1. He said they were working in the garden.
2 She told us they had got married six months before.
3.He said he would go shopping the following day.
4 He said he had bought a new car the previous week.
5 They said they weren’t doing anything the next week.
6.She told me she couldn’t go out that night.
7 He said he had forgotten to pay the bill.
8 She told me they had brought me a present.
9. She told Peter she would phone him the following day.
Your mother does drive a car.
Horses lay eggs.
The cafe open at 7 o clock.
заранее предупреждаю что я могла ответить не верно
1 will sell
2 never makes
3 attended
4 had delivered
5 has already written
6 i'm answering
7 john was answering
8 i will graduate
9 will wait
10 discuss
Я знаю токо 10 а 9 я не понел
2)shorter
3)taller
4)happier
5)shorter
6)shorter
7)Eline has got longer hair than Jess
8)taller
9)longer
10)taller
New York is one of the largest cities in the world. Its population is over 11 million people. New York is an industrial and cultural centre of the country. Most business is centred in Manhattan Island. The whole area is very small, that's why the sky-scrapers were invented in New York and, especially, in Wall Street. Wall Street is a narrow street with big houses, but it is well known all over the world as the busiest street in the USA. People do business there. There are two more world-famous streets — Broadway and Fifth Avenue. Broadway is the centre of the theatres and night life. It is known as “The Great White Way” because of the electric signs which turn night into day.
It is the city that never goes to sleep. Buses and sub-way run all night. There are many drugstores and restaurants which never close their doors. There are cinemas with films that start at midnight. Fifth Avenue is the great shopping, hotel, and club avenue.
New York is the largest port in America. More than half the trade of the United States goes through this city.
There are many places of interest in New York. They are: the Statue of Liberty, the United Nations Building, Empire State Building, Columbia University, City Hall, New York Public Library and others. When you come to New York you see lots of cars, big and small, black and yellow, old and modem; you do not see any trees or flowers in the streets, but only cars. You'll see and hear advertisements everywhere. There is no getting away from them. Advertisements fill the newspapers and cover the walls, they are on menu-cards and match-boxes, they are shouted through loud speakers and shown in the cinemas.