Exam card I i reading Charles Darwin (1809—1882)
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- III Essay Writing Internet in our life. Signature of the examiner_______________ EXAM CARD XXIV I Reading THE STATUE OF LIBERTY
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II Grammar 1. I want my magazine back. Please give it to ..... . my mine me 2. I want you to read ..... passage of the text. the next the nearest next 3. It is not clear if the weather ..... for the better, and we want to know if our plane will be late. changes will change will be changing will have changed 4. I like that camera. I am going to buy ..... . she it its 5 The safe showed no sign of _____. touching being touched having been touched 6 How many times have you ......... your house broken into? been had be have 7 We are looking forward _____ hearing from you as soon as possible. – to for in 8 If I _____ more time, I _____ to play the guitar earlier. have; will learn had; would learn had had; would have learnt 9 Ann begged me not to tell her father what ..... earlier that day. happen had happened would happen 10. Lora wondered if ..... in town for the rest of the summer; she wanted him to go to the country with her. her cousin was going to stay was her cousin going to stay her cousin is going to stay III Essay Writing Internet in our life. Signature of the examiner_______________ EXAM CARD XXIV I Reading THE STATUE OF LIBERTY Ever since 1886, when her great torch was lifted into place 305 feet above Liberty Island in New York Harbor, the colossal statue of "Liberty Enlightening the World" has symbolized America for millions of eager newcomers. Many wept as they neared the American shore, recalling all they had left behind and apprehensive about what they might find in the new land. But with their first glimpse of the statue, one Italian immigrant recalled, they were "steadied ... by the concreteness of the symbol of America's freedom, and they dried their tears". The statue was the work of Alsatian sculptor Frederic Auguste Bartholdi and was intended to commemorate both a century of amity between France and the United States and the concept of political freedom shared by the two nations. The book that Liberty holds in her left hand symbolizes the Declaration of Independence. The main figure is attached to an iron framework designed by Gustave Eiffel, builder of France's Eiffel Tower. The statue was paid for by French contributors; American schoolchildren participated in a nationwide drive to raise funds for the pedestal. On a tablet within are inscribed the last five lines of a sonnet, "The New Colossus", by Emma Lazarus, herself an immigrant: Give me your tired, your poor, Your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, The wretched refuse of your teeming shore, Send these, the homeless, tempest-tost to me, I lift my lamp beside the golden door! Download 77.82 Kb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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