.


:




:

































 

 

 

 


,




, , . . . . , , : much, as much as, something of, the whole of, none of, a bit of . .

It would be as much of a holiday for her as it would be for him. , .

Then he perceived something of the other's hard intention. - .

was not worried about any of that. .

She had run after him and he would have none of her. , .

The rest of the students are in the yard. .

as much as told me not to. .

a few, a little, a good many, a great many . , , . : a few, a little , () few, little ( ); a good many, a great many , '' ( ), . . - , . , a good deal, a great deal, a lot of,


deal () lot (, ), . . - , , ( much, something . .).

quite '' all ', ' .

Mary is quite a popular name. .

forgot all about it. .

She can't be all bad if she wants to help the cause. , .

What do we call a man who is dressed badly?, what, how (. ). , . What... like? (.: ?). , .

What does he look like? ? .

"Perhaps he is always like that," Robert Jordan thought.

, ,

. You mustn't say things like that.

.

, . , . . , , , .

Bowshott had reported seeing him earlier that morning. , .

hated this familiarity with the servants, he hated everybody knowing that all was not well. , , , - .


, .

to do, . , - : some, the, a lot of, a bit oi . . :

We do a lot of reading. .

Let men folk do the thinking. They are so much smarter

than us. ,

.

to take a decision, to make a suggestion, to have a smoke . . , - .

She took a deep breath. This was living. . !

All you got to do is dance a little with them and have a few laughs. , , .

wondered if he were to give Miranda a hard slap one of these days. , - .

to be + ( is not a great reader), .

I. , .

1. She wanted him to give up air traffic control; to quit, and choose some other occupation while some of his youth and most of his health remained. 2, The whole of Hungary was occupied by fascists. 3. That was the last he had seen of Golz


with his strange white face that never tanned. 4. Robert Jordan registered that he was not taking any of the flattery. 5. Elsie, flushed with pride, happiness, and the sweet champagne, and already looking more of a Dulver, was compelled to respond. 6. It would not help the situation any. 7. It wasn't much of a note to mark the end of eighteen years of marriage. 8. And if I so much as mention Ashley's name, he cocks his eyebrow up and smiles that nasty, knowing smile! 9. Something of the chief's contained anger, and a hint of authority, made the lieutenant hesitate. 10. I didn't think you were much of a one for the old ladies. 11. Having had enough of London for a while, I set off for Tyrol. 12. We saw a lot of one another that year. 13. For the second time in this room tonight he exhibited nothing of kindness. 14. He was too busy to leave Chicago much. 15. Anyhow I've never minded if people thought me a bit of a fool. 16. "Well, what's the news?" "Oh, he's dead." "I thought as much." 17. It would be absurd for him to marry so much beneath him. 18. But you know, I'm not much of a one for believing in miracles. 19. No one could be more of a stranger to her than Ashenden. 20. Peewee has hardly so much as mentioned you. 21. Fanny Peronett was dead. That much her husband Hugh Peronett was certain of as he stood in the rain beside the grave. 22. Mrs Linsell showed all that was possible of her very pretty legs. 23. He felt that he could not go on being polite to her any longer and if the doctor's remedy did not help, one day he would forget himself and give her, not a piece, but the whole of his mind. 24. I'm a bit of a reader myself. 25. It gave me something of a shock to realise that in England far, far the greater number of these men would have suffered capital punishment. I dare say you see a good deal of my daughter-in-law. June had hardly been at home at all that week; she had given him nothing of her company for a long time past. 28. To old Jolyon it seemed that his son had grown. "More of a man altogether," was his comment.

II. , of.

1. I think we shall often see one another in the future. (a great deal) 2. I don't like it at all. (any) 3. I want to know you better. (more) 4. She looked into the pleading brown eyes and did not see the beauty of a shy boy's first love. (none) 5. There are some who'd say it isn't a suitable pastime for a grown man. (much) 6. "A small fellow too delicate for

5-826 105


rough me," he said. (a little bit) 7. Here he was, taking her out, kissing her good night, seeing her often and then not seeing her at all. (a lot) 8. Keith and Vernon saw each other rarely. (little) 9. "Not a strong animal, is it?" grinned Rhett. "Looks like he'll die in the shafts." (much) 10. Vernon Demerest was enjoying his passive role tonight having someone else do almost the entire work, yet not relinquishing his own authority at all. (most, none) 11. A part of the hostility directed at Mel earlier was now being transferred towards the lawyer. (some)

III. , of,

1. . 2. . 3. ! 4. . 5. . 6. . 7. , . 8. , . 9. - ! 10. , - . 11. (seamstress).

