That can absorb many times it's weight in oil.
10-11 класс
|
как правильно перевести
that can absorb many times it's weight in oil.
Что может поглощать много раз её вес в масле.
или
что может поглотить много раз его вес в масле.
или
это может абсорбировать много раз это - вес в эфирном масле.
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TV/stay/why/we/don't/in/watch/and/?
go out with one person.,
1. Is,best, she, friend, my.
2. Learn, different, students, our, subjects.
3.The, is, Russia, o,f the, in, country, the, largest, world.
4.In, the, we, city, live, a, flat, in, of ,center ,the.
5.Reading, is, my, of, best, sons, fond, friend.
2.Напишите по-английски.
Моя книга.Ее ручка.Наша комната.Его собака.Ваш портфель.Их комната.Твоя машина.
3.Перевидите на английский.
1. Та книга-не моя. 2. Эта книга-моя. 3.Это-моя книга. 4.Это ее карандаши,а те-мои. 5.Возьми те карандаши. 6.Я люблю такие ручки, они хорошие. 7.Ваша ручка плохая,возьмите мою.
Читайте также
Writers often travel unpredictable and uncommon paths. That’s particularly – and literally – true for Matt Gross, who had the enviable task of traversing the globe in 90 days, chronicling his journey in a blog and a series of articles for The New York Times.
In May, he set out from New York City to Lisbon. In August, he ended his trip with a flight from Beijing to San Francisco. In between, Gross skipped around the world carrying his messenger bag, aa 28-inch rolling duffel, a host of gadgets for staying in touch, and a list of contacts culled from friends and readers.
Sounds sexy, but he wasn’t on a three-month, spare-no-expense lark. Gross is the paper’s “Frugal Traveller,” which means he has to operate on a tight budget. And, unlike a vacation, his time isn’t his own.
“I’m on a Greek island right now,” he said by phone in June. (He had already driven from Lisbon to Galecia, flown to Barcelona, hopped a bargain flight to Italy, taken a ferry to Croatia, and ridden a bus to Montenegro and Albania. “I’d be perfectly happy to spend the next three days going to the exact same beach and eating food at the same restaurant. But my perfect vacation is not necessarily the same thing as anybody else’s perfect vacation. So I try and do everything. I explore as many of the beaches as possible. It’s this sort of constant rush.”
With his editors, Gross decided to avoid some destinations, and purposely include others. He also wanted to simply see where the winds would take him. “I can’t really narrow it down because in some ways I’m not a very particular traveler,” he said mid-trip. “I don’t care where I go; I’m just happy to go.”
Going Places, on the Cheap
Writers often travel unpredictable and uncommon paths. That’s particularly – and literally – true for Matt Gross, who had the enviable task of traversing the globe in 90 days, chronicling his journey in a blog and a series of articles for The New York Times.
In May, he set out from New York City to Lisbon. In August, he ended his trip with a flight from Beijing to San Francisco. In between, Gross skipped around the world carrying his messenger bag, aa 28-inch rolling duffel, a host of gadgets for staying in touch, and a list of contacts culled from friends and readers.
Sounds sexy, but he wasn’t on a three-month, spare-no-expense lark. Gross is the paper’s “Frugal Traveller,” which means he has to operate on a tight budget. And, unlike a vacation, his time isn’t his own.
“I’m on a Greek island right now,” he said by phone in June. (He had already driven from Lisbon to Galecia, flown to Barcelona, hopped a bargain flight to Italy, taken a ferry to Croatia, and ridden a bus to Montenegro and Albania. “I’d be perfectly happy to spend the next three days going to the exact same beach and eating food at the same restaurant. But my perfect vacation is not necessarily the same thing as anybody else’s perfect vacation. So I try and do everything. I explore as many of the beaches as possible. It’s this sort of constant rush.”
With his editors, Gross decided to avoid some destinations, and purposely include others. He also wanted to simply see where the winds would take him. “I can’t really narrow it down because in some ways I’m not a very particular traveler,” he said mid-trip. “I don’t care where I go; I’m just happy to go.”
3) Are you going to grow a beard or is that just designer st__? 4) First he put on his bo__ s__ and then his jeans. 5) Both men and women can wear f__ -f__ instead of shoes in the summer. 6) Are you sure yiu can walk in those h__ h__?
when it is winter in one part of ... country, it is already summer in another. Imagine it is ... beginning of ... May now. It is spring in ... St. Petersburg. ... weather is fine. It is still cool at ... night, but it is quite warm in ... afternoon. It sometimes rains, but... rain is warm, too. ... ground is covered with ... soft green grass, and ... trees are covered with ... green leaves. But while it is spring in St. Petersburg, it is still winter in ... north of our country at ... beginning of ... May, Here it is cold and sometimes frosty, ... rivers and ... seas are covered with ... ice. ... ice does not melt in some places even in summer. ... ground is covered with ... deep snow. In ... south of our country ... weather is quite different. It is already summer in ... Caucasus and in ... Crimea. It is much warmer than in St. Petersburg. It is sometimes even hot. ... sky is usually cloudless and it seldom rains here. People wear ... summer clothes.
it borders on...in the...
the main rivers are ...,the largest lake is
the highest point is ... in ... . It's... .