вставьте артикль, где необходимо. the russia is such large country that when it is night in one part of country, it is day in another part, when it is winter in one part of country, it is already summer in another. imagine it is the beginning of may now. it is spring in st. petersburg the weather is fine. it is still cool at night, but it is quite warm in the afternoon. it sometimes rains, but rain is warm, too. the ground is covered with the soft green grass, and trees are covered with the green leaves. but while it is spring in st. petersburg, it is still winter in the north of our country at the beginning of may, here it is cold and sometimes frosty, the rivers andthe seas are covered with ice. the ice does not melt in some places even in summer. ground is covered with the deep snow. in the south of our country the weather is quite different. it is already summer in caucasus and in crimea. it is much warmer than in st. petersburg. it is sometimes even hot. the sky is usually cloudless and it seldom rains here. people wear the summer clothes. вставьте артикль, где необходимо.россия такая большая страна, что когда он ночью в одной части страны, это день, в другую часть, когда он зимой в одной части страны, то уже летом в другую. представьте себе, что это начало мая сейчас. это весна в санкт-петербурге хорошая погода. он по-прежнему прохладно ночью, но это довольно теплым днем. иногда дождь, но дождь теплый, тоже.земля покрыта мягкой зеленой травы, и деревья, покрытые зелеными листьями. но в то время это весна в санкт-петербурге, это еще зимой на севере нашей страны в начале мая, здесь холодно, а иногда и морозная, море рек сюжету покрыты льдом.лед не тает в некоторых местах даже летом. земля покрыта глубоким снегом. на юге нашей страны погода совсем другая. это уже летом на кавказе и в крыму. это намного теплее, чем в санкт-петербурге. иногда бывает даже жарко.небо безоблачное, как правило, и оно редко дожди здесь. люди носят летней одежды.
Объяснение:
NZ is a constitutional monarchy with a parliamentary system of government. This means that our head of state is a sovereign (currently Queen Elizabeth II). The Queen is represented in NZ by the Governor-General, Dame Patsy Reddy.
The Governor-General
NZ uses a Mixed Member Proportional (MMP) voting system which makes it unlikely that any one political party (eg National, Labour, Greens) will win a majority of the seats in the House. The party with the most votes usually needs to form a coalition or agreement with another party or parties.
MMP voting system
NZ also uses the system of ‘responsible government’. This means government can only be made up of Ministers who are first elected members of the House of Representatives. The government can only stay in power while it has a majority of members in the House of Representatives. This is known as having the confidence of the House.
Our system of government
The system of government works by having 3 separate branches of government. This ‘separation of powers’ makes sure no one part of government has too much power.
The different branches of government
New Zealand’s 3 branches of government
The legislature (Parliament)
This is the House of Representatives (where all the MPs sit) and it includes select committees.
Members of Parliament (MPs)
The House’s role is to:
supply the government (the political party or parties in power) with MPs
make new laws and update old ones by carefully looking at and talking about bills -which become laws when they’re passed
represent New Zealanders by giving a voice to different ideas from people and organisations
examine and approve the government’s taxes and spending
check the actions of the Executive.
The Executive branch
This is the Government. It runs the country and makes day-to-day decisions on how and what NZ should spend its money on. It brings proposed laws to parliament, and decides policies which get put into practice by government departments.
It is made up of Ministers of the Crown supported by government agencies.
List of Ministers
The judiciary
The judiciary are judges and the courts. Judges interpret the law in cases that come before the courts by hearing and deciding cases, and they can review decisions of government.