IV. like this, like that . .

1. You mustn't go about looking like this. 2. You can't stay indoors on a day like this. 3. I saw some delightful boxes of beauty aids in one of the shops last week. Lip-stick, face powder, a small mirror, things like that. 4. You oughtn't to behave like this. 5. I'm sorry to see you like this. 6. "It's not the Ritz," he said, "but at this hour of the night it's only in a place like this that we stand a chance of getting something to eat." 7. What have I got to offer a girl like that? 8. And to think that after all the trouble he's given me he had to end up like that. 9. He had seen his son like that before.

V. .

1. Randall was not surprised at seeing Emma. 2. All the same he was deeply grateful to Ann, grateful to her for having insisted on having Fanny at Grayhallock, for having insisted on nursing Fanny. 3. I hope Randall won't mind our deciding things without him. 4. "I suppose he hasn't changed his view


about coming to Seton Blaise?" said Hugh. 5. She stopped her folding and went on. 6. Since his arrival in April he had been simply hanging round the house, helping Ann with the washing up, running errands for whoever was looking after Fanny. 7. I had approved of Verena hiring her. 8. But it was an unpleasant, even distinctly alarming, prospect and he had put off doing so. 9. In the last few years he had taken to spending more and more time in London.. 10. Hugh had avoided speaking seriously to his son about his treatment on Ann. 11. Mildred, with her long tolerance of Humphrey and her skill in defending him, was surely not a censorious woman. 12. This falling in love was, he felt, the best thing he had ever done. 13. Emma joined with Randall in flattering Lindsay, and with Lindsay in teasing Randall. 14. Your asking me to come to India put me, in a way, up against it. 15. He hated our finding her there. 16. I should swallow him without his even noticing it. 17. She denied having written anything of the sort. 18. Do think seriously about coming to Seton. 19. He feared and detested the idea of Emma's visiting Grayhallock in his absence or indeed at all. 20. She never became resigned to not winning. 21. Instead of struggling one against the other, instead of avoiding, they should unite. 22. Her face was agreeable without being handsome. 23. The previous autumn, after having been left back in the eighth grade three years running, Mule had joined the Navy. 24. He just couldn't tolerate always being left behind in the eighth grade, him getting so tall and the other children so little. 25. Pretending an interest gave me sufficiently private opportunity for sizing Holly's friends.

VI. , .

1. It struck her that she had been doing all the talking and that Larry had had no chance to do more than listen. 2. Just shut up and let me do the teaching of ancient history in this class. 3. If that's the way you feel, maybe you should do some checking. 4. Because he had been cautioned to do only local flying in an area northwest of Baltimore, no flight plan had been filed. 5. The man in the middle is a Frenchman who has done a lot of climbing in the Pyrenees. 6. The bell-boy grinned at Christine. "Doing a bit of detectiving, Miss Francis?" 7. "Get in and do the talking on the way," he said. 8. She and her two daughters, both of them middle-aged, did the cooking and the housework. 9. Even if he could fire the chief

5* 107


house detective, McDermott thought, he would do some hell raising in the morning. 10. We can do our shopping before lunch. 11. They had a gin and a tonic, Ashe doing most of the talking. 12. "Suppose you were asked now, though?" "Depends on who did the asking." "I'm doing the asking" 13. Ashenden went to the market about nine when the housewives of Geneva for the most part had done their provisioning. 14. In your place I'd leave the General do most of the talking. 15. Go along and do your packing. 16. He intended to do no more roof-climbing that night. 17. He's done most of the casting. 18. I do a little teaching here. 19. "Well, somebody's got to do some scheming," said Mildred. 20. "IV/ do some thinking about what you just said, Bessie," he promised without enthusiasm. 21. Amos, who does a little of travelling now and then, claimed to have seen her once at a fair in Bottle. 22. Freddie did a bit of gasping. He was a good deal on the nonplused side. 23. "I must be going," said old Bodsham. "I have some thinking to do." 24. I should have some very awkward explaining to do.

