люди добрые!
'It's not until you go abroad, or meet people
from another country, that you think / are
thinking of yourself in terms of having a
national identity', says Leon Davies. We talk
/are talking in his new flat in New York. Leon
is British but lives / is living in New York for a
year, while doing a post-graduate degree at
Columbia University. I don't remember / am
not remembering thinking about national
differences in England. But when you are
surrounded by people from many other
countries, you start / are starting to notice
the way different nationalities express / are
expressing themselves, the way they behave /
are behaving, and so on.' I ask / am asking
him if he feels / is feeling British. 'That's just
it', he says. "Now I'm away from home, I've
become a typical Englishman. I have / am
having tea at 4.30, talk / am talking about
the weather, and I always know / am always
knowing the cricket score.'
2. The suspect is being (pres cont) caught.
3. The plaintiff was (past simp) struck.
4. The shoplifters were being (past cont) seen.
5. The final decision will be (fut simp) made in a month.
6. A pay increase has not been (pres perf) awarded in all the judges.
7. The woman had been (past perf) kidnapped before the police arrived.
8. The sentence will be (fut simp) passed after deliberations.
9. The evidence will have been (fut perf) reported to the police by next
week.
10. He hopes (pres simp) to be released from prison.
11. He hopes (pres simp) not to be sent to prison.
Все, кроме 11 и 12 - Passive.