Hello from Georgia! How is your deal, how is your doings? I just wanted to say what yesterday I had a school trip to Georgia. We tripped to Georgia's capital Tbilisi, there is wonderful nature and beautiful mountains. On the second day, a guide came to us and began to tell us stories about ancient places in the country. We went to the mountains and marked the many statues that were there, looking like people.
The next day we drove to a nearby town called Telavi. Georgia is a small country that will take 10 minutes to get to another city. There we were shown the traditions and attractions of the city. What I liked.
Sometimes Georgia has a bad picture, when Russia wanted to take away the Caucasus mountains, it began to make air raids. And there I saw the knowledge of the machine destroyed at home. It was certainly scary to be in such a situation.
This is what I wanted to write to you. Okay then, good luck, my friend, bye, I'll write to you later.
1) Are the latest scientific methods used to collect and analyse physical evidence and solve horrible crimes in record time? 2) Did they interview 26-year-old Ben Langdon to find out what the job is really like? 3) On the show, investigators seem to end every work day with a dramatic arrest, don't they? 4) Do they go to the crime scene, do DNA analysis, then go and arrest the suspect? 5) In reality, a lot of different specialised technicians, forensic scientists and detectives are involved in each case, aren't they? 6) Who specialises in fibres and blood analysis, but others look at fingerprints, footwear and many other things? 7) There’s no typical day because every case is different, isn't there? 8) When did he exam in any evidence that had been collected from a crime scene? 9) Did he have the DNA compared to samples from the suspects? 10) Who uses powerful electron microscopes? 11) They also use ultraviolet light to see traces of evidence like tiny fibres and spectrometers which identify 30 chemicals, don't they? 12) Are their techniques becoming more high-tech all the time? 13) Some crime scenes can 35 be very distressing, can't they? 14) Is it wonderful when a case has been solved and your evidence played a role in that?
Hi (Любое имя)
Hello from Georgia! How is your deal, how is your doings? I just wanted to say what yesterday I had a school trip to Georgia. We tripped to Georgia's capital Tbilisi, there is wonderful nature and beautiful mountains. On the second day, a guide came to us and began to tell us stories about ancient places in the country. We went to the mountains and marked the many statues that were there, looking like people.
The next day we drove to a nearby town called Telavi. Georgia is a small country that will take 10 minutes to get to another city. There we were shown the traditions and attractions of the city. What I liked.
Sometimes Georgia has a bad picture, when Russia wanted to take away the Caucasus mountains, it began to make air raids. And there I saw the knowledge of the machine destroyed at home. It was certainly scary to be in such a situation.
This is what I wanted to write to you. Okay then, good luck, my friend, bye, I'll write to you later.
(Ваше имя)
Объяснение:
Было сделано своей башкой. Думаю что я
2) Did they interview 26-year-old Ben Langdon to find out what the job is really like?
3) On the show, investigators seem to end every work day with a dramatic arrest, don't they?
4) Do they go to the crime scene, do DNA analysis, then go and arrest the suspect?
5) In reality, a lot of different specialised technicians, forensic scientists and detectives are involved in each case, aren't they?
6) Who specialises in fibres and blood analysis, but others look at fingerprints, footwear and many other things?
7) There’s no typical day because every case is different, isn't there?
8) When did he exam in any evidence that had been collected from a crime scene?
9) Did he have the DNA compared to samples from the suspects?
10) Who uses powerful electron microscopes?
11) They also use ultraviolet light to see traces of evidence like tiny fibres and spectrometers which identify 30 chemicals, don't they?
12) Are their techniques becoming more high-tech all the time?
13) Some crime scenes can 35 be very distressing, can't they?
14) Is it wonderful when a case has been solved and your evidence played a role in that?