1.Do you like the new phone <u>what</u> that (which) you bought?
2.Is this the purse that you thought you'd lost <u>it?</u>
3.Isn`t she the girl who <u>she</u> works in the supermarket?
2)Choose the correct relative pronouns.
1.That`s the shop <u>where</u>/who I bought my new dress
2.I can`t understand the reason <u>why</u>/when you bought this.
3.Saturday's the day who/<u>when</u> I usually go shopping
3) at
4) at
5) in
6) in
7) on
8) on
9) in
10) at
11) at
12) in
Many copy- books
much milk
much water
many days
many newspapers
much chalk
much snow
many years
many pictures
1. Will Pete have completed his work by 4 o'clock tomorrow?
Pete will not have completed <span>his work by 4 o'clock tomorrow.
2 Will Diana have </span><span>changed her mind by the end of the evening?
Diana will not have </span><span>changed her mind by the end of the evening.
3 Will we have </span><span>seen all the places of interest by the end of our holiday?
We will not have </span><span>seen all the places of interest by the end of our holiday.
4. Will the guests </span>have left before his parents come?
The guests will not <span>have left before his parents come.
5. Will Liz have </span><span>written the test when the teacher comes back?
Liz will not have </span><span>written the test when the teacher comes back.
6. Will they </span><span>have bought the house by autumn?
They will not </span><span>have bought the house by autumn.</span>
Recent studies of the capabilities of the human brain have allowed scientists to conclude about its ability to adapt to artificial objects and perceive them as their natural part of the body. This discovery creates all the prospects for closer integration of machines and humans, in particular, in the field of high-tech prosthetics.
In the process of research, Italian experts from the University Of Rome La Sapienza determined that people with spinal cord injuries over time tend to get used to a wheelchair and perceive it as part of their own body. Metal and plastic strollers begin to feel a kind of continuation of the body, so that the brain adapts to the new possibilities of the body. Scientists note that in comparison with completely paralyzed people, patients with less serious spinal cord injuries, who retained the mobility of the upper body, showed stronger associations of the wheelchair with their body. Therefore, accordingly,