As a rule, I get up at half past six. I put on my dressing-gown, go into bathroom and turn on the bath taps. Good health is better than wealth, so I do my morning exercises. I get breakfast at seven-thirty and listen to the news over the radio. I like to begin the day well, so my breakfast is always a good one. For breakfast I usually have hard-boiled eggs or an omelette, bread and butter, tea or coffee; I read my newspaper with my last cup of coffee before I leave home. Then, I say "Good-bye" to my mother, take my school-bag and go to school. I don't live far from my school, so it doesn't take me long to get there. The lessons start at half past eight. Each lesson lasts for 45 minutes. The classes are over at two o'clock. I come back home, have dinner, wash up and go shopping. I buy foodstuffs for the family. Coming back I begin to clean the house and get the vegetables ready for supper. We have supper at seven. I do my homework for the next day. It usually takes me several hours to prepare well for the lessons. In the evening, I always try to spend at least an hour at the piano. As a rule my parents and I sit and talk, watch a film on TV, read newspapers and magazines. Sometimes, we go to the cinema or to the theatre. Once or twice a month, I visit exhibitions in my home town. I go to bed at about eleven o'clock, but my parents like to sit up late and write letters or read.
The English tourists visited two art galleries and some museums during their week's stay in Moscow.
1. Where were the tourists from? 2. Who visited two art galleries and some museums during the week's stay in Moscow? 3. What did the English tourists do during their week's stay in Moscow? 4. What did the English tourists visit during their week's stay in Moscow? 5. How many art galleries and museums did the English tourists visit during their week's stay in Moscow? 6. When did the English tourists visit two art galleries and some museums in Moscow? 7. What city did the English tourists visit two art galleries and some museums during their week's stay in?
During many centuries people all over the world can't imagine their lives without friendship. Friend - is a person, who helps and supports you in any situation/ It is a well-known fact, that practically every person on the Earth found his friends at school/ So why school friendship can be constant? I personally feel that school ages are the perfect time to make friends. Only then you can live without problems and responsibilities. You can communicate with contemporaries and get pleasure from it. By the way, children can detect lie and meanness better than adults. That is why, friendship in such a young age is the most sincere. But when you grow up, you find new interests, new priorities and old friends lose value in your eyes. Moreover,you and your friends can choose different life's roads and this fact destruct your relationships at all. But instead of all facts, you shouldn't forget about the idiom "A friend is never known till needed." No matter how and where you met your friend: at school or university, pab or cafe, you will always detect :your" person, who will be your anchor during the whole life.
I put on my dressing-gown, go into bathroom and turn on the bath taps.
Good health is better than wealth, so I do my morning exercises.
I get breakfast at seven-thirty and listen to the news over the radio.
I like to begin the day well, so my breakfast is always a good one.
For breakfast I usually have hard-boiled eggs or an omelette, bread and butter, tea or coffee; I read my newspaper with my last cup of coffee before I leave home.
Then, I say "Good-bye" to my mother, take my school-bag and go to school.
I don't live far from my school, so it doesn't take me long to get there.
The lessons start at half past eight.
Each lesson lasts for 45 minutes.
The classes are over at two o'clock.
I come back home, have dinner, wash up and go shopping. I buy foodstuffs for the family.
Coming back I begin to clean the house and get the vegetables ready for supper.
We have supper at seven.
I do my homework for the next day.
It usually takes me several hours to prepare well for the lessons.
In the evening, I always try to spend at least an hour at the piano.
As a rule my parents and I sit and talk, watch a film on TV, read newspapers and magazines.
Sometimes, we go to the cinema or to the theatre.
Once or twice a month, I visit exhibitions in my home town.
I go to bed at about eleven o'clock, but my parents like to sit up late and write letters or read.