I have a sister. She is 17 years old. Though she has recently graduated from school, she works in a cafe as a waitress. Her name is Tanya. She's probably one of the most beautiful girls in the world. She's of medium height, she has blue eyes and dark hair. She also studies at university. She wants to be a doctor in future. She's caring, kind girl, I'm sure she'll make a great mother when she bears a child. We've been friends since childhood, though she sometimes made me mad when she tried to make me do my homework. I really love her and hope her life will be happy.
There is an age, and let me call that age Golden, when love means to us everything. Who hasn't loved in his life? Is there a human in the world, who hasn't loved or who doesn't? It would be very sad. When a person wakes up in the morning feeling love in his heart, he has the best reason to live. At Golden age (which is between 16 and 25) nothing seems impossible. You think you can do everything. You think you have the ability and the strength to change the world. You just believe in humanity, in everything that is good in life. Love makes people see many things, that sometimes don't even exist. May be it's wrong,sometimes it's just a self-deception, but it's so sweet... As for me there would be no life without love, without true love. In this life, which is full of disapointment, we couldn't do without that sweet little thing. So where love is, all is
Это не он? Тут рассказывается о том, что кто то продает фрукты, овощи. 22-hour workday New York, once the largest city in the world, is now only the ninth or tenth largest. Of its over seven million people, 52 per cent are white, 24 per cent black, 20 per cent Hispanic, and 4 per cent «other». As a Korean immigrant, Lee Chang-Soon is one of the «others». Together with his wife and his mother-in-law, Mr Lee runs a fruit and vegetable store on Manhattan's Upper East Side. His workday starts at midnight when he drives his truck to the fruit and vegetable market in the Bronx. It ends at 10 p.m. when he locks the door of his store and goes home with his wife. Here's part of our reporter's conversation with Lee Chang-Soon. Reporter: Mr Lee, you're at work when the rest of us are sleeping, and you're still working when we're watching TV in the evening. Mr Lee: Yes, in our kind of business you have to work long hours. I spend five hours at the market every night, and the store's open from 8 a.m. to p.m. People here want a wide choice of fruit and vegetables; everything must be fresh and clean - and cheap! Reporter: Your wife's cleaning lettuce right now and you're sorting green peas Mr Lee: Yes. We have to be very quick. There are 15 boxes of strawberries and a lot of asparagus and cauliflower waiting. There's always work to do. Reporter: When do you sleep? Mr Lee: Well, when I get back from the market - at about six o’clock in the morning - my wife and I first unload and store everything. That takes us about two hours. After that I sleep for an hour or so. And I get a bit of sleep in the evening after work ... Reporter: ... before you leave for the market again at midnight. Life's pretty hard for you and your family, Mr Lee. Mr Lee: Yes - but that's the way it is. We want to get on. We're not complaining.