If Tom ... his exams better last year,he... so many problems.
5-9 класс
|
A) passed ... wouldn`t have
B) passed ... wouldn`t have had
C) had passed ... wouldn`t have had
If Tom ... his exams better last year,he... so many problems.
C) had passed ... wouldn`t have had
III type conditinal sentences
If + past perfect, would have глагол (3 форма)
Другие вопросы из категории
числе опускается, определенный артикль сохраняется).the star, a mountain, a tree, a waiter, the queen, a man, the woman, an eye, a shelf, a box, the city, the boy, a goose, a watch, a mouse, a dress, a toy, a sheep, a tooth, a child, an ox, a deer, the life, a tomato.
demand for money
5 his need for help
6 the reason for her visit
7 my love for mum
8 on business
9 on holiday
10 on the telephone
(to do) my morning exercises. It (to take) me fifteen minutes. My sister (to get) up at eight o'clock. For breakfast she (to eat) two eggs, a sandwich and a cup of tea. My father and I (to leave) home at eight o'clock. On Sunday we (to go) swimming. My brother (to play) the guitar in a band. I (to do) my homework in my room. They (to have) lunch at 10 o’clock. You always (to listen to) this song.
II. Change the verbs into the correct form. Make question forms.
I ( to wake up) at five in the morning? You (to go) to work by train? She (to drink) coffee every morning? Alexander (to exercise) regularly? You (to rest) enough? What time … you (to get up) in the morning? Where … your friend (to study)? Which TV programmes … you (to watch)? What … you (to do) on holidays? Where … your parents (to live)?
III. Change the sentences from positive into negative:
1. The sun rises in the west.The English Queen lives in Alaska. Manchester United footballers wear yellow shirts. Kangaroos come from Canada. In Britain people drive on the right. He drinks coffee for breakfast. They live in London. My friend speaks English. I like rock music.
10. We have classes on Sundays.
1. Somebody borrowed my pen.
2. Somebody broke the window.
3. Somebody brings of flowers everyday.
4. Somebody will wash the floor.
5. Somebody is cleaning the room.
Читайте также
If Tom … his exams better last year, he … so many problems.
A) passed ... wouldn’t have
better last year, he … so many problems.
A) passed ... wouldn’t have
A)had passed
B)passed
C)have passed
D)would pass
country.
3 If she ………(study) harder, she would do better in her exams.
4 If I……. (buy) this jacket for you, would you wear it?
5 If the team ………(try) harder, they would win the championship.
6 If Bill drove to work, he…….(get) there faster.
7 If I ……..(be) you, I would buy her a scarf.
8 If we moved house, I…….. (miss) my friends.
9 If Julie………(have) time, she would learn how to type.
10 If they didn't like Chinese food, they…….. (not/order) from the Chinese restaurant all the time.
11 If Tom ……..(be) taller, he would become a basketball player.
12 If my father was a baker, we…….(eat) fresh croissants every day.
younger. They were both fine, upstanding, people and their children, two sons and three girls, were handsome and strong. But the master of the house was not George Meadows; it was his mother. Her word was law in the house and on the farm. One day Mrs. George stopped me on my way home. (Her mother-in-law was the only Mrs. Meadows we knew; George’s wife was only known as Mrs. George.) ‘’Whoever do you think is coming here today?’’ she asked me. ‘’Uncle George Meadows.’’ ‘’Why, I thought he was dead.’’ I heard the story of Uncle George
Meadows and Tom, his younger brother, had both courted Mrs. Meadows when she was Emily Green, fifty years and more ago, and when she married Tom, George had gone away to sea. Mrs. George asked me to look in and see him. Of course I accepted. I found the whole family assembled. When I arrived, they were sitting in the great old kitchen, Mrs. Meadows in her usual chair by the fire, very upright, and I was amused to see that she had put on her best silk dress. On the other side of the fireplace sat an old man. He was very thin and he had lost nearly all his teeth. I shook hands with him. It was strange to look at them, these two old people who had not seen one another for half a century, and to think all that long time he had loved her and she had loved another. ‘’Have you ever been married, Captain Meadows?’’ I asked. ‘’I said I’d never marry anyone but you, Emily, and I never have.’’ He said this as mere statement of fact. ‘’Well, one thing you’ve not done, George, as far as I can see,’’ said Mrs.
Meadows, ’’and that’s to make a fortune.’’ ‘’I’m not one to save money. But one thing I can say for myself: if I had the chance of going through my life again I’d take it.’’ I looked at him with admiration and respect. He was a toothless, crippled, penniless old man, but he had made a success of live, for he had enjoyed it. Next morning when I came to the garden I saw Mrs. Meadows picking flowers. ‘’ How’s Caption Meadows?’’ I asked her. ‘’When Lizzie took him in a cup of tea this morning she found he was dead.’’ ‘’Dead?’’ ‘’Yes. Died in his sleep. Well, I’m glad he came back,’’ she said. ‘’After I married Tom Meadows and George went away, the fact is I
was never quite sure that I’d married the right one.’’