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Why Should You Never Touch a Baby Bird?

Maxim Akimenko

Exercise 27. Betoken out what parts are detached and by what they are expressed.
1. Now their laughter joined together, seized each other and held close, harmoniously, intertwined through each other'south fabric and substance. (Stone) ii. Huckleberry Finn was there, with his dead true cat. (Twain) 3. We reached the station, with only a infinitesimal or ii to spare. (Collins) 4. Bullheaded and virtually senseless, similar a bird defenseless in a snare, he still heard the precipitous slam of the door. (Cronin) 5. Equally he strode along he was witting, within himself, of a deep, pervading sense of ability. (Cronin) 6. With his easily by his sides, he strolled very slowly and inconspicuously, down the edge. * (Cronin) 7. Ane summer, during a cursory vacation at Knocke, his visit had come to the notice of Harrington Brande. (Cronin) eight. We are very poor, senor, with many mouths to feed, and these fish would make a expert meal for usa. (Cronin) 9. Unbelievingly, his eyes fixed, lips tightly compressed, Brande stared at the advancing youth. (Cronin) 10. He remembered her brave and hardy, wjth a minor-boned eager face up, enriched with weather and living. (Sdnborn) eleven. The girls had met and were strolling, arm in arm, through the rose arbor. (Douglas) 12. Stout, middle-aged, full of energy, clad in a grease-stained night blue impress dress... she bustled backwards and frontward from the kitchen to the dining-room. (Prichard) thirteen. She had become very drab and unattractive, with all the hard work, no dubiety. (Prichard) fourteen. Just, for all that, they had a very pleasant walk. (Dickens)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Do 28. Point out homogeneous parts, define them and say by what they are expressed.

