Amos Finnister Was A Private Detective

Amos Finnister Was A Private Detective




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Amos Finnister Was A Private Detective
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Никита Шевцов в « Школы », 2 года назад
Dinner Amos Finnister was a private detective. In all his years as a policeman and a private investigator, he had learned about people. He gained a psychological insight into most as he (11)…. them do foolish things. He was at ease with people from all walks of life, and in consequence they were at ease with him. And this was most apparent on Friday evening, when Major Cedric Crawford dined with him at the Ritz restaurant. Amos (12)…. to dine there when he lived in New York. By the time they were halfway through dinner, Amos had the major laughing and sharing stories, some of which were funny. By the time they had eaten the main course, Amos felt comfortable enough to (13)….. the answer to an important question. ''I wonder if you have ever come across Tabitha James''. Cedric (14)….. knowing Tabitha with no sign of embarrassment or reluctance. ''To (15)….. the truth, I knew her quite well, actually. She was a close friend of a fellow guards officer, Sebastian Lawford. She fell in love with him at first sight. They were going to marry but unfortunately that did not come to pass.'' ''And why was that, Major, do you know?'' ''Oh, yes, i'm afraid I do. Tabitha had contracted pneumounia but (16)….. no attention to her illness. Before I knew it, she was dead and gone. As for Sebastian, he rejoined the army when the war broke out and was killed. A sad story, isn't it?'' Amos nodded. So much depended (17)….. this information. 11 a) watched b) stared c) looked d) gazed 12 a) took b) used c) held d) kept 13 a) seek b) ask c) pose d) search 14 a) agreed b) admitted c) accepted d) adopted 15 a) say b) tell c) speak d) talk 16 a) paid b) brought c) turned d) took 17 a) of b) at c) in d) on
Ужин Амос Финнистер был частным детективом. За все свои годы в качестве полицейского и частного детектива он узнавал о людях. Он получил психологическое понимание большинства, поскольку он (11)… они делают глупости. Ему было легко с людьми из всех слоев общества, и, как следствие, им было легко с ним. И это было наиболее очевидно в пятницу вечером, когда майор Седрик Кроуфорд обедал с ним в ресторане Ritz. Амос (12)… чтобы пообедать там, когда он жил в Нью-Йорке. К тому времени, когда они были на полпути к обеду, у Амоса начались смешные и смешные истории, некоторые из которых были забавными. К тому времени, как они съели основное блюдо, Амос почувствовал себя достаточно комфортно, чтобы (13)… ...ответить на важный вопрос. «Интересно, встречали ли вы когда-нибудь Табиту Джеймса»? Седрик (14)… .. зная Табиту без признаков смущения или нежелания. «К (15)…… по правде говоря, я знал ее довольно хорошо, на самом деле. Она была близкой подругой офицера гвардии Себастьяна Лоуфорда. Она влюбилась в него с первого взгляда. Они собирались пожениться, но, к сожалению, этого не произошло. '' '' И почему это было, майор, ты знаешь? '' 'О, да, я боюсь, что да. Табита заразилась пневмонией, но (16)… .. не обращала внимания на ее болезнь. Прежде, чем я знал это, она была мертва и ушла. Что касается Себастьяна, он вернулся в армию, когда началась война и был убит. Печальная история, не правда ли? Амос кивнул. Так много зависело (17)… .. эта информация.
Watched / used to / seek / admitted / tell / paid / on

Amos Finnister was a private detective. In all his years as a policeman and a private investigator, he had learned about people. He gained a psychological insight into most as he 1___________ them do foolish things.
Амос Finnister был частный детектив. Во всех его лет как полицейский и частный детектив, он узнал о людях. Он получил психологический проницательность в большинстве как он 1___ их делать глупые вещи.
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Amos Finnister был частный детектив. Во всех своих лет в качестве полицейского и частного детектива, он узнал о людях. Он получил психологическое понимание наиболее , как он 1___________ их делать глупые вещи.
