Ex. XI, p. 276
1. I wonder what shop you bought this hat at.
2. Tell me what colour scarf you would like to buy lo match your new coat.
3. I'd like to know If those gloves are old or new.
4. I wonder how old your father is.
5. Tell me if Ann does shopping every day.
6. I'd like to know when you will goto I he State Department Start.
7. I wonder If any new films were on last week.
5. Tell me how much this material is.
9. Fd like to know if anything has gone wrong Willi the Iron.
10. I wonder why you didn't come lo the dining hall yesterday.
1J. Tell nie if it is snowing hard.
12. I'd like to know if John has given you good advice. 13.1 wonder why it is so stuffy In the room,
14. Tell nie when they got everything arranged.
15. I'd like to know if you have managed to knit a pullover for your father.
16.1 wonder when you are going to the dairy. 17. Tell me when he was made to write this letter.
Ex. XII, p. 277
1. wait 2. (has) expected 3. Wait 1. expect 5. expected
6. wait 7. expected 8– expected 9. were waiting 10. expected
11. expected
Ex. XIV, p. 277
4. 1. What size gloves (shoes, coat) do you wear?
2. This dress suits you. This hat suits you. Don't try on this dress. The colour doesn't suit you. Does the blouse suit me?
3. I want to buy shoes to match my new costume.
Л. This costume fits me badly. This dress fits you perfectly / like a glove. The dress fits Irene like a glove.
5. These gloves, do not go with your costume. These shoes
do not match your smart dress. This bow does not match
your purple / mauve blouse* fi. This blouse is loose on you. This costume is loose on you.
This dress is tight on me. These shoes are tight on me.
This coat is tight on you.
7. These shoes are very beautiful. Try them on. The coat is very elegant / smart. Try it on.
8. The coat is too expensive forme. The umbrella is not very en pensive.
9. I need (a pairof) cheap walking shoes (to go out). 1 prefer to wear cheap things.
10– He isclevcrtomymind. It is not Interesting to my mind. It is necessary to wait for him to my mind. В. 1. We have run out of meat. Wc have run out of onions. We have run out о/ potatoes. 2. I must go to the grocer's (the haker's. the greengrocer's, Lhe fishmonger's, the confectionery, the dairy, the fruit-shop).
2. It was Nina who helped us. It was mother who washed up all the dishes. It was Nick who was our guide.
4. It's my turn to read. It's our turn to go shopping, it's her turn to wash up.
5. Let Pete buy some onions. Let Ann buy a head of cabbage. l*t Nick buy (some) cucumbers.
6. Don'L wait for him, he won't come. Who is waiting for me? — Roger is. Will you wait for us at the station, near the booking-office, please?
Ей. XVIII, p. 27H
The, aj the, the, a, —; the, a; the. the; the. a, the. the, the; the; the, a, a, the; the; a; the
Ex. XIX. p. 279
a. 1. When Irene came up to the fitting room, she saw her girlfriend trying On a smart dress.
2. Did you hearOleg read the text? He reed it very well. Now
it is your turn to record your reading. 3– Don't advise her to buy this blouse. It does not suit her. A. Let Lena buy (some) potatoes, onions and tomatoes.
5. Do you want her to buy these expensive shoes? — Yea, I do. They are so beautiful, aren't they?
6. Mother wants Nina to goto the baker's.
7. I met my girlfriend a few days ago / the other day. She was going out of the Moscow Central Shop.
8. Nina was not sleeping and heard her sister come into the room. She felt Ann touch / touching her hand.
9. Make the child take away his things / put his things in order / in the right place,
10. Nobody can make him follow your advice.
B. 1. I bought a pair of suede gloves at / in the department store yesterday. They are tighten my hands. If you like, 1 can give them to you. — Thank you. I will take them with pleasure if they are my / the right fllie. — The size is six and a half. — What a luck! It is just my size. How much are they? / What is the price of them? / What do thqy cost? — Right roubles. — Пего is the money, please.
2. I have got a scholarship and I will have Lo do some shopping. I must buy stockings, socks and a red belt made of leather for my new dress.
3. fn summer I prefer lo wear dresses made of cotton. It is not so hot lo have them on as those made of silk.
4. The costume suits yon very much but the jsckel is too long to my mind.
5. Dresses are notsoldin the shop. Suits for men only, trousers, coats and shirts are sold here-
6. Will you help me tochoosea pairof shoes? — Try on those brown (ones). It seems to me (that) they will match your green costume,
7. Will you follow my ad vice, please, and don't take this coat. It is out of fashion already. That grey one is much better. I am sure it will fit you perfectly / like a glove. Go to the fitting room. This way, please. — Oh, the coal is reeUy
wonderful] What docs it cost? /How much is It?/ What is the price of it? — Bight hundred and twenty roubles. Shall Igiveyou the bill? — Yes. please. — Thank you ever во much. / Jam very grateful to you.
8. We have run out of sugar and butter. On the way from your work remember / don't forget to drop at the grocer's and buy all the necessary things.
9. Wc have hardly any bread (in the house). Drop at the baker's and buy a long loaf and two buns.
10. It's necessary to / We must buy some sausage, cheeze, a tin of sprats, vegetables for salad, sweets and cakes,
11. Nina will have to go lo the greengrocer's and buy some cabbages and car rota.
12. Robert was made to go to the provision shop.
Еж. I, p. 205
1. Goonreading.
2. He stopped writing.
3. He couldn't help laughing. ■1. We all enjoyed swimming.
5. Have you finished smoking?
6. I don't mind walking,
7. Her cousin is fond of knitting,
8. The child is rather good at painting.
9. She goes in for driving. Ю, The poem is worth reciting.
11. The boy doesn't read a sentence without gasping.
12. You won't go there without limping.
Ex. II, p, 285
1. Stop talking (laughing, smoking, writing, quarrelling).
2. The mother ordered the children to finish playing (reading, knitting, sewing, ironing).
3. Go on singing (working at / on this text, translating this article, writing, studying this problem).
4. Do you mind (my) opening the window (our meeting / gathering together on Saturday, going there together, repeating this exercise)?
5. 1 am fond of drawing (playing tennis, singing in chorus, reading aloud),
€. Wehaveenjoyed her singing (swimming, talking to him, skiing in the woods / forest).
7, 1 couldn't help agreeing with him (waiting for her, answering his question).
8. The play is worth seeing (the museum is worth visiting, these exercises are worth doing orally).
9– He left the room without saying a word (without looking at anybody, without taking anything with him. without saying goodbye).
10. Her daughters go in for knitting (skating, dancing).
Ex. VI, p. 291
1. She Looked eager and her dark eyes sparkled with excitement.
2. Their seals were in the pit.
3. The curtain rose upon a scene of eighteenth-century Paris at the time of the French Revolution.
4. It was a melodrama full of hopeless love and heroic self-sacrifice, a play after Dickens's novel "A Tale of Two Cities".
h". She was greatly impressed by pate, dark Carton and delicate, charming Lucie Manette, the girl beloved.
6. Robert said about the leading actress that in real life she was Martin Harvey's wife, that she might be about forty five, and that blonde hsir was a wig.
7. Jean couldn't keep her tears and they fell upon the back of Robert's hand like raindrops in spring.
8. Mies Jean Law was too overcome to join in such a banal applause, her feelings were too deep for words.
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