Task 2. Complete these conditional sentences with the verbs in the correct tense.
1 She can help you if you
2 If she
(ask) her.
(have) a free evening tomorrow, she will take both of you to the cinema.
3 If you heat water to 100 degrees centigrade, it
Task 3. Open the brackets in the Passive:
1) Many rare animals
2) Large areas of Brazilian rainforests
(boil).
(already kill) by cruel people so far.
(cut down) annually.
(solve) by local authorities last
3) Some environmental problems in the area
year.
4) Wildlife
(destroy) by human activity day after day.
Task 4. Complete the sentences using discover","discovery" or "invent", "invention" in the right form
1 When did they
2 Who
3 Australia was
oil in the North Sea?
the computer?
for Europeans by James Cook.
4 In what country was money first
5 Writing was probably the most revolutionary of all human
6 The
of the atom meant the beginning of a new era in physics.
Alice:It was fantastic!
John: Did you go to the sea?
Alice:Yes,we did.We spent some days at the seaside and then we went to the mountains.
John:. How did you get there?
Alice:By train.It was a through train, so we didn't change.
John:. Was it a fast train?
Alice:Yes,it was a fast train.We got to our hoter very quickly.
John:.How long did you stay there?
Alice:We stayed there for 4 days.
John:.Were you in a double room?
Alice:No,it was a single.
John:.What was the weather like?
Alice:It was wonderful, sometimes a bit windy and cold,but usually very pleasant and sunny.
What was the purpose of the anti-globalisation movement?
What have members of the anti-globalisation movement generally seeked to protect the world's population and ecosystem from?
What is another cornerstone of the anti-globalisation movement's platform?
What do members of the anti-globalisation movement advocate for?
Does the movement itself include diverse and sometimes opposing philosophies of the globalisation process and incorporate alternative visions, strategies and tactics?
Many governments and free trade institutions are seen as acting for the good only of multinational corporations, aren't they?
Do these corporations have privileges that most human beings do not even have according to anti-globalists?
What are these privileges?
What will "free trade" actually result in?
What did many of those involved in the movement show wide opposition to in 2003?
How many people participated in global protests against the Iraq war on the weekend of the 15th of February?
How does the movement manage to successfully organise large protests on global basis?