<span><span>1)</span><span>What are you</span><span>doing now?</span>
<span>2)</span><span>We have</span><span>a translation</span><span>in English.</span>
<span>3)</span><span>How</span><span>long do you</span><span>translate</span><span>it</span><span>?</span>
<span>4)</span><span>I translate</span><span>it</span><span>for 3</span><span>-yoh</span><span>hours.</span>
<span>5) I</span><span>just</span><span>translated</span><span>that</span><span>chapter</span><span>2</span><span>of the</span><span>text.</span>
<span>6)</span><span>How many</span><span>English lessons</span><span>in your</span><span>week?</span>
<span>7)</span><span>We have</span><span>3 lessons</span><span>of English per week</span><span>.</span>
<span>8)</span><span>It</span><span>vsegda.opazdyvaet</span><span>.</span>
<span>9)</span><span>I drink</span><span>orange juice</span><span>from childhood.</span>
<span>10)</span><span>I do not like</span><span>apple juice.</span></span>
I listen to music every day-habit
Matt likes reading -habit
Tony and Jill work in a shop - a permanent state
Sally walks to school every day -a daily routine
We live in a village- a permanent state
1 My parents are tired of
2 worth
3 free
4 century
5 publish
The heyday of the movement came at the end of the 1960s - the beginning of the 1970s. Initially, hippies opposed the Puritan morality of some Protestant churches, and also promoted a desire to return to natural purity through love and pacifism. One of the most famous hippie slogans: “Make love, not war!”
Hippies say that people should be free and the fact that there is a change in sowing from the inside is what you name and from the outside