1. The shoes on this website are cheap, but costs £15! A stamp B send C delivery
stamp
send
delivery
2.Make sure you have everything before you go to the to pay for it all.
assistant
checkout
basket
3. I didn’t get this coat in a shop. I bought it .
online
inline
offline
5. If you’re not sure about your size, the rooms are over there.
trying
checking
changing
5. If you’re not sure about your size, the rooms are over there.
trying
checking
changing
6. The colour of this skirt doesn’t me at all.
fit
suit
match
7. If you want your clothes to look good, you need to do some !
washing up
ironing
tidying
8. Can you put your things in the cupboard?
off
up
away
9.After dinner I the table and did the washing up.
made
cleared
laid
10. Don’t forget to your bed before you go to school.
make
do
have
11.It’s Monday night, so you need to the rubbish out.
make
take
go
12. I need to a phone call. Can I use your phone?
make
take
ring
After school I go home and have dinner. After a short rest, I start doing my homework and then I am free. I listen to music, meet my friends. Sometimes I play computer games or watch TV. Sometimes I do some work about the house: tidy my room, vacuum the carpet, wash the dishes, go shopping, take the rubbish out and so on. I go to bed at half past ten.
Willard Wigan (born in 1957 in England) is the creator of the smallest works of art on Earth! His miniature sculptures include The Titanic on a pinhead, a cat on an eyelash and the six wives of Henry VIII in the eye of a needle. Some art a lot smaller than the full stop at the end of this sentence.
Wigan started making tiny things when he was a child. People made him feel small because he had learning difficulties, so he decided to show them how significant small could be! How does he create his unbelievable micro-sculptures? He slows his breathing, then patiently sculpts or paints between heartbeats, so that his hand stays perfectly still. He spends months carving his tiny creations from materials such as toothpicks, sugar crystals and grains of rice and then paints them with a tiny hair such as an eyelash. So how do visitors to Willard Wigan's exhibitions view his work? Through a microscope, of course!