<span>1. They have lunch. 2. When you dine? 3. What we have for dinner tonight? 4. you are now</span><span>Dine? Then I'll call you a quarter of an hour.<span> Ok? </span>5. take off yourcoat and enter.</span><span>We just have lunch. 6. at what time does your family eatnormally? 7. Nina home? -Yes,</span><span>She has dinner. 8. What are you looking at? -I look at the new House. Beautiful building. Are you</span><span>do you see it? 9. zdravstvuj, Sergeyev! Where are you going? -I'm going to College, I want to again</span><span>listen to the laboratory 12-lesson. 10. What do you<span> do</span>, Bob? I'm writing a letter is</span><span>you don't see? 11. you go to the library? -No, I go to the English language (the Cabinet</span><span>English study-room). 12. Why do you smoke here? In the room of the sleeping child. 13. why you</span><span>speak Russian? After all, you're on the English classroom, right?14. ne speshi! Lecture</span><span>will only begin in half an hour. 15. can you hear me, comrades?16. you listen,</span><span>Petrov? 17. you hear it? 18. Why do you not answer my question?<span> You can</span></span><span>to answer my question? 19. do not shout so loud your little sisteris asleep. 20. Why are you</span><span>cry, baby (my little kiddy, my little one)-I'm not crying. 21. What do students? They</span><span>answer the questions of the instructor. They listen to the text ofno. 12. 22. What do you think?</span><span>It's time to prepare lessons. 23. Why you're putting so little plateson the table? Today, us</span><span>5. Grandpa arrives, you know? 24. sit down at the table, MOMhas the soup. 25. read the</span><span>you this proverb? 26. Lunch Cook for four hours? 27. Write the word on the</span><span>the Blackboard? 28. salt the soup? (to salt) 29. Bring some chalk?30. Erase from the Board<span>?</span></span>
The most important among them is the capital of the country, Ottawa. It is situated on the picturesque bank of the Ottawa River. One third of its population is descendants of English and French immigrants. Before the colonization, the Ottawa region was an Indian trading centre. The name of the city comes from the Indian word meaning “trade”. For a very long time Ottawa was a furtrading centre. The suburbs of the city house different industrial factories: electronic enterprises,foodprocessing factories, paper mills and others. Ottawa is a city of bridges. There are more than 20 bridges in the city. Ottawa is famous for its walks, along which about a million of tulips bloom in spring.
He wearas uniform. She serves food and drinks
he wears a white uniform
she helps sick people
<span>"Guinness Book
of Records" (1— is) one of the most popular books in the world. It (2 —
contains) records of all kinds„ there (3 — are) thousands of them. It all
(4 — started) in 1954 when a man (5 — called) Norris McWhirter (6 — published)
the Guinness Book of Records for the Guinness brewery — Guinness, by
the way, (7 — being) a type of beer. Very quickly the book (8 — became) a
best-seller. It (9 — has sold) over 49 million copies so far. And if you (10 —
think) that it (11 — is) the English who (12 — are) mad about records,
you (13 — are) wrong: the book (14 — has been translated) into 24 languages. There
(15 — are) a lot of people all over the world who (16 — seem) to want
(17 — to read) about other people who (18— are) faster, fatter, fitter or
just madder than they (19 — are). Since ancient times people (20 — have been trying)
to break a record. If you (21 — want) to break a record one day, you (22
— will have) to find someone reliable who (23 — would watch) you and then (24 —
ask) a newspaper (25 — to write) a report. Then, when you (26 — break) the
record, you (27 — should write) to the Guinness Book and (28 — hope) that the
day (29 — comes) when your record (30 — is printed) in the newspaper. Your
name and photograph (31 — will be placed) in many newspapers and your record (32 —
will be translated) into twenty-four languages— in one of the world's famous
books. You (33 — could) do it, for example by (34 — walking) on your hands a
long way or (35 — singing) the same song over and over again or (36 — doing)
any other thing not many people (37 — are able) to do. Why not (38 — try)
and (39 — see) what (40 — happens)?
</span>
1, isn't she
2, hasn't she
3, don't they
4, doesn't she
5, does he
6, isn't he
7, did it