... .
Choose the correct result. Twenty-five take away seven equals ... .
Choose the correct result. Two times four goes ... .
Choose the correct translation. Кто из вас бывал в Америке?
Choose the correct translation. С кем ты танцевала на вечеринке?
Choose the correct translation. Ты знаешь, когда он вернется?
Choose the correct translation. Хотите мороженного?
Choose the correct translation. Я не умею ни петь ни танцевать.
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: The newspaper … bought is the early evening edition.
Choose the correct word: Hardly had he sat down … he was sent for again.
Choose the correct word: I never know … to ask for permission or not.
Choose the correct word: I’ll have to do overtime tonight, … is very tiresome.
Choose the correct word: Not only there was no tea, … there were no sandwiches either.
Choose the correct word: They’ll explain … you need to know to complete your report.
Choose the correct word: When … money into the slot, be sure to use undamaged coins.
Choose the correct word: … out of work, I watch TV and read books.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the sentence which contains a grammar mistake.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: Even if it rained …
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: If it hadn’t rained …
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: It was … a straightforward job … I can’t believe such a mistake has been made.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: I’m writing to you … we have still not received a reply to the letter we wrote to you 3 weeks ago.
Choose the suitable ending for the sentence: Unless it rains …
Choose the correct translation. Никто никогда ничего мне не рассказывает.
Choose the correct translation. Двадцать одна страница отсутствует.
Choose the correct translation. Аптека находится на другой стороне улицы.
Choose the correct translation. Я знаю одну девушку, которая работает с тобой.
Complete the conjunction. Hardly had I taken my seat … the show began.
Complete the conjunction. He couldn’t decide whether … not he should go there.
Complete the conjunction. He not only told a lie … betrayed his friend.
Complete the conjunction. I came to London … to practice English.
Complete the conjunction. I can neither ski … skate.
Complete the conjunction. I have visited both Canada … the USA.
Complete the conjunction. I’ll study either Chinese … Japanese.
Complete the conjunction. Please call me … soon as you arrive.
Complete the conjunction. Please, move close so … I could hear you.
Complete the conjunction. … Jerome nor Harry can ski.
Complete the dialogue - Did anybody see you? - No, but I … if it hadn’t been so dark. with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue - Why didn’t you tell me? - You … angry if I had told you about it. with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- Did you say anything when your boss asked you? - No, I didn‘t. You see, if I … even a word, he … into a rage.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- How did it happen that you missed your stop? - I … it if the conductor … the stops.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the dialogue «- If they … short of money, they … eat out. - It’s true.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If water … to 100ºC, it … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Andrew would have been able to pass the exam if … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Had the councillors been re-elected, your proposal … accepted.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Hurry up! We … good seats if we … late.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I decided to stay at home last night. I would have gone out if I … so tired.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I felt as if I … a confidence.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I wasn’t hungry. If I … been hungry, I would have eaten something.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I wish it … possible.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would ask him if I … him better.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would go out if it … raining.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I would have bought that Hi-Fi if I … enough money.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I … the same if I … in your shoes.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Benjamin Franklin … so hard, he … the symbol of America.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Columbus … such a passion for travelling, he … America in 1492.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Derek had been looking where he was going, he … into the wall.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I were you, I … that coat. It’s much too expensive.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … early tomorrow morning, I … jogging. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … her address, I would write to her.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … Mrs. Ross, I … to her. But I didn‘t see or speak to her.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If I … you, of course I … hello to you.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If Laura … so much, she wouldn’t have put on weight.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If pigs … wings, they … .» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If research into genetechnology … so successful, we … be faced with such serious ethical problems now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If we … that you were coming, I … you at the airport. I had a lot of time to do that.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you had one million pounds what … ?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … a run for it, you’ll catch the train.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … at a loose end last month, you … your driving. But you failed it.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … Eve’s vase, she’d have been furious.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … late, you … understood the lecture.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … late, you … what we … about now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … really my friend, you‘d lend me the money.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «If you … the milk out of the fridge in this weather, it’ll go bad.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «It’s a pity you can’t drive. It … useful if you could.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «It’s pity you couldn’t come to our concert. I’m sure you … it.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I’m not tired enough to go to bed yet. I wouldn’t sleep if I … to bed now.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «I’m sure he will give me some money. I … surprised if he refused.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «James, look at that man! If he … harder at school, he … the streets now.» with one of the following verbs
Complete the sentence «No matter what … . I’ll always stand by him!» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Plants die if you … them.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Supposing the computer …, what would you do?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «The view was wonderful. If I … camera, I … some pictures.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «They helped me a lot. I don‘t know what I … without their help.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «They would be offended … we didn’t accept their invitation to the party.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «What a pity my cousin is away! If he … here he … us. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «What … you do if you were bitten by a snake?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Which guide books … useful if you went to Britain?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Would it be all right if I … round at about six?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Would you contribute to the fund if I …. you to?» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «Yesterday’s earthquake would have caused less damage if the houses … of stronger construction.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You can get there more quickly if you … the short cut across the railway bridge.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You look tired. If I … you, I … a holiday. » with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You may invite whomever you … to the barbecue.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You … have a tussle with the management if you … through with that plan.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «You’ll get a free month‘s subscription, … you renew your membership by the end of January.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence «… Andrew was angry, he would walk out of the room.» with one of the following verbs:
Complete the sentence: Ales told me about his new job, … very much.
Complete the sentence: I don’t like stories … have unhappy endings.
Complete the sentence: I was woken up by the bell … .
Complete the sentence: Life must be very unpleasant for people … near busy airports.
Complete the sentence: What’s the name of the man …?
Complete the sentence: When I entered the waiting room it was empty except for a young man … by the door … a newspaper.
Continue the sentence: “Purpose clauses are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Clauses of comparison are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Manner clauses are introduced by, conjunctions such as …”
Continue the sentence: “Result clauses are introduced by conjunctions such as …”
Define the clause in the sentence: I couldn’t see Mary’s expression, because her head was turned.
Define the clause in the sentence: I keep the windows, open so as to let fresh air in.
Define the clause in the sentence: It all sounded so crazy that I laughed out loud.
Define the clause in the sentence: Mary sounded as though she had just run all the way.
Define the clause in the sentence: Though he has lived for years in London, he writes in German.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: He did the work very carefully so that he’d be sure of getting it right.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: I turned up at the dentist’s in spite of having the flue.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: I wouldn’t enrol for the course unless I felt it would fulfil my needs.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: In the interview, I tried to speak just as I do normally.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: Kate had a lot of loose change in case they ran out.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: She does exercise after exercise so as to perfect her English.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: There was too much noise where we were sitting.
Describe the adverbial clause in the following sentence: We kept on working till the end of the day.
Fill in the missing conjunction: I was very tired … I worked for a long time in my garden.
Fill in the missing phrase: “Please find a bill for £ 100 for the advice …:” read Mr. Grown.
Fill in the missing relative pronoun: The car … caused the accident drove off.
Fill in the missing relative pronoun: The thing … really surprised me was his attitude.
Fill in the missing word(s): A lot of our friends … to the party cannot come today.
Fill in the missing word: - Who shall we ask to the party? - Just a few people … we can be relaxed with.
Fill in the missing word: Are they the people … you went to Finland with?
Fill in the missing word: Carlo is the Italian guy … is staying with John’s family.
Fill in the missing word: Is he the one … bag got stolen when they were in Paris?
Fill in the missing word: James told me about his new job, … he’s enjoying very much.
Fill in the missing word: Maria works in that cinema … they show all the foreign films.
Fill in the missing word: Sue couldn’t come to the party, … was a pity.
Fill in the missing word: The sun, … is one of millions of stars in the universe, provides us with heat and light.
Fill in the missing words: I didn’t believe them at first but in fact everything … was true.
Identity the type of the pronoun: him.
Identity the type of the pronoun: itself.
Identity the type of the pronoun: our.
Identity the type of the pronoun: those.
Identity the type of the pronoun: whose.
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. fifty-six
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. five
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. forty-eight
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. nine
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. ninety-two
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. seventeen
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. thirty-one
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. three
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. twelve
Make the ordinal numeral from the cardinal. twenty
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have one colleague. He works extremely hard. He has many friends.
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have several aunts. One works in London. She’s getting married.
Match the situation with one of the sentences that follow: I have two umbrellas. I bought one of them in Spain. That one needs repairing.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): My sister and her husband are in Rome now.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): Two thousand people work here.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): It’s half past ten.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): The castle is on the other bank of the river.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): There is something on the table.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): They spent a lot of money.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): They told her the truth.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): This umbrella is mine.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): Tom missed the first lesson.
Put a question to the underlined word (group of words): We need a little sugar.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Do the English drink … tea?
Supply a pronoun correctly. I haven’t got … money. Could you lend me some?
Supply a pronoun correctly. There is … bread left. You’ll have to buy some.
Supply a pronoun correctly. There will be … people at the conference.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Unfortunately, I don’t have … .
Supply a pronoun correctly. We have … money left. Let’s buy some souvenirs.
Supply a pronoun correctly. Would you like …. tea?
Supply a pronoun correctly. … of us wanted to see the play.
Supply a pronoun correctly. … sisters, Mary and Sindy, are architects.
Supply a pronoun correctly. … time I listen to this song, I feel like crying.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. - How did the man die? - He shot … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. - Who taught her to sew? - She taught … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Do you think the children can do it … ?
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Don’t hurt … , children!
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. I want to buy … a new pair of jeans.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Let me introduce … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. One should solve one’s problems … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. This tree stands by … .
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. Tom enjoyed … very much at the concert.
Supply the correct reflexive pronoun. You look very proud of … .
Use a preposition if necessary. All … lemons are sour.
Use a preposition if necessary. Are you pleased … yourself?
Use a preposition if necessary. He was born … the sixth of February.
Use a preposition if necessary. It’s half … seven.
Use a preposition if necessary. I’ll pick you up … nine o’clock.
Use a preposition if necessary. Most .. us like American films.
Use a preposition if necessary. Seven multiplied … four equals twenty-eight.
Use a preposition if necessary. Six … ten makes four.
Use a preposition if necessary. Thousands … people visited the exhibition.
Use a preposition if necessary. We waited for half … an hour.
Use a pronoun or an article. Can I have … sandwich and … coffee?
Use a pronoun or an article. She is … only child, she doesn’t have .. brothers or sisters.
Use a pronoun or an article. There are … old buildings in the center of the city but you can’t see … of them from your room.
Use a pronoun or an article. There is … sugar, but there aren’t … eggs.
Use a pronoun or an article. There weren’t … spare chairs. I had to bring … chair from the bedroom.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. He was sitting in an armchair thinking about … .
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. I want to go … with some sunshine.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Is there … to drink?
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Is there … you don’t eat?
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. It’s … business.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. My life is so boring. … ever happens.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. There was … in the street. It was too late.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. Where are my keys? I have looked … , but I can’t find them.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. … wants to see you.
Use a suitable derivative of some, any, no or every. … was there when I came to the party.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. Could you show me another dress? I don’t like … one.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. Every time I come to London I stay in … hotel. I really like it here.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. These flowers are more beautiful than … .
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun. … peaches are delicious.
Use the appropriate demonstrative pronoun: Can you see ... man over there?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Brush your teeth … you go to bed.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I believe … he will be glad to see you.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I feel … miserable … happy.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I had a shower … went to bed.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I had to wait … I arrived too early.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I haven’t seen him … we met in Paris two years ago.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I recognized him … I heard him speaking.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I studied Japanese … I was in Tokyo.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I was tired … I had worked too hard.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It started to rain … we stopped playing tennis.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It was cold .. sunny.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. It was getting dark … we didn’t turn the light on.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I’ll pay you back … I get the money.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. I’ll stay here … he comes.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. We visited … the USA … Canada.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Will you call me … there is any news?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. Would you like to watch a video … to go out for a drink?
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. You know French … you can translate this letter for me.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. … he finished school he went to college.
Use the correct conjunction or linking word. … I go to the country, I always go fishing.
Use the correct form of “other.” Can I have … cup of coffee?
Use the correct form of “other.” Can you speak any … European languages?
Use the correct form of “other.” Some people like cars, … prefer travelling by rail or air.
Use the correct form of “other.” The chemist’s is on … side of the street.
Use the correct form of “other.” There is only one shoe here. Where is … ?
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My coat is grey.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My friends and I like French food.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. “The Queen Hary” (a ship) arrives in Bristol on Friday.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Don’t tell the boys about it.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Have your seen the Browns’ new car?
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I am five years older than my brother.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I have read your letter, but I haven’t read Alice’s.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. I showed the girl the way to the station.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. My room is smaller than Tom’s.
Use the correct pronoun instead of the underlined noun. Where is the children’s room?
Use the correct tense form. Did he tell you what time the (call) again?
Use the correct tense form. He asked if she (marry) him.
Use the correct tense form. I am not sure whether I (come) to the party.
Use the correct tense form. I don’t know when he (come). Probably in an hour or two.
Use the correct tense form. I wonder if Jane (wear) her diamond ring to the theatre tonight.
Use the correct tense form. I’ll go home as soon as the classes (be) over.
Use the correct tense form. I’ll go to bed when I (do) the washing up.
Use the correct tense form. Kevin can pick up Joan if she (be) ready in twenty minutes.
Use the correct tense form. We’ll go sailing this summer if we (have) enough money.