ane. He had lived with this block for several months now, studied it in every light, from every bending, in every caste of heat and cold. (Stone) 2. He felt discouraged, strangely empty. (Cronin) iii. At that place were tangerines and apples stained with strawberry pink. (Mansfield) 4. He came in slowly, hesitated, took up a toothpick from a dish on the tiptop of the piano, and went out again. (Mansfield) v. But I was exceedingly overnice, a trifle diffident, appropriately reverential. (Mansfield) 6. From the edge of the body of water came a ripple and whisper. (Wells) 7. They went side by side, manus in hand, silently toward the hedge. (Galsworthy) 8. The calorie-free oiltside had chilled, and threw a chalky whiteness on the river. (Galsworthy) nine. Thousands of sheets must be printed, stale, cut. (Heym) 10. Opening the drawer he took from the sachet a handkerchief and the framed photo of Fleur. (Galsworthy) II. The Captain was more often than not concerned nigh himself, his own comfort, his own safety. (Heym) 12. Her mother was speaking in her low, pleasing, slightly metallic vox. (Galsvuorthy) 13. And suddenly she outburst into tears of thwarting, shame and overstrain. (Galsworthy) 14. She extended a slender manus and smiled pleasantly and naturally. (Wales) 15. Then, without a word of warning, without the shadow of a provocation, he bit that poodle'south well-nigh foreleg. (Jerome /C- Jerome) 16. Information technology could be smashed past violence but never forced to fulfil. (Stone) 17. Never earlier had the friar had such power and never had his vocalisation rung out with such a clap of doom. (Stone)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Do 29. Analyse the following sentences.
one. His heart felt swollen in his chest. (Stone) 2. The girl [Aileen] was really, beautiful and much above the average intelligence and force. (Dreiser) 3. Footsore and downhearted, they were making their style back to Coolgardie doing a bit of prospecting. (Prichard) four. The idleness fabricated him cranky. (Stone) 5. The prior'south hearty, warm-cheeked face went dark at the mention of Savanarola's proper noun. (Stone) 6. Ah, to exist a soldier, Michelangelo, to fight in mortal combat, to impale the enemy with sword and lance, conquer new lands and all their women? That is the life! (Stone) 7. He said it in a very mature, man-to-man tone. (Warren) eight. Evidently George and the sheriff were getting along in a very friendly way, for all the former's bitter troubles and lack of means. (Dreiser) nine. Together they sketched the apostles, the 1 bald-headed, the other supporting the weeping John. (Rock) x. With all his brightness and cleverness and general good qualities, Mr. Franklin'south chance of topping Mr. Godfrey in our young lady's estimation was, in my opinion, a very poor risk indeed. (Collins) eleven. Suddenly all the differences between life and decease became credible. (Stone) 12. Michelangelo began to see pictures in his mind: of struggles between men, of the rescue of women, of the wounded, the dying. (Rock) xiii. I am a chiliad times cleverer and more charming than that beast, for all her wealth. (Thackeray) 14.1'mnot accustomed to having more than one beverage. (Tennessee Williams) fifteen. Bertoldo, I feel the need to exist lone, to work beyond all eyes, even yours. (Rock) 16. Miss Fulton laid her moonbeam fingers on his cheeks and smiled her sleepy grinning. (Mansfield) 17. Sally found it hard to visit anybody herself. (Prichard) 18. And surely, no man in his senses wants the disastrous consequences of this rush to become any further. (Prichard) xix. To draw ane does not need big muscles. (Stone) 20. And yet, as though overcome, she flung downwardly on a couch and pressed her hands to her eyes. (Mansfield) 21. It was a simple face and could have been handsome, in spite of its saffron colouring, simply for the soft, full mouth. (Cronin) 22. The Lieutenant, without cap, sword or gloves, and much improved in temper and spirits by his meal, chooses the lady's side of the room, and waits, much at his ease, for Napoleon to brainstorm. (Shaw) 23. With his strange, hawking cry and the jangle of the cans the milk-boy went his rounds. (Mansfield) 24. The man and daughter, the mother being dead, brought their letter from a church in West Tennessee and were accepted forthwith into fellowship. (Warren) 25. He could non bring himself to confront Stanek. (Heym) 26. There was a ii-storey new wing, with a smart bathroom between each 2 bedrooms and almost upwardly-to-appointment fittings.. (Lawrence) 27. Her [Aileen'southward] eyes gleamed well-nigh pleadingly for all her hauteur, like a spirited collie's, and her even teeth showed beautifully. (Dreiser) 28. In the afternoon, leaning from my window, I saw him laissez passer down the street, walking tremulously and carrying the handbag. (Lawrence) 29. Amazed and amused, they watched white men scurrying about the ridge, excavation and burrowing into the earth like great rats. (Prichard) 30. He sat down by the oak tree, in the sun, his fur coat thrown open up, his hat roofing with its flat top the pale square of his face up. (Galsworthy)

Maxim Akimenko

31. She was remaining upstairs to give Mary full pleasure of being hostess at her own party. (Murdoch) 32. Information technology was pleasant to travel this style, all expenses paid by "the Business firm". (Warren) 33. One of them fifty-fifty opened the car door for him, with the bad-mannered deference ritually paid in Johntown to the crippled or sick. (Warren) 34. She was sitting there very quietly, her legs bent back under her, her yellowish skirt evenly spread to make a circle on the dark-green grass, her hands lying supine, slightly curled, and empty on her lap, in a sweet humility, her waist rising very direct and modest from the spread circumvolve of the skirt, her back very straight merely her cervix gently inclining to one side. (Warren)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Give-and-take ORDER

Practise two. Translate into English.

1. ����� ������ ����� � ����? 2. ����������� � ��� ���� ������ �� ������ ������. 3. ������ �� ������ ����� �� ������� ��� �� ������ �����. four. �� ������ ��� ����� �������� � ������. ���� ������ ��� �� ����������� �� ���. 5. �� ������ �� ����� � �������, ��� ������� �����. half-dozen. ����� � ������� � ������ ����, � ������� �������� ������� ���. ������� � �� ������ ������ ��������� �������. vii. ��� �� ������ ���� �����, �� ������ �� � �������������. 8. � ��� ������ ����� ���������, ��� �� ����� ���� � �����. �������� ������ �������� ��������� ����, � �� �����������. 9. ��� ���� ��� �������. �� ��������. 10. ����� ���������� ��� ���������, ��� �� ������, ����� �� ��������. xi. ���� �� � ���� ������ �������, � �� ����� ������� ����������� ����. 12. ������ ����� ��� ���� ��� � ������, ��� ���������, ��� �������� ������ ����.

