<span>10 rubles. On the front side 10 roubles depicts the bridge over the Yenisei and the chapel of Krasnoyarsk. And on the reverse side overlooks the dam of the Krasnoyarsk hydroelectric power station. Money written the city of Krasnoyarsk. Bill green.</span>
Kosmograd
Добавь новых технологий,спутники
Возможность путешествовать на другие планеты без космического снаряжения.
Другими словами,открой транспортные пути на другие планеты
1 Какие книги любишь читать
2 что бы ты положил в теплый день?
3 как хорошо ты говоришь по английский если ты начал говорить с детства?
4 где бы ты пошел если бы ты мог пойти в любую точку мира?
<span>5. что бы ты сделал если бы было воскресенье</span>
1. Rory's home has got two bedrooms.
2. The boat is called Marianne.
3. Living on a boat isn't much fun when there's bad weather.
4. They paint the houseboat every year.
5. There are modern painting in the boat's living room.
<span>Ages, eras and wars will always be
defined (1) <u>after</u> they are
over, or at least well after they (2) <u>have</u>
started. (3) <u>In</u> the year
1914, for example, no one said: 'Tomorrow I'm going (4) <u>to</u> go and fight in the First World War." Why not?
Because it wasn't generally called the First World War until the Second World
War had started. Similarly, no one ever said: 'Next year (5) <u>will</u> be the start of the Industrial Revolution" The
era now known as the Industrial Revolution only started being called that once
it was well under way. (6) <u>By</u>
the time we are old, we will all (7) <u>have</u>
experienced enormous technological advances. We might even (8) <u>be</u> walking round with computer
chips implanted in our bodies, or perhaps computer chip technology will have (9) <u>been</u> replaced by even more
advanced technology. There's talk (10) <u>at</u>
the moment that human skin itself might make an excellent electronic circuit
board. We can all make predictions, but nobody knows for sure. And nobody knows
what the era we will live in (11) <u>in</u>
the near future will be called by future historians. If we already live in the
Computer Age or the Information Age, as some people suggest the present-day era
(12) <u>will</u> be referred to by future historians, then who knows what era
we're just <u>(13) at</u> the
beginning of right now?</span>