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Vocabulary Study

21. Study the following words and phrases:

accommodate

размещать, расселять

adjust

регулировать, корректировать, настраивать, приспособлять

affluent

богатый

amenity

удобство

blending

смешение, смешивание

cater

обслуживать

challenge

проблема, задача, вызов

crucial

решающий, ключевой

diversity

разнообразие, многообразие

fall into the trap

попасть в ловушку

hospitality

гостеприимство

luxury

роскошь

occur

происходить, встречаться, иметь место

part and parcel

неотъемлемая часть

reflect

отражать

staffing policy

кадровая политика

tend

иметь тенденцию, склонность

track a moving target

отслеживать движущуюся цель

vast

огромный

vital

жизненно важный, существенный

Тема 3

Indirect command and request

An order or request in indirect speech is expressed by the infinitive.

The verbs most commonly used to introduce indirect orders are: to tell, to order, to command. Requests are usually introduced by the verb to ask. More emotional forms are: to beg, to implore (умолять), to urge (настаивать, уговаривать).

Study the following chart

Direct speech

Indirect speech

The mother said to the lazy son, “Wake up!”

The mother told the lazy son to wake up.

The teacher said to the pupils, “Don't play with fire”.

The teacher told the pupils not to play with fire.

I said to Nick, “Shut the door, please”.

I asked Nick to Shut the door.

The professor said to his students, “Don’t be late for the lecture”.

The professor asked (or told) his students not to be late for the lecture.

Indirect questions

Indirect general questions

  1. The inversion in the direct question changes to statement word order.

  2. If necessary, the tense is changed at the same time.

  3. We use if/ whether (ли) after ask, want to know, wonder, not know, didn't say/ tell me.

NOTE:

to ask smb

to ask a question

Direct speech

Indirect speech

Ann’s mother asked her, “Are you tired?”

Ann’s mother asked her if she was tired.

He asked his friend, “Do you like the wine?”

He asked his friend if he liked the wine.

I asked Frank, “Did you buy a new car?”

I asked Frank if he had bought a new car.

Ann’s father asked her, “Are you tired or unwell?”

Ann’s father asked her whether she was tired or unwell.

I asked my sister, “Did you leave the book at home or loose it?”

I asked my sister whether she had left the book at home or lost it.