Translation

1. When does the train exit for Kiev? 2. They had only 1 bespeak of disagreement. iii. She did non say a word more on the way home. 4. He was always very patient with children. In one case he was angry with them. five. Nosotros did not have time to enter the room, equally the pelting began. vi. When I went to the edge of the forest, I saw a huge green meadow. I have never seen such a wonderful sight. 7. No matter how difficult the book was, we read it with pleasure. 8. I was then tired afterward the tour that I could non become to the theater. In vain my sister tried to persuade me, I did not agree. ix. Here comes my bus. Bye. x. Such an interesting operation was that we regretted when it was over. 11. I would take more than fourth dimension, I would start to learn Italian. 12. Merely when she was already on the train, she remembered that she left the umbrella at habitation.

Maxim Akimenko

Do seven. Put the verb in the proper place.

1. I could not eat annihilation nor I rest considering of a dreadful aching and tingling in the limbs, (could) (Murdoch) ii. Blanche! How very right you. (are) (Tennessee Williams) 3. Very wonderful she, every bit she bade farewell, her ugly wide mouth smiling with pride and recognition... (was) (Lawrence) 4. Three years later the startling news that he had married a young English language girl of good family, (came) (Lawrence) 5. At last, notwithstanding, no longer in that location annihilation about the suicide appearing in the newspapers, (was) (Calkwell) 6. Outside the window and curtained away the finish of the cold raw misty London afternoon at present turned to an evening which even so contained in a kind of faintly luminous haze what had never even at midday, actually been daylight, (was) (Murdoch) 7. In the hotel where the immature men took lunch ii girls, (were) (Lawrence) 8. He lit a cigarette and lingered at the carriage door. On his face up a happy smile, (was) (Maugham) 9. Somewhere hidden and secret (yet near past) a bird three notes, (sang) (Falkner) ten. By the factory walls the grimy weeds, (grew) (Priestley) eleven. He did not write letters to his family, nor he letters from domicile, (receive) (Stone)

Answer

i. I could not swallow anything nor I remainder because of a dreadful agonized and could tingling in the limbs, (Murdoch) 2. Blanche! How very right you are. (Tennessee Williams) iii. Very wonderful she, as she bade farewell, her ugly wide mouth was smile with pride and recognition... (Lawrence) 4. Iii years later the startling news that he had married a immature English girl of practiced family came, (Lawrence) 5. At last, notwithstanding, no longer there anything was about the suicide appearing in the newspapers, (Calkwell) half dozen. Outside the window was and concealed abroad the end of the common cold raw misty London afternoon now turned to an evening which all the same contained in a kind of faintly luminous haze what had never fifty-fifty at midday, really been daylight, (Murdoch) 7. In the hotel where the immature men took lunch were ii girls, (Lawrence) 8. He lit a cigarette and lingered at the carriage door. On his confront was a happy smile, (Maugham) 9. Somewhere subconscious and secret yet almost by a bird three notes, (sang) (Falkner) 10. By the factory walls the grimy weeds grew (Priestley) 11. He did not write letters to his family unit, nor he letters receive from home, (Stone)

Maxim Akimenko

Do 8. Translate into English.

