Предмет: Русский язык, автор: Svetka88

Кто нибудь помогите только не из нета пожалуйста упр 325 заранее спасибо

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Ответы

Автор ответа: esheshukova346
1
Археолог говорил о новом экспонате
Археолог чувствовала напряжение
Биолог расследовал новый объект
Биолог выходила за чаем
Балетмейстер показывал красивое движение
Балетмейстер записывала видео
Тренер заказывал новый снаряд
Тренер оговаривала новые условия
Искусствовед рассказывал интересную новость
Искусствовед проводила экскурсию
Бухгалтер делал отчёт
Бухгалтер разговаривала по телефона
( без интернета)
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Помогите сделать правильный перевод!!

It's not hard to picture. A friend takes a holiday abroad and brings back a little something from the local area for you — some French Brie, maybe, or dried Spanish sausages. You consume it, likely enjoying the gift even more because it's not available for purchase in Russia. Then you put the wrappings in the trash, leaving the bag in the hall to take to the garbage bins in the morning.

The foreign letters on the wrapping are a dead giveaway to your neighbor, however, who is still annoyed about the overly loud dinner party you threw last week, and reports you to the police for consuming a banned foodstuff.

This scenario remains — for the time being — hypothetical, but the Russian government is continuing to escalate its aggression against "counter-sanctioned" food products. Telephone hotlines run by the Russian Prosecutor General's Office have opened across the country in recent weeks, ready to take calls from citizens about sightings of outlawed food items.

The hotline service is technically for reporting the commercial sale of prohibited food, and the ban isn't supposed to apply to foreign products brought into Russia for personal use. Still, packs of jamon and jars of caviar have reportedly been confiscated at Moscow's airports, and at least one keen-nosed (and, reportedly, drunk) citizen of Vladivostok already called the police on his neighbors after smelling the aroma of someone cooking an illegal Polish goose. It's still legal to consume the banned foreign foodstuffs, but for how long?