Заранее стр. 51 учебника)
1. Don’t read these letters, just look them.
2. Look ! Can you see that strange thing flying?
3. Could you please look my plants? I’m going away on holiday.
4. Why are you looking me like that?
5. Why are you looking your keys? Have you lost them again?
№2. Insert the right prepositions where necessary to complete the sentences. (стр. 55-56 учебника)
1. Have you read any books British geography? 2. This year we’re going to have an exam Geography. 3. The devotion of these people their country is just wonderful. 4. Paris has a lot of wide streets lined trees. 5. Did you notice what room this man entered? 6. I’d like to hear the whole story brief. 7. What marks do you have English? 8. Please don’t argue me. 9. The path ran the forest and we walked it.
№3. Choose the noun or the numeral. (стр. 75-76 учебника)
1. Today you can buy (hundred/hundreds) of kinds of ice cream. 2. Five (hundred/hundreds) tree species face extinction. 3. (Hundred/Hundreds) have been killed in the fighting; (thousand/thousands) have become homeless. 4. Up to six (million/millions) people a year visit Great Britain. 5. The program was watched on television in (million/millions) of homes. 6. Three (thousand/thousands) houses were built last year.
№4. Open the brackets to make the sentences complete. (стр. 71 учебника)
1. It was early morning. Ben (wrote/had written) his composition by that time. 2. She saw that the prairies (stretched/had stretched) for miles. 3. When we came back to the camp, the sun (rose/had risen). 4. Susie (looked/had looked) through the letters before her elder sister got them. 5. He (saw/had seen) a stranger stealing his bike. 6. Ted suddenly remembered that he (forgot/had forgotten) to buy some bread. 7. By the end of the year they (got/had got) ready for their exams. 8. Sam read the book and then (did/had done) his homework.
№5. Open the brackets to make the story complete. (стр. 96-97 учебника)
The Melting Butter
One winter evening a country shopkeeper was about to close up for the night when he (see) a man (steal) a pound of fresh butter from the shelf. “I say, Sam,” (say) the shopkeeper coming up to the man who (put) the piece of butter in his hat. “I say, Sam, sit down. Let’s have a cup of tea. It’s good on such a cold frosty night.” Sam (can not / refuse). For some time, he (forget) about the butter he (hide) under his hat. But after the first cup of tea Sam (feel) the butter (melt) and he (jump) up saying he must go. The shopkeeper (remind) him that he (not eat) a piece of strawberry pie yet and (make) him (sit) down again. The butter started pouring down Sam’s face and neck into his clothes. The shopkeeper (laugh) at the trick he (play).
Malyshev Street. One of the oldest streets in Yekaterinburg. Previously, the street was called Pokrovsky Prospekt. In 1919, the street was renamed in honor of Ivan Malyshev, since it was here in the house number 46 in 1917 that the Yekaterinburg Committee of Bolsheviks was located, which immediately after leaving the underground was headed by I. M. Malyshev, who was killed by the white guards in 1918.
Kuibyshev Street. One of the largest and most important streets of old and modern Yekaterinburg. Previously, until 1935, the street was called Sibirsky Prospekt, but initially it was the road to Tobolsk, connecting the fortress-factory with the Tobolsk province. In 1763, the Tobolsk road became the Siberian highway, and the part of the highway passing through Yekaterinburg became known as Sibirsky Prospekt. In 1935, the Avenue was renamed Kuibyshev street in honor of the revolutionary, Soviet political and party figure who died in 1935.
Bolshakov Street. On the site of the current Bolshakov street once stretched a huge swamp, surrounded by dense forest. Only by the end of the last century there was a suburban street with a rare structure in the swamp, and became known as Bolotnaya. Since 1919, it began to bear the name of a Bolshevik worker-Stepan Bolshakov.
Yeltsin Street. Historically, it was formed in the 40s of the XVIII century. On the city plan of 1810, the street was designated as Single, and in 1845 it already appeared as Fetisovskaya and was a fully formed street consisting of two long blocks. In 1919, the street was renamed, being named in memory of the events of January 9, 1905 in St. Petersburg. In 2008, it was renamed in honor of the first President of the Russian Federation, Boris Yeltsin.