one. ������ � ���������� ����� ������� ����������, ��������� �������� ������������� �����. ii. ��� � ��������� ���� ��������� ����������� ������ �������. iii. ������ ���������� ����������� ����� �������. 4. ������ ����������� ������� ��������� ��������� 1821 �. � ����� �� ������� ������������� ���, ����������� ���������, �� ���������� � ��������. 5. ������ ������� ������������ ����� �����������, �. � ������ ������� 20-� ����� ������������ ��� ����� �������� ���������� � ������������ (����������) � ��������������� (���������). seven. ������� ��������� ����������� ������� ������� ������������� � �������� � ��������� ����� ���� �������. ������� � ����� ������� ��� ������� � ������. 8. ������������ ����� ������� � �������� ��������������� ���� ����� ������ ����������� ����� ��������� ������, ��������� ������������ ���� �����������. 9. ��������� ����������� ����������� ������ ������� �� ���������� ����������� ���������. 10. ������ ������� � ����������� ������������� 30-� �����, � ��������� � ����������, ��������� ���������. xi. �������� ������� �������� ������ � ����� � �������� ������� ������ ���������� �������. 12. � ����������� �������� ���� �� ����� ����� ������ ����� � ����������� ������� ������ � ������� �������. 13. ������ ����� ����� ������ ������ ������ �������� ������ � ������ ��������� ���� ������ �������. 14 ��� � �������� �������, ����� �� ��� ���� ������ �������� ������������ ����������� ������� ����������������. 15. ����� ������ ������� ���� � ����������� ������ ������� ��������� ����� �������������� ������� �����>. 16. �������� ���� ������� ������� �� ���������� ����� ������� ����� ������. 17. ������ ������� ������� � �� ������ ������� ������� ��������. xviii. ���� �������� �������� ������ � ������� �. �. ��������. 19. ������ ����� ������� �. �. �������.

Maxim Akimenko

Translation

1. Pushkin is the founder of the new Russian literature, the creator of the Russian literary language. 2. Even in the Lyceum years Pushkin's poetic talent was manifested. 3. Pushkin's poetic genius developed rapidly. 4. Pushkin strongly worried near the Greek uprising of 1821. He met one of its chief leaders, Alexander Ispilanti, in Chisinau. 5. Pushkin deeply sympathized with the ideas of the Decembrists, b. In the poetry of Pushkin in the 1920s, two lines of Russian romanticism - the political (Decembrists) and the psychological (Zhukovsky) united. 7. The failure of the Decembrist uprising caused a feeling of thwarting and doubt among the advanced people of that fourth dimension. Deeply and acutely survived these feelings and Pushkin. eight. The historical place of Pushkin in the development of liberation ideas after the death of the Decembrists was correctly identified by Herzen, the closest successor to the cause of the Decembrists. 9. Some contemporary writers Pushkin condemned for imitation of foreign writers. 10. Belinsky continued Pushkin's struggle with the reactionary journalism of the 1930s, in particular with Bulgarin. xi. Pushkin was deeply interested in the life and culture of the Slavic peoples close to Russia. 12. In "The Prisoner of the Caucasus" Pushkin saw 1 of his tasks in depicting the local customs and nature of the Caucasus. 13. Pushkin considered the supreme goal of his poetry to exist the service of Russian federation and the protection of the advanced ideas of his time. fourteen Like "Eugene Onegin", "Woe from Wit" was the starting time example of a poetic depiction of Russian reality. fifteen. After Pushkin's death, Lermontov expressed his grief and resentment with his poem "The Death of a Poet." 16. Pushkin'due south influence on the creative life of the peoples of our country was enormous. 17. Pushkin'due south influence on other areas of Russian civilisation is also great. 18. Anybody knows a swell love for Pushkin AM Gorky. 19. Pushkin was highly appreciated by AM Gorky.

Maxim Akimenko

Exercise nine. Interpret into English.

