Next Saturday, Peter will be taking Mary to the theatre
10-11 класс
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в следущую суботу Питер будет с Мери в театре
В следующую субботу , Питер отведёт Мэри в театр
Другие вопросы из категории
1 She...(get) a better job if she took time to look for one.
2 If we had tickets, we...(go) to that concert.
3 I...(forget) about it if I were you.
4 If Dick and Jean were here , they...(enjoy) the museums.
5 If you...in a hurry, we ...(get) there on time.
Англичане были разочарованы результатом этого футбольного матча 5. Не заказывай рыбу в этом ресторане.
1. I am...tea (dring)
2. He is ... breakfast (have)
3. I am ... a letter (write)
4. He is ... down (lie)
5. They are ... Spanish (study)
6. He is ... on his coat (put)
7. They are ... ping pong (play)
8. She is ... abroad (travel)
9. He is (die)
10. We are ... (come)
11. She is ... (sing) a new song.
12. We are ... (listen) to her
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(A) Model: When will the train pass Tambov? (not be late).
If it is not late, it will pass the town at 2:30.
1. How long will it take you to read a book of three hundred pages? (do nothing else). 2. When will you finish your course paper? (everything; be all right). 3. Will he take her to the theatre? (get one more ticket). 4. Will you go to the country tomorrow? (not rain). 5. Will he travel to the., Crimea by train? (not get a ticket for the train; go there by plane). 6. When will he make his report on Britain's economy? (get well).
(B) What will happen if: 1. we talk all at once? (hear nothing). 2. you teach him everything at once? (learn nothing). 3. we don't wait for him? (not find the way to the museum). 4. you don't work hard at your English? (get a poor mark). 5. he doesn't arrive in time? (not wait for him). 6. the weather doesn't change for the better? (stay in town).
erformances, to enjoy beautiful architecture. A theatrical performance is always a mystery.
Moscow is proud of the Bolshoy, Maly and Art theatres. The Bolshoy theatre is world-famous for its excellent companies and wonderful acting. Almost all foreign tourists, who come to Moscow, visit at least one of these theatres. The Bolshoy Theatre amazes us with its grandeur and splendour. I visited this theatre several times. I attended the Bolshoy Theatre for the first time when I was 10 years old. It made a deep impression on me. Recently I happened to hear two operas there. They were "Traviata" and "Aida". I liked "Traviata" best. The opera was in Italian and I could understand almost nothing. Moreover, I did not know the subject. But the music was so magnificent that nothing could irritate me. A visit to the theatre is one of the most popular cultural amusements in Russia.
America was discovered bu Columbus in 1492.9.by whom is your French class
tought?10.this room can be used for our cinema club. 11. what kind of
clothes must be worn in the morning?12.the key to this room has been
lost.13.the door was closed with a long(by Edward).14.the glassed bookcases
were filled with files and records of bills paind.15.the letter will be sent
tomorrow in the afternoon (by Mary)
America was discovered bu Columbus in 1492.9.by whom is your French class
tought?10.this room can be used for our cinema club. 11. what kind of
clothes must be worn in the morning?12.the key to this room has been
lost.13.the door was closed with a long(by Edward).14.the glassed bookcases
were filled with files and records of bills paind.15.the letter will be sent
tomorrow in the afternoon (by Mary)
born every second,but this one will mark world population reaching six billion.The five-billionth baby isn`t even a teenager yet, having been born in 1987. It took all of human history until 1800 for the population to reach its first billion; the second took only until 1930. A mere 69 years later, six billion will be crowding the planet.
In 1999. The population of the world is twice what it was in 1960. Onetenth of all the people who have ever lived on the planet are alive today. We are adding new humans at a rate of 78 million year, and we will continue to do so for most of the next decade. Statistics like these are frightening, but they aren’t the whole population picture. The good news is that fertility rates are declining rapidly all over the world (with the exception of Africa), and have already reached below replacement levels in most industrialised countries. On average, women around the world today have 2.7 children, a dramatic drop from the five they had in the 1950s.
97 per cent of population growth is occurring in developing countries, where health services and family planning remain scarce. By 2050, the developed world will have 1.16 bn people, slightly fewer than today. But the developing world will have doubled, from 4.52 bn in 1995 to 8.2 bn in 2050.
The world’s poorest countries are also the hardest-hit by global disasters like Aids. In the 29 African countries most affected by HIV, average life expectancy has declined by seven years. In Botswana, where one in four is infected, people could expect to live until 61 in 1995. By 2005. Aids is expected to drop life expectancy to 41. Despite that, a phenomenon called “population momentum” will still double Botswana’s population by 2050.
This momentum occurs because the population is becoming not just economically polarised, but demographically polarised, but demographically polarised as well. In 1998, only 66 m people were over 80, but that figure is estimated to increase sixfold by 2050, reaching 370 m. The population has also got younger. The group of young women about to enter their childbearing years is the largest ever.
Momentum accounts for 60 to 70 per cent of population growth, but its impact can be blunted by actions we take today. Demographers point out that girls are stayling in school longer in most of the world, and that educated women want fewer children. Another positive trend, frequently seen in young women who’ve completed secondary school, is a delay in childbearing. If couples uniformly delayed marriage and their first birth by five years, demographers say, the population in 2050 would be two billion less than if they had not waited.