44. do/make that $150 altogether. (calculate) 45. What do you do/make for a living? 46. He was done/made mayor in 1998. 47. It must take her ages to do/make her make-up in the mornings. 48. I don’t think we’re going to do/make the town before nightfall. 49. Who does/makes your hair? 50. I did/made French for five years. 51. I think it’s time we did/made for home. 52. We did/made 300 kilometres on the first day. 53. The car can do/make 120 mph. 54. The men did/made off as the police arrived. 55. How are you going to do/make your living room? 56. I couldn’t do/make up what I had done/made to annoy her. 57. In the evenings students are free to do/make as they please. 58. He says he’s never done/made hard drugs in his life. 59. As far as I can do/make out, he has never been married. 60. People thought that the use of robots would do/make away with boring low-paid factory jobs. 61. He could just do/make out a dark shape moving towards him. 62. He did/made over the whole estate to his son. 63.I know you don’t like him, but there’s no need to keep doing/making him down in front of the boss. 64. Nick did/made up a song about them. 65. They did/made him up as an old man for the last act of the play. 66. Are you trying to do/make me out of a job? 67. Have you done/made up with Patty yet? 68. She spent ages doing/making herself up. 69. Women do/make up only a small proportion of the prison population. 70. They did/made up an old cottage in the Scottish Highlands. 71. Caroline doesn’t have a natural talent for music but she does/makes up for it with hard work. 72. This question doesn’t have anything to do/make with the main topic of the survey. 73. I don’t have any sugar so you’ll have to do/make without. 74. I was done/made to wait for hours before I was examined by the doctor. 75. This skirt does/makes up at the back.
Fame Veltistov, the lead author of Soviet children's science fiction, brought a series of works about the robot boy, copies of the schoolboy Syroezhkin - "The electronics - the boy from the suitcase. The Fantasy Story (1964), Rassy the elusive friend (1970, 1971), The Winner of the Impossible (1975), The New Adventures of Electronics (1984, refining 1988); on the first two stories a popular television movie was shot.
Among other Veltistov's works related to science fiction is the tale of the impasse in which the fabulous "fulfillment of desires", "Gum-Gam", 1970 (screened in 1985); and a collection of tales of tales - "One Million and One Day Vacation" (1979), "Classroom and extra-curricular adventures of extraordinary first-graders" (1985). To Veltistov's science fiction "for adults" are: a story about a near future - "A Sip of the Sun. Notes of the programmer Mart Snegov "(1967), which tells about the arrival in the solar system of an alien starfleet, controlled by a computer, as well as the novel" Nocturne of Emptiness "(1988), describing the conspiracy of the imperialists threatening humanity with a climate war; previously published together with the previous story in one volume - a collection of "Nocturne emptiness. The Shot of the Sun "(1982)