Countable nouns: mystery - mysteries, knock - knocks, hoof - hooves,
mosquito - mosquitoes, carrot - carrots, candle- candles, idiom - idioms, tomato - tomatoes, vocabulary - vocabularies, play - plays, coin - coins, potato - potatoes, <span>mother tongues</span>.
Uncountables: bread, murmur, information, weather, toast, housework , practice, advice, money, butter, hair, paper.
Is.
is celebrated
were fighting
adopted
came
was
wrote
wouldn't want
didn't allow
was
didn't make
was adopted
wasn't signed
held
met
heard
was voting(voted)
were ringing
were celebrating
is still ringing
match
decorate
are shot off
<span>
My small son has just started school. Like all mothers I </span>chose<span> the best suit for my son to wear on that day. Though my son had promissed to behave himself I was</span> worried<span> that he was not going to like it on his first day. But when he came home he was very pleased.
As for me I was </span>interested<span> in what had happened during the day. “Well,” I said, “now you’ve been to school. Do you like it? Are you going to go to school every day?”
“Yes,” he said. “There is a little French girl in my class and she is going to be my friend.”
“But does she speak English?” I asked. “No,” said my son, “but it doesn’t matter because she laughs in English. ”Now it was I who really worried.
</span>
1. Does your uncle often celebrate New year? 2. Do your parents sometimes invite your relatives? 3. Does your friend always go shopping his birthday? 4. Does your sister sometimes send letters? 5. Do your relatives always come to see letters? 6.Does your uncle often make bread? 7.Does your sister sometimes visit their friends? 8.Do your parents often buy vegetables and fruits?