Ответ:
Объяснение:
Де гавермэнт оф юкрэйн андервэнт рэпид чэндж ин дэ эли найнтинтвэнтиз. Дэ индэпенденс оф юкрэйн воз проклэймд он дэ твэнти фос оф огаст найтин найнтиван. Итс соверенти из нау рекогнайзед бай ол дэ кантриез оф дэ ворлд. Юкрэйн хэз итс оун стэйт симболз, конститюшн, карренси энд гавермент. Эккординг ту дэ конститюшн оф юкрэйн итс тэрритори их ван энд индивизибл. Дере из Краймеан Аутономик репаблик ин Юкрэйн , твэнти фор эдминистрэйтив дистриктс энд дэ ситиз оф Киев энд Севастополь. Онли дэ лоз оф Юкрэйн экт он итс территори. Дэ павер ин дэ кантри из дивайдед инту леджислэйтив , экзикютив энд индициару. Дэ майн леджислайтив боди оф юкрэйн из дэ Верховна рада , вич консистс оф фор хандред фифти дэпьютиз. Дэ элекшнз оф дэ верховна рада ар хэлд эври фор йиарз он дэ ласт вик оф мач. Дэ депьютиз ар электед бай иквал , сикрэт ор директ бэллот. Дэ хайест экзекютив боди из дэ прэзидент. Хи кэн вето эни десижин оф верховна рада. Дэ прэзидент из дэ коммандер-ин-чиф оф дэ арм форсез оф юкрэун. Хи олсо репрезентс ин дэ тернайнинал релэйшнз. Энадэ пат оф дэ экзекютив бранч ин дэ кэбинет оф министэрз , вич из хэдед бай дэ прайм-министэр. Дэ кэбинет оф министэрз координэтс дэ лэйли эдминистрэйшн оф дэ гавермэнт энд мэй интродьюс биллз ту дэ верховна рада. Дэ джюдикциари павэр бэлонгз ту дэ конститюшионал курт энд риджионал куртс. Дэ стэйт симболз оф юкрэйн а дэ нэйшнэл флэг энд эмблем. Дэй рут дипли ин эншиент таймз энд хэв симболик мининг. Эзуре-йеллоу стэйт флэг симболайзед дэ юнити оф блу скай энд йеллоу вит филд. Дэ литл стэйт эмблем - трайдент - эппиаред фёст оф дэ сиалз ин таймз оф володимир дэ грэйт . Дэ ладжест партиз ар дэ Коммьюнист пати, дэ соушиалист , дэ Дэмокрэтик энд дэ Грин патиз энд Рух из дэ моуст фэмоуз сошиал мувмэнт.
Сори кратко не могу
My aunt will come down in a few minutes, Mr Nuttel," said a girl of fifteen, showing him into the sitting-room. Mr Nuttel was a young painter who had recently had a nervous breakdown. The doctors had told him that he should go away for a holiday. They warned him, however, against crowded resorts and recommended a complete rest in a quiet country-place. So here he was, in a little village, with letters of introduction from his sister to some of the people she knew.
"Some of the people there are quite nice," his sister had said to him. "I advise you to call on Mrs Sappleton as soon as you arrive. I owe the wonderful holiday I had to her."
"Do you know many of the people round here?" asked the girl when they were sitting comfortably on the sofa.
"No, I'm afraid I don't," answered Mr Nuttel. "I've never been here before. My sister stayed here four years ago, you know, and she gave me letters of introduction to some of the people here."
"Then you know nothing about my aunt, do you?" asked the girl.
"Only her name and address," said the visitor.
"Her great tragedy happened just three years ago," said the child.
"Her tragedy?" asked Mr Nuttel.
"You may wonder why we keep that window wide open on an October afternoon," went on the girl, pointing to a large French window.
"It's quite warm for this time of year," said Mr Nuttel. "But has that window anything to do with the tragedy?"
