Статистика
Всего в нашей базе более 4 327 664 вопросов и 6 445 979 ответов!

Similarities and differences

10-11 класс

Boykoi98 21 апр. 2015 г., 17:31:02 (9 лет назад)
Рейтинг
+ 0 -
0 Жалоба
+ 0 -
Аилтон
21 апр. 2015 г., 19:56:52 (9 лет назад)

differences - это различия, similarities - сходства

+ 0 -
Alua870735787671
21 апр. 2015 г., 21:46:58 (9 лет назад)


differences - отличия, различия

similarities - сходства

Ответить

Другие вопросы из категории

Из активного залога перевести в пассивный. Вот задание:

1. Её ошибка была прощена и забыта

Очень прошу помочь с заданием по английскому!

1) напишите предложения в Present Perfect. Поставьте их в вопросительную и отрицательную формы:
He already (do) his homework
They never (go) to the theatre
I (get) the grant this year
2)Present Perfect или Past Indefinite?
Ann already (buy) a new camera
We ever (study) well
Our family (go) to the country last weekend

Поставьте глаголы в следующих предложениях в утвердительную, вопросительную и отрицательную формы Present Simple. Помните про пути действия и состояния!

1. I (to do) morning exercises.
2. He (to work) at a factory.
3. She (to sleep) after dinner.
4. We (to work) part-time.
5. They (to drink) tea every day.
6. Mike (to be) a student.
7. Helen (to have) a car.
8. You (to be) a good friend.
9. You (to be) good friends.
10. It (to be) difficult to remember everything.

Упражнение 2. Раскройте скобки, употребляя глаголы в Present Simple.
1. My working day (to begin) at six o'clock.
2. I (to get) up, (to switch) on the TV and (to brush) my teeth.
3. It (to take) me about twenty minutes.
4. I (to have) breakfast at seven o’clock.
5. I (to leave) home at half past seven.
6. I (to take) a bus to the institute.
7. It usually (to take) me about fifteen minutes to get there.
8. Classes (to begin) at eight.
9. We usually (to have) four classes a day.
10. I (to have) lunch at about 2 o’clock.

What do you know about the Tower of London?

Читайте также

Помогите перевести текст пожалуйста US department stores launch counter-attack As consumers demand better value and a more interesting and stimulating

experience while shopping, department stores face a clear choice: adapt or die. 'My concern is that they will become retail museums' says Britt Breemer, chairman of America's research group 'The bottom line is that they have to admit they are in trouble and figure out some way to reinvent themselves. This may help to explain why four times as many households visit discount stores as department stores. Department stores face mounting competition from specialty retailers and discounters, such as wall mart and target. Their steady loss of market share may be partly because the concept was born in a different era, a time when, for families, a trip to stores combined shopping with entertainment. What is needed, say retail experts, is a new approach. A typical example of this approach working is seen at Selfridges. This UK group has recast itself from a sleepy 1970s style department store into a retailing experience fit for the 21st century, says Wendy Liebmann, president of WSL strategic retail. One of the main changes is that more floor space is rented to vendors, in what is sometimes referred to as the showcase business model: vendors design their own booths and are encouraged to be creative. The Selfridges model, says Peter Williams, CEO of Selfridges, is about creating an experience that is new, interesting and different where it is not just the product that is different. He says the problem with US department stores is that they all look the same. Arnold Anderson, management consultant believes Selfridges could be a prototype for failing US department stores 'It has brought back excitement and novelty and it is really seducing customers by developing the right merchandise, in the right quantities at the right time. Federated, which owns Macy's and Bloomingdale's appears to be moving in the right direction. Forty two stores are being upgraded with the latest components of its reinvent strategy, including enhanced fitting rooms, convenient price-check devices, comfortable lounge areas, computer kiosks and shopping carts. The challenge department stores face is how to develop in a sector that is, essentially, not growing. But if they adapt, many industry observers believe they will survive. 'The department store is not dead it will live on' said Robert Tamilia, professor of marketing at the ubivercity of Quebec. But it will not be the same animal it was before.

