<span>1 Tigers can run fast.
2 Please be quiet.
3 Elephants can swim well.
4 Is this snake safe .
5 Sats aren't good swimmers. They swim badly .
6 Some frogs are very loud. You can heae them at night.</span>
1) My friend likes playing ~~~~~~~chess. Не spends a lot OF time ON it.
2) We spent Sunday IN the country. We went ~~~~~~~~ there early IN the morning and got back TO town late IN the evening.
3) We decided to ask our friends FOR dinner tomorrow. AFTER dinner we are going TO Central Park.
4) What are we having FOR dinner today?
<span>5) I don’t want to go TO the cinema tonight. My wife and I are going FOR a walk.</span>
The spider bite
Possibly one of the more "believed" urban myths, this one tells the tale of a young person, often a traveller to a far-flung location, who is bitten by a spider and/or an ant. On returning home, the victim experiences a "hatching" whereby parasitic baby spiders and/or ants burst out from under their skin.
FYI – this isn't physically possible, but it hasn't stopped parasitology being a defining feature of the body horror genre from Alien and Wrath of Kahn to Stephen King's Dreamcatcher and Stephenie Meyer's The Host.
1.Now they can do it, can't they?
Can now they do it?
Can now they or we do it?
Who can do it?
Why can they do it?
2. And I love it, don't I?
Do I love it?
Do I or she love it?
Who loves it?
What do I love?