Use the correct tense form. You (feel) better if you stop smoking.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: Everybody around him was panicking, … he stayed calm.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: She seemed calm … sad.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: We didn’t eat … drink.
Use the suitable co-ordinating conjunction: We stayed in a comfortable … shabby place.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Alice, … husband is quite wealthy, doesn’t have to work.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Did you visit the town … Shakespeare was born?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Do you remember the hotel … I first saw you?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. I never know … to expect from him.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. The cars … are produced in Japan are high quality.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. The people … live next door have three cars.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. This is the man … name I can’t remember.
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Where is the boy …. broke the window?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Where is the letter … arrived this morning?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. Why didn’t you tell me … you are tired?
Use the suitable relative pronoun. You can show him the photo … I gave you.
Use the verb in the correct form. Both my son and my daughter (drive) a car.
Use the verb in the correct form. Either Kate or Alice (be) in the kitchen now.
Use the verb in the correct form. I know some people who (not like) flying.
Use the verb in the correct form. Neither Jane nor I (like) cooking.
Use the verb in the correct form. Seven (multiply) by four is twenty-eight.
Use the verb in the correct form. There (be) a lot of snow last winter.
Use the verb in the correct form. There (be) twenty-one students in my class.
Use the verb in the correct form. Three times four (equal) twelve.
Use the verb in the correct form. Twenty-five students came to the lecture, four (be) absent.
Use the verb in the correct form. Which of you (speak) German?
What is the time? It’s a quarter past five p.m.
What is the time? It’s a quarter to four p.m.
What is the time? It’s exactly one a.m.
What is the time? It’s four minutes past six a.m.
What is the time? It’s half past six p.m.
What is the time? It’s nine twenty p.m.
What is the time? It’s ten to eight a.m.
What is the time? It’s twenty to twelve a.m.
What is the time? It’s two minutes to eleven a.m.
What is the time? Seven hundred hours.
Which sentence has reason clause?
Which sentence has the contrast clause?
Which sentence has the result clause?
... Ann was there?
... finished the test the students left the classroom.
... my view, it just shows that passing exams is not always a matter of hard work
... Russians can understand the other nations better now
11. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Why hasn't Mrs. Grey got in touch with us? - I don't know. It … be that she has lost our phone number.
12. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Jane seems to be avoiding you. - I can't tell you for certain. She … have been hurt by my words about her friends.
13. Вставьте пропущенные слова. In this office you … wear a tie, it's not necessary.
14. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Write down two things that you feel you really … do, but you don't do because you never have the time.
15. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Why did you carry that heavy box? You … hurt yourself!
16. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Where are my keys? - I suppose I … them in the car.
17. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I took my umbrella, but it didn't rain, so I … taken it.
18. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He had an accident in his car. He … where he was going.
19. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Mr. Dupon is very rich. He … work for a living.
20. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Do you want me to wait for you? - No, it's okey. You … wait.
21. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Alex’s test is the best in class. He … last night.
22. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - This is my father's car. - Really? Does he let … it?
23. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - What did the police do? - They made … a lot of questions.
24. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I saw … the money from the purse.
25. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Please, don't wake me up tomorrow morning. Let me … a little longer.
26. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The teacher told … a composition.
27. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Did you see the robber? - Yes, I saw him … out of the shop.
28. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I want … this letter right now.
29. Вставьте пропущенные слова. There is a lot … here.
30. Вставьте пропущенные слова. How silly of her … about modesty at a time like this, Scarlett thought.
31. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Mr. Jackwill seems … suddenly ill at his office.
32. Вставьте пропущенные слова. These young people have been observed … daily during the last week in Green Park.
33. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Kilimanjaro is a snow covered mountain and is said … the highest mountain in Africa.
34. Найдите ошибку. I happened (1) to look at that moment (2) out of the window (3) when they arrived (4).
35. Найдите ошибку. Our professors concider he (1) to be (2) the best student at the University (3) because of his knowledge (4).
36. Найдите ошибку. They let John (1), watch TV (2) in spite (3) it being very late (4).
37. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He dressed well and he liked his clothes … properly … after.
38. Найдите ошибку. I don’t even think (1) they heard (2) us (3) came in (4).
39. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He was the first man … at the meeting.
40. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I wanted us … at once, but Sue was quite firm that she wouldn’t.
41. Найдите ошибку. I think I’d like you know (1) that it’s just well to be prepared, (2) so that of she went suddenly (3) it wouldn’t be any shock to you (4).
42. Перефразируйте. Transform the sentence using Complex Object. I still consider Jack is right.
43. Transform: It seems that Clark is not in the habit of reading text books for classes.
44. Вставьте пропущенные слова. He was so foolish … to leave his car unlocked.
45. Transform. It is possible that Derec sent us a letter while we were abroad.
46. Transform. The people say that this palace will be built in 4 years.
47. Вставьте пропущенные слова. You … hear their phone ringing. They haven’t got a phone.
48. Вставьте пропущенные слова. - Where’s Dad? - He is supposed … the car. I saw him in the yard a minute ago.
49. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I shan’t require her … to me.
50. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The question … him feel embarrassed.
51. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … my friend take me to a restaurant of his choice.
52. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I was made … my car to the garage.
53. Transform. “Do you think I’ll jump and sing?” she asked.
54. Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … London before 8 o’clock, but I didn’t.
55. Вставьте пропущенные слова. Julian … hitch-hike to Turkey on his own.
56. Вставьте пропущенные слова. We didn’t like their new house, though we … say so.
57. Вставьте пропущенные слова. The little boy didn’t want to jump off the wall, but his friend … him.
58. Вставьте пропущенные слова. -What a slow train this is! - Yes, we … just as well walk.
59. Найдите ошибку. I daresay (1) you’ll phone me (2) if you’ll be going (3) to be late tonight (4).
60. Вставьте пропущенные слова. We … send these official letters before the end of the week.
Bill can't write yet and he can't read ...
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “A car suddenly … in front of me and I couldn’t stop in time.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “After he was knocked out, it took a long time to … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Alex’s secretary … a call to the office in Chicago.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “As darkness fell, there was nothing for it but to … for the nearest village.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “As the years passed, Joe’s memories of his terrible experience … away, and he began to lead a normal life again.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Did you notice Bob trying to … doing the washing-up?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Don’t worry if you make a mistake. Just … it out.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Don’t …! I haven’t finished explaining yet!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He gambled … his life’s savings before starting on his wife’s.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He … as a quiet, thoughtful person.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “He’s been to the USA, Australia and Germany this year. He certainly gets…!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “How could you have … him for your brother?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I could probably … out the answer if I had a pencil, some paper and a calculator.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I expect the new trend will soon … here.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I knew his family would stand … him.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I know it’s a pretty boring routine, but you’ll just have to … on for a moment, I’m afraid.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I think a couple of coffees will … off the meal nicely.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I was disappointed when I saw the film. It was a real … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “If a bus doesn’t come, you can always flag … a taxi.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “If you’re interested in U2, you can send … free tickets and be part of the studio audience next time they record it.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Ingrid broke … in tears when we told her about the accident.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It is vital that we … a change in people’s attitudes.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It … out that the mayor had bribed several councillors to vote for him.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It’s no good trying to … with Henry. You’ll never change his mind.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “It’s sufficient to tell identical twins… .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’d better take one of my pills. I think I’ve got a headache…”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’ll use my credit card to… up before we check out.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’m not going-so don’t try to … me … going!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “I’m so tired I think I’ll probably … off in the cinema.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Look, I … it all back. I should never have spoken like that.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Look, I’m sorry to … in, but I think I can help you.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “One of them was injured so the team had to … the competition.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Owning an animal can really tie you … .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Paloma will have to … her antiques, because she needs the money.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Politicians frequently … a lot of criticism.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Rosa certainly … her mother in her devil-may-care approach to life.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Sarah wasn’t at all hungry and could only … with the food on her plate.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Scientists … a carefully controlled experiment on the mystery virus.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “She’s so depressed. All these problems are really…”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “So you’re passed your driving test! This … a celebration!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Suddenly the fire-alarm … and everybody had to leave the building.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “Thank goodness you’ll be there. I’m … on your support.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The elaborate bridal costumes of the coasted Indians are … from mother to daughter.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The lecture hall gradually emptied as Professor Jackson… on.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The motorist must have run … the fox without noticing.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The official … quickly through my file, and then handed it back to me.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The plane … and was soon flying high over the town.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The reporter announced solemnly that the President had … in his sleep.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The road was closed, so we had to … and find an alternative route.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The speaker failed to get his message … to his audience.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “The terrorists headquarters was blown ... in the army attack.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “There’s no time to do anything but … briefly on the most important points.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “This is a big decision to make. Think it … before you give me your final word tomorrow.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “To beat the holiday traffic, we’ll have to ... out at down.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We were … when we saw how much he had changed .”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We … for Aberdeen at midnight.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “We’ll have to… down the options before coming to a decision.”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “What do the initials LT … ?”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “You shouldn’t have sent Paul that Valentine’s card. I think you’re scared him…!”
Choose the correct word to complete the sentence: “You’ll lose marks if you don’t … in all the gaps.”
Combine two sentences into one. Mary passed the exam. I saw the results.
Combine two sentences. Andrew was going through the customs. I found him there.
Combine two sentences. Mum, what’s burning in the kitchen? 'I can smell something strange', said the girl.
Combine two sentences. My dad was working all the morning. I saw this when I came into his room.
Combine two sentences. The morning is wonderful. The birds are singing. Listen to them!
Correct the sentence. Wondering where to spend my holidays, a leaflet caught my eye.
Correct the sentence: Shining in the dark sky, we saw a first star.
Do you feel ... going to Peter Gabrial’s concert tonight?
Don't do it. It's very ...
Have you ... been to England? I'm surprised, you speak good English
He was so tired, he ... played chess at all
How did Tom behave? He behaved ...
I ... have tea than coffee
I am used ... English because I know it quite well.
I appreciate ... this chance to explain my mistake.
I don't like fish…
I got acquainted with ... last summer
I haven't seen her ... time
I suspect he isn't honest. I think he's quite ...
I used ... when I was younger, but nowadays I do not smoke any longer.
I was ... surprised to learn that I had passed my exam
I was afraid ... along when I was very young, because I was afraid…
I was sorry ... Sally lost her bag.
I was trying to sell my old Hi-Fi system but nobody was interested ... it.
I was very sorry ... that news
I would ... have been able to find a job like yours
I'm (extremely sleep)...
I'm so tired, but it's ... a long way from here to my house
I'm sorry, there's no ... information
I've drunk ... wine in a restaurant
In our country there are a lot of schools for ... blind
It is ... of me to forget about the meetings
It was nice of you ... me to the airport
It's ... meal I've ever had
It's a ... dress
I’m sorry ... you yesterday.
Jack gave me ... handshake
Jim is a very ... runner and swimmer
Julia ... doesn't understand this rule
London is ... bigger than Edinburgh
London is ... city in Britain
Mark insisted ... attending the driving course.
Mr.Windsor is highly ... in the town
Mrs.Crown spoke very ...
My parents warned me... marrying Jack Wilson.
Nobody suspected Mr. White ... being a Russian spy.
Paul bought this suit and I bought these shoes to go with it, ...
Professor Nelson congratulated the students ... passing their exam.
She's never seen ... mess before
Susan can't do the sums as ... as you do
Susan is an engineer. She's ... a mother
The faster I write, ... more mistakes I do
The papyrus was ... old, we didn't dare to touch it
The safe showed no signs of ...
The supper smells ...
There are some books ...
There were ... many people on the bus
This is ... newspaper
This Russian cookery book is by ...
We saw that the train went ...
What prevented you ... travelling to South Wales on Sunday?
You needn't look at me in ...
You shouldn't answer the door when I'm out ... circumstances
You shouldn't sign the document ... any account
You think you're ... clever
В каком из предложений аббревиатура использована правильно:
Вставьте пропущенные слова. As you ... remember, Tom was always interested in history.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. I … get up early on Mondays.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. I'm sorry, I … have phoned to tell you I was coming.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. Little children like books with large print. They … read them easily.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. My dentist, Mr. Dennison, says I … eat so many sweets.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. Nobody answers the phone. They … be out.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. The policeman told the woman she ... worry.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. To my mind, the government … take care of old people.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. You will … speak Spanish in another few months.
Вставьте пропущенные слова. … you mind passing me the salt?
Вставьте пропущенные слова: …. entitles the holder to travel over a ….. border without being searched and questined.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. '...?' - I'm 20!
Выберите верный вариант ответа. 'Don't do that!' Jane ... to them.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. 'What is his father?' -'...'
