Предмет: Английский язык, автор: BRAWLBOSS228

I prefer ___ to ice skating. *

1 балл

snowboarding

to snowboarding

to snowboard

snowboard

2. I wanted ___ alone but Alan insisted on ___ with me. *

1 балл

to go / coming

going / coming

to go / to come

to go / to coming

3. Remember ___ the letter. Otherwise Aziza won’t get it by Friday. *

1 балл

to sending

send

to send

sending

Questions 4-7: read the text and answer the questions.Football changes girls' lives in rural KenyaA. The sound of girls playing football and clapping wildly when they score goals is not a sound often heard in rural Kenya. But here in the Kilifi district, north of the city of Mombasa, it has become fairly common. In this region, some 3,000 girls play football.B. Today, on a dusty pitch in the village of Sokoke, 22 girls are playing in a training session, half in blue shirts, and half in red ones. Many are barefoot. The weather is very hot but the girls are constantly in motion.C. But these girls are learning a lot more than just how to pass, kick and score; they are learning how to think in new ways, ways that are unusual for young women in this part of the world. "It is about a teenage girl realizing her goals in life, making her own decisions, including sexual decisions," Margaret Belewa, program manager of the Moving the Goalposts project, said. "Most of the times, those decisions are made by the parents or by the husband. How can we help her so that she can take control of her life?".D. 'We can do it' is the slogan of an organization in Kenya called Moving The Goalposts. It uses football to increase self-confidence in girls in Kenya and aims for nothing less than changes in the society.E. Moving the Goalposts (MTG) aims to empower girls and young women in Kilifi, one of the poorest districts in Kenya, through football.

4. What is the correct order of the paragraphs for this text? *

1 балл

Вариант 2

D, A, B, C, E.

D, A, C, B, E.

D, B, C, A, E.

5. Which proper name is not mentioned in this article? *

1 балл

Sokoke

Kenya

Japan

Margaret

6. What is the slogan of an organization in Kenya called Moving The Goalposts? *

1 балл

Never back down.

Just do it.

We can do it.

Never give up.

7. What colours were used for girls’ shirts? *

1 балл

None

Both

Blue

Red

8. In Kilifi district around three hundred girls play football. *

1 балл

Correct

Not mentioned

Incorrect

9. MTG is the name of organization. *

1 балл

Not mentioned

Correct

Incorrect

10. America helps Kenya for improving and developing their organization. *

1 балл

Correct

Not mentioned

Incorrect

I prefer ___ to ice skating. *

1 балл

snowboarding

to snowboarding

to snowboard

snowboard

2. I wanted ___ alone but Alan insisted on ___ with me. *

1 балл

to go / coming

going / coming

to go / to come

to go / to coming

3. Remember ___ the letter. Otherwise Aziza won’t get it by Friday. *

1 балл

to sending

send

to send

sending

Questions 4-7:
4. What is the correct order of the paragraphs for this text? *

1 балл

Вариант 2

D, A, B, C, E.

D, A, C, B, E.

D, B, C, A, E.

5. Which proper name is not mentioned in this article? *

1 балл

Sokoke

Kenya

Japan

Margaret

6. What is the slogan of an organization in Kenya called Moving The Goalposts? *

1 балл

Never back down.

Just do it.

We can do it.

Never give up.

7. What colours were used for girls’ shirts? *

1 балл

None

Both

Blue

Red

8. In Kilifi district around three hundred girls play football. *

1 балл

Correct

Not mentioned

Incorrect

9. MTG is the name of organization. *

1 балл

Not mentioned

Correct

Incorrect

10. America helps Kenya for improving and developing their organization. *

1 балл

Correct

Not mentioned

Incorrect​

Ответы

Автор ответа: Весёлаядевчонка
2

1 - snowboarding

2 - to go, coming

3 - to send

4 - D, A, B, C, E

5 - Japan

6 - We can do it

7 - Both

8 - Incorrect

9 - Correct

10 - Not mentioned

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Предмет: Английский язык, автор: Bobrillo
Помогите задать 10 специальных вопросов по тексту.
MagazinesThere are over 11,000 magazines and periodicals in the United States. More than 4,000 of them appear monthly, and over 1,300 are published each week. They cover all topics and interests, from art and architecture to tennis, from aviation and gardening to computers and literary criticism. Quite a few have international editions, are translated into other languages, or have "daughter" editions in other countries. Among the many internationals are National Geographic, Reader's Digest, Cosmopolitan, Vogue, Time, Newsweek, Scientific American, and Psychology Today.

The weekly newsmagazines — the best known are Time, Newsweek, and U.S. News & World Report — serve as a type of national press. They also have considerable international impact, above all Time. This newsmagazine appears each week in several international editions. There are some for various parts of the United States, for the Far East, for Australia, for Europe, and so on. Time claims that although the advertising changes in each edition, the content remains the same internationally. This is not quite true: in the U.S. editions, for instance, there is no section called "European Notes." In any case, no other single news publication is read so widely by so many people internationally as is Time.

There are two other reasons why Time has such international influence. First, several other newsmagazines were modeled on Time. Among these are the leading newsmagazines in France, Germany, and Italy. Secondly, Time also sells news, news features, interviews, photographs, graphics, and charts to other publications throughout the world. Feature stories that first appear in Time are therefore echoed in many other publications in many other countries.

The newsmagazines are all aimed at the average, educated reader. There are also many periodicals which treat serious educational, political, and cultural topics at length. The best known of these include The Atlantic Monthly, Harvard Educational Review, Saturday Review, The New Republic, National Review, Foreign Affairs, Smithsonian, and, of course, The New Yorker. Such widely read periodicals, along with the hundreds of professional journals, provide a broad and substantial forum for serious discussion. Again, a lot of what first appears in these publications is often reprint internationally or in book form. Many of the long The New Yorker essays, for example, have later appeared in shortened form in publications such as England's The Observer Magazine or Germany's Die Zeit.

There is a strong market for such serious publications. National Geographic has an average circulation of over 10 million, Consumer Reports some 3 million, Smithsonian (published by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington D.C.) over 2 million copies, Scientific American (U.S. edition) over 700,000, and Saturday Review- and The New Yorker over half a million each. More popular and less demanding publications, such as Family Circle, Woman's Day, or National Enquirer, of course, have a huge readership and sell over 4.5 million copies of each issue. Altogether, there are about 60 magazines in the United States that sell over 1 million copies per issue each, and roughly the same number with more than 500,000 copies per issue.