1. She srarts work at the office at 9:30.
2. They have lunch in a cafe.
3. He watch TV at home.
4. I do my homework in my room.
5. He goes to bathroom at nine o'clock.
Freddie is hungry, I think. - Yes, he is. Feed him, please.
It's time to go to bed, kids. - Oh, no. Don't turn off the TV!
I'm hungry, Mum. - Eat a banana.
Freddie wants to go for a walk. - Walk him, please.
I can't do my homework. - I 'm sorry, I can't help you. Ask Jack for help.
The house is in a mess. - Don't worry. We'll clean it on Saturday.
I want to go out to play with Ben. - Don't be silly. It's windy.
Dad, I am bored. - Read a book.
1) If he were in, he (would answer) the phone.
2) He would have been the best pupil in the class if he (had worked) harder.
3) If you (passed) your examination, we would have a celebration.
4) I wouldn't have gone there if I (were) you.
5) If he knew that it was dangerous he (would not come).
Crusoe realizes he's all alone with no supplies, only a "Knife, a Tobacco-pipe, and a little Tobacco in a Box" – he proceeds to have a meltdown (41).
After finding water, Crusoe climbs up a tree to sleep and rest.
Waking, Crusoe decides he needs supplies, so he swims out to the still intact ship. (It wasn't torn to bits by the waves after all.)
Crusoe snags food, clothes, spirits, tools, ammunition, and arms. He then makes a raft out of some of the ship materials and floats them all back to shore.
Crusoe, even though he knows nothing of the land or where he is, must now figure out where to set up camp. Surveying the land, he sees that the island is barren and, he guesses, uninhabited. He builds a hut on the shore.
Crusoe makes another trip out to the ship for supplies. He fortifies his hut area by adding a tent, and then finally goes to sleep.
Crusoe continues to make daily trips out to the ship to strip it of any useful supplies. After thirteen days, he has made eleven trips back to the ship.
On his last trip to the ship, he finds gold and silver. He starts to take the money, but a storm rises up and he swims back to shore. The next morning, the ship has completely sunk.