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... you found the keys you lost?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Dick can't speak Russian and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Dick's paying,...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'll get my money back, ... ?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Mark hasn't got the paper, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She ... the Jamaican coast at 4 a.m.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She's getting a new job, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The women ... me to leave.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. This island ... cyclones and hurricanes.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. We ... here ... 5 years.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. What ... you … at 5 o'clock tomorrow?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Which pigeon ... first?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Who ... St. Paul's?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Yesterday I met Ann who ... me she was getting married.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. He often ... things like that.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. He was ... asleep when alarm went off.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'm speaking good English now, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. John can speak English and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My desk ... by someone 5 minutes ago.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My father ... by the year 2010.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She always ... me her troubles.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. When ... we finish all this work?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. You didn't leave the gas on, ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... carefully, too.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... my wallet?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... any letters? (the mail arrives at a given time in the day)
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... inside the house when the fire ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After they ..., there ... an awkward silence.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Come with me. I'm seeing 'Mission Impossible' tomorrow. - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Do you ... any games?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. First, ... a safe place to cross.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Have you seen my CD player? I've ... it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Have you ... any hobbies?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... round the world in 80 days.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... in prison for 10 years. Now he’s out.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... lived ... 6 years in Fairfield and he's now the principal of the college in Princeton.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. How ... you ... the news?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Huge waves ... on the rocks below.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... to travel around the world.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't know the answer. That's why ... you!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I think ... about nothing.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... any luck since I ... a baby.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'm cold. ... quite windy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'm playing hockey. ... you like it?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Lindsay Lewis ... and has 4 children.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Look! ... soon.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Mary ... a nervous breakdown last year. No one ... surprised. She ... much too hard for months.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Oh, dear. I'm sorry. I ... time at the moment.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Rome ... in a day (a saying).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Shall we go out tonight? ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Students ... this course.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. That ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The sky overhead ... a mass of stars.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The sun ... behind those black clouds.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The weather ... improved.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. They ... him, when he ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We ... her before.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We ... in Brighton about 6 o'clock.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What a pity! ... Don's a very good pianist.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What ... over Christmas?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Where ... ?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Who ... you at the airport?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. He ... jumbo jets all his life but next week he ... his job.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... about it for a long time.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... Andrew all my life.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the current issue of “Plant News” and so far I can't see any mention of my research.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the house blue. I hope to finish it on Sunday.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I ... the stars for years and I still ... very little about the Milky Way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I can't go outside. It ... for 2 hours now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. I see that you ... on the same problem for the last 20 years!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. If your headache ... away, ... another tablet about four hours later.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Let's wait until we ... here for a few more years before we ... anyone that we can't ... what we ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. Sales ... slightly for 7 years and ... up.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. The student ... to this book at the exam.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. The traffic ... much worse now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. We ... Alexandria with my brother from October 22nd to 24th.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. What are you doing? - I ... ... my shoe-laces.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Вставьте вместо пропуска подходящую форму слова. What's that awful smell? - I ... another kind of tea, I'm afraid.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't think the weather ... too much.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Our college hockey team ... the Cup.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Phone 013-631-4401, if you ... an exciting holiday.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. What's the matter, David? - ... my pen.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... is not allowed on double yellow lines.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. ... you hold on a minute please, I'll try to connect you.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Are the students ... about the exam?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. By the time the train arrived I was ... late.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. By this time tomorrow, I ... on the phone.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Don't phone me, I ... all the morning tomorrow.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I will tell you about my decision when you ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I won't go to the party ... you come too.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'll ... in my car on the way to work.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. I'm ... to go to America next summer.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. If you've got a headache, why don't you take a ... of aspirin?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. In 2000 the agreement ... in force for 15 years.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My friend likes to drive the car and ...
Выберите верный вариант ответа. My mum doesn't read love stories and …
Выберите верный вариант ответа. New workers ... always ... by the manager.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. People ... those who are born under the sign of Aquarius.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She said she ... happy to see us ... week.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. She said she ... me the book as soon as she ... it herself.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Soon there ... changes at work, you may be offered a better job.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Sooner or later he ... to face up to his responsibilities.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The ancient Egyptians believed all illnesses were related to ... was eaten.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The children always ... me if they can go for a walk.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The injured man ... to hospital by ambulance.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The snow has been ... steadily for several hours and the ground is completely covered.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The teachers ... on Gilbert's progress from ten to ten thirty next Monday.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. The window ... when I came into the room.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. There is gin, whisky and sherry: ... will you have?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. There'll be no trouble about this, ...?
Выберите верный вариант ответа. These workers ... the new crossroads by the end of the week.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. They ... interviewing this famous actress there.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. They ... post my letter when the ship arrives at the port.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. Until May, you ... too busy with work paying much attention to your family.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. What are Mary's plans for this summer? She ... her entrance exam to Moscow University.
Выберите верный вариант ответа. You can afford a new car now, ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. We just play tennis for fun. Why ... you try playing?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I don't eat meat but I ... all other kinds of food.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Would you like to go to the cinema tomorrow? - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I'd like to visit some of my friends. - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... you ... to Luxor by bus or by train?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. A fortnight in the Sheraton in August ... almost $800.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ... Did you have this book in the first lecture this morning? - …
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Does anyone else know about this accident? - No, ... anyone else yet.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Last Monday Dick ... a wallet on a lonely street.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. ‘Why ... you go with me next Saturday?’ (I ... to the Town Hall next Saturday).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I see that you did well in your 'A' levels. Why ... to university when you left school?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After you ... through all the text book, study parts of it in detail.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The New Oxford Garage is ... for more salesmen.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The number '1' ... in the window of a camera and I'm ready to take my first picture!
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Jane ... in France when she ... the man who later ... her husband.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When Terry ... the job he ... ... his, he immediately ... his colleagues out for a celebration.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When the liner ... the iceberg, most of the passengers ... dinner.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Try as we might, it ... impossible to manoeuvre our sailing boat out of the harbour. The wind ... too hard.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Annabel ... bad headaches for 2 months now. They suspect a brain tumour.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. I ... to get you on the phone for over 3 days. Where ... you ...?
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Why (be) you (not) at the party? - I not (be told) about it.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Before she ... her university course, Jane ... all the books on her first year reading list.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Alex ... treatment for 3 years before he ... finally he ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Stories about this treatment ... for many months before any statement ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The garden ... absolutely lovely last year, because of the hard work we ... the previous autumn.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. If I ... what to do, everything would have been all right. As it ..., everything ... wrong.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Mike ... for the right person to be his wife for 2 years before he ... and ... in love with Mary.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Jerome ... in 1995 and ... a year applying for jobs before he was offered the one he ... .
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Joan ... engaged, it ... a complete surprise.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. His sister ... from asthma all her life. She’s dead now.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... a novel several years ago, but I ... whether he ... it or not.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The girl ... but at the last moment I ... her.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He couldn’t speak, but he ... what I ... . He ...
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Between 1918 and 1939 many people in the West ... their faith in democracy.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. That day (1) I hadn’t (2) nothing (3) important to do (4).
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Last week I ... at a conference in York.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. There ... quite a lot of woodland around here.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. People ... in real life as they ... in plays.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. When they ... the bridge, they ... over and ... down at the water beneath.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The valley ... two thousand feet below them.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. Monica and her sister ... in the same way.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. He ... early to catch the last train.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. To improve the railway service, they ... all the main lines.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. The report ... out of date - which ... hardly surprising, since it was published in 1980.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. After all, Glasgow ... the city where she really ... So this year she ... to spend her holiday in the city.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа. In that case, we can go out and ... our game.
Выберите правильный вариант предложения: "We've bought teak kitchen fine cupboard"
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): -Would you like ... to the cinema? -Oh, yes. I’d love to. I like ... to the cinema.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): As it is late I suggest ... by taxi.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Avoid ... a lot of tinned food, it’s unhealthy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Avoid ... and you’ll feel better soon.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Could you all stop ... ? The programme’s beginning now.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Do the following things ... healthy teeth!
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Do you punish your child for ____ ?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I can’t watch TV with you ... in front of it!
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I can’t help ... about that awful accident.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I really must stop _____ .
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I’m afraid you can’t avoid ... this money.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Mark enjoys ... volley-ball with his friends.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The Blakes want ... Aberdeen this weekend.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The children kept ... him all the time.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): What about ... to the country next week?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Why have you stopped? Go on ____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Would you mind ... off the Hi-Fi?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Would you mind ... the front door?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): You should remember ... Alex. He’ll be at home.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Is there anything in that new magazine worth _____?
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): I’ll always remember ... you for the first time.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My watch is broken, but it’s not worth _____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): You can learn English ... to England, but it’s not so easy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): She tried to be serious but she couldn’t help ...
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Your shoes are terribly dirty; they really need _____.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Although I was in a hurry, I stopped ... to him.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): All parts of London seem ... to different towns and epochs.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The teacher asked us some questions and went on ... us about the climate of Scotland.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): When we had finished ... , the waiter brought the bill.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My older brother went to college, and I hope ... there too.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): My car needs a service badly, and Tom offered ... me with it.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): We might manage ... a lot of interesting places in Greece.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): The dentist advised us to read the note about ... our teeth healthy.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): 'Unfortunately you cannot stop tooth decay simply by ... your teeth, said Mr. Greyson.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): ... your teeth with fluoride tooth paste after every meal is important.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Many countries have also started ... fluoride to drinking water.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): ... found the hotel, we decided to take a sightseeing tour round the city.
Заполните пропуски подходящими словами (формами): Alex hurt his leg while ... football with his classmates.
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Как закончить письмо? (расставьте заглавные буквы)
Как можно написать неполностью Thursday?
Как правильно записать адрес?
Как записать сумму: eighty nine and a half pounds
Найдите правильный вариант: 2 степени Доктора наук
Найдите правильный вариант: will not
Найдите правильный вариант: кризис правительства 1985 года.
Найдите правильный вариант: мужской магазин
Найдите правильный вариант: слишком много букв «м»
Объясните употребление запятой. The manager explained that, if he had known we were coming, he would have made other arrangements
Объясните употребление запятой. The rescuers who had no extra provisions with them, had to be rescued themselves
Объясните употребление запятой. Unless I hear from you by tomorrow, I will assume the meeting is off
Объясните употребление запятой. You can sail any kind of dinghy, cruiser, yacht or surfboard in the har-bour
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. If your foot become (1) white and numb (2), loosen the bandage at once (3), - it's a doctor's advice (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. It is still (1) one (2) of most beautiful books (3) ever produced (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. It was almost (1) dark totally (2) when (3) they arrived (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. James worked (1) for the CIA (2) since 1970 (3) to 1985 (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Methods of printing (1) has developed (2) by the newspaper industry (3) over the past hundred years (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Mike has a small dog (1) and his elder sister has a cat, (2) his younger brother loves snakes (3) and want to put them in the bath (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Sharon is a teacher (1), but she wants to go into business (2) because she can talk (3) and she wants to sold scientific equipment (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Then (1) I went downstairs (2) they were (3) already eating breakfast (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. They were rolling (1) up the hill (2) without breaks, (3) everybody was happy (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. We stopped (1) to refuel (2) at New York (3) in our way to Tokyo (4).
Определите, в какой части предложения содержится ошибка. Paul Johnson's hobby collects money (1) from other countries (2) , but he does not save (3) any paper money (4).
Определите, в каком предложении содержится ошибка. It was a horrible day (1). The children had got up late (2). The cat was sick (3). The car didn’t start (4).
Определите, в каком предложении содержится ошибка. Why didn’t you go to see the film last week? (1) I thought you liked Paul Newman.(2) - Because I already saw it. (3) I went when I was in London. (4)
Перефразируйте предложение. He described the career of the actress
Перефразируйте предложение. This bicycle is for a child
Поставьте дефис, если он необходим: brother in law
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: gone with the wind (a title of the book)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: history of the eastern world (a title of school class)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: Incopterms are to set of rules published by the … , Paris, for the interpretation of the most commonly used terms in foreign trade.
Расставьте заглавные буквы и знаки препинания, где необходимо: I knew that …. ….. was her favourite.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где необходимо.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где они необходимы:
Расставьте знаки препинания, заглавные буквы:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания: What a wonderful day
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Addam Wilson, (1) …. (2) of the (3)… (4)…. , was appointed by (5) … Bush
Расставьте знаки препинания: Caution Don't use matches here
Расставьте знаки препинания: He said I heard this man saying Tell everybody I’m not guilty.
Расставьте знаки препинания: How long did it take you to watch‘ The Titanic we asked
Расставьте знаки препинания: I said to Fred: “You will follow my advice, won’t you?”
Расставьте знаки препинания: I'm sorry to tell you about it however I have to do it.
Расставьте знаки препинания: Mary asked why didn't you tell me what had happened with you
Расставьте знаки препинания: Now I understand this situation Andrew thought
Расставьте знаки препинания: Our deadline is March 31 or is it March 30
Расставьте знаки препинания: Please dont keep asking me Whats the time Alex said crossly
Расставьте знаки препинания: Special offer call 4433111 for more details
Расставьте знаки препинания: The chairman said and thank you for attention
Расставьте знаки препинания: The major counties in the south Kent East Sussex West Sussex and surrey are very popular among tourists.
Расставьте знаки препинания: The President said the policy states but was interrupted by the reporter
Расставьте знаки препинания: The tourists said: ‘It was a terrifying experience which we will never forget.’
Расставьте знаки препинания: This rule see page 100 is very often used
Расставьте знаки препинания: Two TV sets a tape recorder two computers these were her belongings.
Расставьте знаки препинания: We had very good holidays, for example we spent a lot of time near the sea.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Are you Ok Mary asked.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Have you lost your way the stranger asked me
Расставьте знаки препинания: Where are they now he wondered
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Did you visit Peter Smith, …. of …., ….?
Расставьте пропущенные слова: His train to … leaves at …
Расставьте пропущенные слова: The report must be ready by
Расставьте пропущенные слова:Young people like to read … and …. .
Во множественном числе слова birth произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова cargo произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова chief произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова country произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова day произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова fish произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова fox произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова girl произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова hospital произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова lesson произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова mother произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова roof произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова safe произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова watch произносится окончание …
Во множественном числе слова wolf произносится окончание …
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. Can I borrow your scissors? Mine … not sharp enough.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. England … lost all their football matches this season.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. The trousers you bought for me … not fit me.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. Three days … not long enough for a good holiday.
