Could you give me some shugar?
Could you give me some tea?
Could you give me some pepper?
Could you give me some rise?
I don't like any mushrooms
I don't like any tomatoes
I hate any problems
I don't want to solve any problems
I have some problems
I have some ideas
He has some pictures
She has some friends
I have an idea
She has an apple
He is an artist
My brother is an actor
Classroom, bread plate, butter dish, blackboard, school bag
1)When I arrived, I wanted to met the locals
2) There I bought souvenirs for my friends
3) I tried the local cuisine and was delighted
4) It was a wonderful experience of practice language
5) I visited many museums on a journey
6) I went to visit the local markets
<span>By eight o'clock yesterday I (had done) my homework and at eight I was plating/played the piano.
By six o'clock father (had come) home and at six he (was having/had) dinner.
By nine o'clock yesterday grandmother (had washed) the dishes and at nine she (watched) TV.
When I (met) Tom, he (was eat</span><span>ing) an ice cream which he (had bought) at the corner of the street.
When father (came) home, we (were cook</span><span>ing) the mushrooms which we (had
gathered) in the wood. When I (saw) Ann, she (was sort</span><span>ing) the flowers
which she (had picked) in the field.
When I (came) home yesterday, I (saw) that my little brother (had broken) my pen and (was play</span><span>ing) with its pieces.
The Loch Ness monster, also called “Nessie”, is a creature that (1) </span><span>is supposed to live in Loch Ness, the largest lake in northern Scotland.
Since Roman times the legend of a mysterious sea creature has been alive
through (2) </span><span>numerous sightings of the animal. When the Romans came to Scotland in the first century the Picts were the
main inhabitants. They were fascinated by animals and spoke of a
strange (3) </span><span>beast swimming in one of the lakes in the Scottish
highlands. The first references go back to the sixth century when a man
was (4) </span><span>supposedly saved from the swimming beast of Loch Ness.
Over the centuries the legend of the Loch Ness monster has never gone
away. In the 1930s a new road was built along the shore of Loch Ness. In
1933, a couple who was driving along this road reported an enormous
animal (5) </span><span>splashing on the surface of the lake. In the following months
newspapers sent reporters and photographers to the lake to make (6) </span><span>observations. Even footprints of an enormous animal were found. Many books were written about the monster of Loch Ness. Several
photographs made it to the front pages of the newspapers. The most
famous photograph came from a British surgeon in 1934. Robert Wilson, a
London doctor, took a photo of a creature with a long neck that stood
out of the water. In 1975 the Sunday Telegraph proved that this photo
was (7)</span><span><span> fake</span>.
</span>
<span>1.She has her ironing done every week, isn't she ?
2.That's rather ugly, isn' it ?
3. This is a real success, isn't it ?
<span>4. There's nothing to say, isn't ?</span></span>