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on the part of

on occasion ,

on offer

on purpose

on the right (left) hand side ( ) on sale

on a large scale

on sea

on the way ,

on the ground that

on the whole

and so on

on hand ,

on the one (other) hand ( )

later on

upon average

upon condition

upon my honour

upon my life ! upon request

upon the whole

Out of

out of

into.

, :

, out of ( out),

-:

Somebody had stolen her purse out of her pocket. —

.

Laughing, kids ran out of the house. — ,

.

At last, she went out of the building to the fresh air. — ,

.

Out

, , out of,

, : to jump out , to come (go, get, walk) out

, to run out , to take out , to fly out , to pull out . . :

He went out without saying «goodbay». — ,

.

Ho: She went out of the building.

She opened the door and ran out in great excitement. —

.

Ho: She ran out of the room.

out .

,

:

, out:

to be out

,

She is out. — ( .).

 

 

 

 

 

 

to find out

,

How did you find out my telephone number?

 

 

— ?

to make out

 

He could not make out the main idea of this

 

 

article on philosophy. —

 

 

.

to point out

 

He pointed me out my mistakes in test. —

 

 

.

to set out

 

We set out at 5 o’clock in the morning. —

 

 

5 .

to work out

 

A new plan for the firm development has

 

 

been worked out. —

 

 

.

out of:

out of danger

out of doors

out of date

out of envy (pity) ( ) out of necessity

out of order

out of use

out of work

: PRESSI ( HERSON )

out of from:

out of, from

?. out of

, , from

:

The policeman came out of the post office. —

.

I came from Murmansk. — .

Outside

outside ? ( ,

) ? ( , , ).

inside:

Mary went outside the house to pick up mail. ,

.

We were standing outside the door. .

Outside

, , ; :

He has not taken instruments inside the house, they are still outside. —

, .

Over

over :

1. (

under):

Dark clouds gathered over the city. —

.

2. , (

under):

This house costs over two million rubles. —

.

Over five hundred people gathered at the stadium. —

.

3. , . ,

over,

-.

-

:

To fly to USA from Russia, you have to fly over the Atlantic Ocean. —

.

The cat climbed over the wall. — .

over

. , over,

: to climb over , to throw over , to jump over

, to fly over , to go over , .:

It was hard to climb over for the wall was really high. —

, . Jump over here! — !

over

,

:

to go over

(

 

I know that the leader of this party is

 

. )

 

thinking of going over to the other party. —

 

 

 

,

 

 

 

( )

 

 

 

.

to run over

( .)

 

Slow down, you may run over a deer. —

 

 

 

,

 

 

 

.

to talk over

1)

 

He talked her over to come. —

 

);

 

.

 

2)

 

 

 

,

 

 

 

 

 

 

to think over

 

 

I need to think over your proposal. —

 

 

 

.

 

 

over:

: PRESSI ( HERSON )

all over the world (country, town) ( ,

)

over and above 1) , ; 2)

over and over (again)

the lesson (meeting, concert,) is over ( , ,)

to stay over

to sleep over ,

Past

by, past

:

He ran (drove, went, swept) past without looking at me ( ). —

( , , ) , . He walked past me ( ). — .

past :

1)) ; ) , ;

2): , .

They met half past five. —

: ).

He is past eighty. — .

3) . , ;

):

He is past cure. — .

It is past my patience. — ( ).

Round, around

round around : 1) ) , , :

turned round the corner. — .

) ( , ):

He drove me round the city. — . 2) , :

This park operates all round the year —

( ).

Round , around.

,

round:

The moon moves round the Earth. — . He traveled round the world. — .

There are many golf clubs round (around) the city. — (

) .

Round (around)

:

1) ) ; ; :

The wind has gone round to the east. — . Don’t look round (around). — (

).

The door was locked, he had to go round. — ,

.

) , , ( ): all the year round —

2) , , :

They turned round again to totalitarianism. —

.

3) , ,

We have several shops around. —

.

, :

round around:

round the corner ,

all the year round

all around

to travel around the country

round about ( )

round and round ;

all round , ,

long way round

Since

since :

: PRESSI ( HERSON )

1) , — ,

.

since Present Perfect Continuous Present Perfect:

I have been studying English since last year. —

.

I have not heard from her since Thursday. —

.

2) ; , ...:

She looks like she has not changed since then. — ,

.

Since : 1) :

I moved from this district last month and I have not seen him since. —

, . She has been sick ever since. — .

2) :

The teacher was here a little while since. —

.

3) ) , , , :

This boy has since become famous. —

.

This kind of education has been actively introduced since. —

.

) , .

Since

:

1) :

She has married since she graduated from the university. —

. 2) , :

Since you are not feeling better, I’ll call for doctor. —

, .

since from

since, from

. since ,

,

from ,

:

I have been typing since 12 o'clock. — 12 (

, ).

I have been living in Moscow since 1900. — 1990 . The director has been out off office since Tuesday. —

( , ).

The supermarket is open from seven in the morning till ten o’clock at night. — .

I lived in Moscow from 1990 till 1995. — 1990 .

1995 .

Tomorrow we will have classes from 9 o'clock in the morning. —

9 .

Through

through :

1) ,

, , :

We had to run through the park. — . It was hard to see something through the dirty windows. —

.

This road goes through the downtown. —

.

2) , :

) , , (

):

For me it was hard to sit through his long boring lecture. —

.

All through his reign Piter the Great paid lots of attention to education.

.

Through the years we kept in touch each other. —

.

I thought I won't live through this day. — ,

( ).

) ; ( . ):

Banks are usually open from Monday through Friday. —

.

: PRESSI ( HERSON )

3) , , , ,

. through

because (of):

It was through you that we were late for the meeting. —

.

The company was bankrupted through no fault of yours. —

.

Most of her mistakes she makes through her carelessness. —

, , .

4) , ( ): She went through many obstacles. — ( )

.

They got through the test. — .

A strange thought run through my mind. —

.

5) .,

):

He is not used to speak through an interpreter, so you have to ask him to make stops in his speech. — ,

.

You can get a visa through a travel agency. —

.

6) , :

I got to know about this story through TV news. —

.

Through : 1) ; :

The rain was so heavy that my coat soaked through in two minutes. —

, .

2) . ,

-, -.

He has read the magazine through. —

.

Till, until

till until

, :

She will stay in St. Petersburg (until) Sunday. —

.

The mall is open till (until) nine o'clock. —

.

till from ... till ...

to:

I’ll be in office from eight to (till) three tomorrow. —

.

,

till,

, — before:

( ) . — I’ll stay here till

Monday.

( ) . — I’ll continue working on my essay till dinner.

(

)?— Could you pick me up before eight o’clock?

( ).— I’ll finish my essay before dinner.

as far as

till ):

. — I will go with you as far as the park.

Till, until

, ( ) ... :

Let’s wait until (till) everybody comes. — ,

.

to

:

. from.) . .

, .

They went to the Crimea. — .

She took a train to Madrid. — (

).

: PRESSI ( HERSON )

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