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амос finnister был частным детективом.за все годы его работы в качестве полицейского ичастный детектив, он узнал о людях.он приобрел психологическуюпонять, как он 1 ___________ наиболее им делать глупости.
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Задания 36. Лексико-грамматические навыки
Источник: Яндекс: Тренировочная работа ЕГЭ по английскому языку. Вариант 1.
Источник: Яндекс: Тренировочная работа ЕГЭ по английскому языку. Вариант 2.
Источник: Яндекс: Тренировочная работа ЕГЭ по английскому языку. Вариант 3.
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2013 по английскому языку, Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2012 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Дальний Восток. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Сибирь. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Урал. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Центр. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Дальний Восток. Вариант 3
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Сибирь. Вариант 3
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Урал. Вариант 3
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 06.06.2013. Основная волна. Центр. Вариант 3
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 24.04.2014. Досрочная волна. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 24.04.2014. Досрочный экзамен. Вариант 2
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2015 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 05.05.2015. Досрочная волна
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2016 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 08.04.2016. Досрочная волна
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2017 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 2017. Досрочная волна
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2018 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 02.04.2018. Досрочная волна
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2019 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 01.04.2019. Досрочная волна
Источник: Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2020 по английскому языку, Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2021 по английскому языку, Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2022 по английскому языку, Демонстрационная версия ЕГЭ—2023 по английскому языку
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 2020. Досрочная волна. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 2020. Досрочная волна. Вариант 2
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 2021 года. Досрочная волна. Вариант 1
Источник: ЕГЭ по английскому языку 2022. Досрочная волна
Let me tell you what happened once when my dear Uncle Podger decided to hang a picture on the wall. He told us not to 32 ______ and just watch him do it. He said he would do it by himself. Well, he came up to the picture which was waiting to be put up in the dining room and took it. But suddenly it fell down and the glass 33 ______ into pieces and he cut his finger. He started to 34 ______ his handkerchief but couldn’t find it because he had put it in his coat and none of us knew where his coat was.
‘Six of you!’ Uncle Podger exclaimed, ‘and you cannot find the coat that I put down only five minutes ago!’ But then he got up from his chair and found that he had been sitting on his coat the whole time. ‘Oh, you can stop your 35 ______ . I’ve found it myself!’
Then after an hour was spent in tying up his finger Uncle Podger wondered where the hammer had disappeared to. And while everybody was trying to get the hammer he was standing on the chair saying: ‘Well, I want to know if you are going to 36 ______ me here all evening!’
Finally the hammer was found, but we noticed that the nail which he had prepared was lost. And, of course, Uncle Podger didn’t keep 37 ______ while he was waiting for another nail to be brought. We heard all he had to say about our habit of losing all the things he needed.
When the picture was hanging on the wall at last, everybody looked very 38 ______ , all except Uncle Podg er, who was lively as ever. Aunt Maria remarked that if Uncle Podger wanted to do a job like that again, she would spend a week with her mother until it was over.
Пояснение . Looked tired — выглядел усталым.
In my early 20s, after a year and a half in England, and four months in France, I returned to the United States and got a job at a camp in northern Virginia. My 32 ______ that summer was Dan from Mississippi, and I am from Rhode Island. We worked together with a group of boys from 12 to 14 years old. I've always been a bit untidy, but Dan was 33 ______ and clean, even after a night in the woods with our campers. We could not have been more different, but we got on because we shared the same 34 ______ of humor.
At the end of the summer, a few of us went to 35 ______ a cave in West Virginia and got stuck in the cave for the night. It wasn’t as dramatic as it sounds. The park rangers had told us to stay there if anything happened. They knew where we were going, and when we should have been back. Dan hurt his right foot badly. So we had to 36 ______ the night in the cave. Food and water were not a problem, but we turned off our lights to save power. In the distance, we could hear the sound of running water.
To 37 ______ the time, we told stories. That night in the cave we moved from one family story to another. As the night wore on, I remembered more and more. I was not alone—the cave, the blue light and the flowing water released stories and memories that we had never revealed to anyone. It was as if a river of stories had started flowing in each of us.
