М
Молодежь
К
Компьютеры-и-электроника
Д
Дом-и-сад
С
Стиль-и-уход-за-собой
П
Праздники-и-традиции
Т
Транспорт
П
Путешествия
С
Семейная-жизнь
Ф
Философия-и-религия
Б
Без категории
М
Мир-работы
Х
Хобби-и-рукоделие
И
Искусство-и-развлечения
В
Взаимоотношения
З
Здоровье
К
Кулинария-и-гостеприимство
Ф
Финансы-и-бизнес
П
Питомцы-и-животные
О
Образование
О
Образование-и-коммуникации
али394
али394
02.02.2020 06:47 •  Английский язык

Контрольное задание № 1 Вариант 2

I. Перепишите следующие предложения. Определите по грамматическим признакам, какой частью речи являются слова, оформленные окончанием – s и какую функцию это окончание выполняет, т.е. служит ли оно:

а) показателем 3-го лица единственного числа глагола в Present Simple;
б) признаком множественного числа имени существительного;
в) показателем притяжательного падежа имени существительного (см. образец выполнения 1). Переведите предложения на русский язык.

1. Very often parents treat their children more as equals than they used to.
2. The House of Commons consists of members of Parliament.
3. Numbers make the postman’s work much easier.

II Перепишите следующие предложения и переведите их, обращая внимание на особенности перевода на русский язык определений, выраженных именем существительным(см. образец выполнения 2).

1. Most children at day schools have their midday meal at school and go home about 4 o’clock.
2. In 1958 Britain began the first transatlantic jet service.
3. There is a National Youth Theatre with a high standard of performance, most of its actors are teenagers.

III Перепишите следующие предложения, содержащие разные формы сравнения, и переведите их на русский язык.

1. Today Britain is the world’s biggest exporter of cycles.
2. Although Britain is a highly industrialized country, agriculture is still one of her most important industries.
3. More than 55 million people live in Britain now.

IV Перепишите и письменно переведите предложения на русский язык, обращая внимание на перевод неопределенных и отрицательных местоимений.

1. In some areas there are middle schools for children of about 9 to 13 who then move to senior (выпускной, старший, последний) comprehensive schools.
2. Do you know any names of Britain’s famous writers, poets, musicians, actors and singers?
3. “There is no place like home” – the English say.

V Перепишите следующие предложения, определите в них видовременные формы глаголов и укажите их инфинитив; переведите предложения на русский язык (см. образец выполнения 3).

1. The English are a nation of stay-at-home.
2. The Greeks were pioneers in the theatre.
3. The government gives financial help in the form of a pension but in the future it will be more and more difficult for the nation economy to support the increasing number of elderly.

VI. Прочитайте и устно переведите на русский язык 1-3 абзацы текста. Перепишите и письменно переведите 1 и 2 абзацы.

WHO ARE THE BRITISH
1. Most people are English, Scottish or Welsh, but in some British cities you can meet people of many different nationalities. But is Britain a cosmopolitan society? It really depends on where you go. In 1991 5,5 per cent of the 57 million population described themselves as belonging to an ethnic minority. Most members of ethnic minorities live in the South – East. In Greater London, they represent 20 per cent of the population.
2. People have been coming to Britain for centuries: some to get a better life, some to escape natural disasters, some as political or religious refugees. Many Irish people came to England in 1845 to escape famine1, but usually they came to find work. Most of the roads, railways and canals built in the nineteenth century were made by Irish workers.
3. The greatest wave of immigration was in the 1950’s and 1960’s. This happened not only in Britain but also throughout Western Europe. Many companies needed people for unskilled or semi–skilled jobs. Britain advertised2 particularly in the English – speaking islands of the Caribbean, for2 people to come to Britain and work. Other people came from Pakistan, Bangladesh, India and Hong Kong.
4. The number of people asking to settle in Britain is rising, but Britain, since 1971, has reduced the number of people (coming from outside Europe) which it allows to stay. Many people in Britain, in spite of anti – racist – laws, blame unemployment and poor housing3 on “immigrants”.

Пояснения к тексту:
1. зд. не умереть с голода
2. зд. приглашать через рекламу
3. зд. плохое жилье

VII. Прочитайте 4-й абзац и вопрос к нему. Из приведенных вариантов ответа укажите номер предложения, содержащего правильный ответ на поставленный вопрос:
Why has Britain reduced the number of people coming from outside Europe which it allows to stay?
1)… because of unemployment.
2)… because of unemployment and poor housing.

