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, , - , . - , ; ; , . , (I II), , , .

, , . - .

, , . :

to make, to get, to cause, to force, to send, to order, to set, to keep, to allow, to let, to permit, to forbid, to have, to render, to turn, to bid .

e.g. It was enough to make one weep. , .

, , into out of. :

e.g. Dont think you can blackmail me into doing that. , .

into, out of , , . .

:

1). What made you come down on Pit-Pit Lake? he asked carefully. (Aldridge)

2). The accuracy of the statement caused him to grin. (Wallace)

3). Theres no getting a man to walk when he knows he can fly. (Galsworthy)

4). He also had ordered his luggage to be labelled. (Bennett)

5). The blow sent me staggering. (Sommerfield)

6). I sat in my chair and said: Yes, Go on, I follow you to keep him going. (Wells)

7). Her tone rendered James furious. (Bennett)

8). The cold wind turned the leaves yellow. (Salten)

9). He held the door open and they passed out into the hall. (Wilde)

10). That sets us both equal. (Hilton)

 

11). I have his name written down because I know you find it difficult to remember

Chinese names. (Greene)

12). Have your secretary type it at once. (Hammett)

13). I wont have her insulted. Youve no right. (Greene)

14). I made him feel uneasy. (Galsworthy)

15). He had little hope of making them understand it. (Aldridge)

16). They were not respectable folk but they could cause things to be accomplished. (Kipling)

17). Senior managers attitudes to womens employment are changing more slowly than

corporate image-makers would make you believe.(The Economist)

18). Aunt Alexandra stared him to silence. (Dane)

19). She had tended them, mothered them into life. (Dane)

20). The strikers cant be bluffed and bullied into submission. (The Guardian)

21). He tried to bounce me into a rash decision by concealing half the facts. (The Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English)

22). Using your hands and exploring with your hands and exploring with your senses is a way to get people to think, says Ms. Thomas.(The Guardian)

23). The 1st explosions cause a building to start falling and the process gets faster as the explosions move upwards. (Focus Magazine)

24). Each language has its own personality, or speech-feeling, which limits its speakers to a certain way of thinking.(Focus Magazine)

25). The Biblical story of the Tower of Babel says that God forced people to speak many languages in order to reduce their power. (Focus Magazine)

 

 

if any, if anything - , , , , .

Objections to this plan, if any, should be reported to the committee at once. , .(, ...)

Very little, if anything, could be advanced in the defense of his policy. .

. If anything .

If anything it will be in their interests to follow this course. Bo .

2. , whatever, however, ( ). , ( ).

The British people have to submit to new taxation, however high. , .

3. if + II ( ). .

It considered from this point of view, the problem takes on a new aspect. , () .

But the decision, if logical, requires a measure of courage. , , .



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