When the rangers came the next morning, we didn’t want to 38 ______ . ‘Can’t we just tell a few more stories?’ In the cave, that night, I became a storyteller.
Пояснение . We didn't want to leave — мы не хотели уезжать.
Nostalgia for the Old Neighbourhood
Life is made up of little things: some unimportant memories from childhood that, in fact, shaped your character. I 32 ______ on Third Avenue in midtown Manhattan during the 1950s-60s where family life was centred around old 33 ______ of flats and small stores. Third Avenue was my old neighbourhood and it had character. It was 34 ______ with working families of Italian, German and Irish origin. We shopped together with all those people and their kids played together. Third Avenue influenced the way our family lived. I absorbed the street life. It gave me an 35 ______ that I could not have received in any other place. To me, it was home.
In a recent walk around Third Avenue my eyes 36 ______ signs of the old neighbourhood but couldn’t find any. If I hadn’t been born here and someone described the area, it would be 37 ______ to believe. It wasn’t because a few buildings had changed — everything had changed. The transformation began in the late 1950s and 60s when corporations replaced the old neighbourhood. In the early 1960s, the houses were pulled down. Families were forced to 38 ______ , the small stores went out of business and the old neighbourhood was changed forever. And now there is a lack of character in the transformed neighbourhood.
Пояснение . Move out — съехать (переехать).
I believe in patience. I live as a volunteer residential counselor in a small group home. These boys have brought joy and happiness into my life; they have made me laugh and made me proud. However, they have also challenged me, made me angry and tested my patience.
Each day we start anew, going about a 32 ______ routine. I drive them to school, pick them up, cook for them and help with homework. We spend the evenings 33 ______ about what happened during the day. I meet their teachers and study for tests with them. They are the last people I see each night and the first ones I hear in the morning. They have become a 34 ______ of my life. I am twenty-two and am beginning to understand the love of a parent.
I could not have come this far without patience. They do not think like miniature adults and it is not fair to expect them to. 35 ______ my expectations of them are high, I must remember that so much of what they see and understand is for the first time. First loves, first failed test, first time feeling the need to break away from the nest. I must have patience with them, because there is still a child within that comes out when I least expect it.
This world is a fast-paced, fast food, fast-internet place. 36 ______ , no matter how fast things move, children will be children. I believe they will mature quicker and with more tools if I am patient. I see it in their eyes. Over time, sad eyes can glisten again, but only if I am 37 ______ of the fact that it takes them longer to get somewhere.
I see around them a world that expects too much of them. They come 38 ______ too many things that give them too much sadness. They listen to me, respect me and understand reason but not always when I want them to. This opportunity has given me wisdom but only when I was patient enough to hear a child.
It was raining. The rain started early in the morning and it seemed, that it would never stop. Looking out of the window, Bo was thinking about his telephone conversation. Raindrops spattered the windshield as the taxi sliced through 32 ______ traffic on Park Avenue. There were too many cars as usual. When it had skidded to a halt at the curb, Bo gave a ten-dollar bill to the driver. That included a very generous tip. He 33 ______ his point of destination and was ready to take on Frank Ramsey. He had called Ramsey that morning from the Yale club and demanded the meeting. Ramsey had tried to avoid it but Bo insisted and Ramsey gave 34 ______ . At the building’s revolving doors, Bo glanced back over his shoulder through the rain and noticed a woman standing on the sidewalk a short distance away. In the dim light he could not get a clear picture. She 35 ______ so much like Tiffany. She was wearing a yellow top and had long blond hair. Standing absolutely 36 ______ beneath her umbrella while everything around her moved, she seemed to be gazing straight at him. His heart 37 ______ , the way it always did when he saw her. He couldn’t help it. Bo strained to 38 ______ sight of her as he was jostled into the doorway. When he cleared the doors, the woman had already disappeared.
Пояснение . Выражение «to keep sight of...».
