To be: I am bad. She is good. They are intresting. Past Simple: We were playing in computer games. She was walking with her friends. Present Simple: I am doing my homework. He is playing football. They are jumpig.
1. If you can translate this article into Russian, I shall use it in my report. 2. If she's in St. Petersburg now, she will meet you at the I railway station. 3. If you don't hurry, you will miss the train. 4. If it rains, we shan't go to the country. 5. When my friend come to St. Petersburg, we shall go to the Russian Museum. 6. What will you be doing when he comes to your place? 7. Don't forget to pay for your dinner before you leave the canteen. 8. I shall /be able to translate this article if you give me a dictionary. 9. You will have to work hard at home if you miss the lesson. 10. Where will you go when you come to London? 11. The child won't be healthy if you do not give him much fruit. 12. I shan't have dinner before mother comes home.
Juvenal's phrase became popular after it was repeated the English philosopher John Locke (1632-1704) French writer and educator Jean-Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778). All authors proceeded from the fact that having a healthy body does not guarantee the presence of a healthy mind. Instead, they talked about what should aspire to this harmony, because in reality it is rare. Allegorically about striving for the harmonious development of man. Thus, the traditional understanding of this popular expression is the exact opposite initially invest in it sense: people see the second part as a consequence of the first. It would be better to say that the author of this saying tried to formulate the idea of the harmonious development of man, which is inherent in the one and the other.
I am bad.
She is good.
They are intresting.
Past Simple:
We were playing in computer games.
She was walking with her friends.
Present Simple:
I am doing my homework.
He is playing football.
They are jumpig.