A) What are you read?
I am reading a magazine
b) What is she write?
She write a letter
c) What is he looking at?
He looking at a computer
d) What are they do?
They do a homework
e) What is Frank play?
Frank play the saxophone
Television<span> (1920s)</span>
The invention that swept the world and changed leisure habits for countless millions was pioneered by Scottish-born electrical engineer John Logie Baird. It had been realised for some time that light could be converted into electrical impulses, making it possible to transmit such impulses over a distance and then reconvert them into light.
Motor Car<span> (Late 19th Century)</span>
With television, the car is probably the most widely used and most useful of all leisure-inspired inventions. German engineer Karl Benz produced the first petroldriven car in 1885 and the British motor industry started in 1896. Henry Ford was the first to use assembly line production for his Model Т car in 1908. Like them or hate them, cars have given people great freedom of travel.
Electricity
The name came from the Greek word for amber and was coined by Elizabeth I's physician William Gilbert who was among those who noticed that amber had the power to attract light objects after being rubbed. In the 19th century such great names as Michael Faraday, Humphry Davy, Alessandro Volta and Andre Marie Ampere all did vital work on electricity.
Photography<span> (Early 19th Century)</span>
Leonardo da Vinci had described the camera obscura photographic principle as early as 1515. But it was not until 1835 that Frenchman Louis Daguerre produced camera photography. The system was gradually refined over the years, to the joy of happy snappers and the despair of those who had to wade through friends' endless holiday pictures.
Telephone<span> (1876)</span>
Edinburgh-born scientist Alexander Graham Bell patented his invention of the telephone in 1876. The following year, the great American inventor Thomas Edison produced the first working telephone. With telephones soon becoming rapidly available, the days of letter-writing became numbered.
Computer<span> (20th Century)</span>
The computer has been another life-transforming invention. British mathematician Charles Babbage designed a form of computer in the mid-1830s, but it was not until more than a century later that theory was put into practice. Now, a whole generation has grown up with calculators, windows, icons, computer games and word processors, and the Internet and e-mail have transformed communication and information.
Aeroplane
<span>The plane was the invention that helped shrink the world and brought distant lands within easy reach of ordinary people. The invention of the petrol engine made flight feasible and the American Wright brothers made the first flight in 1903. </span>
C.: Уэлл, Дэнниэл. Зис ис йо рум. Уот ду ю финк?
д.: Итс вэри найс.
c.: Глэд ю лайк ит. Нау, ремембе, зэ ра сам рулс. Ю мастнот тэйк нойс энд ю хэв ту кип зэ рум тайди.
д.: Оу, ай си. Кэн май фрэндс кам раунд?
c.: Онли иф зей а стьюдентс ин зис скул. Энд онли битвин ван пиэм энд найн пиэм.
д.: Оу, ай си. Кэн я бринг фуд фром зэ дининг рум хиа?
c.: Нот рили. Ю кэн онли хэв снэкс энд софт дринкс ин ё рум. Бат ремемба, ё рум маст би онлвейс тайди.
д.: Эмм, окей. Сенкь ю, мистер Кокс.
с.: Ай хоуп ю а комфатобл хиа, Дэниел.
(ПЖ, лучший ответ, ЕСЛИ всё так, как хотел. Желаю удачи)
1. to ask
2.looking
3.to ...
4.crying
5 to call
6 to call
7moving
8 to
9moving
10 meeting
11walking to jog
12to ..
13to
14telling
15 to talk (устойчивое выражение)
проверь меня еще раз, я тоже могу ошибиться
1. Are there any fruit trees in front of my house?
2. Do I live in a new district?
3. Can we go out for a walk now?
4. Do you have to switch off the tape-recorder?
5. Are the walls of our kitchen whitewashed?
6. Does my friend live in his own house?
7. Do we often receive guests in the sitting room?
1. There are not any fruit trees in front of my house.
2. I do not live in a new district.
3. We can not go out for a walk now.
4. You must not switch off the tape-recorder.
5. The walls of our kitchen are not whitewashed.
6. My friend does not live in his own house.
7. We do not often receive guests in the sitting room.