�� ����� �� ����� ������ ����, ����� ������ ��� ����������������, ����� ����������� ����� �����, ������� ��, ��������� � ��� �������� � �������, � ����� ���������� ������� ���������� ���� ����� ����������.
����� ����. ��������� ����������� ��� � ��������� ��� ����� �������� ���. ����� ������ ��������� ���� ����� ���� ����� ����������. ����� ������ �� ���� ������������, ������������ �� ���� ��� ������ ��������.
� ����������� ����� ���������� �����, � ������������ ����������� ������ ��������� ����� ������, ����������� �� ����� ����� ����������� ���������, � ��� �������� � ���, � ����� ������� ���������, � ����� ������� ��������� ��� ����� � �������� ����������� �������� ��������.
������ ������������ ������� �������, �����������, ������, �������, ��������, ���������, ������ ������������� � ����������� ����, ��������� ���� �������������� �����������, ������ ������� �������� � ������� ������� ����, ������� �� � ������ ������� ����������� ����-����� �. �. �����������.
�� �� ������ � ���� ���� ����� �������� �����������. ������ � ��� ����������� ������ ������. ����� ������ ����� �������� ������� ������� ������. ��� �������� ���� ��������� ��������� � ������� �������� ����������� �����, ������� ��� �����������.
� ���� ����� ��������� ������������, ������ ��������� �������� ��������: ������ �����, �� ��������� �������� ����, ��������� ��������� ���������� � ����-�����. �. �. �����������. � ��������� ������ ���������� ���� ���, ���� ���������� �������� �����������, ���������� ���� ������ �� ������� ���� � ������������ ����������. � ��� � ������� ������ ����� ��������� ��������, ��������� ����� ����������, �������������� ����� �������. ������ ������� �� ������ ������� ���� ��������. �� ��� �� �������� ����������� ������� �������, �� ������� � ���������, �� ��-��� ������ �� ������ ����� �������������� ������� �����������.

Maxim Akimenko

Translation

"I would wish with all the strength of my soul that my music spread, then that the number of people who honey it will increase, they will find consolation and support in it," wrote the brilliant Russian composer Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky.
The city of Klin. A small ii-storey business firm with a mezzanine under the shadow of blossoming lindens. Pyotr Ilyich Tchaikovsky spent the final years of his life hither. Here he created his unique, sounded to the whole world 6th symphony.
And the cleared alleys of a small park, and the edifice, destroyed past the caring hands of Soviet people, destroyed past fascist barbarians during the war, all spoke of the great respect with which our people regard the great cultural heritage of the by with nifty affection.
Thousands of enthusiastic records of workers, collective farmers, scientists, military, artists, students, thousands of excited and grateful words that pay tribute to the remarkable composer, the author of the great symphonies and the operas loved by the people, we find in the books of visitors to the PI Tchaikovsky Business firm Museum.
Just not only in this tribute to the great composer. The memory of him is immortalized past living deeds. Ofttimes the silence of the museum is broken past sonorous children's voices. It comes here little musicians - the pets of the Klin musical school named later on Tchaikovsky.
A touching tradition full of deep significance was created in this school: every bound, at the end of the school year, pocket-sized musicians gather in the House-Museum. P. I. Tchaikovsky. In the sacred walls of a modest house, they, the young heirs of the great composer, show their successes on the difficult path to musical mastery. And in the strict silence of the museum deep, velvet sounds of the violoncello, heartfelt sounds of the violin are heard. Playing a student in violin class Nina Kovaleva. She yet tin non hold a full-size musical instrument, her violin is a one-half-dozen, but the sounds of Neapolitan Tchaikovsky's song flow from under her bow.

Maxim Akimenko

THE Chemical compound AND THE Circuitous SENTENCE

Exercise one. Bespeak out ihe coordinate clauses (mark the elliptical ones) and annotate on the style they are Joined.