Вставьте глагол в правильной форме. … the police know about the stolen money?
Вставьте правильный артикль. After … lunch, we went for a walk to … sea.
Вставьте правильный артикль. As I was walking along the street I saw … £10 note on … pavement.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Bill has got … big feet.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Can you turn … television down, please? It's a bit loud.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Could you close … door, please?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did Ann get … job she applied for?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did you see this film on … television or at … cinema?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Did … police find … person who stole your bicycle?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Do you collect … stamps?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Every English child knews the story of Robin Hood. It is said that he robbed … rich and gave the money to … poor.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Have you finished … book I lent you last week?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Have you got … camera?
Вставьте правильный артикль. I never listen to … radio. In fact I haven't got … radio.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I prefer swimming in … sea to swimming in pools.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I went into the shop and asked to speak to … manager.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I wrote my name at … top of the page.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I'm looking for …. job.
Вставьте правильный артикль. I'm not very hungry. I had … big breakfast.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Is he a rich man? Yes, he's … richest person I’ve ever met.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Is it a big hotel? Yes, it is … biggest hotel in the city.
Вставьте правильный артикль. It was warm and sunny, so we decided to sit in … garden.
Вставьте правильный артикль. It was … long voyage. We were at … sea for four weeks.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Jack plays … guitar very badly.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Jane is … teacher. Her parents were … teachers too.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Many people were killed in the plane crash. The bodies of … dead were taken away. … injured were taken to hospital.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Peru is … country in … South America. … capital is Lima.
Вставьте правильный артикль. There's no need to buy … milk. … milkman brings it every morning.
Вставьте правильный артикль. This is a nice house. Has it got … garden?
Вставьте правильный артикль. Those are … really nice trouthers.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Those people with jobs have enough money but life is not so easy for … unemployed.
Вставьте правильный артикль. We live in … small flat near … centre of the city.
Вставьте правильный артикль. We went out for … meal last night. … restaurant we went to was excellent.
Вставьте правильный артикль. What … beautiful garden!
Вставьте правильный артикль. What … lovely children!
Вставьте правильный артикль. When I was … child, I used to be very shy.
Вставьте правильный артикль. Would you like to be … actor?
Вставьте правильный артикль. … giraffe is the tallest of all animals.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … moon goes round … earth every 27 days.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … President of … United States is elected every four years.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … Soviet Union was … first country to send a man into … space.
Вставьте правильный артикль. … whale is a mammal but it lives in the sea.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. - I hear you're writing a book. Have you finished it yet? - Not quite, but I hope to finish it … the end of this month.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. - I'm going out now. I'll be back … 4.30. Will you still be here? - I don't think so, I'll probably have gone … then.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. .. the end of the course the students usually have a party.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. After many years away, he arrived back … England a month ago.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann has a good relationship … her brother.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann reads a lot of books … American women writers.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann works hard during the week, so she likes to relax … week-ends.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Ann's brother lives … a small village … the south coast of England.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Are you doing anything special … the week-end?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Are you going away … the begining of August or … the end?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Carol got married … 17, which is rather young to get married.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Columbus discovered America … the 15th century.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Do you know any songs … the Beatles?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. George is usually late for work but this morning he arrived … time.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. He hasn't lived in Moscow all his life. He lived in Germany … five years.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. His illness got worse and worse. … the end he had to go into hospital for an operation.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. How much money do you spend … food each week?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Hurry up! We've got to go … five minutes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I can't think of an answer … your question.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I couldn't hear the teacher very well. She had a quiet voice and I was sitting … the back of the class.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I don't think that there is any need … a new road.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I haven't seen Ann for a few days. I last saw her … Tuesday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I look stupid with this haircut. Everyone will laugh … me.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I met Ann … I was reading for the exams in the library.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I mustn't eat too much. I'm supposed to be … a diet.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I read about the accident. There was a report … the front page of the newspaper.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think I need a bit of exercise, shall we go … a walk?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think I'll wait … Thursday before making a decision.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I think that there are some advantages …. being married.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I usually buy a newspaper … my way to work … the morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I waited for you … an hour and then left because I decided that you weren't coming.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I went to bed … midnight and got up … 6.30 the next morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I wouldn't like an office job. I couldn't spend the whole day sitting … a desk.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I wouldn't like his job. He spends most of his time talking … the phone.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll be moving to a new address … the end of September.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll meet you … the corner (of the sheet) … 10 o'clock.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll phone you … Tuesday morning … about 10 o'clock, okay?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'll see you … next Friday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm hungry. What's … dinner this evening?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm just going out to do some shopping. I'll be back … half an hour.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I'm moving into my new flat next week. I'm staying with some friends … then.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. I've been offered a job and I haven't decided yet whether to accept it or not. I have to decide … Thursday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. If the train had come … time, we would have been late.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. If want to get away from modern life, you should go and live … a small island … the middle of the ocean.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In Britain children have to start school … the age of five.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In Britain football matches are usually played … Saturdays.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. In most countries people drive … the right.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It took John a long time to find a job after he left school. … the end he found a job as a waiter.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It was quite a short book and easy to read. I read it … a day.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It's a strange feeling when you first arrive … a foreign country.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. It's difficult to listen when everyone is speaking … the same time.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Jazz became popular in the United States … the 1920s.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Look at those beautiful horses … the field.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Mary and Henry always go out for a meal … their wedding anniversary.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Mr. Boyle's office is … the first floor. When you come out of the lift, it's the third door … your right.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Production at the factory was increased … the war.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. She spends all days sitting … the window and watching what is happening outside.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Someone threw an egg … the minister while he was speaking.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The course begins … 7 January and ends … 10 March.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The first man landed … the moon 21 July 1969.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The headquarters of the United Nations is … New York.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The price of electricity is going up … October.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The Russian Revolution took place … 1917.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. The train from London arrives … platform 4.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There are usually a lot of parties … New Year's Eve.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There has been a big increase … prices.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There has been a fall … the number of the employed this year.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There is no demand … such shoes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. There was panic when people realized the building was … fire.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom didn't want to lend us the money at first but … the end he agreed.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom doesn't see his parents very often these days - usually only … Christmas and sometimes … the summer for a few days.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Tom isn't here … the moment. He'll be back … about five minutes.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We are trying to find a solution … the problem.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We had to get on the train without tickets because we didn't get to the station … time to buy them.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We hadn't arranged to meet. We met … chance.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We normally use the front entrance to the building but there's another one … the back.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We travelled overnight to Paris and arrived … 5 o'clock … the morning.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We usually go somewhere … Christmas but we don't often go somewhere … the year.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. We went to the theatre last night. We had seats … the front row.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. What time do you usually arrive … home in the evening?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. What time will you arrive? - I don't know. If depends … the traffic.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When do you get paid? - … the end of the month.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When I heard that he had passed his exam, I phoned him to congratulate him … his success.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When I opened the envelope, I was delighted to find a cheque … $500.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When we arrived … the cinema, there was a long queue outside.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When we were at school we met Sue … the interval.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. When you send a letter, it is a good idea to write your name and address … the back of the envelope.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. Why are you looking … me so sadly?
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You can rely … Jack. He always keeps his promises.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You can see the stars … night if the sky is clear.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You'll find the cups … the top shelf.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. You'll have to learn this table … heart.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … my opinion, violent films shouldn't be shown … television.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … next month I'm going to Scotland … a short holiday.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … our stay in Moscow, we visited a lot of parties.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … Sunday afternoons I usually go for a walk in the country.
Вставьте предлог(и), если это необходимо. … we were in Moscow we stayed at our friends.
Множественное число от слова berry образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова birth образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова chief образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова child образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова fish образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова glass образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова leaf образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова ox образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова photo образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова piano образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова potato образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова rock образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова roof образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова shelf образуется при помощи окончания …
Множественное число от слова watch образуется при помощи окончания …
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. I had (1) to buy a (2) bread because I wanted to (3) make some (4) sandwiches.
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. Margaret has (1) got (2) (3) very long black hairs (4).
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. Tom gave (1) me a (2) good advice (3) yesterday.
Найдите ошибку в следующем предложении. We had (1) a (2) very good weather when we were (3) on (4) holiday.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a book of your father-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a car of David and Ann.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a dictionary of the boys.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a flat of my mother-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: a friend of Jack and Peter.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: the husband of my sister-in-law.
Образуйте притяжательный падеж при помощи ’s: the work of her brother-in-law.
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: boy’s book …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: chicken's leg ….
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: cow's hoof …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: fish's tail …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: fox's leg …
Окончание ’s произносится в данном случае: Mike's dictionary …
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. Economics ,,, a very useful science.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. He bought good clothes. … (clothes) … fashionable.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. Mathematics … my favourite subject.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. My glasses … broken.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. That Japanese … very strange.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The British … very cold people.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The goods … sent yesterday.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The news … good.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. The police … looking for evidence.
Поставьте глагол в правильную форму. These … very good pieces of advice.


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  0096.12.04;Т-Т.01;1

ПКВЯз АНГЛ Практическая грамматика (курс 1) - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He’s in his last year of high school. B) How many sisters - do you have?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He’s tall and - dark. B) He wears dark suits but at weekends he wears casual clothes?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) I am - an editor. B) I live and work in San Francisco.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) I am an - electronic engineer. B) I live and work in New York.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Уour name is George Scott isn’t it? B) Yes, it is.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Alice reads a lot, she is fond of music. B) She is good, at drawing.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) And what’s - your name? B) Му name is Peter Brook.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Does your whole family live here! B) My whole family except my grandparents.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Either she’s making something or mending something or doing something to entertain herself. B) She’s extremely generous, but not very tolerant with the people who don’t agree with her?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Have they done - the homework? B) Has she come back?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Have you heard the news. B) Has he won the match?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Have you invited them. B) Has she received the message?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He is a a member of the local yacht club. B) When he has a chance, Steve and his friends get down to the coast for the weekend, camping there and sailing in competitions.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He is a clever young man. B) He works at an office.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He is interested in collecting pictures - of horses. B) At the moment he is travelling on business in America because he’s opening an office over there next year?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He plays football sometimes for a Rugby team, but prefers watching the game, either on television or at the local ground where he goes with his father sometimes. B) Steve has a number of close friends and a beautiful girl-friend, Pauline, by name.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He usually gets up at six, does some exercises and goes to the office? B) He never gets back before ten o’clock at night, - so he doesn’t see much of his family.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) He’s at the University. B) The younger one is seventeen?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) I have one sister. B) She’s - eleven.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) I have two brothers. B) The elder one is twenty?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) I’m twenty-five. I was born on July 26, 1982. B) How many brothers do you have.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Pauline is a very good skater and she is trying to teach Steve how to skate well. B) Both Steve and Pauline are very friendly and sociable.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Pauline studies at a teacher’s training college. B) Steve and Pauline often go out for the evening to the cinema or else they go skating at the Rugby skating rink.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Sarah, Mr. Cornford’s wife, - is forty-five. B) She is an attractive woman with blond hair - and soft blue eyes.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She goes (to school). B) He’s a doctor.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She goes to school. B) She is a bright girl and does very well at school.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She is in her late sixties. B) Her kind face is wrinkled, - her hair is grey, but she is still quite young in spirit.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She is kind and gentle very practical and full of common sense. B) Sarah is, a house-wife.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She likes reading and gardening and she often goes for long walks. B) She’s - a very active person.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She looks after the house and the family. B) The Cornfords have two children: a son and a daughter.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) She takes lessons in drawing at the local art school. B) Sarah’s mother, Grandma, as the children call her, - also lives with them.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Sometimes Steve takes Pauline to a pub where they meet some of their friends and sit and chat for an hour or so and sometimes they go dancing at the Mecca Ballroom. B) Steve is very fond of Pauline.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) Their son’s name is Steve. B) He is 22.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) They are going to get married in a year. B) Steve’s sister, Alice, is a lovely, quiet and serious girl.
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) They live on a farm near York? B) Has he bought the flowers?
Верны ли предложения? (Обратите внимание на пунктуацию) A) The Cornfords live in Rugby - at 35 Daisy Street. B) John Cornford is - a rich businessman of about fifty.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Grand weddings are popular on Grande Comore even though economic development ________ republic has been held back by coups d'etat, assassinations and military rule.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: Pelicans are sexually mature when they are two to four years old. _______ many birds, a male pelican makes no fuss of mating. He may do some head movements, inscribing a figure eight in the air to attract a female's attention.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: The bedroom is a place where kids can reflect on what happened during the day, ______ they can sit down and read a book.
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: ______ this was not possible, the case was dismissed
Выберите правильный вариант ответа: _______ the leader lifts its wings, each bird behind it also lifts, almost in unison.
