1) Is your favourite pastime different from your friends? What is it?
No, it isn't. My friends and I like watching anime and reading manga.
2) Do you have a family favourite pastime? What do you like to do together?
Yes, we do. We like to go to the cinema together. We usually go there once a month. We also like going on a picnic together.
3) Is going to museums or reading books popular with your friends? Your family? How often do you go to museums? Do you read a lot?
I read a lot, and so do my parents. My friends like reading too. Going to museums isn't popular with my friends, but my family and I go to museums a few times a year.
4)How much time do you spend outdoors in winter? What do you and your friends usually do in December, January and February? Are skiing and skating your favourite winter sports?
In winter I usually spend a lot of time outdoors. My friends and I like to go skiing and skating, make snowmen, play hockey or throw snowballs.
“Climate change” and “global warming” are often used interchangeably but have distinct meanings. Similarly, the terms "weather" and "climate" are sometimes confused, though they refer to events with broadly different spatial- and timescales.
Weather refers to atmospheric conditions that occur locally over short periods of time—from minutes to hours or days. Familiar examples include rain, snow, clouds, winds, floods or thunderstorms.
Climate, on the other hand, refers to the long-term regional or even global average of temperature, humidity and rainfall patterns over seasons, years or decades.
Climate change is a long-term change in the average weather patterns that have come to define Earth’s local, regional and global climates. These changes have a broad range of observed effects that are synonymous with the term.
Извини , но это всё что я смог написать , Надеюсь