.


:




:

































 

 

 

 


( do)




, Present Past Indefinite, to do, , , to. , -, :

said he would come and he did come.

, , .

Now I see that she does know the subject well.

, .

We do not know very much of this author. But we do know that all the three poems were written by him.

. - , .

. to do. :

has written this work.

( ).

1. , do.

1. Materialism does not deny the reality of mind. What materialism does deny is that a thing called the mind exists separate from the body.


2. Certainly a great deal of new English poetry does meet with indifference because it seems private and incomprehensible.

3. While we have no language Academy for English, we do have something that partly serves the purpose, and that something is the dictionary.

4. The one thing, though, which must be set to her credit, is that she did initiate. She followed no one, but introduced what was actually a new type of novel.1

5. These old manuscripts are not so easy to read as our modern books, for the reason that there are no spaces between words. The later manuscripts however, do sometimes have spaces between the words just as we have.

6. He (Maugham) does, however, belong of right to that small and select company of contemporary writers whose best work, we may reasonably assume, will survive beyond their lifetime.

7. What possibilities and potentialities in politics, arts, sciences, vanished among the shell holes and barbed wire, we shall never know. But consequences of this war we do know, and we cannot ignore them.

8. It is perhaps necessary to remind the reader that there is a nucleus of fact hidden among all this fictitious embroidery. Kublai Khan did send a large fleet against Japan about the time stated, which met with a fate similar to that of Spanish Armade.

. not, un-, in- (il-, im-, ir-) dis-, , , , + (); :

not uncommon ,

not infrequently ,

not impossible .

... ( ).

not + without + :

1 (18161855), , .


It is not without significance that... , ...

not ( ) , . , :

Humour is not missing in his work. ( [] ).

by no means + + () ... ..., :

It is by no means unreasonable to compare these data. .

2. . (, ) . .

1. The total number of German words in English is not inconsiderable.

2. To find a poet who is also a literary critic is not unusual nowadays.

3. Not infrequently the primary meaning (of a word) dies away and the derivative meaning remains.

4. To group these artists into schools is a little pedantic.. Yet it is not unreasonable to group together the painters who worked chiefly in Florence.

5. The changes of sound here are not irregular.

6. Not dissimilar effects are found in painting.

7. It is not without significance, also, that this work was utilized as a basis for the libretto of a popular opera.

8. These scholars then carried the New Learning (The Renaissance) to all parts of Europe, and the learned men of England were by no means unrepresented among them.

9. These two volumes were savagely, but not unfairly, criticized.


10. None of the long poems are uninteresting, and very few are insignificant or unsuccessful.

11. Kitchener 2 whose arrogance was not dissimilar to Curson's 3 was not prepared to tolerate a situation in which his proposals were criticized from the military point of view by the military member of Council.

12. The scenes and characters themselves are depicted most graphically, often even dramatically, and humour is not wanting where it is suitable.

13. If in historical times people were relatively safe from the assaults of enemies and from robbery, they feared dangers of other kinds which threatened them and their houses. Belief in magic and witchcraft is primeval and was not lacking even in the classical age of Greece.

, ( it is... that, which, who, whom). it is... that . , . it is... that , . , , , ( ), ; , :

It is language that enables us to communicate with each other.

. ( ).

It was then that the London Bridge began to be rebuilt.

. ( ).

It is Greek that she wants to study.

2 Kitchener , (1904).

3 Curson , - .


(). ( ).

But it is not the Doctor who is the central figure of the play.

() . ( ).

It is when men begin to use tools for social production that they also begin to speak.

, , . ( ).

. it is... only , :

It was only with the help of a small lantern that we managed to find the box.

.

3. . , .

1. Of the countries of Western Europe, it is France that has the greatest number of human fossils.

2. It is no doubt to this quality that the great popularity of this collection is due.

3. It was only through treachery that the Turks had taken Antioch in 1085.

4. It was during the reign of the same Emperor that the Bulgars, who in later days played so important a part in Byzantine history, first established themselves in the Balkans.

5. Schools flourished in monasteries connected with York, Yarrow and Whitby, and it is to these that the literature about to be described owes its origin.

6. But, after all, it is not by means of any tricks or devices that, the remarkable effect of Milton's verse is produced: that surely is due to the genius of the author whose mind and soul were full of music and harmony.


7. All the extensions of human control over external nature have been due to improvement in tools. For it is mainly with the aid of tools that men can act upon and alter the material world around them.

8. In 1681 John Dryden wrote his four celebrated Satyres, which brought him into still greater prominence in society and at Court. It is largely on these that his fame as a poet now rests.

9. It was only with the beginning of that literary movement which we call Romanticism that men of letters, artists and scholars began to turn their attention seriously to the investigation of regional dialects.

 

10. However it is with Leonardo the painter and sculptor that this book is concerned, and though from his paintings one can guess at a massive intellect one could hardly deduce the empirical scientist and inventor.

11. It was to Lyme Regis, the delightful little seaport and bathing beach, where we made a brief stop on our way to Exeter, that Charles II came after the battle of Worcester when he planned to escape from England.

( it is not until... that). it is... that it is not until (till)... that , . .

, until , , :

It was not until midnight that the vessel started. .

, until , , :

It was not until his book was published for the second time that it became more widely known.

, , .


4. , , until , .

1. Actually, however, it is not until the other person begins to speak that you can form a very definite idea of his personality and his character.

2. It was not until 1846, when Vanity Fair 4 began to appear, that Thackeray attained any eminence.

3. It was not until the end of the seventeenth century that France began to produce an art that, instead of echoing the faded glamour of Italy, reflected the lively if equally artificial life of Versailles.

4. It was not till impressionism turned its attention to the nature of light and especially to the colour of shadow that painters evolved a new way of seeing.

5. Although it is impossible to be quite certain of the changes that English words are now undergoing for in general it is not until a change is an accomplished fact that it becomes perceptible changes which have occured in the past throw a strong light upon changes which must be now taking place.

6. It was not till a century and a half had passed after the Claudian conquest that the Emperor Severus marked the final limit of the northern frontier by renovating (210 A. D.) the wall that Hadrian had erected'(123 A. D.).5 7. It was not until seven years had passed since the manuscripts had come into these scientists' hands that they published them with the introduction translated into English.

not... till (until). not, , till (until), , , :

4 Vanity Fair , .

5 Claudian. Severus, Hadrian , , . - 80 .


The work was not finished till 8 o'clock. 8 .

not + until (till) + after :

His work was not published until after the October Revolution.

.

.

5. .

1. The first part of this work did not come out until 1940.

2. Cotton was not introduced (to Japan) from China until later and wool was unknown.

3. Utopia 6 was written in Latin about 1516, and it was not translated till 1551, some years after More's death.

4. Tennyson's last work, Death of Oenone, was not published until after his death on October 6th 1892.

5. In England ancient fields indicate that no plough was used till late in the local bronze age, about 800 . ., and then at first only in the south.

6. Silver and lead were known in Hither Asia before 3000 . ., but neither was used in Britain till after 500, though Britain is well supplied with lead ores.





:


: 2015-10-27; !; : 477 |


:

:

.
==> ...

1467 - | 1394 -


© 2015-2024 lektsii.org - -

: 0.027 .