1) Are you going to marry Tom? - Alice asked me if I was going to marry Tom.
2) Where have you been? - The mother asked her son where he had been.
3) Has Ali already left for his holiday in France? - Tim enquired if Ali had already left for his holiday in France.
4) Who is the best football player in the country? - The boys wanted to know who was the best football player in the country.
5) How much do you need to buy that car? - I asked you how much you needed to buy that car.
6) Will you be able to pay back the money tomorrow? - He asked if I would be able to back the money the next day.
7) How far is the sun from the Eaeth? - The examiner asked her how far the sun was from the Earth.
8) How do you cook couscous? - I asked you how to cook couscous.
1. it has been raining since morning.
2. When I saw him, his clothes were dirty as he had been working in the garden since morning.
3. Where is Nick? He is buying a book now.
4. Every day she writes letters and sends cables.
5. When I came back home my son was drawing something.
6. He will have painted the picture by the end of June.
7. We had already discussed the plan when he came.
8. They are students now.
9. It's a pity, but I have not finished the work.
10. We have just discussed the mistakes in our works.
11. He has never been to St. Petersburg.
12. My friend will leave for Moscow at 5 o'clock p.m.
13. When were you there last?
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Напишите топик на тему "the rights of teenagers in kazakhstan". 98
Almost a third of Russians believe that parents should have the right to beat their teenage children.
Some 32 percent of Russians think that parents should be able to physically punish children aged between 13 and 14 years old, a new survey by independent pollster the Levada Center revealed.
A majority of respondents, 54 percent, said parents had the right to monitor teenagers' correspondence. While 47 percent said that adults should be able to limit children's contact with friends.
Forty-eight percent of those surveyed said that children should bear full criminal responsibility at 16 years of age, rather than 18 years under Russian law. Forty percent believe that criminal responsibility should remain at its current level.
The survey was conducted among 1,600 people over 18 in 48 Russian regions to celebrate International Children's Day on June 1.