1. There is a sofa in the bedroom.
2. There is a pen on the table.
3. There is a cat under the chair.
4. There is an orange in my bag.
5. There is a ruler in the pencil-box.
6. There are apples in the basket.
7. There are six books on the shelf.
8. There are many houses in the city.
9. There are a lot of flowers in the garden.
10. There are two lemons in the fridge.
6. You might not go there yesterday. 7. You should go there: they are waiting for you. 8. You had to go there yesterday. 9. You didn't have to go there yesterday. 10. We may come to you tomorrow. 11. Where are they living now? They may be living abroad now, but I am not sure. 12. You should listen to him and try not to worry about it.
Fashion is something we deal with everyday. Even people who say they don't care what they wear choose clothes every morning that say a lot about them and how they feel that day.
One certain thing in the fashion world is change. We are constantly being bombarded with new fashion ideas from music, videos, books, and television. Movies also have a big impact on what people wear. Ray-Ban sold more sunglasses after the movie Men In Black. Sometimes a trend is world-wide. Back in the 1950s, teenagers everywhere dressed like Elvis Presley.
Fashion is revealing. Clothes reveal what groups people are in. In high school, groups have names: "goths, skaters, preps, herbs." Styles show who you are, but they also create stereotypes and distance between groups. For instance, a businessman might look at a boy with green hair and multiple piercings as a freak and outsider. But to another person, the boy is a strict conformist. He dresses a certain way to deliver the message of rebellion and separation, but within that group, the look is uniform. Acceptance or rejection of a style is a reaction to the society we live in. Fashion is a language which tells a story about the person who wears it. "Clothes create a wordless means of communication that we all understand," according to Katherine Hamnett, a top British fashion designer.
Fashion is big business. More people are involved in the buying, selling and production of clothing than any other business in the world. Everyday, millions of workers design, sew, glue, dye, and transport clothing to stores. Ads on buses, billboards and magazines give us ideas about what to wear, consciously, or subconsciously. Clothing can be used as a political weapon. In nineteenth century England, laws prohibited people from wearing clothes produced in France. During twentieth century communist revolutions, uniforms were used to abolish class and race distinctions.
2) He's an old man
3) It's a cheap hotel
4) It's an expensive car
5) It's an easy exercise
6) It's dirty glasses
7) It's a small cell phone
8) It's a big city
9) He's a tall guy
10) It's a long snake
<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>