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( ) , :

They will realize the importance of his work only in the course of time.

Utopia (14801535).


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:

Only in the course of time will they realize the importance of his work.

: , , 1- , , 2- , .

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, :

only ;

not only... but also ..., ;

so... that ... ;

hardly (scarcely)... when ... ;

no sooner... than 7

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never - - ;
(in, at, on, of .) - - , ( ; : in no country );
nowhere - ;
nobody - ;
not until - , , ;
nor - ... , ... ;
neither - ; ... ;
neither... nor - ... ...

, , .

Only in two cases can we find a similar construction. .

7 no sooner... than hardly... when .


Only from this point of view is it possible to approach the problem.

.

Only tomorrow will they receive our telegram.

.

(. . Present Past Indefinite), , ( ) to do , ; ., :

We find a slight difference between the two forms only in one case.

.

:

Only in one case do we find a slight difference between the two forms.

do, , :

Only in one paper did we find confirmation of our theory.

.

. , :

Only after the proofs had been corrected did he leave the publishing-house.

, .

so nor. . So , , nor ... . to do, to be . (. . 178).

is very busy now, and so are both his friends. , .

1/2 11 . . 161


He knows three foreign languages, and so does his sister.

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1. , , - .

1. In architectural unity Chekhov surpasses all Russian writers of the Realistic age. Only in Pushkin and Lermontov do we find an equal or superior gift of design.

2. Not only has this custom many parallels in modern times, but it can be demonstrated that it has survived in Greece since antiquity.

3. In no department of literature was so great an advance made during this period as in prose.

4. News about Japan reached Russia relatively late. Not until the seventeenth century do we find mention of Japan in Russian sources.

5. Not only did they edit and print textbooks on Confucianism, but they compiled books for popular education.

6. Only in 1733 did justice triumph when a new investigation was launched and both villains were hanged.

7. Nor can the author resist the temptation of bestowing on the reader tedious displays of his erudition, or of introducing foreign or obsolete words.

8. Prosper Merimee may at first sight seem to be completely outside the Romantic movement, for neither as a man AOL as a writer does he share any of its obvious and flamboyant characteristics.

9. Naturally, Hamlet is bitter against such a trimmer as Polonius. Nor could there, apart from reasons for direct resentment, be any community of feeling between the types so antagonistic.

 

10. The forts were not works of defence either strategic or social. Nor were they sacrificed places: they were something special. They were economic units, enclosed villages.

11. Hardly had the Turks taken possession of Tarsus (a city), when three thousand Normans arrived before the city, having come from the main army to reinforce Tancred.


12. The king of Dahomei himself was subject to 8 the prohibition of beholding the sea, and so were the kings of Loango and Great Ardra in Guinea.

13. Only after 1500 . . do bronze sickles begin to figure in Egyptian pictures or European hords.

14. In no part of the world, perhaps, are the inhabitants better fishermen.

15. Only occasionally do human bones found in these tumuli indicate the action of fire.

16. The dust had hardly settled over the battlefields of the world, when newspapers began to carry reports of a sensational new discovery in the field of biblical 9 archaeology.

17. No sooner, however, had his mother discovered that her son had found through imaginative play a method of stimulating his mind, than she put an end to the fairy tales.

18. The negotiations had barely been resumed, when sudden disaster overtook both sides. In the forenoon of December 23, an earthquake shook the area and a great tidal wave deluged the coast.

19. Agricultural tasks succeed each other in due order because they are bound up with the seasons, and so also do the rites and ceremonies which are connected with the tasks of sowing, reaping, threshing, gardening, and fruit gathering.

20. The two words are not enough alike in sound to cause their confusion, nor do their written symbols look alike enough.

21. Not only have her inland position and her relation to the Asiatic mainland influenced Japan greatly, but the characteristics of the land itself have been important.

22. Other examples of sound language not based on speech are the Army bugle calls, each one of which has a different meaning which the soldiers must learn. Nor should we forget our conventional way of indicating approval by clapping the hands and disapproval by hissing.

8 to be subject to ; : ().

(II . . .I . . .),


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Past Continuous Active

A small ring was lying inside Lying inside the box was a small

the box. ring.

-

. .

Present Indefinite Passive

Some other types of changes Connected with this phenomenon

are also connected with this are also some other types

phenomenon. of changes.

-

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2. , .

1. Standing on the threshold and smiling was Ann, safe and sound.

2. Connected with these ballads is still a larger group of miscellaneous romances of adventure.

3. Left behind are two small islands, treeless bits of volcanic soil.

4. Developing alongside these schools was a third group, the monastic, which owed less to the spirit of the Renaissance, and more to the old art of the East.

5. An equally interesting hunting scene is that painted in the neighbouring cave. The two stags are pictured here in full flight. Running at the top speed after the two animals is their pursuer a hunter armed with his bow.


6. Less general than these principles, but yet closely connected with universal modes of thought, are the various functions of words, which we call the parts of speech.

7. This is the most important problem since linked with it is the question of the relations between language and thought.

8. Allied to these classes is a group of words which have been shortened owing to misapprehension, whereas the foregoing have been shortened for the sake of brevity.





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