Дополните предложение: A common variant of the nuclear
Дополните предложение: A family is a group of persons united by the ties of marriage, blood, or adoption, constituting a single household and interacting with
Дополните предложение: A much more common form of family
Дополните предложение: A young man might visit his intended bride in her parental home and bring gifts, discuss
Дополните предложение: About 10,000 years ago in the Neolithic Period, man achieved relatively fixed settlement, but for perhaps 5,000 years such living was confined to the semipermanent peasant village—semipermanent
Дополните предложение: As a household unit, the extended family is most common where ties between kinsmen
Дополните предложение: As a type of community, the city may be regarded as a relatively permanent concentration of population, together withits diverse habitations, social arrangements, and supporting activities, occupying a
Дополните предложение: As human settlements increased in size, by reason of the technological advances in irrigation and cultivation,
Дополните предложение: As with marital roles, there seems to be a trend toward the reduction of differences in
Дополните предложение: At the same time, other young people in
Дополните предложение: By 3500 BC urban populations were distinguished by literacy, technological progress (notably in metals), social
Дополните предложение: Certainly there is no reason to exclude the entire Third World and equate
Дополните предложение: Childbirth, of course, is a biologic fact, but
Дополните предложение: City government is almost everywhere the creation
Дополните предложение: City is a relatively permanent and highly organized centre of population, of greater size or
Дополните предложение: During the 2nd millennium the Indus civilization was engulfed by an onslaught of Aryan nomads, while other peoples,
Дополните предложение: Even before marriage, they begin to assert their independence, which, arguably, was instilled in them by
Дополните предложение: Even so, cultural, subcultural, religious, and class differences create a variety of forms within the modern family,
Дополните предложение: Eventually the same-sex groups come into contact with similar groups of the opposite sex at social occasions. In some societies young people go out with mixed-sex groups before they begin dating, but in other
Дополните предложение: Except for the ancient City of London (an area of about 677 acres in central London under the jurisdiction of the lord mayor),
Дополните предложение: For example, people usually marry within their social class and often to those
Дополните предложение: For instance, before she will consent to marry him, a woman may want her intended husband
Дополните предложение: For most people, children are the key to
Дополните предложение: For the purposes of the following discussion, the “modern family” may be taken generally
Дополните предложение: Frequently the family is not differentiated from the marriage pair, but the essence of the family group is the parent-childrelationship,
Дополните предложение: However, the extent to which it is
Дополните предложение: If one person is designated as the family leader and another (normally his eldest son) as his successor,
Дополните предложение: If the couple gets along welltogether, the phase sometimes
Дополните предложение: In a narrower sense, sociologists usually think of the extended family as being larger and maintaining less control
Дополните предложение: In agricultural societies the nuclear family is often the primary unit of production, sharing tasks and taking collective
Дополните предложение: In all societies, past and present, parents
Дополните предложение: In both agricultural and other types of communities, the nuclear family is
Дополните предложение: In India the joint family may have property held in common by male members of the small, coresident patrilineal kin
Дополните предложение: In its institutional aspects the family is also frequently confused with the institution of marriage, the complex of
Дополните предложение: In its strictest sense courtship usually refers to an activity,
Дополните предложение: In legal terms, in the United States, for example, a city is an urban area incorporated by special or
Дополните предложение: In many countries this type of
Дополните предложение: In many modern societies the nuclear family
Дополните предложение: In many societies the custom is for young people in the early stages of adolescence to spend time in same-sex groups. Boys may
Дополните предложение: In many societies, grandparents are indulgent toward their grandchildren, while the parents themselves may
Дополните предложение: In many traditional cultures an unmarried mother is encouraged or even forced to marry, or else she is required to
Дополните предложение: In many Western industrialized societies, the one-parent (especially the single-mother) family
Дополните предложение: In modern Islāmic societies and in modern India, as in some other parts of the world, parents have the duty
Дополните предложение: In most extended families, the marital bonds between spouses are stronger than the kinship bonds between, for example,
Дополните предложение: In most modern societies, parentsshow an interest in and concern for the sexual activities of their children,
Дополните предложение: In most societies adolescence is marked by
Дополните предложение: In some parts of Africa, for example, female-headed one-parent families are actually more common
Дополните предложение: In southern Africa migrant labourers
Дополните предложение: In Western societies there is
Дополните предложение: Individuals often claim that their match is made on the basis of love, but statistical studies
Дополните предложение: It also refers to a particular type of community,
Дополните предложение: It is becoming increasingly common, however, for a mother to retain her children and raise them, often
Дополните предложение: It is generally defined as a married couple and their
Дополните предложение: It requires a readjustment of roles as people become not only husband and wife to each other
Дополните предложение: Its definition depends on the contrasts and
Дополните предложение: Marriage defines the procedures for establishing and terminating the husband-wife relation, as well as the
Дополните предложение: Mate selection may be defined simply as the process, often unconscious,
Дополните предложение: Members of the nuclear family share
Дополните предложение: Modern parents retain the vestiges of their traditional roles, but in many parts of the world they send children to nursery school,
Дополните предложение: More typically, though, the family begins with marriage, which grows out of courtship and is preceded by
Дополните предложение: No matter what pattern is followed, however, ideally the children are brought up
Дополните предложение: Often dating is followed by a stage of “steady dating,” in which a couple agree to date only each other, and their exclusive dating
Дополните предложение: One or both parents, and sometimes children, earn money outside the home and then share at least some
Дополните предложение: Other forms of family organization, such as compound and joint families, are in a sense built upon the nuclear
Дополните предложение: Others take the notion of modern in a more literal sense, meaning the family
Дополните предложение: Paradoxically, however, from a child's point of view, Western parents are often regarded as inhibiting
Дополните предложение: Prior to the 20th century, and still
Дополните предложение: Relations between the new parents and their own parents are often heightened as the latter take
Дополните предложение: Some authorities consider the modern family to be identical with the Western family
Дополните предложение: Some European countries have adopted general municipal codes which permit centralized administrative control over
Дополните предложение: Sometimes such an arrangement is permanent, but similar female-headed households are also common
Дополните предложение: Sometimes the full joint family is a phase through which nuclear families pass, dividing upon the death of key persons and
Дополните предложение: Special concern is directed, mainly but by no means exclusively, toward family
Дополните предложение: Such social changes often include a new, more formal attitude toward parents and, more particularly,
Дополните предложение: The birth of subsequent children can have equally considerable restructuring effects on the family, including
Дополните предложение: The distinctions are further blurred by modern couples' living together, either before marriage or
Дополните предложение: The evolution of the Neolithic village into a
Дополните предложение: The family group is often confused with the household, but boarders and roomers sharing a common
Дополните предложение: The family is also sometimes confused with a kindred because of the unit of blood lines, but a kindred
Дополните предложение: The growth of cities, however, was
Дополните предложение: The major technological achievement in the early history of transportation, however, was obviously the invention
Дополните предложение: The man supports his family with wages earned away from his marital home but continues to regard it
Дополните предложение: The name city is given to certain urban
Дополните предложение: The nuclear, or conjugal, family
Дополните предложение: The specific social adjustments people must make after the birth of a child differ according to
Дополните предложение: The temporary absence of fathers who take jobs as migrant labourers, for example, may place teenage children
Дополните предложение: The trends may indeed be related. In the non-Western world, too, modernization and economic development similar to
Дополните предложение: There is no precise distinction between
Дополните предложение: There is no precise distinction between the joint family and the extended family, and the latter term
Дополните предложение: They are also integral to the definition of family life, and many sociologists regard the raising of children as
Дополните предложение: They may also be formed when an unmarried
Дополните предложение: This form consists of one parent and his or her children. One-parent families may be formed
Дополните предложение: This practice of like marrying like is known as homogamy. Mate selection is also
Дополните предложение: This variant, however, is regarded by many sociologists as a form of nuclear,
Дополните предложение: To achieve this, they must acquire education within the family and, later, within
Дополните предложение: To nontraditional people these customs, if continued to courtship, may seem ridiculously old-fashioned, and it is
Дополните предложение: Usually the mate is the person's intended spouse, and the traditional definition
Дополните предложение: Wealthy parents rely less than in the past on nannies to raise their children, and lower- and middle-classparents have
Дополните предложение: Yet in modern Western societies the practice
Дополните предложение: Yet too precise a definition is a hindrance rather than a help. In different
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Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: South Dakota
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Tennessee
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Texas
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Utah
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Vermont
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Virginia
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Wisconsin
Укажите аббревиатуру для названия американского штата: Wyoming
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: 40%, (1) homeless people (2) in the USA are families.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: And: (1) this list (2) can be (3) prolonged.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Animals (1) could be (2) witnesses (3) as well.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: At first, (1) the babies (2) are fed – (3) fish gruel.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1442 (1) a wolf was tried, (2) in Zurich. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Its beak (1) can be (2) over a foot (3) long.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Like many Mongolians,(1) she uses (2)only one name. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Still, (1) the defendants (2) failed (3) to appear.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Such trials (1) were also held in Italy, (2) England, Sweden, (3) Switzerland and the Netherlands.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The price of meat – (1) has (2) soared.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The widespread (1) cattle deaths (2) have many nomadic families, (3) struggling.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1713 termites (1) were brought to trial in Brazil (2) for eating the flour and destroying (3) the wooden supports of a monastery cellar.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: "An approach to (1) life in which people catastrophize about (2) bad events leads to untimely death decades later, (3) concluded a research team headed by University of Michigan psychologist Christopher Peterson.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: "But we are old people,(1) she said, (2) cradling a naked child in her lap. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: "In summer we'l1 be very hungry," said Tserondoi, a 73year-old nomandic woman inside her family "ger (1), the round felt tent (2) that is the traditional portable home of Mongolia’s(3) nomads.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: "It may be more important that you are not a (1) pessimist than that you are an optimist," (2) said research psychologist Susan Robinson-Whelen, (3) the study's lead author.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: A flock of pelicans (1) flying early in the morning (2) is a wonderful (3) sight.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: A traditional nomad breakfast,(1) for example, (2) consists of flour biscuits (3) and tea with milk.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: After surfacing with its catch, (1) the bird closes its mouth; (2) and the water drains (3) from the beak.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: An estimated 1.8 million animals (1) or about one in every 15 in the nation, (2) have died, (3) affecting a fifth of Mongolia's 2.6 million people.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: As the leader lifts its wings, (1) each bird behind it also lifts, (2) almost in unison. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Because the nomads live, (1) such a spartan life (2) to begin with,(3) there is little fat to trim.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Between the 12th (1) and the 17th centuries (2) nearly a hundred death sentences (3) were ruled to animals in France.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: But even – (1) by Mongolia's (2) standards the past year (3) was rough.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Cattle, (1) yak, (2) two-humped camels, (3) horses, goats and sheep provide everything from food to barter goods to transportation.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Despite its clumsy appearance, (1) the pelican, (2) is an expert fisher. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: During the first weeks, (1) the parents must be in or beside (2) the nest to protect the newborn chicks (3) without any feathers from the sun.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Finally, (1) one pelican succeeds, (2) the others follow (3) within a few days.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: First came a drought – (1) which killed (2) much of the grasses (3) that sustain the cattle.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Following a leader, (1) the birds , (2) move with military precision (3) in a long line.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Fortunately, (1) adult pelicans are good providers, (2) for each baby needs a constant supply (3) of fish every day to survive.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: From one isolated family of nomads to another: (1) the grisly sight is the same across (2) Mongolia's vast and frozen Gobi Desert (3) and nearby mountains.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: He (1) may do some head movements, (2) inscribing a figure eight in the air (30 to attract a female's attention.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: He made an ardent speech; (1) arguing it was not fair to condemn the whole race, (2) and that the court had to rule the individual guilt (3) of each animal. Since this was not possible, the case was dismissed.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: He was brought (1) in a cage (2) which was set in the central square (3) where the trial was held.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Her family of ten; (1) living in two gers in the Gobi,(2) had been prosperous. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Homelessness (1) is a huge (2) social problem (3) even in affluent countries.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: If a man was attacked (1) in his home (2) and nobody could testify to his words, (3) he could have a cat, a dog or a rooster as a witness.