VII. . - , .

1. The Tamil had been grossly insolent to him and Saffary had given him a thrashing. 2. When they chanced to meet she always gave him a friendly smile. 3. We're trying to get some sleep. 4. Saffary gave a harassed glance at the papers on the desk. 5. Suddenly she gave a piercing cry and fell headlong on the floor. 6. He took a step towards her and stopped. 7. He gave his hands a glance. 8. She gave a slight start. 9. He gave a gasp. 10. He gave her a pitiful look. 11. His voice broke and he gave a little sob. 12. She gave him a little bow, silently, and walked past him out of the room. 13. He made no further reference to the scene. 14. But Gallagher's appearance gave Mrs Hamlyn a shock. 15. I'm afraid there's no use in our making a promise we shouldn't be able to keep. 16. Gallagher gave a sigh of relief. 17. The captain sent for me yesterday. He gave me a rare talking to. 18. Pryce gave her a searching look. 19. Mrs Hamlyn passed Pryce on the deck, but he gave her a brief greeting and walked on. 20. She gave him a sharp look. 21. I wanted to have a good think. 22. Lord Kastellan gave me a nod. 23. He's a damned powerful man even now. By George, I had a struggle with him. 24. There was something about him that gave her a funny little feeling in the pit of


her stomach. 25. There was something so attractive in him that she couldn't bring herself to give him a saucy answer. 26. Mrs Towler gave me an angry frown. 27. You gave me such a fright. 28. Mrs Carter gave a gasp of horror. 29. Then an idea occurred to him and he gave her a piercing glance. 30. He only did it because he wanted to give me a good time. 31. He gave another grunt. 32. She had a proper laugh over this. 33. He lifted the cat on the toe of his shoe and gave him a toss. 34. The captain gave a great bang on the table with his fist. 35. He gave a loud shout. 36. During the next few days he looked at the house whenever he passed it, but never caught a glimpse of the girl. 37. Appleby heaved an immense sigh of relief. 38. You can have a little talk and then if you do not like the look of her you take your leave and no harm is done. 39. She shot a swift glance at him. 40. He poured himself out a little, added some soda, and took a sip. 41. He gave me a smiling look of his soft eyes. 42. "Had a nice swim?" he asked. 43. I stole a glance at him. 44. Two or three days later my friend and I were taking a walk. 45. Captain Bredon took a look at him first and went up. 46. Mr Warburton gave him a little nod of dismissal. 47. The man gave his shoulders a scornful shrug. 48. Then he would have a good sleep.

VIII. + ( ) (. ).

1. The skipper chuckled cynically. 2. He smiled whimsically. 3. He sipped a little of whisky. 4. Neilson stopped talking and sighed faintly. 5. The Swede looked at him with hatred. (to shoot) 6. The mutual attraction of those two young things delighted him enormously. 7. She glanced indifferently at the man who was sitting in the chair by the window and went out of the room. 8. The skipper's face puckered and he chuckled cunningly. 9. The lawyer smiled politely. 10. Mr Warburton glanced carelessly at the menu. 11. Cooper laughed harshly. 12. The director smiled shrewdly at me. 13. Assunta comes down to chat with me now and then. 14. But he looked at Neil curiously. 15. The man held out his hand and looked at Neil appraisingly. 16. He started slightly and looked at her to see if she was serious. 17. The worst of it was that you couldn't hint her. 18. Cooper chuckled contemptuously. 19. Mr War-burton glanced sharply at him. 20. The man shrugged his shoulders angrily.


, , , . , , , , . - , : , , , . , - , , , . :

blue ,

blue ,

blue ;

board

board ;

up () , ,

up , ,

up

up , ;

,

( , . .) up , . .,

, *

, .

* - . . . , ., . , 1972.


, . , , , , : step to step, blow to blow, roar to roar . . - . , , : face to face, hand to hand, pocket to pocket, shoulder to shoulder, eye to eye . . , , . , : commission , ; , to commission , station , to station , . . , (-ssion, -tion), .

. : dog's ear to dog's ear ; to pull back , pull-back , ; to take off ( ) take-off , .

+ , . , , . :

She exhilirated Rusty Trawler by stiff-arming him into a corner. , .

