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should+ , to.
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Canada was considering a proposal that the Secretary General sound out Paris on its attitude to this question.
2. should ( ) + . , . Shouldhecomethisway, Iwillspeak , tohim. . 3. were ( ) + , ; . , , , ( |
She insisted that they open a bottle of wine and toast his success.
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Such a system is bound to be unpopular among most Europeans, and if the Federal party were to support it, they would undoubtedly weaken their chances in the forthcoming federal elections.
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It would be dangerous political folly to write off as insignificant the revival of nazi-type extremism in Germany.
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It was recommended that a special report should be submitted. This report would give a detailed account of the activities of the committee and their views on the situation.
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Had this policy been adopted, the subsequent history of the treaty might well have been quite different.
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6 . 2642
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Haditbeenaseasyasthat, nospecial , - negotiationswouldhavebeenneces- sary. ( ).
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2. , , : if + , given, provided . butfor + .
Butfortheirwillingnesstoassist, this , decisionwouldneverhavebeenar- , rivedat.
■ 1. .
1. Perhaps it's time that I got one or two things clear.
2. It was better that I should be the enemy, not Roger.
3. I wish I knew what made you engage in these studies. I should have thought your medical profession protected you from any tenderness towards superstition.
4. I wish Charley Dog could have been with us. He would have admired this night.
5. I'm most grateful for your advice. I very much wish I could accept it. It would make things easier for me.
6. The back of his head felt as if it were weighted with a heavy piece of fire.
7. The world would be healthier if every chemist's shop in England were demolished.
8. The Government, therefore, propose that these matters should, in the first instance, be left to negotiations between the Corporation and the Federation.
9. Whoever you may be, Sir, I am deeply grateful to you.
10. It is important that the real situation should be examined because anything which promotes irrational differences between earnings in industry is bound to cause trouble.
11. It is essential that every child has the same educational opportunities.
12. We insist that a meeting be held as soon as possible.
13. A demonstration of 500 angry teachers, parents and students in Birmingham yesterday demanded that the council withdrew its £3 million cuts in education.
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14. The paper also recommended that the eligibility age for retirement benefits be raised gradually from 65 to 68 by the year 2012.
15. The majority of people, be they politicians, trade unionists or employers, are now all in favour of East-West trade. The problem today is how to break down the remaining barriers.
16. It would be foolish to think that all this will be easy.
17. Had the wanderer remained awake for another half-hour, a strange sight would have met his eyes.
18. The coloured believe that if white children had been involved in, the tragedy would have received huge public and press attention.
19. Unemployment of those proportions, were it general, would be a national catastrophe.
20. It is high time that the country abandoned and changed this course while there is still time to do so.
21. If Mars were to be a testing ground for our notions about the origin of life, we should avoid using the same notions to conclude in advance that Mars is lifeless.
22. I was afraid lest my aunt Should be displeased with me.
■ 2. , , , .
"Would You Like Your Son or Daughter to Become a Scientist? If So, in What Field?"
The questions were asked by the Youth Section of the Literary Gazette and a British scientist was reported to answer them as follows.
"I would not like my son or daughter to become a scientist of the kind typical in the world today. The development of science has
already led to many undesirable consequences and is likely to lead to many more unless great effort is made to control the application of scientific discoveries. If, however, science could be developed in a new way to become a meaningful social activity, I would be glad to see my son or daughter doing science.
So far as the field is concerned, I think there will be a growing tendency for scientists to occupy themselves with problems which affect fairly directly the lives of the people. There seems to exist a great need to develop science which deals specially with the problems of how the applications of science affect man. To cite but a few examples, there are such problems as urban development, education and, of course, the prevention of war. If the new knowledge about the world is used for the benefit of man, rather than for death and destruction, the human race can continue to benefit from science for centuries to come."
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Older men probably resented him while others of his own generation could feel so inadequate when comparing their talent to his.
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While I disapprove of what you say, I would defend to the death your right to say it.
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unless - , until.
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Unless changed, this law will make life difficult for farmers.
We always have to wait till / until the last customer has left.
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Unless you change your mind, I won't be able to help you.
If you don't change your mind, I won't be able to help you.
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At the meetings it became clear that unless the union leadership carried out their wishes, the men may form their own organizations.
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■ 1. .
1. Unless paying by credit card, please pay in cash.
2. While admitting that he had received the stolen jewellery, he denied having taken part in the robbery.
3. The civil rights groups complained that while racial segregation was illegal in New York, it existed in fact.
4. In Paris the prolonged Anglo-French talks ended with a joint communique which, while claiming some agreement, admitted differences.
5. As readers of Shakespeare will remember,' Chester was the port of military expeditions to Ireland, England's first overseas colony, while the city's wealthy merchants carried on a rich trade with France, Spain and other countries.
6. While concerned at the possible loss of jobs for 200 engineers at their own factory, the British Siddeley workers are expressing concern at the whole future of the aircraft industry.
7. Unless present trends are reversed, one-third of the 25,000,000 or more young people who will come into the labour market during the next 10 years will not have a high school diploma.
8. The more discriminating and capricious the public is, the better for us, because unless we can meet the demands of that kind at home, we shall never hold on to export markets abroad.
9. Unless the National Coal Board comes to terms with the justified wage demands of the miners, a fuel crisis is possible over the Christmas period.
10. The houses will not be built, nor will the rents be reasonable, unless the land is available cheaply and the rate of interest on housing loans reduced.
