1. "You're just in time for tea," said Fanny's uncle as she entered _ the room. Her aunt was just then pouring _ the tea; she took a clean cup and saucer from the cupboard and poured some tea into the cup for Fanny. 2. "What's the good of calling a doctor if you refuse to take the medicine he gives you", said Ann to her friend. 3. The secretary took a clean sheet of paper from a drawer of the table and began writing a letter. 4. She took her hands out of her long gloves. 5. She heard herself saying afterwards to the amazement of her friends: "I simply took her _ home with me." 6. But happily at that moment the car stopped. 7. She was going to take a cigarette off the mantelpiece. 8. She had the table placed between them. 9. She plied the poor girl with everything and every time her cup was empty she filled it with tea.
Bridget and Annie rent a flat in London.Bridget is engaged in fitness with enthusiasm and a "die hard" in the novels with guys.She receives a letter from his old PAL Hector from Argentina, who is planning to visit her that day. There is a knock at the door. But it's not Hector, and Nick – the guy who lives next door who likes Bridget, and he will not be happy to hear about a new contender! When Hector appears in the doorway, he doesn't look particularly attractive. His clothing and behaviour is very strange.The girls leave him with Nick who persuades him to tell Annie that her dog is in the oven and provokes him to work out on the exercise bike for the street, knowing that she doesn't like when someone sits down on it. When the girls returned, they are outraged by the behavior of Hector, and decide that he should leave. But they reconsider when they see him after a shower without old-fashioned clothes and see him as an attractive guy. Nick discovers that Hector comes from one of the richest families in Argentina, but Hector wants to keep it a secret. Now and Nick and the girls really want him to stay.
1. "You're just in time for tea," said Fanny's uncle as she entered _ the room. Her aunt was just then pouring _ the tea; she took a clean cup and saucer from the cupboard and poured some tea into the cup for Fanny. 2. "What's the good of calling a doctor if you refuse to take the medicine he gives you", said Ann to her friend. 3. The secretary took a clean sheet of paper from a drawer of the table and began writing a letter. 4. She took her hands out of her long gloves. 5. She heard herself saying afterwards to the amazement of her friends: "I simply took her _ home with me." 6. But happily at that moment the car stopped. 7. She was going to take a cigarette off the mantelpiece. 8. She had the table placed between them. 9. She plied the poor girl with everything and every time her cup was empty she filled it with tea.