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this museum was used as a zoo,prison and treasury

1-4 класс

Lishhenyuk 29 апр. 2015 г., 10:26:10 (9 лет назад)
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Stas9889
29 апр. 2015 г., 11:46:49 (9 лет назад)

Этот музей был использован в качестве зоопарка, тюрьмы и казны. Лондонский Тауэр

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Koshka210581
29 апр. 2015 г., 13:30:22 (9 лет назад)

Напиши какой музей то? 


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The Houses of Parliament, otherwise known as The Palace of

Westminster, stands on the site where Edward the Confessor had the
original palace built in the first half of the eleventh century. In 1547
the royal residence was moved to Whitehall Palace, but the Lords
continued to meet at Westminster, while the commons met in St. Stephen’s
Chapel. Ever since these early times, the Palace of Westminster has
been home to the English Parliament.
In 1834 a fire broke out which destroyed much of the old palace, all
that remained was the chapel crypt, The Jewel Tower and Westminster
Hall. It was Lord Melbourne, the Prime Minister, who saved the great
hall by arranging for the fire engines to be brought right into the hall
and personally supervising the fire fighting operation.
The magnificent Gothic Revival masterpiece you see today was built
between 1840 and 1888, this was the work of Charles Barry who designed
the buildings to blend with nearby Westminster Abbey. The two imposing
towers, well known landmarks in London, are the clock tower, named after
it’s thirteen ton bell called Big Ben, and Victoria tower, on whose
flag pole the Union Jack flies when parliament is sitting. Much of the
Victorian detail of the interior was the work of Barry’s assistant
Augustus Pugin.
Entrance to Westminster Hall is permitted only as part of a guided
tour, otherwise it can be viewed from St. Stephen’s porch above. The
hall measuring 240 feet by 60 feet has an impressive hammerbeam roof of
oak and is one of the most imposing medieval halls in Europe. In this
noble setting coronation banquets were held until 1821. It was used as
England’s highest court of law until the nineteenth century and it was
here that Guy Fawkes was tried for attempting to blow up the House of
Lords on 5th November 1605. The statue of Oliver Cromwell, which stands
outside the hall, reminds us it was here in 1653 that he was sworn in as
Lord Protector.
The route to the upper and lower houses takes you through the huge
wooden doors into St. Stephen’s hall. The vaulted ceiling and murals
were designed by Barry to replicate the medieval chapel where the
commons met until 1834. From here you are ushered into the well known
octagonal Central Lobby, whose tiled walls are inscribed with Latin
mottos. This is the central meeting place where constituents can meet or
“lobby” their Members of Parliament. It is from here that you will be
shown your direction either to the House of Lords or Commons.
House of Commons.

An incendiary bomb destroyed the House of Commons in 1941. A
reconstruction of Barry’s original design for the house, taken from St.
Stephen’s chapel, the commons old meeting place, was completed in 1950.
The seating arrangement in the house is reminiscent of choir stalls, the
members of the cabinet sit on the front benches while opposition senior
members sit directly opposite. The distance between the benches marked
out on the floor in red lines, is exactly two sword lengths and one foot
apart. Members are not allowed to cross these lines, thus ensuring that
debates are kept orderly. In the centre of the floor stands the Table
of the House, on which the mace is placed at the start of each
parliamentary sitting; this is the Speaker’s sceptre. The speaker of the
house presides over sittings, keeping order.

SAY THESE SENTENCES USING THE VERB HAVE(HAVE GOT).TRY AND USE AS MANY VERSIONS AS POSSIBLE. 1.THERE ARE MANY ACTORS IN THIS THEATRE. 2.THERE ARE NOT ANY

WIDE STREETS IN THIS TOWN. 3.ARE THERE ANY WOODEN CUPS IN THE MUSEUM? 4.THE WOMAN`S VOICE IS VERY WEAK. 5.THERE IS NO TOWER IN THE OLD SQUARE. 6.THERE WON`T BE ANY NEW SETTLEMENTS IN THIS PLACE.

очень нужна ваша помощь!

Say these sentences using the verb have (have got) . Try and use as many version as possible.
Example: There is a wide door in the room.
The room has (has got) a wide door.
1.There are many actors in this theatre.
2.There are not any wide streets in this town.
3.Are there any wooden cups in the museum?
4.The woman s voice is very weak.
5.There is no tower in the old sguare.
6.There won t be new settlements in this place.

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Standard English is the official language of Great Britain, taught at schools and universities, used by the press, radio and television and spoken by educated people is commonly defined as the form of english which is current and literary substantially uniform and recognized as acceptable wherever english and spoken or understood.Local forms of the language are known as local dialects. Such varieties of the English language are very diverse . They go back to the earliest period of the language and reflect conditions which prevailed at a time when traveling was difficult and communication between residential areas was limited . Local dialects peculiar to some districts have no normalized literary form.Regional varieties possessing a literary form are called variants . Distinction will be made between two variants : Scottish English and Irish English and five main groups of dialects :Northern ,Midland, Eastern,Western and Southern. But this classification of the English dialects is sufficient only for purposes of a broad grouping . Every country has its own peculiarities,and sometimes as many as three dialects regions may be distinguished within the boundaries of a single shire

I would like to tell you what happened to my uncle Oscar, or I would rather try to understand it and explain it to you. My uncle Oscar was a very nice

man. Every morning on Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday he usually took the seven-forty-five (7.45) bus and started for work. He went to the bank early in the morning as he was an accountant (and by the way, a very good one). He worked hard all day long and returned home rather late. My uncle was forty-seven years old, married and had two children. His wife’s name was Agatha. Aunt Agatha was fond of talking and always talked too much and in a very loud voice. That’s why I think Uncle Oscar sel-dom had much to say. Their two children, Elizabeth and Julian, were not very pleasant. Both of them were large and loud like their mother. And they were selfish and greedy too. They didn’t think about their father much. He was a lit-tle quiet man, who spoke little and went about unnoticed. He liked music but didn’t play any musical instrument. He practically never went to the theatre or to the cinema and he didn’t visit exhibitions or museums either. Uncle Oscar didn’t go in for sports. You could never see him in the sitting room in front of the television watching sports programmes. Uncle Oscar never complained about his boring life. I knew he had a hobby. He had a very good collection of stamps and he was happy only when he worked on his stamp collection. His children took no interest in their father’s hobby. But I, his nephew, did. Uncle Oscar showed me some stamps and ex-plained that they were really very expensive. Then on the 14th of October 1971 Uncle Oscar got up as usual at six-forty-five, made his own breakfast (Aunt Agatha, Elizabeth and Julian were still in bed; they never got up before 8), left the house and went to the bust stop. Some people who were at the bus stop that day didn’t see him at all. The others were not so sure. They couldn’t say anything definite. But that was the kind of per-son Uncle Oscar was: other people seldom noticed him. One thing was certain, he never got to the bank that morning.
1)Who is the narrator of the story?2)How many members were there in Uncle Oscar's family?3)How old was Uncle Oscar ?4) What was his job?5. Who talked a lot in his family? Who was always quiet?6. Do you think Uncle Oscar’s children loved their father? Why?7. What was Uncle Oscar’s hobby?8. Why was Uncle Oscar’s life boring?9. Uncle Oscar didn't go in for sports, did he?10. Where did Uncle Oscar go on the 14th of October? Did he get there?
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