Предмет: Русский язык, автор: Sensor789

Напишите сочинение 100-150 слов мое любимое домашнее животное

Ответы

Автор ответа: NS0710
84
Моё любимое животное.
   У меня есть кот по имени Мурзик.Он обычный кот,не очень пушистый,рыжий.Ему уже один год.Мы взяли его ,когда ему было всего 2 месяца.Кормили его специальным кошачьим кормом.
  Мурзик очень любит играть.Если взять ленту и помахать у него перед глазами,то он начинает высоко прыгать,пытаясь ухватить кончик ленты.Когда ему это удаётся,то он хватает ленту и начинает её таскать.Наверно,думает,что это мышка.
Ещё Мурзик любит гоняться за солнечными зайчиками.Я беру зеркальце и навожу на стену.Солнечный свет отражается в зеркале и падает на стену,на пол.А Мурзик начинает гоняться за этим солнечным зайчиком с большим удовольствием.Даже только увидев зеркало у меня в руке,он уже начинает прыгать.
 Когда я беру Мурзика на колени и начинаю гладить его спинку,то он от удовольствия громко мурлыкает.Это так приятно!
Спит Мурзик на кресле,но часто ночью он приходит ко мне и спит вместе со мной.
Мурзик-очень умный кот.Когда папа его поругает,то Мурзик нарочно берёт его тапки и прячет под кроватью. Мурзик вообще очень любит таскать разные предметы в зубах:то карандаш,то ручку,то даже мою футболку однажды спрятал.
 Вот такой мой любимый кот Мурзик!
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Предмет: Английский язык, автор: mamo61
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Julius Caesar came to Britain in 54 BC. A hundred years later the Romans came again, and this time they stayed for four hundred years (43 AD until 410 AD).
When the Romans came to Britain, they found it a land of forest and swamp. In order to move their troops rapidly, they made roads. Camps for soldiers were constructed at road junc­ tions. These sites of old Roman camps became centres of trade. Their houses and roads, castles and theatres can still be seen. f
There are many examples of Roman influence, it is evident in names of towns ending with: -caster,-chister,because “castrum” in Latin denoted a fort, and “castra” — a camp. The Romans were fond of warm water baths, and the city of Bath owes its origin to the possession of naturally warmed spring.
The Romans didn’t need carpets — they had central heat­ ing under the floors of their houses. So they decorated their floors with mosaics. The mosaic of a dancing girl was found in a Roman villa in Susses. It is over 1,700 years old.
One of the oldest buildings of the Roman period is the lighthouse, or Pharos, at Dover.
When the Romans had departed (in 410 BC) the English swept over the country and destroyed almost all the civilization which Rome had established. The Anglo-Saxonsdisliked liv­ ing in towns. They lived in small agricultural villages, and in houses mainly built of wood.
In the 11th century England was invaded by the Normans. This was the fifth and the last invasion of England. The Norman invasion changed both the history and the language of Britain.
When King Edward the Confessor* of England died, he had no sons, and the Anglo-SaxonEarl, Harold was chosen to the throne. William, the Duke of Normandy who was a distant relative of the late king also claimed the English throne. In 1066 he began to gather an army to invade Britain. At the end of September William’s army set up a camp at Hastings. He promised land to all who would support him and many Englishmen joined his army. William also asked the Roman Pope forhis support promising to strengthen his power over England. And the Pope gave his support.
The battle between the Normans and the Anglo-Saxonstook place on the 11th of October 1066 at Hastings. The Normans outnumbered theAnglo-Saxonforces and were bet­ ter armed. TheAnglo-Saxonhad a small cavalry mainly Harold’s bodyguard, and were poorly armed.
The battle lasted all day. The English fought hard but by late afternoon the Normans were winning. Harold’s two brothers died fighting and then Harold was killed. The battle ended, the English forces withdrew. William became King of England, and because he conquered England he is called William the Conqueror.
The Norman invaders brought with them Norman archi­ tecture (you can still see a number of Norman churches and castles), and the Norman-Frenchlanguage, which over the years mixed withAnglo-Saxonto form the modem English language​