Перейти к выбору ответа 02.04.2022найдите значение выражения 65×a,если a ÷6=9(ост.6) Выбрать другой вопрос Смотреть ответ Перейти к выбору ответа Математика Вопрос школьника по предмету Математика найдите значение выражения 65×a,если a ÷6=9(ост.6) Ответ учителя по предмету Математика а/6=9(ост 6) а=60 65*60=3900
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Картинки по запросу rhyming pairs
For each riddle read the clues. The answers to a pair of clues should rhyme.
For example:
Clues: A pet that meows./ Put it on your head.
Answer: cat, hat
Write your answer as in the example.
There are a lot of animals there./ Where ……………. you live?
Not strong/ seven days
Three and five/………………… for a bus
You go up and down these./ apples, oranges and ……………
361,2/42
5168/85
312,156/39
1852,59/37
4584,36/506
Всё решение в столбик)
Найдите в тексте предложения, в которых употребляется Participle I, Participle II, выпишите и переведите их на русский язык.
The Monarch is really a figurehead representing the country. For thousands of years England (and later whole of the United Kingdom) has been united under one sovereign. The hereditary principle still operates and the Crown is passed to the sovereign’s eldest son or daughter if there are no sons.
Upon the death of the Sovereign, his or her heir immediately and automatically succeeds (hence the phrase «The King is dead. Long live the King!»), and the accession of the sovereign is publicly proclaimed by an Accession Council that meets at St. James’s Palace. The monarch is crowned in Westminster Abbey, normally by the Archbishop of Canterbury. A coronation is not necessary for a sovereign to reign; indeed, the ceremony usually takes place many months after accession to allow sufficient time for its preparation and for a period of mourning.
The Monarch takes little direct part in Government. The decisions to exercise sovereign powers are delegated from the Monarch, either by statute or by convention, to Ministers or officers of the Crown, or other public bodies, exclusive of the Monarch personally. Thus the acts of state done in the name of the Crown, such as Crown Appointments,] even if personally performed by the Monarch, such as the Queen’s Speech and the State Opening of Parliament, depend upon decisions made by others.