. , , . , . , , -


, . :

I'm a subscriber to the Great Russian classics series, a monumental edition of all the Russian literary greats. , .

, .

It was just an accident, why should it sour you against the world? . - ?

, . :

wanted to better himself. .

In that low and squalid mind there was but one motive, the desire to get the better of his fellow men by foul means; it was a puckish malice that found satisfaction in besting another. , ; , , .

. , , . :

Yesterday was my birthday. .

Now, how can I leave here? ?

"You'll want somewhere to stay," he said. - , .

otherwise so.


otherwise , , , . :

You must be careful. Otherwise I can't give a fillip for your life. . ( , ) . ()

A few lads hung about old Thomas' fish shop, but otherwise the street was deserted. , . (.: ... .) ()

The other two airline representatives on the committee had at first taken the view that the airport management was doing its best under exceptional conditions. Captain Demerest argued otherwise. , . . ( )

"Now," Mel said, "about sabotage potential and otherwise"' , , , . ()

so. so . ( , ), , , . , , : , , (): , .

You've read the testimony. You just said so. . . ( )

I didn't explain my correction. I ought to have done so. . . ( )

"Well, are you going with me?" "I guess so." , ? , . ( )


After the American-Spanish war of 1898 Puerto Rico became a colony of the USA and remained so till 1952. - 1898 - 1952 , ()

She's just the way the message said, only more so. , , . ()

. :

You'd think the Old Man would okay air-conditioners for the offices. , .

More and more people came crowding in, to tapper-tap-tap with their feet. , , .

, , , . , .

. , . , , -(), , : fishy, watery . . :

"What's the matter?" he enquired. "Is the starey bird going?" ? . , , , ?"

, . , . ( staring , .)

.

Zanetta, sixtyish, was prominent in community affairs. , , . -ish, , .


I. . , . .

. 1. promised to will Ed a castle in India. 2. Her mother could shame her to tears with a reproachful glance. 3. He rose awkwardly from the deep chair, the sciatica () knifing as he did. 4. Ruth cupped the base of his head and edged him with her curved hand quietly back to sleep. 5. That particular trouble had begun shortly after dark when an Aero Mexican captain, taxiing out for take-off, mistakenly passed to the right instead of left of a blue taxi light. 6. Mel pocketed his change from the cashier. 7. In intense pain, half-drowned, he surfaced. 8. It had been a slow, tricky job because steps () were icing as fast as they were cleared. 9. Money meant little to him, and he never much minded whether patients paid him or not. Since time was as unimportant as cash, he was just as willing to doctor them as not. 10. We generally anchor for the night. 11. He was evidently much taken with Erik, and the companionship of someone only a little older than himself had loosened his constraint so that he seemed to flower with a new adolescence. 12. But why was he sailing these lonely seas on a pearling lugger with a scoundrel like Captain Nichols was mysterious. 13. Somewhere in Keith's mind a door, which had been closed, inched open. 14. "Never mind it, Elliott," I said, "it may rain on the night of the party. That'll bitch it." 15. Isabel wirelessed him from the ship. 15. But the director, crazed with enthusiasm, had insisted on detailing his plans. 17. The vote climaxed some 50 years of efforts. 18. Only a slight moistness at eyes and mouth, a slight pale plumpness of cheek, aged him a little. 19. When he went on leave he hunted and, anxious to keep his weight down, he dieted carefully. 20. I shouldered a bag and set out. 21. More than 18,000 Arab houses were dynamited off the face of the earth. 22. We have carefully documented them with facts and evidence and witness. 23. It ages a worker fast. 24. But I do feel as though I were skylarking along on a pair of stilts. 25. Freddie detailed his own exciting triumphs in Queen Anne Street. 26. Mine, the black and white mare, rose on her hind legs, whinnied, teetered like a tightrope artist, then blue-streaked down the path. 27. Photographs of Holly were front-paged by the late edition of the "Journal-


American". 28. A nurse, soft-shoeing into the room, advised that visiting hours were over. 29. I'm not hot-footing after Jose, if that's what you suppose. 30. Tucked between the pages were Sunday features, together with scissored snippings from gossip columns. 31. The bank didn't pension one off till after thirty years' service. 32. Torpenhow was paging the last sheets of some manuscript. 33. It was a fine October evening with a solemn and sorrowing sky, full of stars.

