1. Summer. 2. It is difficult to translate this text. 3. Day light and night dark. 4. In your room is warm or cold? 5. In may is usually warm. 6. When I get home, will still light. 7. Spring. In the parks many colors. 8. Tomorrow will be Sunday. 9. We will come tomorrow at half past seven, if it doesn't rain. 10. It was ten to seven when my father returned home. 11. In the summer it is warm? 12. In the winter we are not cold. 13. Yesterday was as cold as today. 14. From here to home 5 miles. 15. Winter. Cold. It's snowing. 16. It's raining? – No, but in the sky a lot of clouds. 17. It is important to read many English texts. 18. Yesterday it was snowing? – No. 19. It's late and quite dark. 20. It is difficult to speak a foreign language without mistakes. 21. Far away from here to the theater? 22. It was very pleasant to swim in the sea. 23. It is very difficult to translate such texts without a dictionary. 24. Was it easy for you to get up so early yesterday? 25. How long do you need to get to the University? 26. Tomorrow will be clear. 27. In summer it often rains. 28. In winter, snowing. 29. Outside it's drizzling, put on the cloak. 30. It's going to rain, hurry up. 31. Yesterday it took us two hours to get home. 32. It was very difficult to walk in the darkness. 33. It is strange that he did not come. 34. It is interesting that she told?
The chances of the country’s … have never looked so remote. 2.
She felt so, as if there had been some strange … . 3. … had better
be slow, in order that it may be sure. 4. … like these will make the
devices more usable. 5. As the revolution proceeds an inevitable
class … is to happen. 6. I like people, but when people become
"customers" certain nasty … often take place. 7. The whole history
of knowledge can be represented by one single line of progress and
… . 8. Pure energy, in all its …, is absolutely unknown to man. 9.
The idea was largely discredited by Darwin's theory of …, first
published in 1859. 10. In the opening years of the French … the
two men in Europe who seemed omnipotent were Pitt and
Robespierre.