59.5 Fill the gaps with a suitable word. 1 I don't well. I think I'll go to bed early. 2 1 hit my hand on the desk and now it really 3 Do you often 4 They say she died of a heart backache? 5 She had some apples that weren't ready to eat; now she's got stomach 6 I've got this terrible 7 He died of in my neck from sleeping in the wrong position. cancer but he never smoked a cigarette in his life. 8 I went to the doctor, and she gave me a 9 There are different forms of hepatitis; one is a more serious other. 10 My back for some antibiotics. from sitting at that computer all day. than the
How to protect yourself in the streets.
1. Never walk alone late in the evening or late at night.
2. Always take a torch with you - it will help you to see the road better.
3. If you see strange people - choose another way.
4. Tell a stranger that you recognised him as a former classmate - it will make them confused.
5. Never brandish any attractive or expensive things to strangers.
6. Tell the parents where and with whom you are going.
7. Follow the traffic rules.
8. Don't take a lift if the driver is a stranger.
9. Never speak to strangers in the streets.
10. Avoid having conflicts with drunk people.
11. Don't take presents from unknown people.
12. Don't buy things in the street from unknown people.
1. Никогда не ходите в одиночку поздно вечером или ночью.
2. Всегда берите фонарик - это вам видеть дорогу лучше.
3. Если вы видите странных людей - выбирайте другой путь.
4. Скажите незнакомому человеку, что вы его узнали, как бывшего одноклассника - это отпугнёт его.
5. Никогда не размахивайте какими-либо привлекательными или дорогими вещами перед незнакомыми людьми.
6. Сообщайте родителям, куда и с кем Вы идете.
7. Соблюдайте правила дорожного движения.
8. Не садитесь в машину, чтобы Вас подвезли, если водитель незнакомый.
9. Никогда не говорить с незнакомцами на улицах.
10. Избегайте конфликтов с пьяными людьми.
11. Не принимайте подарки от неизвестных людей.
12. Не покупайте вещи на улице от неизвестных людей.
Объяснение:
English has developed over the course of more than 1,400 years. The earliest forms of English, a group of West Germanic (Ingvaeonic) dialects brought to Great Britain by Anglo-Saxon settlers in the 5th century, are collectively called Old English. Middle English began in the late 11th century with the Norman conquest of England; this was a period in which English was influenced by Old French, in particular through its Old Norman dialect.[9][10] Early Modern English began in the late 15th century with the introduction of the printing press to London, the printing of the King James Bible and the start of the Great Vowel Shift.[11]