. 1. Fred Phirmphoot's job was to calculate how much could be stowed aboard Flight Two and where. 2. No mailbag, no individual piece of freight went into any position in the aircraft hold () without his say-so. 3. Have you been a stowaway on other airlines? 4. She had always been "in painting", as she put it, and there was no doubt in her mind that it was a come-down to be the mistress of a businessman. 5. Standish had been about to turn away, but something about the man attracted his attention. It was the way the newcomer was holding his case under his arm, protectively. Harry Standish had watched people many times, doing the same thing as they came through Customs. It was a giveaway that whatever was inside the case was something they wanted to conceal. 6. He watched the swim of faces as the train moved. 7. He certainly ought to speak to Randall sometime about the drink. 8. The money was rather a bother. 9. I did not want to expose Elliott to the humiliation of asking her to invite him to her big do. 10. The one hopeful sign was that Senator Michael Mullen confirmed that he was prepared to act as a go-between for the two movements. 11. I couldn't feel the drag in those eyes. I began to swim dizzily in their depths. 12. He saw the hurt creeping into her eyes, and he reached for her hand. 13. What they have negotiated is a sell-out of the rights of the British people to decide their own destiny. 14. The British government must tell the US that it will not tolerate any repeat in Portugal of the Chile "scenario". 15. They thought him inhuman. It was true that there was nothing come-hither in him. They were talking loudly and laughing, for they had all drunk enough to make them somewhat foolishly hilarious, and they were evidently giving one of their number a send-off. Lord, how I look forward to a dip in the Atlantic. I'd give anything for a good long swim. 18. In a rush I realised the house boat was someone's hide-out.


. 1. The crowd was thinning now. 2. Her features had fined down. 3. She always felt secure when Ellen was by her, for there was nothing so bad that Ellen could not better it, simply by being there. 4. It's a sure thing one of us can't show up in the cabin, or we'll alert him. 5. This was Tom Helliwell who now came crunching over the snow to meet him, his silver-gilt hair prettied by the dust of snow. 6. Maybe it was the whisky warming my stomach. 7. What ammunition they had was secreted in their home. 8. But while she was maturing politically, her husband became a reactionary. 9. I'd yearned so much for a ride in Riley's car that now the opportunity presented itself nothing, even the prospect that no one might see me, could have thinned my excitement. 10. Back of her there appeared to be an entire orphanage emptying out of the truck. 11. But he outsmarted me. 12. Such a splendid friend would not have wronged me. 13. Maude's cheeks pinked.

. 1. They never had become rich. But always, at the Marsh, there was ample. 2. Indeed it was strange to enter up that silent cove, protected by the green hill, in the still cool of the evening, and see there a sailing vessel. 3. The next day I took a local to the place where the mine was. 4. It irked him that even Ann did not treat Nancy Bowshott as an equal. 5. Now she was sitting behind closed doors with him and him alone, as the evening drew on, and hoping like a seventeen-year-old that perhaps he might invite her out to dinner.

II. . .

. 1. Tonight is important to me. 2. "What are you going to do," he asked, "when you leave here?"3. "You're wrong there" I interrupted quickly. 4. In the ordinary way she would have been home at her apartment hours ago. But today had been exceptionally full, with two conventions moving in and a heavy influx of other guests. 5. My clear, surely you know Charleston! You've visited there. 6. I think I must find somewhere to sit. 7. Tomorrow's St Stephen's Day. 8. You have the effrontery to stand there telling me you've sold elsewhere! 9. Tonight was different. 10. I'd like to leave here no later than Thursday night. 11. "Where was his parish?" "Concep-


cion* and the villages around. But he left there years ago." 12. Ashley was acting as if he thought she was just flirting with him. But he knew differently. 13. You grow up like your father. Try to be just like him, for he was a hero and don't let anyone tell you differently. 14. That would be all they needed to know until such an evil day when they might find out differently. 15. It'll be interesting to see what abroad'' s really like. 16. He missed the absence of the outback, the absence of a totally untamed beyond. 17. He raised his hands awkwardly and lifted the hair back over her brow, to reveal her bland and smiling beneath. 18. It was as if she were perpetually haunted and mocked by a music of happiness which came from some inaccessible elsewhere. 19. He was as fit as a fiddle when he left here. 20. There is nowhere else for them to work. 21. It was hard to reconcile herself to the fact that she had nowhere to go. 22. Fortunately we had not that far to go.

