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Вопрос от Анонимного юзера 12 апреля 2025 15:19

Реши английский

Ответ нейросети

12 апреля 2025 15:19

To solve the exercises in the image, let’s tackle each one step by step:

Exercise 4: Choose the correct option.

  1. My cousin had/was having an accident

    • Answer: was having
    • Explanation: "Was having" is used to describe an ongoing action in the past, fitting the context of the sentence.
  2. I hurt my nose I was riding a motorbike.

    • Answer: while
    • Explanation: "While" is used to indicate simultaneous actions, meaning the accident and riding the motorbike happened at the same time.
  3. My mum hurt/was hurting her head as she got/was getting into the car.

    • Answer: hurt, was getting
    • Explanation: "Hurt" is a short, completed action, while "was getting" implies an ongoing action she was involved in.
  4. As my dad was doing/was doing weigh-training, he hurt/was hurting his arm.

    • Answer: was doing, hurt
    • Explanation: "Was doing" indicates a continuous action, and "hurt" indicates the sudden occurrence during that continuous action.
  5. I hurt my wrist we danced / I was trying.

    • Answer: when
    • Explanation: "When" is used to indicate that the second action (dancing) happened during the first one (hurting the wrist).

Exercise 5: Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the verbs in brackets.

  1. A: What were you doing (do) when the accident happened (happen)?

    • Answer: were you doing, happened
    • Explanation: "Were you doing" is used for past continuous, indicating an action in progress, and "happened" is simple past for a completed action.
  2. B: I was driving (drive) my kids to school. They made (make) a lot of noise, so I did not look (not look) at the road, and I drove (drive) into a tree. Fortunately, nobody was hurt.

    • Answer: was driving, made, did not look, drove
    • Explanation: Use "was driving" and "made" for past continuous to describe the ongoing background, and "did not look" and "drove" in simple past for specific completed actions.

By following these steps and explanations, you can clearly understand how to select the appropriate tense and conjunctions for these sentences.

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Реши английский
To solve the exercises in the image, let’s tackle each one step by step: ### Exercise 4: Choose the correct option. 1. **My cousin _had/was having_ an accident** - **Answer:** was having - **Explanation:** "Was having" is used to describe an ongoing action in the past, fitting the context of the sentence. 2. **I hurt my nose _I was riding a motorbike_.** - **Answer:** while - **Explanation:** "While" is used to indicate simultaneous actions, meaning the accident and riding the motorbike happened at the same time. 3. **My mum _hurt/was hurting_ her head as she _got/was getting_ into the car.** - **Answer:** hurt, was getting - **Explanation:** "Hurt" is a short, completed action, while "was getting" implies an ongoing action she was involved in. 4. **As my dad _was doing/was doing_ weigh-training, he _hurt/was hurting_ his arm.** - **Answer:** was doing, hurt - **Explanation:** "Was doing" indicates a continuous action, and "hurt" indicates the sudden occurrence during that continuous action. 5. **I hurt my wrist _we danced_ / _I was trying_.** - **Answer:** when - **Explanation:** "When" is used to indicate that the second action (dancing) happened during the first one (hurting the wrist). ### Exercise 5: Complete the dialogue with the correct form of the verbs in brackets. 1. **A:** What _were you doing_ (do) when the accident _happened_ (happen)? - **Answer:** were you doing, happened - **Explanation:** "Were you doing" is used for past continuous, indicating an action in progress, and "happened" is simple past for a completed action. 2. **B:** I _was driving_ (drive) my kids to school. They _made_ (make) a lot of noise, so I _did not look_ (not look) at the road, and I _drove_ (drive) into a tree. Fortunately, nobody was hurt. - **Answer:** was driving, made, did not look, drove - **Explanation:** Use "was driving" and "made" for past continuous to describe the ongoing background, and "did not look" and "drove" in simple past for specific completed actions. By following these steps and explanations, you can clearly understand how to select the appropriate tense and conjunctions for these sentences.