1. It was high summer, and the hay harvest was most over. (Lawrence) ii. All the rooms were brightly lighted, just at that place seemed to be complete silence in the house. (Murdoch) 3. One modest group was playing cards, some other sat nearly a table and drank, or, tiring of that, adjourned to a large room to trip the light fantastic to the music of the victrola or thespian-piano, (Dreiser) iv. His eyes were bittersweet and heavy, his face a mortiferous white, and his trunk bent as if with age. (Dickens) 5. He but smiled, however, and in that location was comfort in his hearty rejoinder, for there seemed to exist a whole sensible world backside it. (Priestley) half-dozen. Yous'll either canvas this boat correctly or you'll never become out with me again. (Dreiser) 7. Fourth dimension passed, and she came to no conclusion, nor did whatsoever opportunities come up her style for making a closer study of Mischa. (Murdoch) viii. She often enjoyed Annette's visitor, nonetheless the child fabricated her nervous. (Murdoch) nine. She ran through another set up of rooms, breathless, her feet scarcely touching the surface of the soft carpets; then a last doorway suddenly and unexpetedly let her out into the street. (Murdoch) 10. It was early on afternoon, but very dark outside, and the lamps had already been turned on. (Murdoch) 11. A large number of expensive Christmas cards were arrayed on the piano; while upon the walls dark evergreens, tied into various clever swags of red and silver ribbon, farther proclaimed the flavor. (Murdoch) 12. Brangwen never smoked cigarettes, yet he took the 1 offered, fumbling painfully with thick fingers, blushing to the roots of his hair. (Lawrence)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Exercise 2. Define the kinds of subordinate clauses (discipline, object and predicative clauses). Translate into Russian.

1. Miss Casement stopped what she was doing and stared at Rainsborough. (Murdoch) 2. What you saw this evening was an ending. (Murdoch) 3. About what was to come she reflected non at all. (Murdoch) four. It's odd how it hurts at these times non to be part of your proper family. (Murdoch) five. The trouble with you, Martin, is that you are e'er looking for a primary. (Murdoch) six. Suddenly realizing what had happened, she sprang to her anxiety. (Caldwelt) 7. "It looks equally though spring will never come," she remarked. (Caldwell) viii. I want you to sit here beside me and mind to what I take to say. (Caldwell) ix. Who and what he was, Martin never learned. (London) 10. That I am hungry and you are enlightened of information technology are simply ordinary phenomena, and in that location's no disgrace. (London) 11. What he would do next he did not know. (London) 12. It was only and then that I realized that she was travelling too. (Murdoch) i3. What I desire is to be paid for what I do. (London) 14. I cannot help thinking there is something incorrect about that closet. (Dickens) -15. And what is puzzling me is why they want me now. (London) 16. That was what I came to find out. (London) 17. What I desire to know is When you're going to get married. (London) 18. Her fright was lest they should stay for tea. (Ch. Bronte) xix. That they were justified in this she could not but admit. (London) 20. What was certain was that I could not now slumber again. (Murdoch) 21. What vast wound that catastrophe had possibly made in Georgie'southward proud and upright spirit I did not know. (Murdoch) 22. After several weeks what he had been waiting for happened. (London) 23. And permit me say to you in the profoundest and most true-blue seriousness that what y'all saw tonight will have no sequel. (Murdoch) 24. I understand all that, simply what I want to know is whether or not yous have lost faith in me? (London) 25. He could remember with startling clarity what previously had been dim and evasive recollections of babyhood incidents, early on schooling and young manhood. (Caldwell) 26. It'south been my feel that as a rule the personality of a homo beingness presents as much of a complexity as the medical history of a chronic invalid. (Caldwell) 27. He [Cowperwood] had taken no function in the war, and he felt certain that he could only rejoice in its conclusion � not as a patriot, just as a financier. (Dreiser) 28. He felt as if the ocean separated him from his past intendance, and welcomed the new era of life which was dawning for him. (Thackeray) 29. Information technology was noticeable to all that fifty-fifty his usual sullen grinning had disappeared. (Caldwell) xxx. That I had no business with two women on my hands already, to get falling in love with a 3rd troubled me comparatively piffling. (Murdoch) 31. I just write down what seems to me to be the truth. (Murdoch) 32. Believe me, believe us, it is what is all-time for you. (Murdoch) 33. Pleasantly excited by what she was doing, she momentarily expected somebody to stop her and remind her that she had forgotten to buy the evening paper and had failed to take the bus abode at the usual time. (Caldwell) 34. I dislike what yous call his trade. (Murdoch)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Exercise 3. Define the kinds of attributive clauses. Interpret into Russian.