"Exactly three years ago my aunt's husband and her two young brothers walked out through that window. They went shooting and never came back. When they were crossing the river their boat probably turned over and they were all drowned. Their bodies were never found. That was the most horrible part of the tragedy." Here the girl stopped. There were tears in her eyes and she drew a handkerchief out of her pocket. "Three years have passed, but my poor aunt still thinks that they will come back some day, they and the little brown dog that was drowned with them, and walk in through that window just as they always did. That is why the window is kept open every evening till it's quite dark. Poor dear aunt, she can't understand that they've left forever. She's growing worse day by day, so let me give you some advice. Don't be surprised at anything she says or does: she will start telling you all over again how they went out — her husband, with his coat over his arm, and her youngest brother, singing 'Bertie, why don't you come? ...' as she once told me. You know, sometimes, on quiet evenings like this, I almost get a feeling that they will all walk in through that window, and the whole family will be gathered in here again." The young girl finished her sad story. There was a long pause, and Mr Nuttel was glad when Mrs Sappleton at last entered the room.
"I'm sorry I'm late," she said, "but I hope my niece has entertained you well."
"Yes, she's been very amusing," said Mr Nuttel.
"D'you mind the open window?" asked Mrs Sappleton. "My husband and brothers will soon be home from shooting and they always come into the house this way." And she went on speaking gaily about shooting. After what Mr Nuttel had just heard, he looked worried.
"The doctors told me," he said, trying to change the subject, "to have a rest here and to avoid anything that would make me feel nervous."
"Did they?" said Mrs Sappleton in a voice which showed that she was not at all interested in what Mr Nuttel was saying. She never took her eyes off the open window and suddenly cried out:
"Here they are at last! Just in time for tea.
How tired they look."
Mr Nuttel looked at the girl and saw that she was looking out through the open window with horror in her eyes. Mr Nuttel turned round slowly in his seat, looked in the same direction and saw three figures walking across the garden towards the window. They all carried guns and one of them had a coat over his shoulder. A tired brown dog was following them. Noiselessly they approached the house, and then a young voice began to sing. "Bertie, why don't you come?"
Mr Nuttel seized his hat and ran out of the house like mad.
"Here we are, my dear," said Mrs Sappleton's husband, coming in through the window. "We've enjoyed ourselves very much. I wonder what made that gentleman run out so quickly when we came up? Who is he?"
"A very strange young man, called Nuttel. He could only talk about his illness. He didn't say a single interesting thing. I don't understand why he ran out that way without saying good-bye," said his wife.
"I think it was the dog," said the niece calmly. "He told me that he was afraid of dogs. Once when he was attacked by a pack of dogs somewhere in India, he was so frightened that he started running like mad, and finding himself in a cemetery, climbed down into a newly-dug grave, where he had to spend the night. Since then he has always been afraid of dogs."
She was very good at inventing stories and did it artistically.
1. Computer data <span> c) processing system frees humans from routine
error-prone tasks.
2. Computers can store vast amount of information to organize it and </span><span> b) to retrieve it.
3. The entered data can be transmitted by </span><span>a) communications networks.
4. The possibility of </span><span> c) error is reduced if data were correctly put into the data processing system.
5. Computer data processing systems can </span><span>b) respond at a fraction of a second.
6. Computer systems are vulnerable to the entry of </span><span>a) invalid data.
7. As soon as data were entered into the system correctly, the human </span><span><span>manipulation </span>is limited.
8. The amount of data stored on magnetic discs is constantly
b>increasing.</span>
1. He said not to go.
2. She asked if he worked in London.
3. She asked me where the post office was.
4. She told to come there.
5. She said she had never been.
6. She asked if I had ever seen "Lord of the Rings."
7. She said that she didn't like mushrooms.
8. She told me not to be silly.
9. She asked me if I wouldn't mind waiting for a moment.
10. She asked how often I played sport.
ex.
1. He asked me how much I had payed for that book.
2. The nurse asked him how he was feeling.
3. The teacher asked if I had written my homework.
4. He asked me if I knew anything about the accident.
5. My brother asked if anybody called him while he had been out.
6. She asked me if I knew where Mrs Baker lived.
7. He asked her if the plane had left.
8. She asked how much that coat cost.
9. She asked me where I was from.
10. He asked me where I would meet my friends.