. 1. He was shorter than Leamas remembered him; otherwise, just the same. 2. Anger had always come easily except for those few brief years when Hester had taught him otherwise: to use patience and a sense of humour. 3. Call me if there's anything new that's important. Otherwise I'll be in touch with you. 4. At eighteen Andrew found himself alone, carrying a scholarship worth 40 pounds a year, but otherwise penniless. 5. Aunt Pitty knew nothing about men, either with their backs up or otherwise, and she could only wave her fat little hands helplessly. 6. She knew perfectly well that airlines never prosecuted stowaways, on the theory that publicity would be more harmful than otherwise. 7. "I've no luggage," Leamas replied, "except a tooth-brush and ." "That is taken care of. Are you ready otherwise?" 8. "What's his hame?" "Finegan. He's acting chief ( ). Our regular chief is otherwise engaged." 9. The reason he had stayed, through most of the three-day storm, was to be available for emergencies. Otherwise, by now he would have been home with Cindy and the children. 10. Briefly, the policeman seemed ready to vent his own anger, then decided otherwise. 11. He would have preferred to have the note, but to insist would raise an issue, emphasising the incident, which otherwise might be forgotten. 12. She had been perfectly happy in her way, and it was pure sentimentality to wish that her way had been otherwise. 13. She hoped

* (.)


everything would work out that way because it would be more difficult otherwise.

B. 1. I am so glad to have you with us. 2. You saw most of the places that tourists usually see. So this year you want a rest from sightseeing. 3. All the shops are closed and so are the theatres and most of the cinemas. 4. I may even get to be an airline vice-president. You just said so. 5. "Tell me, is it true? Are the Yankees coming?" "I'm afraid so." "Do you know so?" "Yes, Ma'm. I know so." 6. You say you wish to meet and make friends with as many people as possible, so I won't suggest a quiet fishing village. 7. "Who was it said all men are equal, Anne? Do you remember?" "Has anyone ever said so?" 8. Warren Trent lit a cigar, motioning to McDermott to take a cigarette from a box beside him. When he had done so, Peter said... 9. Until the war, life was never more real to me than a shadow show on a curtain. And I preferred it so. 10. It was a safe bet, Mel thought, that Cindy had been more than usually snippy with Danny, but, loyally, he wasn't saying so. 11. The planes had been close, exceptionally so, and for an instant his flesh had prickled with alarm. 12. That so many had turned out at all on such a night, leaving warm houses to do so, spoke eloquently of their concern. 13. Her father gave us this house as a wedding present, so we haven't to pay the rent. 14. "No smoking in here," the girl said. "Who said so?" said Julian. 15. They were selling papers right in the Bellevue-Stratford. They were so. 16. "He'll be ruined." "I don't think so." 17. I could see that the big man opposite me was trying to stop him; but he evidently held the old gentleman in considerable respect and could not venture to do so at all abruptly. 18. But she knew too well that it was her nature, she was born so and she must make the best of it.

III. down .

1. You aren't down. Nothing will down you. 2. She's got a down on him. She crossed his name out on the list herself. 3. Crusty colonels downing their crushed port are foaming at the mouth and knocking at the knees.

IV. .

tonight sixish, tennish, eightish, half-past-fivish, mid-nightish


, . , , , ; , , - , - ; , ; ( + ) The station is about an hour's walk The shoes are the right size , .

. .

(-, , : .)

, , , , . :

Her attitude, whether of suspicion or jollity, seemed always designed to get the last ounce of him. , , ,


, : .

His tone, though bitter, was serious. , , .

, , , . , , .

I should say at once, husband or no husband, it serves him right and teaches him a lesson. , , , .

But fire or no fire, her job was to get herself back into the bedroom before she was discovered. , , .

(husband or no husband) , .

Peremptory tone or not, Peter thought, it was an attractive voice. , , .

, It was not that... Not that... ' ..., , ..., .... :

It was not that she was basically unkind. He

. Not that she knew why she was crying.

