1. We (did not spend) much time at the beach on holiday.
2. When (did you go) away on your holiday last year?
3. We (have eaten) some fantastic food in our hotel this week
4. How long (have you lived) here now?
5. I (saw) a brilliant concert last weekend.
6. We (have not done) much painting yet.
<span>1 A: What ....... DO you think of chess. B: I ........ DO not like it, actually, i ...... prefer playing darts.
2 A: Do you agree that Bob is very good at cards?<span>
B: Oh on ! I ...... DO not believe he is a good player. He ..........always cheatS!</span></span>
Здесь везде Present Simple
Sarah did not go to New York next week
1. It’s one of the most difficult questions in this test. 2. Who knows him better than you? 3. We have less interest in this work than you. 4. Health is better than wealth usually. 5. Today you worked more slowly than usually. 6. Which is the longest day of the year.
Threat to civilization, humans and the Earth - the threat to the existence of which can completely destroy mankind, have adverse consequences for the development of human civilization, or even destroy the planet Earth. This idea is usually expressed by such phrases as "global catastrophe", "End of the World", "Doomsday", "Armageddon" and other events in the next point - catastrophic scenarios - different from other types of hazards (such as earthquakes), both in scale, so and gravity.
While some natural disasters, such as supervolcanoes and asteroids can destroy humanity if they are powerful enough, as well as man-made catastrophic events, or global warming, nuclear war or bioterrorism.
The apocalyptic scenario is difficult to study in spite of the importance of global risks. Although individual threats, such as nuclear war or climate change, have been studied intensively since 2002.
There are various threats to human existence, but not all of them are equally dangerous. Threats can be roughly divided into six types, based on the magnitude of these threats (personal, regional, global) and their intensity (portable and deadly). The table to the right shows some examples.
Threats discussed in this article are not "almost imperceptible", "local" or "private." Hamays Cassio (born Jamais Cascio) has created an alternative classification system