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: If aid (1) from other countries is not provided – (2) a half million Mongolians could be (3)desperately short of food.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1314 – (1) a bull was sentenced (2) to the gallows for attacking (3) a man.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1480 - (1) he won the case by explaining to the court (2) that his clients were not able to appear in court (3) because their homes were scattered all over the country, and the news could not reach their holes.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1796 (1) a bull convicted of causing (2) a cattle epidemic (3) was buried alive in Germany.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In 1936 and 1940, (1) the group was questioned in detail about difficult (2) life experiences and their own personalities. Researchers studied the way the individuals explained and reacted to experiences such as disappointments, failures, (3) losses and bad relationships.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In a land of few roads and phone lines, Mongolia's nomads: (1) about 30% of the population – (2) live the simple life of their great-great-grandparents. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In another study, researchers from Ohio State University reported that the possible harm associated with pessimistic outlook – (1) increased anxiety, stress (2) depression and ill health – (3) appears greater than the protective good given by an optimistic outlook.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In Russia many people (1) lost their homes - (2) because of scams (3) with flats.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In some countries, (1) bulls (2) horses and rams were under special protection (3) and enjoyed immunity.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: In the 13th century (1) the pig was sentenced to hanging (2) in France (3) for eating its litter.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: It was universally believed (1) that animals acted rationally (2) and had to answer for their misdeeds (3) according to law.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Its ancestors (1) appeared 30 to 40 (2) million years (3) ago.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Later, (1) they learn to get pieces (2) of fish out of (3) their parents sacs.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Many people believe (1) the pelican fills its sac with fish (2) then flies back (3) to its nest with them.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Mongolia (1) which broke a way from socialism more than 10 years ago, (2) is still struggling with its difficult transition to democracy (3) and free-market economy.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Next, (1) the male brings sticks, (2) reeds, straws, (3) grasses, leaves to his waiting mate who builds up the site.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Nomadic children, (1) who learn to ride horses and camels at a very early age, (2) often can't travel to their schools (3) many miles across the plains.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Not all animals, (1) however, (2) were liable to legal responsibility (3) and punishment.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Not noted for grace or beauty, (1) the pelican looks like (2) something Mother Nature (3) put together for the fun of it.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Now there is no milk (1) for the tea, (2) because the domestic animals - (3) that have survived often don't have milk for their own young.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Once he succeeds: (1) he allows her onto the nest site (2) that he has been protecting, (3) and mating takes place.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: One of the largest birds (1) in the world, (2) it appears clumsy (3) even at rest.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Our lives (1) are over anyway – (2) Our worry is for these kids and how they will live.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Pelicans (1) are sexually mature (2) when they are (3) two to four years old.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: People become homeless (1) through a variety of reasons: imperfect laws, (2) family problems, (3) drug or alcohol addiction, illness or separation, rock bottom poverty, loss of job and others.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Plaintiffs (1) and counsels for the defense (2) were given a chance (3) to plead their cause.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Researchers - (1) found that a tendency to "catatastrophize", (2) that is to see bad things that happen to you as part of global evil and pain - was linked to an increased risk of (3) dying before the age of 65, especially in men.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Such international organisations as World Bank (1) and the United Nations, (2) as well as developed countries are helping Mongolia to overcome (3) difficulties of severe winter and develop its economy.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The birds (1) step off the eggs: (2) when they feel the movement of life (3) under them.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The court (1) decreed that the summons should be (2) made known to all mice (3) in all the villages.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The findings are based on data from the historic Terman Life-Cycle Study,(1) in which a group of more than, (2) 1500 healthy California schoolchildren has (3) been followed since 1921.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The French barrister (1) Barthelemy Chassanee (2) made a career (3) defending mice and rats.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The pelican uses it (1) to catch fish (2) which it keeps in the strong sac that is the creature's (3) trademark.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The procedure was strictly observed: (1) the defendants, (2) were interrogated (3) and even tortured.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The range of people (1) who are affected by homelessness (2) is infinite (3) as society itself.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The sac (1) conveniently folds (2) under the beak (3) when not in use.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The same correlation was not found in people who explain life difficulties in other ways, such as blaming themselves, researchers said.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The sick (1) can't get to doctors (2) or obtain medicine. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The study is part of, (1) a larger project studying the (2) effect of stress on adults taking care of a sick family member. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The wolf (1) was accused of killing two little girls, (2) sentenced to death and executed.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: The young (1) inside the eggs (2) begin to chip away, (3) but birth is a slow, laborious process.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Their counsel again found a plausible excuse – (1) saying that the mice had to cover many miles across fields, (2) woods, ravines and swamps, (3) their life threatened at every step by cats, foxes and owls.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Then severe blizzards hit early, (1) in September, (2) freezing many animals and leaving so much snow (3) that the survivors couldn't graze.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: There (1) were countries (2) where horses and cows (3) were tried for damage done to the crops.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: There are more (1) than 3 million homeless people (2) in the USA, (3) and the number is growing.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: There were trials against worms (1) bugs, (2) Spanish fly, (3) rats and other animals and insects.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: They - (1) were often executed (2) because they failed to call (3) for help.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: They were looking for correlations, (1) between those attitudes (2) and the timing and cause of death.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Thinking (1) why such attitude to bad things can be dangerous, researchers (2) noted that it is often related to poor (3) problem-solving, social isolation and risky decision-making.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: This is not only untrue but impossible: (1) for the weight in the sac would unbalance the bird (2) and make the flight out (3) of question.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: This transition brought problems: (1) higher a1coholism (2) homeless children, (3) hundreds per cent of inflation.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Too weak even to hold their heads up (1) the babies make (2) one of the few sounds of their lifetime; (3) a grunt that becomes a bark, then later a scream of hunger.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Trials of animals – (1) birds (2) reptiles and insects were common (3) in medieval Europe up to the 18th century.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Unlike many birds, (1) a male pelican makes (2) no fuss of mating. (3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Usually (1) they were executed, (2) and their meat went to pay (3) the court expenses.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: When it dives, (1) the pelican gulps fish (2) and water into the sac (3) which can stretch enormously.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: When it sits or floats – (1) its neck is bent (2) in an awkward way.(3)
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: When the nest is complete, (1) the female lays two or three eggs and, (2) for one month, (3) the two take turns incubating them.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Young pelicans (1) can leave the nest (2) and move about by, (3) their fifth week.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: Westminster and other suburbs (1) were left to develop their own administrative structures—(2) a pattern replicated a hundred times over as London exploded in size, (3) becoming the prototype of the modern metropolis.
Укажите место пунктуационной ошибки в предложении: People who (1) tend to see their (2) personal difficulties as a catastrophe; (3) are more likely to die young than others, a psychology study says.
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  0096.12.04;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
A comma should be used to separate short noun phrases that directly follow a noun, are the grammatical equivalent of a noun they follow, and are not essential to the meaning of the sentence:
A comma should be used to separate two or more adjectives modifying the same noun, unless all the adjectives are joined by conjunctions:
A comma should be used to set off dates with years; place a comma before and after the year if the month and day precede the year:
A comma should be used to set off names and titles of persons that are parenthetical to the description of that person within the sentence:
A direct quote structure is any structure which shows that you are reporting what someone said or wrote (or sometimes thought) as if you were using their own words:
A question mark is used at the end of an interrogative sentence:
A question mark should be used to set off a direct quotation from the the rest the sentence:
An ellipsis a series of three periods, with spaces between, before, and after, that is used to show an omission of a word, words, or sentences from within a quoted passage:
An excplamation point is used in excplamatory sentences to show strong feelings, surprise, or emotion:
An indirect report structure is used to show that you are reporting what someone said or wrote in your own words rather than in the words they actually used:
Apostrophes have two primary functions: to form contractions and to show possession:
Colons are used to join words when we want the words to be either a compound noun or a compound adjective:
Punctuation shows how words and strings of words are related, separated and emphasized, its main purpose should be to help the reader understand the construction of the sentence:
The basic purpose of parentheses is to present explanatory material in a way that does not disturb the flow of the sentence:
The period is used with two types of sentences: declarative and imperative:
To use merely commas as dividers would produce chaos because commas already exist within some of the listed items:
When an abbreviation falls at the end of an excplamatory sentence, both the period and excplamation point are used:
While the semicolon and colon noticeably indicate that the reader should pause, the dash does so more forcefully and draws great attention to what follows in the sentence:


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  0096.12.04;МТ.01;4

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Модульный тест

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
В каком из предложений аббревиатура использована правильно:
Вставьте пропущенные слова: …. entitles the holder to travel over a ….. border without being searched and questined.
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Знаки препинания правильно поставлены в предложении:
Как закончить письмо? (расставьте заглавные буквы)
Как можно написать неполностью Thursday?
Как правильно записать адрес?
Как записать сумму: eighty nine and a half pounds
Найдите правильный вариант: 2 степени Доктора наук
Найдите правильный вариант: will not
Найдите правильный вариант: кризис правительства 1985 года.
Найдите правильный вариант: мужской магазин
Найдите правильный вариант: слишком много букв «м»
Объясните употребление запятой. The manager explained that, if he had known we were coming, he would have made other arrangements
Объясните употребление запятой. The rescuers who had no extra provisions with them, had to be rescued themselves
Объясните употребление запятой. Unless I hear from you by tomorrow, I will assume the meeting is off
Объясните употребление запятой. You can sail any kind of dinghy, cruiser, yacht or surfboard in the har-bour
Перефразируйте предложение. He described the career of the actress
Перефразируйте предложение. This bicycle is for a child
Поставьте дефис, если он необходим: brother in law
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте дефис там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо:
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: gone with the wind (a title of the book)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: history of the eastern world (a title of school class)
Проставьте заглавные буквы там, где это необходимо: Incopterms are to set of rules published by the … , Paris, for the interpretation of the most commonly used terms in foreign trade.
Расставьте заглавные буквы и знаки препинания, где необходимо: I knew that …. ….. was her favourite.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где необходимо.
Расставьте заглавные буквы там, где они необходимы:
Расставьте знаки препинания, заглавные буквы:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания:
Расставьте знаки препинания: What a wonderful day
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Addam Wilson, (1) …. (2) of the (3)… (4)…. , was appointed by (5) … Bush
Расставьте знаки препинания: Caution Don't use matches here
Расставьте знаки препинания: He said I heard this man saying Tell everybody I’m not guilty.
Расставьте знаки препинания: How long did it take you to watch‘ The Titanic we asked
Расставьте знаки препинания: I said to Fred: “You will follow my advice, won’t you?”
Расставьте знаки препинания: I'm sorry to tell you about it however I have to do it.
Расставьте знаки препинания: Mary asked why didn't you tell me what had happened with you
Расставьте знаки препинания: Now I understand this situation Andrew thought
Расставьте знаки препинания: Our deadline is March 31 or is it March 30
Расставьте знаки препинания: Please dont keep asking me Whats the time Alex said crossly
Расставьте знаки препинания: Special offer call 4433111 for more details
Расставьте знаки препинания: The chairman said and thank you for attention
Расставьте знаки препинания: The major counties in the south Kent East Sussex West Sussex and surrey are very popular among tourists.
Расставьте знаки препинания: The President said the policy states but was interrupted by the reporter
Расставьте знаки препинания: The tourists said: ‘It was a terrifying experience which we will never forget.’
Расставьте знаки препинания: This rule see page 100 is very often used
Расставьте знаки препинания: Two TV sets a tape recorder two computers these were her belongings.
Расставьте знаки препинания: We had very good holidays, for example we spent a lot of time near the sea.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Are you Ok Mary asked.
Расставьте знаки препинания: What do you mean Have you lost your way the stranger asked me
Расставьте знаки препинания: Where are they now he wondered
Расставьте пропущенные слова: Did you visit Peter Smith, …. of …., ….?
Расставьте пропущенные слова: His train to … leaves at …
Расставьте пропущенные слова: The report must be ready by
Расставьте пропущенные слова:Young people like to read … and …. .