, .

, . , where , , , ; , , what , , . .

Now he began to question if there were not some truth in what Denny said. , - , .


Charley grunted every time the bed springs creaked. , .

. why.

It was so obviously an exaggeration, he wondered why. , , .

Leo noticed the calf of his right leg was thicker than the other leg, but the trouser hid why. , , , .

, why , .

"You don't belong here, do you?" "Why?" ? ? ( ?)

, , , : , . :

Randall, with an eye to his own interests, was of course by no means opposed to, though he was also irrationally disturbed by, a renewal of friendship between his father and Emma. , , , , , , .

, , , .

I'll tell you what I mean if you're interested. , , .


Fawley didn't like Leamas, and if Leamas knew he didn't care. , , .

A real hotel is for hospitality. Unfortunately, too many people in this business have forgotten. . , .

: . :

How wonderful it would be to scorn his offer and order him out of the store! !

shook her hand enthusiastically and assisted her into the buggy. .

on . : '' + , .

Her silence pressed him on. .

She sobbed on, saying a few words now and then. , - .

looked at her oddly, still inscrutable and as she hurried on she could not tell if he were amused or repelled. , , , , , .

. :

Sweden and Spain imported almost their entire need of coal. , (.: ...... )


- .

- , , , . , . . . , .

Hugh recalled his saying once of Ann, "She doesn't really love the roses. She regards them as a chemical experiment." , : , . .

I saw him walk (walking) along the street. , () .

The ship was reported to arrive on Friday. , .

It is necessary for him to go there. , .

The apples were too high for the boy to reach. , .

The meeting plotted out steps to be taken at the June conference. , .

to have, to get . :

The secret meeting at Currawong discussed a plan to get the conference to wipe off the State Executive every member who could not be trusted to vote for the right wing Senate team candidate. , , , ,

12;


.

I can't have her getting her death of cold and then not being fit for work. , .

I had him read the script last night. ( , ) .

to find (to see) oneself doing smth. ( II) . :

She found herself humming as she crossed the street. , , .

simply could not see himself starting again to build up, somewhere else in England, another rose nursery. , - .

, , . . , . , , . to continue, , , - , , . ' ', ' -. '. :

Everything continued still. - .

The T-33, mortally damaged itself, continued upwards briefly. T-33, , .

:

A strictly enforced Louisiana law forbade animals in hotel rooms. .


Before that, I'd not ever been allowed into their house, .

, to forbid to allow : ''/'' + .

. , ( ) , , .

1. . , .

1. The postman was an hour late. 2. It was raining when she came out of the building and the sky was a dull colour. 3. My daughter is the same age as you. 4. What metal are your fry baskets? 5. My husband is five years dead. 6. Your watch is ten minutes slow. 7. I was Charleston born myself. Miss King's room was two floors higher than Ashenden's. They were three days too early. 10. He was felicitously married, with two boys and two girls who all seemed to be much the same age. 11. Felix was Mildred's half-brother, and fifteen years her junior. 12. You were a cop then, and the soles of your shoes were almost an inch thick. 13. He was just a few years older than I. 14. Mary was a few steps behind her. 15. The rent was only two days behind. 16. Fred noticed it was four doors away from the pillar-box.

. , .

1. 30 60. 2. , . 3. . 4. 3 . 5. 5 . 6. . 7. 10 . 8. 10 . 9. (his senior). 10. .


11. .

1. Her conduct when there had been most unaccountable. 2. It was a dreadful thing that he now proposed, a breach of the law which, if discovered, would bring them into the police court. 3. I see very little point, if any, in such plays in terms of social significance. 4. In preparing for trial the lawyer appointed to represent the accused who is without funds generally has few, if any, of the investigatory resources available for the prosecution or to an accused with means. 5. She wore a fringed chamois skirt and knee-deep cowboy boots, which was a mistake, for you felt that her legs, if fully exposed, would have been the best part. 6. Some plants, though, they blossom just the once, if at all, and nothing more happens to them. 7. Her face revealed little of what, if anything, she felt. 8. A clerk had been dispatched also, to look up Michael's record,* if any. 9. They had made a comfortable, if unexciting, adjustment to life. 10. If subpoenaed, they said, they would state that they had known Lowes only a short time. 11. But his pulse, though thin, was steady.