👇
Открыть все ответы
Ответ:
alekskholod01
alekskholod01
02.02.2020
There is an ancient oriental tale about three smart, beloved by fate, lucky princes, wandering around the world and sometimes by chance, and more often due to their intelligence, dexterity and ingenuity, they found wonderful and useful things that they, in general, were not looking for. Princes came from the Serendip principality (as the Arabs in ancient times called the island Ceylon). There was even the term "serendipnost" - the gift of finding valuable or pleasant things that are not looking for.
Serendipnost characteristic of a true scientist. In science, they are often looking for one thing, and due to chance, a happy coincidence of circumstances and insight, they find something completely different, sometimes even more important. True, the history of science testifies that this gift, as in the ancient fairy tale, inspired and deep minds are rewarded, that only brilliant insight and excellent preparation make it possible not to indifferently pass by a happy event, but to translate it into a discovery. Thus, the case, as it were, is no longer a case, and the serendipnost is not just a happy coincidence ...
4,5(47 оценок)
Ответ:
magomedov254
magomedov254
02.02.2020

There is an ancient oriental tale about three smart, beloved by fate, lucky princes, wandering around the world and sometimes by chance, and more often due to their intelligence, dexterity and ingenuity, they found wonderful and useful things that they, in general, were not looking for. The princes came from the Serendip principality (as the Arabs in ancient times called the island Ceylon). There was even the term "serendipnost" - the gift of finding valuable or pleasant things that are not looking for.


 In science, they are often looking for one thing, and due to chance, a happy coincidence of circumstances and insight, they find something completely different, sometimes even more important. Truly, the history of science, that it is a gift, as in the ancient tale, inspired and deep minds are rewarded, that only brilliant insight and excellent preparation do not indifferently pass by a happy event, but turn it into a discovery. Thus, the case, as it were, is no longer a case, and the is not just a happy coincidence ...


We will not give examples about a falling apple, a “eureka” about the water that has been pushed out of the bath, a strange blue glow that suddenly flickered in the darkness of a laboratory closet and marked the beginning of a whole section in science. Suffice it to recall the fascinating history of the discovery and study of elements heavier than the heaviest, "closing" leaf of Mendeleev uranium, the history of the first created human synthetic elements that long ago disappeared from the face of the Earth or did not exist at all.


Actually it all started with serendipness on that sunny morning of 1935. Under the low cool arches of the ancient building of the University of Rome, young Enrico Fermi, already then a world-renowned physicist, with four closest friends and collaborators Edoardo Amaldi, Oscar d'Agostino, Franca Rasetti and Emilio Segre, frozen with amazement, contemplated the “handiwork” of a simple experimental chamber, in which, as it seemed, they had succeeded in creating new elements heavier than uranium as a result of bombardment with neutrons.


A small hermetic glass tube served as a neutron gun. It contained beryllium powder and radioactive gas — radon, which emits, like radium, alpha particles (helium nuclei), which are necessary to produce the components of neutrons. Alpha particles, about one in a hundred thousand, getting into the nucleus of the beryllium atom, combine with it, generating the nucleus of the carbon atom and releasing the neutron. Free neutrons require assistance in the training mode, allowing to penetrate into the main citadel of nature - the atomic nucleus.


Farms and other physicists by then already knew very well that the atom - the main building material of nature - is 99.999999999 percent free space. In a neutral atom, negatively charged light particles - electrons - move in external orbits around a positively charged nucleus, the volume of which is about one trillion parts of the atom and less.


In the nucleus, almost the entire mass of the atom is concentrated, and the density of its block is of colossal size (240 trillion grams per cubic centimeter) A cubic millimeter of matter with a density of life of matter would weigh approximately 100 thousand tons. If ordinary houses consisted of only atomic nuclei, then fifteen standard ten-storey houses would weigh as much as the entire globe.


It is known that the atomic nucleus consists of positive charged heavy objects of particles and prototypes. The number of protons in the nucleus determines its charge, as well as the number and arrangement of orbital electrons, which compensate for the positive charge of the nucleus, and the atom as a whole remains neutral. The number and arrangement of electrons in orbit completely determine all chemical properties of an atom, all innumerable combinations of elements, all chemical reactions that underlie an infinite variety of the living and nonliving world. These electrons and the place of the chemical element in the periodic table. The periodic system has ceased to be an empirical law of chemistry. Having obtained a reliable basis in the theory of the structure of atoms, it acquired a simple but very essential physical meaning and became the basis of the law of atomic physics. On the basis of the scientific data known today, it is perhaps not an exaggeration to assert that this is the only universal and simple enough to be universal, law of the structure of a substance discovered by man.


Even mushrooms should be sought, guided by some rule, ”the founder of the periodic law, D.I.Mendeleev, joked. The found principles of the structure of matter open up dozens of ways for people to search for and create at will new building materials of the Universe, opened the door to the magical kitchen of nature.

4,4(62 оценок)
Это интересно:
Новые ответы от MOGZ: Английский язык
logo
Вход Регистрация
Что ты хочешь узнать?
Спроси Mozg
Открыть лучший ответ