..... the floor?
10-11 класс
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a)She washed
b)was she wash
c)Did she wash
d) were she wash
Это вопрос, значит нам нужен вспомогательный глагол в начале предложения. Время - прошедшее, вспомогательный глагол в прошедшем времени - did, отсюда
Did she wash the floor?
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1.Many different languages (to speak) in India
2.These houses are very old.They (to build) about 500 years ago.
3.I am sure I (to ask) at the lesson tomorrow.
4.The novel already (to discuss)
5.By the middle of autumn all trees (to plant).
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had a bed, but Tom, his grandmother and his two sister Bet and Nan slept on the floor and coverd themselves with rags.Bet and Nan were fifteen years old. They were twins. They were always dirty and in rags, but they were kind-hearted girls. The mother was like them. But the father and the grandmother were very bad people. They often got drunk and then they fought each other and beat the children
cleaned
E) don’t clean
81. When I arrived at the party, Sam … already … home.
A) has gone
B) had gone
C) had going
D) is gone
E) has been gone
82. When we came home last night, we found that somebody … our vase.
A) has broken
B) had been broken
C) had broken
D) have been broken
E) had been broking
83. Ken gave up smoking last year. He … for 20 years.
A) had been smoking
B) has been smoking
C) smoked
D) does smoke
E)has been smoked
84. We were good friends. We … each other for years.
A) knew
B) had known
A) had been knowing
B) have been knowing
C) had been known
85. I arrived at the cinema late. The film … already … .
A) has begun
B) began
C) had begun
D) begin
E) have begun
86.We felt very when we got home, so we … to bed.
A) had gone
B) had been going
C) went
D) go
E) are going
87. I was very sad when I sold my car. I … it for a very long time.
A) have had
B) had
C) have
D) am having
E) had had
88. When I arrived, all guests’ stomachs were full. They … .
A) have eaten
B) were eating
C) ate
D) had eaten
E) eat
89. Jim was on his hands and knees on the floor. He … for his contact lens.
A) had been looking
B) was looking
C) had looked
D) looked
E) looks
90. Alice woke up in the middle of the night. She … for 3 hours.
A) dream
B) has been dreaming
C) has dreamed
D) had been dreaming
E) dreams
91. Who was that man? I … never … before.
A) have seen
B) is seen
C) have been seeing
D) had been seening
E) had seen
92. Yesterday he … a phone call from Sally.
A) have had
B) had been having
C) had
D) has
E) was
93. I … never … cricket in my life.
A) had, played
B) have, been playing
C) haven’t, played
D) have, played
E) have, been playing
94. Mike had just turned the TV off. He … TV since 2 o’clock.
A) has been watching
B) had been watched
C) was watching
D) have been watching
E) had been watching
95. Ann … two brothers.
A) have got
B) has
C) have
D) had got
E) have been got
96. My sister … long hair when she was a child.
A) had
B) has
C) had got
D) have got
E) has got
97.… they …a car when they were living in London?
A) will have
B) does have
C) had got
D) do have
E) did have
98. Goodbye! I hope you … a nice time.
A) are having
B) have
C) have got
D) were having
E) had got
99. I don’t eat much food. I never … lunch.
A) have
B) have got
C) had got
D) were having
E) are having
2) She's starting ( to sing, singing).
3) she overturned the work-box and began ( picking; to pick) up the articles one by one from the floor.
4) It took him twice to begin ( realizing, to realize) that such a detectives would never find his sister.
5) Take an umbrella. It's starting ( raining; to rain).
and indeed three or four of the twenty staff-members did sometimes use it after respectable hours.
That morning Martin had isolated a new strain of staphylococcus bacteria from the carbuncle of a patient in the Lower Manhattan hospital, a carbuncle which was healing with unusual rapidity. He had placed a bit of the pus in broth and incubated it. In eight hours a good growth of bacteria had appeared. Before going wearily home he had returned the flask to the incubator.
He was not particularly interested in it, and now, in his laboratory, he removed his military blouse, looked down to the lights on the blue-black river, smoked a little, thought that he was a dog not to be gentler to Leora, and damned Bert Tozer and Pickerbaugh and Tubbs and anybody else who was handy to his memory before he absent-mindedly wavered to the incubator, and found that the flask, in which there should have been a perceptible cloudy growth, had no longer any signs of bacteria — of staphylococci.
"Now what the hell!" he cried. "Why, the broth's as clear as when I seeded it! Now what the — Think of this fool accident coming up just when I was going to start something new!"
He hastened from the incubator, in a closet off the corridor, to his laboratory and, holding the flask under a strong light, made certain that he had seen aright. He fretfully prepared a scope. He discovered nothing but shadows of what had been bacteria: thin outlines, the form still there but the cell substance gone; minute skeletons on an infinitesimal battlefield.
He raised his head from the microscope, rubbed his tired eyes, reflectively rubbed his neck — his blouse was off, his collar on the floor, his shirt open at the throat. He considered:
"Something funny there. This culture was growing all right, and now it's committed suicide. Never heard of bugs doing that before. I've hit something! What caused it? Some chemical change? Something organic?"
...A detective, hunting the murderer of bacteria... he rushed upstairs to the library, consulted the American and English authorities and, laboriously, the French and German. He found nothing.
He worried lest there might, somehow, have been no living staphylococci in the pus which he had used for seeding the broth — none there to die. At a hectic run, not stopping for lights, bumping corners and sliding on the too perfect tile floor, he skidded down the stairs and galloped through the corridors to his room. He found the remains of the original pus, made a smear on a glass slide, and stained it with gentian-violet, nervously dribbling out one drop of the gorgeous dye. He sprang to the microscope. As he bent over the brass tube and focused the objective, into the gray-lavender circular field of vision rose to existence the grape-like clusters of staphylococcus germs, purple dots against the blank plane.
"Staph in it all right!" he shouted.
Then he forgot Leora, war, night, weariness, success, everything as he charged into preparations for an experiment, his first great experiment. He paced furiously, rather dizzy. He shook himself into calmness and settled down at a table, among rings and spirals of cigarette smoke, to list on small sheets of paper all the possible causes of suicide in the bacteria — all the questions he had to answer and the experiments which should answer them. [...]
By this time it was six o'clock of a fine wide August morning, and as he ceased his swift work, as taunted nerves slackened, he looked out of his lofty window and was conscious of the world below: bright roofs, jubilant towers, and a high- decked Sound steamer swaggering up the glossy river.
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keeping up with him because he ............. (walk) so fast. 2) Sue was sitting on the ground. She was out of breath. She.............(run) 3)When I arrived, everybody was sitting round the table with their mouths full. They ......................(eat) 4)When I arrived, everybody was sitting round the table and talking.Their mouths were empty, but their stomachs were full. They ..............(eat) 5) Jim was on his hands and knees on the floor. He....... (look) for his contact lens 6) When I arrived, Kate ..........(wait) for me. She was annoyed with me because I was late and she .......(wait) for a long time 7) I was sad when I sold my car. I......... (have) it for a very long time 8) We were extremely tired at the end of the journey. We .....(travel) for more than 24 hours