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  0096.11.04;Т-Т.01;1

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Тест-тренинг

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Between the 20th and 60th Streets it is a street of shops and department stores. - предлог B) After 110th Street it passes through Harlem and slum tenements to the Harlem River. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Temperatures seldom fall below -15°C in the winter or rise above 35°C in the summer. New York City consists of five boroughs: the Bronx, Brooklin, Manhattan, Queens and Richmond. – наречие B) The most important industries are manufacturing, printing, publishing, food, chemical and primary metals industries. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) A landlady who had fed and clothed the young man when he was too poor to pay her, suddenly found herself an owner of an apartment building, without any idea who bought it in her name. - существительное B) Unlike most corporate bosses, Ricardo Semler likes to boast about all the things he does not do at the company. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) At the height of Softbank's stock market success, Son had stakes in more than 400 Internet companies around the world and planned to increase the number to 800 by 2005. - существительное B) He wanted to create a new kind of the web of manufacturing and trading cartels that defined the Japanese economy in the 1980s. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Fifth Avenue starts at the Washington Arch. - глагол B) The avenue continues straight uptown u and divides Manhattan streets into east and west. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Greek businessman Aristotie Onassis was the ruler of an empire larger and more powerful than most countries. – существительное B) He had no title or official position, but he regularly bought and sold prime ministers, cardinals, ambassadors and kings. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Harlem covering the north central section of Manhattan is almost a city within a city. - существительное B) Early in the 20th century, as a result of racial antagonism in other sections of the city, the blacks moved to Harlem and formed a majority of the population. - глагол
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) He had married, had three children and was one of the most prominent men in Greece. - местоимение B) During those years Onassis patiently sat back and let Nicolas build his little empire. - местоимение
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) He was one of the two or three wealthiest men in the world and his power was legendary. - прилагательное B) He owned the largest fleet of cargo ships, an airline, newspapers, banks, steel mills, gold mines. - наречие
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) He went to other banks and lending institutions, but for reasons he could not understand, they refused to help him. - причастие B) The day after he went bankrupt Nicolas committed suicide. - глагол
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) However, the market turned, and Softbank's share price had started a plunge. - существительное B) Now no one knows what the future will hold for Son. It will not, however, be the future he planned as the markets work against him. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) In an interview, Massayoshi Son said that the Softbank had a 300-year investment plan. - глагол B) His aim for Softbank was to hold a stake in almost every online venture in the world. Investors believed him between 1997 and February 2000, the value of Softbank on the Tokyo stock exchange rose from f. 1,5 billion to f. 123 billion. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) It is 15 years since he signed a cheque, and 14 years since he had his own office. - предлог B) "We had a party recently to celebrate 10 years since I had taken a decision," he says. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) It is the home of the New York professional hockey team, the Rangers, and its professional basketball team, the Knickerbockers. - прилагательное B) The new cultural center in the city is the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts, which was built in the 1960s. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) It was this provocative approach that turned Mr. Semler into a cult figure in the management theory. - причастие B) The book of his ideas, entitled Maverick, has sold more than 1 million copies in 22 languages since 1993. - местоимение
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) New York City has long been a major transportation center. - прилагательное B) Its harbor is one of the largest of the world's ports. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) New York is a city of banks. Wall Street is the financial heart of the city. - существительное B) The New York Stock Exchange is located at 11 Wall Street. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) New York is a city of islands consisting primarily of two islands (Manhattan and Staten), part B) of a third island (Long Island) and part of the mainland. - прилагательное It is situated at the junction of the Hudson and East Rivers with New York Bay, an arm of the Atlantic Ocean. - союз
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) New York is the most populous city in the United States and one of the biggest cities in the world. - существительное B) New York has a humid climate with sudden changes of weather. - глагол
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Onassis had an idea of opening a small stand on the docks to serve hot food to the workers on the night shift. - существительное B) He had scraped half the money for the enterprise, but when it had become successful, Nicolas had forced him out of the business and had taken it over to himself. - наречие
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Onassis has accepted his fate without a protest and had gone ahead to other enterprises. - прилагательное B) Over the next twenty years Nicolas had gone into the meat-packing business and had become rich and successful. - числительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Onassis owned a bank with which Nicolas did business, and the bank encouraged Nicolas to borrow money for expansion at interest rates that Nicolas could not resist. - прилагательное B) Nicolas borrowed a big sum of money, and in the process of expansion his loan was suddenly called in by the bank. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Puerto Ricans form the second largest group within Harlem, living mainly in the eastern part of the district (Spanish Harlem). - прилагательное B) Most of the houses in Harlem are in a dreadful need of repair. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Son was a successful Internet investor during the 1990s. - существительное B) As early as 1995 he had spotted the potential of America's Yahoo buying a 23 per cent stake in the online media company. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) Son's charm and modesty (he enjoys nothing more than a game of golf with a politician or Fortune-500 chief executive) won him many powerful partners. - существительное B) Britain's Internet companies were eager to follow Son's philosophy of investing "early and often". - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) The best known of the more than 30 museums in the city is the Metropolitan Museum of Art. - существительное B) Its magnificent collection of European and American painting contains the works of many of the greatest masters of world art. - глагол
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) The headquarters of the United Nations is located in New York. - существительноее B) The Godfather of Britain's incubators is Massayoshi Son, president of Japan's Softbank. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) The second best known museum is the Museum of Modern Art. – существительное B) Madison Square Garden, with a capacity of 18,900 people, has been the center of boxing, hockey and basketball events. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) The sense of justice of Onassis was a two-edged sword. - наречие B) He never forgave an injury and never forgot a favour. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) The total area of New York City is 319.8 square miles. - глагол B) The length of the city from north to south is 36 miles, and its breadth is 16.5 miles. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) There are 60 bridges and 4 tunnels in the city, most of which connect the boroughs to each other. - союз B) Some of the bridges are privately owned and toll is to be paid. - предлог
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) They were never even aware of it, for his mathematical mind was working out traps that finally caught and destroyed his victims. - числительное B) When Onassis was 16 years old, he had gone into his first business enterprise with an older man named Spyros Nicolas. - числительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) To achieve this aim, he spent billions of pounds of his shareholders' money buying technology companies in America's Silicon Valley. - существительное B) A few were failures, but many were astonishing success. - глагол
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) To the ancient Greeks the word justice often meant vengeance, and Onassis was obsessed with both. - существительное B) He remembered every slight hurt he had ever suffered, and those who were unlucky enough to hurt him were paid back. - прилагательное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) When he decided that Nicolas was as successful and as happy as he was ever going to be, Onassis struck. – существительное B) Because his business was booming, Nicolas wanted to buy farms and open a chain of retail stores. An enormous amount of money was required. - существительное
Верны ли соответствия? (Правильно ли указана частеречная принадлежность выделенных слов?) A) When the man protested that he could not make the payments, the bank immediately began foreclosure proceedings. – прилагательное B) The newspapers owned by Onassis played up the story on the front pages, and other creditors began foreclosing on Nicolas. - предлог
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is known that the Fortune Theatre—built in 1600 for a rival company, the Admiral's Men—was modeled on the Globe. In 1613, during a performance of Henry VIII , the thatch of the Globe was accidentally set alight by a cannon, set off to mark the king's entrance onstage in a scene at Cardinal Wolsey's palace.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I'll be glad to go there. I hope I'll have a good time.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: Heatch Robinson, ____ died in 1944, was a graphic artist and cartoonist.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: A child ____ mother had left him was crying loudly.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: Angela was the only person ____ I could talk to.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: He showed me the place _____ they work.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: He was a man of considerable inherited wealth, ____ he ultimately spent on his experiments.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: He was asking questions to which there were no answers.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: He was the man ___ bought my house.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I am teaching at the Selly Oak centre, ____is just over the road.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I never met Brando again, ____ was a pity.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I wanted to do the job _____ I’d been training for.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I was in the same group as Janice, ___ I like a lot.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: It’s obvious ____ he’s going to be late.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: She was a little tense, ____ was understandable.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: She was engaged to a sailor, ___ she had met at Dartmouth.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: She’s the girl ____I sang the song for.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: Small computers need only small amounts of power, ____ means that they will run on small batteries.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: That was the room ___ I did my homework.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The car ____ caused the accident drove off.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The car ____ I wanted to buy was not for sale.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The car ____ crashed into me belonged to Paul.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The house ____ we lived in was huge.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The man ___ you met yesterday was my brother.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The thing ___ I really liked about it was its size.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The thing ____ really surprised me was his attitude.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The woman ___ lives next door is very friendly.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: The woman___ you met yesterday lives next door.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: There are reasons _____ we can’t do that.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: There had been a time ____ hated all men.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: There was ice cream ___ Mum had made herself.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: These are the people to ____ Catherine was referring.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: This is the year ________ profits should increase.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: We have only told the people ____ work is relevant to this project.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: You are the only person here ____ knows me.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: He told me ___ he had succeeded.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I know _____ he’s going to be late.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: I will tell you the first thing ____ I can remember.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: It was in 1909 _____ it happened.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: It’s a pity ____ he’s going to be late.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: Tell me ____ you signed the contract.
Вставьте пропущенное слово: There is the house______ I live.
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Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: Because the combination of thought and activity carrying out that thought is unique to writing, we must, in planning a writing curriculum, devise exercises that necessitate intense concentration
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: For example, one of the first things the student will have to learn is that writing has certain structural differences from speech
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: One difference is that writing generally has longer sentences — what might be two or three sentences in speech is often only one sentence in writing
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: So the student must learn how to combine the short sentences of spoken English by modification or by using sentence connectors of various kinds (conjunctions like however and therefore, phrases like in the first place, etc.).
Укажите синтаксическую функцию подчеркнутого слова: While it does require the students to memorize structures, thereby increasing the grammatical ability, and perhaps even teaching him something about style, it does not require him to do much thinking
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: It holds five million books.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: About 44 years later oil was found there. And again people came, but few of them found the riches they were looking for, as it had been by those who had come in the twenties of this century when they were drawn from their Oklahoma or Texas homes.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Washington was founded in 1791. It became the capital of the United States of America.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: It is in the very centre of the city.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: For over a hundred years New York has been the nation's leading financial and commercial center.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: In 1834, in order to hide the marks of the fire, the brown stone walls of the president's home were painted white — and it has been the "White House" ever since.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: It is also the center of fashion, theater and culture.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Today Washington is a city which attracts a lot of tourists by its fashionable hotels, restaurants and sightseeing, the Lincoln Memorial, the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the White House and others.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The south-eastern part of the state has miles of light brown sand dunes like those of the Sahara.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: There is a law in Washington against building structures higher than the Capitol; therefore it presents different appearance from New York with its sky-scrapers.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Among the newer buildings one of the most imposing is the National Gallery of Art.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: And the whole of this city, with its long wide avenues, with shady trees on both sides, its low buildings and its crowds of government officials, is unlike New York with its sky-scrapers and its noisy streets.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: George Washington chose the place located midway to keep at close touch as possible between the states.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Go over to the mountains to the west and you come into the garden and fruit country which attracted a lot of people since the gold rush in 1848.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: In San Francisco you would like to wear your overcoat sometimes.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: It is said that in 1812 when England was at war with America, the British captured the city, and some of the buildings, including the Capitol and the house of the president, were set on fire.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: It was named in honour of the first President whose name was George Washington.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Not far from the Capitol is the Library of Congress.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Poverty and wealth exist side by side in marked contrast to each other.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The capital of the United States is Washington.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The Capitol, where the Congress meets, is a very high and beautiful building with white marble columns.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The most important cities of the USA are: New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, Chicago, Boston and others.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The north-western part of California has a very pleasant climate.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The population of Washington is over 3 million.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: The White House, the residence of the president, is the oldest public structure in the capital and one of the most beautiful.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Washington has wooded areas and red-brick houses.
Укажите функцию выделенного слова в предложении: Washington is not a very large city, but it is very important as the capital of the USA.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: About 239 million people live there. The USA consists of 50 states.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The greatest of these rapids is the Niagara Falls.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: This causes great temperature fluctuations. On the whole, the USA has a continental climate.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Fleet Street is busy day and night.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Its main tributaries are the Missouri and Ohio Rivers.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The entire theatre was destroyed within the hour.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The Rocky Mountains extend from Mexico to Canada.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The United States' economy is highly developed.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: These rivers are unsuitable for navigation.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Alaska is separated from Russia by only about 50 miles across the Bering Strait.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The form has to be filled in in block letters.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: "The United States of America" is the name of the country composed of 50 states joined in a federal republic, and its citizens are known as "Americans".
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: At the airport you may be met by a specially trained dog who will make sure that you are not carrying drugs, and the immigration officer might want to know at whose invitation you are coming and whether you have a return ticket.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Hawaii, which became the 50th state in 1959, is situated in the Pacific Ocean halfway between the west-coast states and the Far East.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: In the North the U.S. is bordered by Canada, and in the South it borders on Mexico.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is washed by the Atlantic Ocean in the East, and by the Pacific Ocean in the West.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Major highlands are the Appalachian Mountains in the east and the Rocky Mountains in the west.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Such industries as mining, metallurgy, electronics and space engineering, chemicals, textiles, leather and footwear are well developed.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The 50 stars — white on a blue field represent the 50 states and the 13 stripes represent 13 original English colonies, which in 1776 became free and independent of England.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The largest among them are the Colorado and the Columbia rivers.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The Mississippi together with the Missouri form the longest river in the world (7,300 km).
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The Times is a daily newspaper published in London, one of Britain's oldest and most influential newspapers.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The United States of America or the USA is a large country.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: There are cut by rapids, and so serve as an immense source of electric power.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: This is an anti-hijacking measure, and anything that might be dangerous or disturbing to other passengers must be handed to one of the crew and only returned to the owner after the plane has reached its destination.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: A year later the Bolshoi Theatre was made a government institution, and a new building was opened in 1825.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: After fulfilling all these formalities you go to the departure lounge where you can have a snack, read a paper, buy something in the duty-free shop and wait for the announcement to board the plane.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Although only a small percentage of the original theatre could be examined, the discovery of these foundations enabled scholars to make certain design adjustments.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: As regards agriculture, both animal husbandry and arable farming are prominent in the economy of the United States.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: As to population, it is the fourth largest country in the world.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: At first you won’t be feeling very well because of it, but don’t worry - it won’t take you long to get used to it.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: But the largest readership has been won by magazines that are full of advertisements and are good at leisure time, such as Cosmopolitan, the Ladies Home Journal and the Saturday Evening Post.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: By June 1614 it had been rebuilt, this time with a tiled gallery roof and a circular shape.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: By referring to a number of extant Elizabethan buildings for clues to the structure, style, interior, and roofing, scholars and architects completed the design of the Globe Theatre reconstruction.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: By the end of the 19th century the Bolshoi's operatic and ballet productions of Russian and other European works were influencing the performing arts throughout the Western world.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Crossed by mountain ranges from north to south, the country is unprotected from cold winds from the north and from warm winds from the south.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: GLOBE THEATRE is a famous London theatre in which the plays of William Shakespeare were performed after 1599.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Half the shares in the new theatre were kept by the Burbages.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: In 1924 a smaller auditorium was added to the theatre complex, and in 1961 the Kremlin Palace of Congresses, with a capacity of about 6,000, was acquired as a third performing space for bigger productions.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: In 1970 the American actor Sam Wanamaker established the Shakespeare Globe Playhouse Trust.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: In most countries there is also a security check when your carry-on luggage is inspected.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Information about the physical arrangement of the Globe is largely a matter of conjecture.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It explained why the Congress on July 2 “unanimously” by the votes of 12 colonies (with New York abstaining) had resolved that “these United Colonies are, and of right ought to be Free and Independent States.”
