a)him
b)them
c)her
d)they
10.Choose the best answer.
… says in the paper that… are thinking of putting up the price of petrol again.
a)They / you
b)They / we
c)She / he
d)It / they
1) Andy ___________the family car.
a) wash b) washes c) washs
2) Every morning my mother ___________at 6 o'clock.
a) get up b) get ups c) gets up
3) Mr. Black ___________e-mails in the evenings.
a) write b) writes c) writs
4) The girls ___________the shopping. a) dos b) does c) do
5) Mandy and Susan ___________films every weekend. a) watches b) watch c) watchs
6) His friend ___________to school. a) gos b) go c) goes
7) Do you ___________milk in your tea? a) like b) liks c) likes
8) ___________I correct? a) Are b) Be c) Am d) Is
9) It ___________a beautiful day today. a) am b) are c) be d) is
10) John often ___________handball. a) play b) plays c) playes
Read the sentences and underline the correct one.
1. a. I have got a sister.
b. I got a sister.
c. I have to got a sister.
2. a. They’ve have a swimming pool.
b. They’ve got a swimming pool.
c. They’s got a swimming pool.
3. a. He hasn’t has a cat.
b. He’s hasn’t a cat.
c. He hasn’t got a cat.
4. a. Has you got a hamster?
b. Have you got a hamster?
c. You have got a hamster?
5. a. We haven’t got a car.
b. We’ve haven’t got a car.
c. We’ve got not a car.
a. I know the answer; I ____________answer the question now.
b. She is good at the piano; she____________ play the piano very well.
c. This test is very difficult; I___________ answer any question.
d. Maria can speak English but she__________ speak French.
e. You____________ sleep today because you are very nervous.
f. Juan____________ play tennis very well; he is a good tennis player.
The chief conflict in the poem is between Odysseus’s desire to reach home and the forces that keep him from his goal, a conflict that the narrator of the Odyssey spells out in the opening lines. This introductory section, called a proem, appeals to the Muse to inspire the story to follow. Here, the narrator names the subject of the poem—Odysseus—and his objective throughout the poem: “to save his life and bring his comrades home.” The narrator identifies the causes of Odysseus’s struggle to return home, naming both the sun god, Helios, and Odysseus’s fellow sailors themselves as responsible: “The recklessness of their own ways destroyed them all, the blind fools, they devoured the cattle of the sun and the sun god blotted out the day of their return.” The narrator next identifies Poseidon as one of Odysseus’s main antagonists, as all the gods took pity on Odysseus except Poseidon, who “raged on, seething against the great Odysseus until he reached his native land.” Finally, the proem tells us that the Odyssey will be the story of Odysseus’s successful journey home: “the exile must return
The climax of the poem happens after Odysseus has left Phaeacia and at last returns to Ithaca, where his story merges with Telemachus’s and father and son are reunited to face one final obstacle. They go to the castle with Odysseus disguised as a beggar, echoing his actions during the Trojan Wars and enabling them to test the loyalty and values of their countrymen. The suitors abuse Odysseus rather than extending hospitality, essentially sealing their doom and reinforcing the importance of the host-guest relationship in the poem. After several suitors fail Penelope’s challenge to shoot an arrow through twelve axe handles, Odysseus strings his bow and accomplishes the feat with ease, proving not only that he is the rightful husband of Penelope, but that he still has his warrior-like strength and agility. Odysseus and Telemachus kill the suitors and the servants, reconciling Odysseus’s former warrior persona with his current role as husband, father, and king, and confirming Telemachus’s evolution into a brave and decisive leader. In the poem’s falling action Odysseus is reunited with his wife and father, and the poem concludes with Athena erasing the suitors’ parents’ memory of the battle, restoring peace to Ithaca.
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