1. Have we done our homework ?
Who has already done homework ?
What have we done ?
2. Who was cooking soup at 5 o'clock yesterday ?
What was she cooking at 5 o'clock yesterday ?
When was she cooking soup ?
3. Are there 40 students at the conference ?
How many students are at the conference ?
Where are 40 students ?
<span>On Saturdays my father goes to the gym or to the swimming pool.
</span>My sister is very musical – she plays the guitar and she also plays the piano
I love fruit and vegetables (but I don't like meat.
My mother does the housework in the morning and then she goes to work in the afternoon.
<span>My friends come to my house and we play computer games or we sometimes watch a DVD.
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<span>I want to study English at university but my parents want me to study maths.</span>
What is the Westminster Abbey?
How many meters high is the London Eye?
How many statues of lion are there on Trafalgar Square?
Is the Sherlock Holmes museum named after a real person?
For professional musicians, the instrument on which they play is more than just a tool of the trade. It can also be a Muse, partner and voice.
Min Kim started playing the violin at the age of 6 and won her first competition at 11. Now the former Prodigy of the author of the book: gone: the girl, the Violin, the life is irritated, in which she shares her story of finding her ideal partner — only that he is stolen.
"From a very young age, I knew that the most important thing is how a violinist and how a musician should find his voice through the right instrument," Kim says. For a professional soloist, this means that the top shelf of the violin is worth hundreds of thousands of dollars. And Kim, that meant Stradivarius. She saved all her winning competition for that purpose; it was just a matter of finding the right one.
When she was 21 years old, a merchant of cannon brought her two violins to choose from. "And everything kind of points to one of the violins, which was an incredibly sonorous and powerful sound — everything both as a soloist and you would look for," Kim says.
So she tried that first violin. It sounded like "gorgeous," but something was wrong.
"It was how I was dressed in an incredibly beautiful dress that didn't suit me," she says. "And so I put it down and I took another one. And it was smaller, it was repaired -- it went through the water. I could see that. However, when I played the first note, just, Oh my God ... I knew it was my voice."
She found her voice in the form of a rare 1696 Stradivarius, which she describes with surprise as" incredible soprano "and a sonic"orbit around the notes".
"The first real, genuine partnership I felt with this Strad," Kim says. "I've had my violins for 10 years and I still recognize him. Even after 10 years he was still showing me new things, he taught me new ways to play."
Unfortunately, this partnership is not destined to last. What happened next made the headlines: one November night, Kim and her boyfriend were sitting in a cafe at London train station when three thieves caught him violin from under the table. She already has felt this moment until now.
"This is one of those things I still find it so terribly painful to say," she says. "I didn't know who I was, and I don't know what to do with myself. I felt like I was just a shell of a man. ... You know, when it's a human relationship, it's something that everyone can understand and understand. But I think as a violinist, as a musician, as an artist, when you know that the relationship you have with your art is that it lives inside you and lives its own life. And it's very hard to explain or describe."
Three years later, the detectives were able to repair Kim PoE's violins. But her insurance company paid the claim after it was stolen and she has made a career to pursue — so, Kim has already used the money to buy a new violin. But she couldn't stop thinking about who she lost. She was writing her memoirs, she said that helped her to move forward.
"One of the most important things that I learned throughout this process is that we have so little control over anything," she says. "But one thing we control is how you handle the next steps forward. Write — on fact find this a new voice-he helped unlock my musical life. And, you know, for the first time in seven years or so, I felt hope again."
1) What are you doing here? I am waiting
2) When do you play basketball? Today it is raining
3) Sometimes helps. He wants
4) Why are you hurrying? My bus is leaving
5)Is Ulan sleeping? No, he is reading
6) You are looking tired. I am studying