Select the question with the correct form.
• 1
What you keeps awake at night?What keeps you awake at night?
• 2
Who you wanted to be when you were a child?Who did you want to be when you were a child?
• 3
Who taught you a valuable lesson, and what was it?Who did teach you a valuable lesson, and what was it?
• 4
You ever wish you lived in a different time?Do you ever wish you lived in a different time?
• 5
What type of music you do listen to?What type of music do you listen to?
• 6
As a child, did you like school?As a child, did you to like school?
• 7
When did you first think of yourself as an adult?When you first thought of yourself as an adult?
• 8
What one thing do you always worry?What one thing do you always worry about?
Select the correct alternatives to complete the text./fill in the gaps with a correct relative pronoun
Kids say the funniest things!
As a children's quiz master, I've heard some wonderful answers over the years. In one quiz I asked, 'What is the name of the insect
makes honey?' One child answered, 'The honey monster.'
The best sources of funny answers are usually geography questions. I once asked, ' country is famous for pizza and pasta?' One little boy shouted out, 'Hungary!' I imagine he was thinking 'hungry'. Another question: ' Latin American country do you find tamales, sombrero hats and burritos?' Without hesitating, a child shouted, 'Germany'!
Kids' history isn't always perfect either. When I asked,' leader, whose last name began with 'G', helped India gain independence?', the answer, according to one child, wasn't Gandhi, but Geronimo! Another time, I asked almost a joke question: ' the 2008 Olympic Games held in Beijing?' '2010!' shouted an eight-year-old.
Science questions get some nice answers, too. I once asked, 'Where a rocket fly to?' The answer? Mysteriously, a six-year-old replied, 'A rocket goes in your pocket!'
2. Always a punctual woman, she (comes) downstairs as the front door (is being opened) for Charles.
3. Some kind of public demonstration (is being planned) to take place at the airport tonight.
4. The flight (had not been announced) yet. It (would not be announced) for another half-hour, at least.
5. The message, as Tanya (was dictating) it, (was being typed) by a girl clerk in New York.
6. She could tell by the inclination of his head that he (had been listening) intently to everything that (had been said).
7. It (is) an old house that (is divided) into flats.
8. Julia can’t know what (is being said) about her, and someone must tell her.
9. Each apartment was usually ( shared) by two or three girls. They (were known) as stewardess’ nests.
10. Inez (occupied) a chair in the room’s centre to which she (had been/was guided) on arrival.
11. He ( saw) that the doors of Trans America Flight Two (had not been closed) yet, and a few remaining passengers were still ( checking) in.
Go on jungle cruise, explore tiny worlds, go on a water ride Splash Mountain and eat a home-cooked meal grandmother Sara's kitchen.
Before you return to the real world make sure you have shaked hands with your favorite cartoon characters, you have flown with Peter Pan in the pirate ship through skies, you have gun on the journey in a StarJet.
в грамматике я уверена, взяла из учебника 5-6 классов