11. While skating along at full speed, they heard the cars coming close behind them.
12. While at college, Delia wrote a novel.
13. Unless the management improve their offer, there'll be a strike.
14. I couldn't have got to the meeting on time unless of course I had caught an earlier train.
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I heard a train approaching. .
The train (that I heard approaching), was going very fast.
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A Mr. Johnson wants to speak with you. - () -
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Are you the Mr. Johnson (the famous)? () - ?
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You must take this medicine three times a day. .
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Chelsea is the place for rest for young - people. .
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The temperature was only a degree above zero.
The ship is not the ship that we saw at the harbour yesterday. It is just a ship.
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"Ah! Mr. Burton!" exclaimed the Di- "... () , rector, "the very person I wanted." ".
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did not encourage the idea."
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ourselves. .
■ 1. .
1. Inventions and discoveries have led to the mechanisation of industry.
2. Modern art reflects all the uncertainty and instability of modern life.
3. All power corrupts, and absolute power corrupts absolutely.
4. The discovery of the New World brought undreamt of wealth to the Europe of the sixteenth century.
5. Society today is probably more tolerant of the weak and the unfortunate than ever before.
6. Politics is the art of the possible.
7. For the first time in history mankind has the power to destroy itself.
8. The last Monday in August is a national holiday in England.
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Too often the stories about amazing foreign weapons come from people in - reporters' services or defense contrac- () tors with an interest in exaggeration. () ,
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2. , , tocallfor, toannounce, toseek, tofavour, topropose, todrive, toplan, towage .., proposal, appeal ..
ThePeaceCommitteetodaycalledfor - top-levelconferenceondisarmament.
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The plan of action was worked out thoroughly and in great detail.
A plan of action was worked out thoroughly and in great detail.
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power , ,
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has a few objections, but they are unimportant.
He has few ideas on that matter. They said they have little faith in the premier's promises.
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Pour the water into the glass. .
Pour some water into the glass. .
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A woman came up to me and asked what time it was.
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■ 1. .
1. There was a time when the government leaders were well aware of this.
2. It is time for a decision: without it, in the end, there will be no possible solution.
3. Few other international problems have such a complex structure or such wide repercussions.
4. On this particular morning he sat facing a new client, a Mr. Redginald Wade.
5. He hadn't answered the one letter she had written to him.
6. I was beginning to mix with people of a kind I'd never mixed before.
7. I don't believe he is a Newton, though he is undoubtedly an extremely talented physicist.
8. I looked round as Car stood up with cries of welcome. I was taken aback. Yes, it was the David Rubin I knew very well, the American physicist.
9. It was a very sharp and decisive Poirot who spoke now.
10. I cannot identify anyone. But I could testify that a woman came out of that particular room at that particular time.
11. A 50-point salary structure is proposed by the National Union of Teachers to-day. The new structure will be submitted to the Blackpool annual conference in April.
12. Always a moment came when we had to face the fact that no trains were coming in.
13. I use the elevated word for want of a better one and by it I don't mean learning. I mean the stamp left by blood plus bringing up, the two taken strictly together.
14. A young girl is a very interesting phenomenon, George, especially when she has brains.
15. One does not just communicate, one communicates something to someone. And the something communicated is not the words used in the communication, but whatever those words represent.
16. He had hardly spoken a word since they left Riccardo's door...
17. A cold May is the usual thing in the north.
18. The May of 1945 will always rest in my memory.
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Where is the chair? It is in the corner of the room.
Take your watch... It is on the shelf.
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This is a very urgent case and we shall discuss it immediately.
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It is winter. It is cold. It snows in winter. It is December.
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I find it necessary to look through these articles. He felt it his duty to help his group-ma- tes. | . . |
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It is our University teacher. It is a nice room. | . . |
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, : itis (was), (who, whom, whose, that ..)
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Don't blame her. It was me who opened the door.
It is for that reason that the present book is both timely and appropriate.
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Nottill (until) , .
It is not until November that the pen- , - sioners will receive the increase pro- , vided for in the budget. .
■ 1. , , it.
1. It took him some time to bring home the fact that the experiment was dangerous.
2. Nowadays most people find it difficult to keep pace with the information accumulating in their special field of interest.
3. It is not quite clear at the moment who will see to it that all is in balance.
4. It is not very wise of you to cut your life short by ignoring your doctor's advice.
5. It was only in this century that aluminium was produced in quantity.
6. It is also important that more and more service and auxiliary operations are being done by automatic devices: no longer does the cosmonaut have to depend on ground control for a lot of valuable information.
7. Many people in the world believe that it is man who is degrading and polluting his environment.
8. It is perhaps for this reason that most of the significant experimental results have surfaced in the last five to seven years.
9. It was not until the mid-forties that this problem was recognized.
10. One of the most dangerous products of unjust wars is intolerance, violence and repression in the country waging the war. It suits reaction to stir up hysteria and, in the name of "patriotism", set the jingo riff-raff against those who are campaigning for peace.
11. In a joint statement Mr B. and his colleagues said that they felt it their duty to help the Government to build true unity in the country and kill tribalism and discrimination.
12. The gap between the highest paid manager and the manual workers in any company is, the pamphlet argues, particularly wide here in Britain. It is this gap that Mr N. and his Cabinet want to force wider still.
13. It is the strength of the peoples that can ensure a world without war, without arms, a world of our dreams.
14. It is not until June 5 that the Bill will be published.
15. The corporation has said earlier that it will not negotiate until normal working is resumed.
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We found new methods of investigation as the old ones were unsatisfactory.
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There is only one book on the table. One must know the traffic rules.
One learns much by reading books.
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This subject is more difficult than the one we had in the 5th term.
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