2) am not fit enough
3) is too fast
4) am not rich enough
5) is too difficult
6) is not big enough
It is impossible in the 21st century with a ruler and a pointer to the child to gain a competitive education. When I saw his first computer at age 15, odinadtsatiklassniki saw him five, then have my children, a new generation has seen it in 5 months. We understand that children today requires other new approaches. Our children - no matter where they were born in the Red Ray should receive one foundation<span>Reform the education system is definitely necessary. The first - a teachers' salaries, the second - a logistical base in schools. And the third is, of course, the prestige of the teaching profession. Today, almost all retired teachers - because such a tiny pension that they have to work to somehow feed themselves. And young people do not see the prestige, does not go and does not give the case. And the human factor in education - it is huge.</span>
The British Museum
The British Museum has one of the largest libraries in the world. It has a copy of every book that is printed in the English language, so that there are more than six million books there. They receive nearly two thousand books and papers daily.
The British Museum Library has a very big collection of printed books and manuscripts, both old and new. You can see beautifully illustrated old manuscripts which they keep in glass cases.
You can also find there some of the first English books printed by Caxton. Caxton was a printer who lived in the fifteenth century. He made the first printing-press in England.
In the reading-room of the British Museum many famous men have read and studied.
Charles Dickens, a very popular English writer and the author of 'David Copperfield', 'Oliver Twist', 'Dombey and Son' and other books, spent a lot of time in the British Museum Library.
1)-cross country skiing
2)-horse racing...
3)-football
4)-ice skating
5)-tennis
6)-ice hockey
Talked saw took went put liked gave lived took was