1.I don't like playing cards*
2.Kate agreed to come
3.The goal helped (us?) to win
4.They are afraid of swimming in the sea
5. Sam thinks of being a pop star
6. I want to sing
7. They decided to return home.
<span>*When the gerund is used it means I generally don’t like playing cards.
The infinitive would be used for a particular occasion. eg I shouldn’t like to
play this game</span>
<span>In former days people who
wanted to discuss something had to gather on special days in some
special place. Analysing the situation we can say that we will inevitably have to nominate election candidate or to discuss legislative proposals
in advance of formal proceedings. Do you have to leave tomorrow? I’d
prefer you to stay. The list of the selected applicants is too long, I
think I must choose only one of them for the final interview. You must ask permission any time you want to make some changes, it is
inevitable. We don’t have to agree to any change, as we operate within a
framework of rules and constraints. You must pack these things very
carefully, they are fragile. At a meeting participants must quickly
decide what policy they are willing to accept. In order to draw the
support from the ranks of the poor and disadvantaged (in urban
societies, the working classes) the “Left” will have to promise to
change, in the form of either social reform or wholesale economic
transformation.
</span>
-Hi Max!
-Hi Dan!
-It's nice weather today,isn't it?
-Yes,but it is a bit cloudy and cold.
-Tomorrow it will be rainy
-Oh,I hate rain...I like snow and sun
-Me too
Дети были на уроке в деревенской школе. Урок был о четырёх временах года.
"Есть четыре времени года," сказал учитель. "Это весна, лето, осень, зима. Весной тепло и зеленеют деревья."