12. Old Jolyon alluded to him, if at all, as "a hard, thick sort of man; not much refinement about him." 13. A good talker, when allowed, she would converse for hours together. 14. Emily, though pretty, had nothing, and he himself at that time was making a bare thousand a year.

III. money or no money (peremptory tone or not).

1. Well, even though he might be a pirate.he's not going to cut my throat today, if I can help it. 2. Some of them say that whatever the problems might be, pilots are still supposed to use noise abatement procedures. 3. Whether there would be a community meeting or not, there was nothing he could do to eliminate overhead noise for the time being. 4. But if you're living underneath, knowing why aeroplanes are coming over doesn't make anyone feel better, whether there is a storm or there isn't. 5. If the war goes on much longer, I'm going to do something whether my wife likes it or not.

= criminal record


IV. . not that.

1. Not that Frank particularly wanted to remedy matters, for it appeared that his marriage would be a happy one. 2. Not that she did not know what he meant. 3. Not that it was very informative to them even then. 4. Not that Frank had never seen commanding women before this. 5. Not that he was more serious. 6. So this is going to be a proper Christmas for us for once. We have been buying toys and things for George's stocking not that he believes in Santa Claus still of course. 7. Not that he ever said anything. 8. It is not that she doesn't understand things. 9. Not that I'm asking for thanks. 10. It was not that their clothes were particularly cheap, but they were worn badly. 11. Not that the fact fills me with moral indignation. 12. Not that there was anything wrong with Jimmy really. 13. Not that you haven't done frightfully well.

. , not that.

1. , -. 2. , (popular) . 3. , - (ill-feeling). 4. , . 5. , . .

V. why .

1. His mother must have been crying for some time, before he joined in, without knowing why. 2. Vernon Demerest had asked the question on impulse. Now he wondered why. 3. "Who was Ruysdael?" "Ruysdael? He was a Dutch landscape painter. Why?" 4. There were still several hours of his shift remaining, and he had made a pact with himself to finish his air traffic control duty for tonight. He was not sure why, except that it seemed the right thing to do. 5. Already two irate dog lovers were demanding to know why, when their own pets had been refused admittance. 6. "You're something of an ideas-man, aren't you?" "Something of. Why?"

VI. . . .

1. Leave the frog where it is. 2. The recent increase of water in the reservoirs has created what is described as an


"alarming situation". 3. The Douro region is where port-wine conies from. 4. They went heavily, pulling and climbing up the granite shelf and over its upper edge to where there was a green clearing in the forest. 5. And I can't forbid the house to a man who thinks what my husband thinks. 6. She was happy now where a few weeks before she had been miserable. 7. The mountainside sloped gently where he lay. 8. He had no rights at all where she was concerned. 9. The question of how to obtain the money worried her not a little. 10. It was well, a sort of habit I hung onto from when I was a little girl. 11. I want an explanation of why Mr Wells was shifted from his original room to 1439. 12. His only moment of risk was when he walked back to his hotel with the paper in his pocket. 13. Also, she feared any diminishment of what she thought of her circle. 14. As if my dear brother-in-law had ever felt any emotions where I was concerned except amazement and contempt. 15. Hugh was hesitating about whether and how to pursue the subject. 16. Miranda was as pale as her mother, but her face had the transparency of marble where Ann's had the dullness of wax. 17. They could wait, both of them, they could wait for what was left of Fanny's cash. 18. He was moved by how young she looked.

. , .

1. , (to be crowded). 2. , . 3. , (originally). 4. , , . 5. , . 6. , . 7. , . 8. , (branch) .

VII. , .

1. His advocacy of, or opposition to, proposed legislation indicates the party preference. 2. She was even more surprised to find herself invigorated" by, positively enjoying, the atmosphere of relaxed drama which surrounded Emma. 3. Jealousy, envy, contempt, anger, guilt, a kind of pure amazement which was analogous to, though not exactly akin to, admira-


tion strove together in his bosom. 4. My ideas of a Christian do not include laughing at and encouraging a poor mad woman. 5. He has a tremendous faith in and love for people.

6. These popular singers are all folk influenced. But in this production one felt real love for and admiration of the author,

7. Is that decided by the parents, depending on what the child has a bent





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