Ex2
1)just
2)already
3)yet
4)already
5)yet
6)just
Ex3
1)begun
2)got
3)she's
4)was
5)couldn't
6)found it already
7)chosen
8)haven't put
1.
1 He has got a flat in the town center.
2 Have you got a car?
3 I haven't got a brother.
4 She hasn't got a computer.
5 We have got an expansive car.
6 Have they got a garden?
7 Has your garden got fruit trees?
2.
2 She has got two brothers.
3 He hasn't got any friends.
4 Has the hotel got a lot of rooms?
5 Have you got any milk?
6 He hasn't got a dictionary.
7 The house hasn't got a garage.
8 I haven't got a bicycle.
Cows give us milk. There is milk on the table. You can take the milk. Goats give us milk. Bees give us honey. There is honey here. Can I take the honey? March is the third month of the year. When is Ann's birthday? - On the second of June.
<span>Russia is the world’s largest country, so if differs greatly from region to region. The same can be said about Russian national cuisine, which is rather varied and based on different cultural and historic traditions. Usually any national cuisine is formed under the influence of two main factors: religion, which prescribes eating certain kinds of food, and climate, which determines availability of various vegetables, fruit, meat and fish products. Orthodoxy, which has traditionally been an official religion in Russia, doesn’t forbid any food. But long fasts prescribing abstinence from meat and other types of animal source food, explain why Russian cuisine includes many vegetarian dishes. And long severe Russian winters help to understand why hot fatty soups and broths are so popular in this country.</span>
6. saw - was sorting - had picked
7. came - saw - had broken - was playing
8. opened - saw - had already come - were writing
9. came - was reading - had brought
10. came - were eating - had cooked
11. rang - was still learning - had begun
12. looked - were playing - had brought
13. had settled - were watching