Предмет: Русский язык, автор: Аноним

Составить 10 предложений со словами
Лиловый
Фиолетовый

Ответы

Автор ответа: SVETA1951TIT
9
Мне купили лиловые брюки.
У меня есть фиолетовый маркер.
Маме подарили лиловый цветок.
Я принесла фиолетовый шарик.
Бабушка испачкалась лиловой краской.
Я подняла с земли фиолетовый бантик.
На дереве висела лиловая лента.
Дедушке подарили фиолетовый галстук.
Мне нравится лиловый цвет.
Как красивое фиолетовое платье.
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Предмет: Английский язык, автор: Аноним
30. Read the text and make up five special questions.
The original British fast food
Long before the Big Mac was invented, Britain had its own national form of fast food. "When I was a young man, it was the sort of thing you'd have once or twice a week," remembers 82-year old Arthur Mowbrey. "Sixty years ago, you'd get a full size portion of cod and chips for sixpence. It was cheap, and good." Fish 'n' chips was nourishing too. It was a proper meal, that you could eat in the street on your way home from work, or during the lunch-break. Wrapped in newspaper, it would keep warm to the last chip, even on the coldest days of the year. Thousands of chip shops, however, have closed in the last twenty-five years. Some have been turned into Chinese or Indian take-aways, others have just closed. They have survived best in seaside towns, where the fish is really fresh, and people visit them more as a tradition than for any other reason. Yet nothing, perhaps, can save the classic fish 'n' chip shop from extinction. Fish 'n' chips wrapped in newspaper is already just a memory of the past. British and European hygiene rules no longer allow food to be wrapped in old papers, so today's carry-out chip shops use new paper or styrofoam cartons. Of course, you can still eat fish and chips with your fingers if you want, but there are now plastic throw-away forks for those who don't want to get greasy fingers! Yet in spite of these changes, the classic fish 'n' chip shop could disappear from British streets in a few years' time, for a completely different reason; lack of fish. For over twenty years, European agriculture ministers have been trying to solve the fish problem, but with little success. As a result of modern industrial fishing, some types of fish are facing extinction in the North Sea and Atlantic. "Overfishing in the North Sea has reached crisis levels," say Greenpeace. Quotas have been introduced, but each time there are new restrictions, fishermen in Britain, France, Spain and other countries protest, because jobs are lost. Every town in Britain had its fish 'n' chip shops. No British town is more than 150 km. from a sea port, and most are much closer; once railways were built in the nineteenth century, fresh sea fish could easily be bought in all British towns. Cheaper than meat, sea fish became a popular source of protein ; by 1870, "fish and chip shops" were springing up all over the country. For a hundred years, they were the classic popular restaurant, British style.


please help the question should not be easy please help me ​
Предмет: Английский язык, автор: Аноним
29. Read the text and make up 5 special questions.
Away to school.
Often in Britain, it is parents who send their children to make a new home, away from home. At school. For hundreds of years, "boarding schools" have played an important part in British life. Not for everyone, of course; far from it. But boarding schools are part of middle class culture, especially in the south of England, where almost 30% of all 17-year olds in secondary schools are in fee-paying independent schools. In 2017, over 70,000 pupils in Britain were boarders Many parents (and grand parents) save money for years, in order to be able to send their children to boarding school. "My dad worked as a flying instructor in Saudi Arabia for ten years," explains Nikki. "He saved as much as he could, to send me and my sister to a good school. He could have spent it on other things; for instance he could have bought a big BMW, but we've had the same car for five years, a VW, and it was second-hand when we bought it." According to classic images, boarding schools are spartan places, with cold dormitories and strict rules; but the image is no longer true. "I started boarding when I was 14," says William; "The worst thing about it was the first few weeks, when it was all new and strange. But now I feel much more independent. I like coming home for hols, but I like it at school too. It's not like it used to be, with big cold dorms and corporal punishment! You've got to obey the rules, of course; but that's part of life!" For young people who cannot "go away" to school, university offers the chance of breaking free. While in many parts of Europe students tend to study at universities and colleges close to home, the British tradition is very different. "I certainly wouldn't have wanted to go to college in my home town," says Tom. "One of the great things about going to university is that you get away from home! Universities recruit nationally, and when you apply, you usually apply to several different universities. You choose your universities for the courses they offer, not because they're near your home. I go home to see my parents in the holidays, but that's all. As far as I'm concerned, I've left home now. I certainly wouldn't want to go back home at weekends! That's when everything happens!"



please help me the question should not be easy please help help​