1. "Everybody who makes the kind of corrigendum I did should apologize," he remarked with a pronounced nodding of his head. (Caldwell) 2. Rachel had go aware of the fact that she was talking loudly. (Swinnerton) iii. He took subsequently his blond begetter, who had been a painter. Rosa took subsequently her nighttime-haired mother, who had been a Fabian. (Murdoch) 4. What we are interested in, as writer and reader, is the fact that publishing in England is at present an integral part of big business. (Play a joke on) five. The first thing Martin did next morning was to go counter both to Brissenden'southward advice and control. (London) half dozen. The invalid, whose strength was at present sufficiently restored, threw off his coat, and rushed towards the ocean, with the intention of plunging in, and dragging the drowning man ashore. (Dickens) 7. He was of a sudden reminded of the crumpled money he had snatched from the table and burned in the sink. (Caldwell) 8. Georgie, who is now 20-six, had been an undergraduate at Cambridge, where she had taken a caste in economic science. (Murdoch) 9. He would speak for hours nigh them to Harry Esmond; and, indeed, he could have chosen few subjects more likely to interest the unhappy swain, whose heart was now as e'er devoted to these ladies; and who was thankful to all who loved them, or praised them, or wished them well. (Thackeray) x. I inappreciably know why I came to the conclusion that you don't consider information technology an birthday fortunate attachment. (Pinero) 11. He walked to the window and stood at that place looking at the winter night that had finally come upon them. (Caldwell) 12. What terrified her most was that she found deep in her center a strong wish that Mischa might indeed want to reopen negotiations. (Murdoch) xiii. Directly in front of her window was a broad terrace with a stone parapet which swept round to what she took to be the front of the firm, which faced the sea more squarely. (Murdoch) 14. He spent half the week in Cambridge, where he lodged with his sister and lent his ear to neurotic undergraduates, and the other half in London, where he seemed to have a formidable number of well-known patients. (Murdoch) 15. I went upstairs to lie downward and fell into the nearly profound and peaceful sleep that I had experienced for a long fourth dimension. (Murdoch) sixteen. "Palmer Anderson," said Georgie, naming Antonia's psychoanalist, who was besides a close friend of Antonia and myself. (Murdoch) 17. She looked to him much the same child as he had met half-dozen years agone... (Murdoch) 18. Rosa had the feeling that she was both recognized and expected. (Murdoch) xix. Peradventure the reason you don't want to goto a specialist is because you don't want to alter�you want to stay equally you are. (Caldwell) twenty. Gretta regarded him with a look on her confront that was unrevealing of her thoughts. (Caldwell) 21. Such light every bit there was from the little lamp cruel at present on his face, which looked horrible � for information technology was all covered with blood. (Priestley) 22. Iii days subsequently Gretta and Glenn Kenworthy's Saturday night political party, which was still being talked about among those who had been nowadays, Royd Fillmore presented a formal jesignation to the governing board of Medical Square Clinic. (Caldwelf)

Maxim Akimenko

Maxim Akimenko

Exercise iv. Define the kinds of attributive clauses and punctuate appropriately.

1. That is all I can tell y'all. (London) 2. He was under the impression that an attempt was going to be fabricated to convict him. (Dreiser) 3. Whenever she came which was often she came quite noisily. (Dreiser) four. The things her begetter said seemed meaningless and neutral. (Lawrence) 5. Then she came to New York where she remained two years. (Lreiser) 6. I opened Palmer'due south shut-fitting hall door which is ever unlocked and ushered Dr. Klein inside. (Murdoch) 7. What happened was the last thing that whatever of them expected to happen. (Priestley) 8. I shook out my scarf which was damp and soggy. (Murdoch) nine. She had no thought where she was going. (Murdoch) x. There were times when I wanted to stop the car and tell him to get out. (Maltz) 11. His hair which was short sleek and black was but visible beneath the capacious skirt of a low-crowned dark-brown chapeau. (Dickens) 12. Just he could see now no reason why he should not fume. (London) xiii. The bar was crowded with men which she had expected it to be and at kickoff she was not able to find a identify to sit down. (Caldwell)

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