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is packed with vans, cars, motorcycles, newsboys every day between 9 a.m. and 3 p.m. when the latest news is ready to go out all over the world.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is thought to have been cylindrical in shape, with a thatched gallery roof.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It was built by two brothers, Cuthbert and Richard Burbage, who inherited its predecessor, The Theatre, from their father, James.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It was pulled down in 1644, two years after the Puritans closed all theatres, to make way for tenement dwellings.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It, too, was destroyed by fire, in 1853, but it was rebuilt and enlarged in 1856 to accommodate an audience of more than 2,000.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Its area is only a little smaller than the area of Europe.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It’s the jet-lag, a difference between the time you are accustomed to and the new time.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Many Americans consider The New York Times the nation's most prestigious newspaper which established itself as a serious alternative to sensational journalism.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Performances of various types have been held since the late 1980s, and a regular season was inaugurated in 1996.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Publishing houses of many big foreign newspapers are also there.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Seventeen years later a groundbreaking ceremony was held on a Bankside site near that of the original Globe, and in 1989 the foundations of the original building (now buried beneath a historic 19th-century building) were discovered.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Since the mid-1950s the opera and ballet troupes have traveled extensively.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Some of these formalities are repeated when you arrive at your destination.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The central lowland between the two main mountain ranges makes up the basin of the Mississippi River.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The company was kept intact during the Russian Revolution of 1917, both world wars, and the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1990–91.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The country is rich in coal, oil, iron and other minerals which form a solid base for the development of American industry.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The customs declaration and the immigration form are often filled in on board the plane.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The Declaration of Independence in U.S. history, document that was approved by the Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, and that announced the separation of 13 North American British colonies from Great Britain.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The flag of the United States is called 'Stars and Stripes'.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The latter theatre had closed, ostensibly for good, in 1597, and the owner of the land on which it stood threatened to pull the building down once the lease expired.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The main part of the United States consists of several physical divisions, including highlands and lowlands regions.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The mountains are crossed by streams which flow through deep canyons and fall into the Pacific Ocean.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The northern part of the USA embraces the region of the five Great Lakes (Lake Superior, Lake Huron, Lake Michigan, Lake Erie and Lake Ontario ) which are connected by natural channels cut by rapids.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The paper gives coverage of important national and international events.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The rest were assigned equally to Shakespeare and other members ofthe Chamberlain's Men (the company of players who acted there), of which Richard Burbage was principal actor and of which Shakespeare had been a leading member since late 1594.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: TheBurbages and their associates anticipated the threat, however, and in late 1598 dismantled The Theatre and carried the materials to Bankside (a district of Southwark stretching for about half a mile west of London Bridge on the south bank of theRiver Thames), where the Swan and the Rose theatres already stood.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: There is another inconvenience you have to be prepared for when travelling long distances by plane.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: To the east of these, they reassembled the timbers from the old theatre, calling the new building, which was probably completed by the autumn of 1599, the Globe Theatre.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Using traditional methods and materials, with only a few concessions to modern fire regulations and the like, builders completed work on the new Globe Theatre in the mid-1990s.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: You write your name, nationality, permanent address and the purpose of your trip.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Among these newspapers are the Daily Express, the Daily Mirror, and many others.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Its reputation is solid today that it is used as a major reference tool by American libraries, and is standard reading for diplomats, scholars and government officials.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The most prominent American newspapers are The New York Times, The Washington Post, The Los Angeles Times, the Boston Globe, the Chicago Tribune.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Among popular magazines are Time, Newsweek, Business Week and World Report which give information on national affairs, business and science.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: By the mid-1800s it had become awidely respected influence on British public opinion, and its circulation had grown from 5,000 in 1815 to 40,000 in 1850.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Fleet Street has been the meeting place for newspaper men since the 18th century, when writers met to talk in its coffeehouses. And up to now Fleet Street is the Street of news.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Fleet Street is now the centre of journalists and newspaper men.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: For example, the Times Educational Supplement specializes in reports and features on education in schools, and the Times Literary Supplement is one of Britain's leading literary weakly magazines, noted for its interesting coverage of the literary and publishing world.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Founded by John Walter on Jan. 1, 1785, as The Daily Universal Register, the newspaper began as a 2 1/2-penny broadsheet whose main function was to publicize a system of typography in which Walter was then interested.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: He expanded it from 4 pages to 12 large pages, and, by the time control of the paper passed to his son, John Walter III, in 1848, the foundations of The Times's reputation as Britain's preeminent national journal and daily historical record had been laid.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It became The Times on Jan. 1, 1788, publishing commercial news and notices, along with some scandal.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is also noted for its readers' letters to the editor.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: It is generally accounted, with The Guardian and The Daily Telegraph, one of Britain's “big three” and has long been recognized as one of the world's greatest newspapers.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Many newspapers are offered for less serious reading.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Much attention is given to personal stories (especially when they are sensational, or mention a figure in the public eye such as a member of the royal family), and importance is also given to sport and entertainment.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Offices of most English daily and evening papers are situated in this street.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: People have begun to buy less newspapers, and the most important reasons for this trend is probably the growing popularity of television which sixty five percent of Americans use as their primary source of news.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Some newspapers have an accompanying colour supplement, with many photographs and advertisements.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The founder's son, John Walter II, took over the newspaper in 1803.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The best known of the more than thirty museums in the city is the Metropolitan Museum of Art.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The best-known British newspapers which give serious coverage of the news and comment are The Times, The Guardian, The Financial Times, and The Independent.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The Daily Telegraph and the Daily Express have their offices here, and The Times, The Guardian and many others are nearby.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: The style of English in these newspapers is often conversational, with much use of slang, nicknames and catchy headlines.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: They contain information on home and foreign affairs, serious editorials, arts and literary reviews; they provide up-to-date financial information and much professional advertising.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: They have brief news reports and a large number of photographs.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова: Under its first great liberal editor, Thomas Barnes (editor from 1817 to 1841), The Times developed into a strong independent newspaper popularly described as the “Thunderer.”
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова:Accordingly, the day on which final separation was officially voted was July 2, although the 4th, the day on which the Declaration of Independence was adopted, has always been celebrated in the United States as the great national holiday—the Fourth of July, or Independence Day.
Укажите частеречную принадлежность выделенного слова:West of the Rocky Mountains we find the State of California. It is full of contrasts.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: "Prime time" is 8:00 to 11:00 p.m.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: "Movies" (from moving pictures) is American English.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Everybody likes to see skating and dancing on the ice.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I see all the best films that are on in Moscow.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Newspapers tell us what is on at cinemas and theatres.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: People use radio or television.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Television has succeeded in moulding public opinion.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Then you must book tickets.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They say it is done very well.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Those who like to dance join a dancing section.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: A digital TV hangs on the wall like a picture.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Essentially, it is a minicomputer with a visual display.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Everyone likes to see the plays.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Films are shown in cinemas, clubs and Houses of Culture.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I'm a great cinema-goer.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: If you are a film fan, you will go to a cinema.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Most TV stations broadcast at least eighteen hours a day.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: On TV people could even see both sides of the Moon.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Schools usually get tickets for their pupils.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Some people like music.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The cinema has really become the most popular kind of art.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The boundaries of time and space have disappeared.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: There are a lot of fans among people.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: There are several ways to do this.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: There is also a noncommercial public network - PBS.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: These are the most popular kinds of sports.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: This is what we can do at home.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: All national shows are one hour earlier there.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I always come to the cinema in time.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I don't like films based on any book.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The other day he saw a film.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: At a hotel, you should be able to get five to twenty TV stations and at least fifteen radio stations, each playing a different kind of music.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Commercials (TV advertisements) may interrupt the shows as often as every ten minutes.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In Great Britain, along with the BBC network, there is a commercial television company in each area and they all belong to a centralized body, the Independent Television Authority (ITA).
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Rocket-launching, concerts and football and tennis matches can be seen as they occur.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Some members are taught to paint, and they organize local exhibitions of their paintings.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: A few years ago it became evident that the next major advance for TV is digital television.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: As regards the system of TV networks, there are three commercial TV networks in the USA - NBC, C BS, and ABC - that broadcast nationwide through local stations.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: At present TV communication is provided with the help of a system of artificial earth satellites so that people living in different time zones are able to watch the central TV programs at the most convenient hours.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: But the most important stage in the development of color television is called hi-definition television (HDTV), or Hi-Vision.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: HDTV equipment has already found its application not only in homes, but also in industry, medicine and TV production.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: He liked it immensely and said it was one of the best he had ever seen.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I prefer feature films though I enjoy documentaries almost as much, to say nothing of animated cartoon films.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I usually go to the cinema for the matinee performances.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I made up my mind to see this film and as it is very difficult to get tickets I’ll get them in advance by telephone.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I think it is better if we don't know the plot of a film.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: I'm fond of serious films but a friend of mine prefers thrillers and musicals.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: If you are a theatre-goer, you will choose a play you want to see.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: If I want to go to the cinema in the evening I book tickets beforehand.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: If we want to go out, there are a lot of cinemas, theatres, museums, Houses of Culture and clubs in our country where we can spend our free time.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In 1980s it became possible via satellite and cable TV to use more channels on a TV set at every home on the world.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In small towns and villages they have no actors of their own.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In addition to these, most towns and cities have cable TV, which costs a few dollars a month.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In big cities like Moscow and St. Petersburg it is often difficult to decide where to go in the evening.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In England the word "cinema" is used if we mean a building for showing films but "pictures" is also British English and more colloquial than cinema.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In one showing there are usually a main film (called the main feature), a shorter one, a news film, some advertisements and a "trailer" telling about the film for the next week.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In small towns and villages both Houses of Culture and clubs are the centres of cultural activities which are carried out through different sections.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: It is used to be the most common word in conversation.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Many countries also have cable TV, a system using wires for the transmission of television programs (like telephone calls).
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: More marvelous even than radio is television, which enables us not only to listen to talks, plays and concerts, but also to see what's going on.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Most English people know the word, but practically no one uses it.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Next week they are announcing a new film produced by Focus Features.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Once a week you put the programs you like into the memory, and the TV set will automatically switch on the desired channel at the right time.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: People who are fond of sports can join sport sections, such as football, skiing, boating, and others.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: People who live in small towns near London do not often go to the theatre or cinema in London as the cost of the journey and the higher price of seats in London make this too expensive.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Radio and television extend our knowledge about the world in which we live.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Since 1990 a new communication satellite has begun to offer regular Hi-Vision service direct to tiny antennae on houses' roofs.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: So they invite a group of actors from a big town or a city to show plays.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Some do cutting work; others grow flowers and take part in town and region flower-shows.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Some serials are written specially for television, and continue for several years in daily, weekly or twice-weekly installments.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Television helps us to 'visit' different lands, see new plants, animals, unusual birds, fish and insects, mountains and valleys, lakes, rivers, and seas.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The first performance or showing in Great Britain begins about two o'clock in the afternoon and goes on from then until about half past ten.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The main types of television programmes in Britain include news, talks, interviews, current affairs programmes, discussions, documentaries, sports programmes, shows and wild life programmes.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The prices of cinema seats outside London are between three pounds and five pounds.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The art section is one of the most popular with the people, because they can learn to create beautiful things there.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The cinema is not emptied between the performances, so that once you have paid for your seat you can stay in the cinema as long as you like.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The cost of commercial television broadcasts is covered by the income from commercials shown on the screen at 15-minute intervals, either between programmes or during short breaks of programs.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: There are also a lot of serials, or plays broadcast in parts.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They often depict the everyday life of a particular group of people (a family, people living in the same street, colleagues, etc.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They can also see championships in athletics and other kinds of sports.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They go to the theatre with their teachers and have talks about the play they have seen.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They listen to various concerts of modern and old music, new and old songs, and see dances.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: They switch on the radio set or TV set and choose the programme they like best.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: This film has been dubbed in Russian and it is done so well that when you watch the close-ups you get the impression that they are talking Russian as the lip movements coincide so well with the Russian script.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: This is the time when the most people watch TV, so the networks put their best shows on then.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: This very film had a successful run as the cast was good and the plot was thrilling.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: This very film had a successful run as the cast was good and the plot was thrilling.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Those who are fond of sports listen to or watch football and hockey matches.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Those who are interested in music join a musical section where they are taught to play different musical instruments.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: We are shown different countries, cities and towns and people who live there.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: When new interesting plays are on, it is not easy to get tickets, because the theatres play to full houses every night.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: When we have time for leisure, we usually need something that can amuse and interest us.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Young and old people like to see films very much, and when a good film is on, the house is usually full.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In 1780 the first permanent theatre building in Moscow was opened as the company's home, but it burned in 1805.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: In its short history television has had great influence on people's life and way of thinking.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Most TV stations have local news and weather forecasts before national and international news, which is at 6 p.m. except in the Central Time Zone.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: Russian Bolshoy Theatre is a leading theatre company for ballet and opera in Russia.
Укажите, каким членом предложения является выделенное слово: The original group, which was made up of several smaller troupes, was organized in Moscow in the mid-1770s, performing primarily at the mansion of Count R.I. Vorontsov.
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  0096.11.04;СЛ.01;1

ПКОЯз. Англ. Практическая грамматика - Слайдлекция по модулю

Список вопросов теста (скачайте файл для отображения ответов):
A compound-complex sentence consists of five or more independent clauses and one or more dependent clauses:
A noun clause does the work of a noun. It answers the questions "Who?" or "What?":
A relative pronoun in a relative clause can be the object of a preposition:
A sentence can take any one of four forms: - a statement; - a question; - a command; - an exclamation:
Adverbial clauses of reason answer the question "Why?":
Co-ordination is one of the methods for combining two or more complete sentences but it also shows the proper relationship between similar or related ideas:
In a complex sentence there is one "main" idea and one or more "subordinate" ideas:
In formal English, "whom" is sometimes used instead of "who" as the object of a non-defining relative clause:
In written or formal English, if the subjects of the main clause and the time clause are the same, you sometimes omit the subject in the time clause and use a participle as the verb:
Inversion can take place after negative adverbials:
Some verbs never take an object:
Subjects joined by both ... and always take a singular verb:
The meaning of an English sentence depends on the word order:
There is one kind of clauses in English: dependent ones:
We can use the past participle instead of the passive to join two sentences:
When connecting two complete sentences, we use a comma after the first sentence:
When there are two auxiliary verbs, neither is after the first one:


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