.


:




:

































 

 

 

 


. 1. But if one has any sense of U.S




1. But if one has any sense of U.S. history, one has to believe that both the corporations and the president whose program they are so enthusiastically promoting are on somewhat shaky ground.

2. President of the Association of American Colleges said: We might begin to define the educated person as one who can overcome the deficiencies in our educational system.

3. The winner will be the one whom the voters don't want less than they don't want his opponent.

4. In old age there is a deep and different sense about human beings and situations, one that just isn't possible when one is younger.

5. Dealers in coca or cocaine have their own reasons for palm-greasing, and also finance cross-border trade in other goods as one way of laundering their profits.

6. When one hears such thoughtless declarations, one must realize that one has to face here a fundamental misconception.

7. Discretion is another necessary quality one finds highly developed in interpreters. They often participate in the most confidential and far-reaching discussions, and delegates must feel that they can speak freely.

8. Economic dependence upon a foreign country is also a major obstacle to growth although one that is not always obvious and easily definable.

9. Ministers and Tory Spokesmen have been vague, either referring to maintaining existing powers or ensuring that any replacement House is at least as independent as the existing one.

10. Brazilians see their land, usually rightly, as a gentle one, untroubled by war or ethnic strife.

11. Although Europe produces more films than America, Europeans want to watch American ones.

12. Democratic Presidents are as reluctant as Republican ones to formalize a consultative process on Capitol Hill that the White House might not be able to control.

13. Of all candidates, the one who comes most closely to the people's interests is the one with the least apparent chance of winning the nomination.

14. For those who see East Asia's crisis primarily as one of panic, these market-reinforcing reforms mostly miss the point. Far more urgent is the need to control the capital flows themselves.

15. The notion that there is a distinctively East Asian political form is a less familiar one.

16. None of the new men in Brazil's cabinet in fact looks any worse than the one he has replaced. The new industry minister is as protectionist as his predecessor but far more polished.

17. As the Cuban missile crisis tapes from the Kennedy White House show, presidents have understood that the use of nuclear weapons must be the option of the last resort, and even then, one that is all but unthinkable.

18. His name has been mentioned as a possible future president of the European Commission. This would be welcomed by America, which spent the cold war keeping a watchful eye on Europe's socialists and knows which ones it likes.

19. The agency has required companies that want to build a major new installation or modify an existing one to install the best available pollution control devices.

20. If the endless devolution of power has a drawback, it is one of accountability.

III. That

that :

1. . : , , . .

 

A joint fiscal decision-making mechanism for the EU will not be called a confederation but it will be a major step in that direction. , .

2. , , . : , ,...

 

Voters in the EU are starting to notice that their national governments have less and less to do. EC , .

3. , . : , . .

 

Some voters, notably in Germany, are growing unhappy with a EU's budget that leaves them paying in much more than they get out. , , , , ( ).

 

4. -, , (that , those ). .

 

Increasingly, New York's style of policing is being contrasted unfavourably with that of other cities, particularly Boston. - , -, , .

 

. now that , ; not that , .





:


: 2016-07-29; !; : 600 |


:

:

- , , .
==> ...

1540 - | 1348 -


© 2015-2024 lektsii.org - -

: 0.012 .