Stephen pulled up the collar of his coat as he walked along the platform. Overhead a dim fog clouded the station. He was 32 ______ trains move slowly, throwing off clouds of steam into the cold air. Everything was dirty and smoke-grimed. Stephen thought with revulsion: “What a foul country — what a foul city!” He had to 33 ______ that his first excited reaction to London — its shops, its restaurants, its well-dressed attractive women — had faded. Supposing he were back in South Africa now... To 34 ______ the truth, he felt a quick pang of homesickness. Sunshine — blue skies — gardens of flowers. And here — dirt, grime and endless crowds — moving, hurrying, jostling.
He got on a train and passed along the corridor, looking for a place. The train was full. It was only three days before Christmas. He 35 ______ to go to his parents for Christmas... And then, suddenly, he caught his breath, looking into a carriage. This girl was different. Black hair, rich creamy pallor, the sad proud eyes of the South... It was all wrong that this girl should be sitting in this train 36 ______ these dull drab looking people. She should be somewhere splendid, not squeezed into the corner of a third class carriage.
He was an observant man. He did not fail to 37 ______ the shabbiness of her black coat and skirt, the cheap quality of her gloves. 38 ______ , splendor was the quality he associated with her. He thought: “I’ve got to know who she is and what she’s doing here.”
Пояснение . Nevertheless — тем не менее.
Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами 32–38. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32–38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Укажите номер выбранного вами варианта ответа.
I was a chemist at the Amos Cosmetics factory in New Jersey, USA, trying to design a new perfume when it happened. I never thought I would discover something quite so amazing by 32 ______. Not me. I was only 23 and it was my second year at the factory. I liked my job very much but I was not a lucky person. I had come straight from the university then, but now I was a chemist in one of the biggest factories in New Jersey. It was an important position to have and meant lots of work.
I was 33 ______ out all the usual mixes of flowers and things- just as I always did - when I decided to throw in a 34 ______ of the fruitcake Mummy had packed for my lunch. I don’t know why I did it –just did it. I put it into the mix with all the other things.
I thought it 35 ______ nice, but there was nothing special about it, so I put the bottle into my handbag. I couldn’t give something like that to my boss. After all, I was a chemist and my job was to make perfumes in the proper 36 ______.
If I told him how I made this one he would tell me not to be a silly girl. Later, he would probably 37 ______a joke about it to his friends at the golf club.
It was my boss, David Amos. He happened to be walking past where I worked. I couldn’t 38 ______ being nervous. He was fairly sure of his good looks and never spoke to ordinary-looking girls like me. I was thrilled.
Пояснение . Bыражение «can't help being nervous».
Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами 32–38. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям 32 – 38, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Укажите номер выбранного вами варианта ответа.
Uncle Will arrived at Kent at 5 p.m. ”What’s wrong with your father, Bess? Will asked after 32 ______ her with an affectionate embrace. Bess was his favorite niece and he came as quickly as he could after her call. She sounded desperate. Stepping back, Will peered into her face. It was pale and filled with 33 ______.
“What happened?” Uncle Will placed his hand on Bessy’s.
“Pa took my brothers fishing at Ravenscar last weekend and 34 ______ a cold then. It was chilly out on the North Sea, and very windy, and it poured with rain, they got drenched. His cold 35 ______ into bronchitis, as it often does with him. I think it’s a family weakness, a weak chest, I mean. His face is white and he is feverish. I have never seen Pa look as ill as this. That’s why I telephoned you.”
“I am glad you did, and I’m certainly glad I decided to come down to Kent last night”.
As they walked across the entrance foyer of Waverley Court, heading toward the staircase, Bess went 36 ______, “I think you know that my mother went to Rome for Easter. Her former college mate invited her. She took Cecily and the two boys with her. The boys were so happy. I didn’t want to go with them, and now I’m relieved I stayed here, so that I can look 37 ______ my father”.
”I’m assuming you’ve telephoned the doctor?”
“Yes, he will be here very soon. It’s Dr. Earnest Lessing. He is the local doctor we use when we are residing in Kent. Meanwhile Faxton and I have been 38 ______ Father the best we can. He’s been inhaling Frier’s Balsam and taking his cough mixture. I do think that’s helped.” At this moment the door opened and Dr. Lessing came in.
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