Предмет: Английский язык, автор: TianDe

Exercise14. Вставьте в предложения соответствующую форму глагола be
1.There … a computer club at my school.
2. There… a parking lot in our block (квартал) next year.
3. In his yesterday test there … many errors (ошибка).
4. There… three new subjects in our curriculum (учебный план) next year.
5. There… a concert at the student club tonight.
6. In a week there … yellow and red leaves on the trees.
8. There…an unpleasant incident here yesterday.
9. There … a lot of passengers in the bus.
10. There … only one visitor in the museum now.

Ответы

Автор ответа: nunny
2
1. There is a computer club at my school.
2. There is a parking lot in our block next year.
3. In his yesterday test there were many errors.
4. There will be three new subjects in our curriculum next year.
5. There is a concert at the student club tonight.
6. In a week there will be yellow and red leaves on the trees.
8. There was an unpleasant incident here yesterday.
9. There are a lot of passengers in the bus.
10. There is only one visitor in the museum now.

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Помогите перевести текст пожалуйста.
A Shortage of Sirs Trying to teach quadratic equations to a bunch of unruly teenagers is hardly the cushiest of jobs. So as unemployment continues to fall, it is not surprising that teacher-training colleges are finding it hard to recruit prospective maths teachers. But there are growing worries that the supply of teachers may be dwindling just as the number of school-age children is growing. The government asked teacher-training colleges in England and Wales to recruit about 2,000 people to train as maths teachers this autumn. John Howson of Brookes University in Oxford, who has just been appointed as the government's adviser on the supply of teachers, reckons they will end up with only 1,500, a shortfall of 25 per cent. He also predicts shortfalls in other secondary-school subjects: 15 per cent in science and 10 per cent in languages. So far, though, there is no lack of people wanting to become primary-school teachers or to teach history or games. Teaching is not the best-paid job, especially for those with degrees in maths and science. But it is not badly paid either. Between 1980 and 1992, teachers' pay grew faster than that of nurses, hospital doctors, police officers and most other non-manual workers, although their pay has been squeezed slightly since. Mary Russell, secretary of the Universities Council for the Education of Teachers, says that it is not starting salaries (at least £12,400 a year) nor (he pay of head teachers (up to £55,600 a year) that pose the problem: it is a lack of mid-level jobs which discourages people from joining and staying in the profession.