1.They are visit their friends every Sunday.
2.What do you do last week?
3.We don't to rest yesterday.
4.Do you watch TV in the evening?
5.My brother doesn't read a book 2 days ago.
6. He often goes to the zoo.
2
1.She doesn't know Spanish.
2.Does your father work?
3.My father didn't read a newspaper yesterday.
4.He got up at nine o'clock yesterday.
5.What mark did she get last week?
3
1.There aren't any mistakes in her design
2.Are there any ancient buildings here?
3.They had not any time.
4. I think your plan is the best of the two.
5. This is the largest power — station, I’ve ever seen.
6. Henry is the oldest of the 3 brothers.
7. What do you usually do at the weekend?
8. I'm afraid I can't come to the party on Sunday.
9. I don't like going out alone at night.
10. I'm leaving on Saturday.
4
My house is very big and beautiful. There are 5 rooms in my house. There are three windows in the kitchen. There is a plate and two cups on the table. Next to the sofa there are four chairs in my living-room. In the middle of the room there is a bright carpet. There is a table, four chairs and two lamps in my room. There are two bedrooms and a bathroom in my house. I love my house!
The Loch Ness Monster (, Nessie, is a monster that, according to the Scottish urban legend, lives in Loch Ness.
The first written mention of a mysterious creature that lives in the water of Lake Loch Ness dates back to the VI century AD. In the biography of St. Columbus, written a hundred years after the events in the Ness River.
The Celtic legend of the Kelpi water spirit, migrated to medieval folklore, mentioned during the first peak of the monster's observations in 1933-1934, describes the water spirit of the lake as a horse with a long neck and a very small head. Seeing an accidental traveler, Kelpie lured him, exposing his glossy back - as if offering to bring it - and carried the gullible man under water.
The first documented information about observing creatures on the lake dates back to the construction of General Wade’s old military road on the south coast (XVIII century) - then blasting near Foyers frightened off two huge dozing monsters. Throughout the 19th century, messages came that described the gigantic salamanders. On the whole, the “monster” seemed to calm down for a long time, but suddenly in 1880, with complete calm and clear sky on the lake, it turned over and went down to the bottom with people a small sailboat. They immediately remembered the monster, since there were people who saw him.
In 1957, Mrs. Constance White, who had lived on the lake for many years, published her book “This is More Than a Legend,” which collected 117 stories of “eyewitnesses” who allegedly saw Nessie. The book wrote that in all the stories the appearance of the animal was described in approximately the same way: a thick massive body, a long neck, a small head.
Their room had been tidied by 7 o'clock.