The Geographers' A-Z Street Atlas is one of the icons of London, as famous as red buses and ...fog. It is the book people reach for when they want to know

exactly where to find thousands of streets in London. You could find it on the bookshelves of the most London homes and in just every travel agency in the city. It lists every street in London and its carefully drawn maps show parks, gardens, railway lines, canals and just about anything else that can be put onto a piece of paper. So where did it come from? Phyllis Pearsall was a remarkable woman. She was born in Britain in 1906. She stayed there until she left school, and then travelled around France. She earned money by painting people's pictures and writing for a newspaper in Paris.
In the 1930s she returned to London, where she worked for her father's company, making maps of the world. She thought that there was a need for new street maps of London, after in 1935 she got lost while using a 20-year-old street map. So she started working on a book of maps. She walked along every street in the capital and wrote down the name, the important buildings and even the house numbers. Working eighteen-hour days she walked a total of 3,000 miles, while compiling her book. She kept the information about the streets on cards in small boxes.
One day a box with cards of all the streets beginning with "T" fell out of her window. She found most of the cards, but some cards landed on top of a bus and she never saw them again. When she sent the cards to the printer, someone asked her, "Why isn't Trafalgar Square in your book?" It was because she had lost the card. Phyllis Pearsall called her book A to Z. The first A to Z was in the shops in 1936 and sold very well. Now it is the most popular book of London street maps. It shows every street in London, important buildings, museums, theatres, schools, parks, train and underground stations. Later Phyllis Pearsall painted pictures of many of the city's famous buildings. In the same year, she formed the Geographers' Map Company which began publishing street maps and atlases of towns and cities and road maps of the whole country.
Today there are more than 130 people working for the Company. It publishes 359 titles including maps and atlases in both black and white and full colour. Computers were introduced into the drawing process in 1991. In 1996 the Company produced its first electronic street map of London on CD which contained over 90,000 streets, stations and different places of interest. 2005 saw the start of the next generation of A-Z maps, this time for mobile phones.
Phyllis Pearsall wrote about the history of the company in her book From Bedsitter to Household Name. She died in August 1996 at the age of 89.
Дайте пожалуйста перевод, но только не с переводчиков разных. заранее спасибо)

Письменно переведите предлагаемый текст на русский язык

Great Britain, the United States of America, Canada, Australia, Ireland and New Zealand are large English-speaking countries. They are situated in various parts of the Globe and differ in many ways. Each country has its own history, national holidays, traditions and customs. But they have a common language, English, the language of the people who left Britain to settle in new countries.
From the British Isles the English language spread all over the world, that’s why we can say that Britain is the main English-speaking country the official name of which is the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland. The country is situated on the British Islands and consists of England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland. The capital of the state is London. The official languages are English, Welsh, Scottish and Gaelic. The country population is over 60 million.
The UK is a constitutional monarchy headed by the Queen whose power is limited by the British Parliament consisting of 2 Chambers: the House of Common and the House of Lords. The British Monarch appoints the leader of the party, having the majority in the House of Commons, as the country Prime Minister who is responsible for the policy conducted by the Parliament.
Britain is the country with old and rich cultural traditions and customs, many of which are well known all over the world. It is also one of the most highly developed industrial powers in the world holding one of the leading places among the European states.

Люди добрые, помогите пожалуйста!!!!

Make up a dialogue (10 sentences, using different tenses and different kind of questions)

Discuss with your colleague what makes the company successful?



Вы находитесь на странице вопроса "Similarities and differences", категории "английский язык". Данный вопрос относится к разделу "10-11" классов. Здесь вы сможете получить ответ, а также обсудить вопрос с посетителями сайта. Автоматический умный поиск поможет найти похожие вопросы в категории "английский язык". Если ваш вопрос отличается или ответы не подходят, вы можете задать новый вопрос, воспользовавшись кнопкой в верхней части сайта.