В классе хорошо! однакласник которые меня отвлекает смешит меня. девочки играют. мальчики бегают.но на уроках тише и приятней.
She has been married five times
He has traveled all over the world
She has written ten books
Только в present perfect simple
1. Loss of life is
the most devastating thing in life. There is no life after death.<span>
2.
The dangers are: lack of food and homes, deaths of relatives and absence of
help in the first hours after the disaster.
3. вопрос не понятен</span><span>
4.
Usually poor people living in distant area are moslty affected by disasters.
5.
Earthquakes cannot be predicted. Other disasters can be predicted.
<span>6. Yes,
they can, but not in the case of the earthquake. </span>
7. To
prevent loss of lives there should always be food and water supplies available
in case of emergency, Also rescue teams in possible disaster areas should
be formed.
8.
Defintely they should.
9.
Richer people and all the people with generous hearts should help.
</span><span>10. Yes, sometimes. </span><span>
<span>11. No I
don't. <span> </span></span></span>
<span><span><span>Удачи)))</span></span></span>
Not so good - worse
not so wet - drier
not so difficult - easier
not so boring - more interesting
not so small - bigger
not so unpleasant - more pleasant
not so sad - happier
not so short - longer
not so easy - more difficult
not so cheap - more expensive
1.
There was a family called Christiansen. They lived up on Holmenkollen, and
they had an old oil-painting in the living-room which they were very proud
of. The painting showed some ducks in the yard outside a farmhouse. There
were no people in the painting, just a flock of ducks on a grassy farmyard
and the farmhouse in the background. It was a large painting and rather
pretty.
2.
Well, one day their daughter Solveg came home from school eating an
apple. She said a nice lady had given it to her on the street. The next
morning little Solveg was not in her bed. The parents searched everywhere
but they couldn't find her. Then all of a sudden her father shouted, "There she is! That's Solveg
feeding the ducks!" He was pointing at the oil-painting, and sure enough
Solveg was in it. She was standing in the farmyard in the act of throwing
bread to the ducks out of a basket. <span>The father rushed up to the painting and touched her. But that didn't
help. She was simply a part of the painting, just a picture painted on the
canvas.</span>