At last week...I saw a new film...the film was bad..
For breakfast I usually eat sandwiches with cheese or ham and drink tea with lemon. Sometimes I eat boiled eggs or some sausages in the morning but I do not really like them. I like fruit salad and yoghurt but I don't eat them very often.
For lunch I love to eat a lot of things, but most of all I love pasta. Yesterday I ate soup with mushrooms and it was very tasty. I also like fried or mashed potatoes with chicken or fish and some vegetables.
For dinner I can also eat a lot of different things, for example carrots, tomatoes, but more often I eat an apple, or some other fruit for it is useful and very tasty. In the evening I can have tea with milk and some biscuits.
1
1. c
2. b
3. d
4. e
5. a
6. c
7. a
8. b
2
1. close
2. 'll be
3. won't let
4. won't pass
5. 'll catch
6. 'll take
4.
Larry: Will we go for a picnic tomorrow?
Sue: Yes. That's a good idea. I shall make some sandwiches.
Larry: OK. And I shall bring some lemonade.
Sue: Shall I buy some cheese?
Larry: I don't really like cheese.
Sue: I won't buy any then. I shall bring some fruit instead.
Larry: I think it will be sunny tomorrow so I shall probably wear my shorts. I won't take a pullover.
Sue: Well, I think I shall take mine. It is still cold in the mornings.
Scotland (Eng. And Scotts Scotland, Gaelic. Alba) - in the past (before 1707), an independent kingdom in northern Europe, now - the most autonomous (possessing its own parliament, the legal system and the state church, and others.) From all the countries that make up the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland.
Scotland occupies the north of the island of Great Britain, bordered by land with England.
The capital of Scotland - Edinburgh.
<span>The Scottish Parliament - a unicameral legislature of Scotland. The emergence of the Scottish Parliament of the Kingdom of the XIII century. In 1707, after the union of England and Scotland into a single Kingdom of Great Britain Parliament ceased to exist and was restored only in 1999, according to the Scottish Act of 1998.</span>