• Установите соответствие между заголовками A–H и текстами 1–7.
    Занесите свои ответы в таблицу. Используйте каждую цифру только один
    раз. В задании один заголовок лишний. Перенесите ответы в Бланк для
    ответов.
    1) The Mona Lisa, also known as La Giaconda, became world famous after it
    was stolen from the Louvre in 1911. The painting was missing for two years
    before police traced the theft to Italian painter, Vincenzo Peruggia, who stole
    the work to return it to its country of origin. The Louvre Museum in Paris built
    a separate room to house the Mona Lisa, giving up to five million visitors a year
    the chance to see the painting.
    2) The tradition of telling stories with a series of sequential images has been a
    part of Japanese culture long before Superman comic strips. The earliest
    examples of pre-manga artwork that influenced the development of modern
    Japanese comics are commonly attributed to Toba Sojo, an 11th-century
    painter-priest with an odd sense of humor. Toba’s animal paintings satirized life
    in the Buddhist priesthood by drawing priests as rabbits or monkeys engaged in
    silly activities.
    3) When the story in which Holmes died was published in a popular magazine
    in 1893, the British reading public was outraged. More than 20,000 people
    canceled their subscriptions. The demand for Holmes stories was so great that
    Conan Doyle brought the great detective back to life by explaining that no one
    had actually seen Holmes go down the Reichenbach Falls. The public, glad to
    have new tales, bought the explanation.
    4) Caviar refers to the salted eggs of the fish species, sturgeon. At the beginning
    of the 19th century, the United States was one of the greatest producers of
    caviar in the world. Because of overfishing, commercial sturgeon harvesting
    was banned. Today, mostly through farm-raised varieties, caviar production has
    returned in America. Some American caviar is very high in quality and has
    been compared favorably to wild Caspian caviar.
    5) T.S. Eliot wrote in his poem, "The Waste Land," that April was the "cruelest
    month." He was living in England at the time, and the weather there can be
    dreadfully rainy and cold during spring. But from a cook's point of view, April
    is anything but cruel. The month brings us some of the freshest, most wonderful
    foods. Consider the first ripe strawberries, asparagus, artichokes, tiny peas, and
    so much more.
    6) When the eruption of Vesuvius started on the morning of 24 August, 79 AD,
    it caught the local population completely unprepared. The catastrophic
    magnitude of the eruption was connected with the long period of inactivity that
    preceded it. The longer the intervals between one eruption and another, the
    greater the explosion will be. Luckily, the frequent but low-level activity of Vesuvius in recent centuries has relieved the build-up of pressure in the magma
    chamber.
    7) Iron Age Britain can only be understood from the archaeological evidence.
    There are few spectacular ruins from Iron Age Britain. Unlike in Classical
    Greece or Ancient Egypt, in Iron Age Britain there was no construction of
    major cities, palaces, temples or pyramids. Rather, it was an essentially rural
    world of farms and villages, which had no economic or religious need to build
    palaces, cities, major tombs or ceremonial sites.
    A) A happy comeback
    B) Dangerous when rare
    C) Recovery of a masterpiece
    D) Back and deep into the past
    E) Return of the popularity
    F) From Eastern to Western culture
    G) They come back in spring
    H) Return to the market

Ответы 1

  • 1-C) Recovery of a masterpiece2-F) From Eastern to Western culture3-A) A happy comeback4-H) Return to the market5-G) They come back in spring6-B) Dangerous when rare7-D) Back and deep into the past

  • Добавить свой ответ

Войти через Google

или

Забыли пароль?

У меня нет аккаунта, я хочу Зарегистрироваться

How much to ban the user?
1 hour 1 day 100 years