picture 2.
woman in a food shop.
at this picture we see a middle aged woman in a food shop. looking at her face we can recognize a tired from life woman with little income, but trying to feed up her children anyway. her hair show us that she wash up her hair quite rarely as she is constantly busy at hard work. but among positive features: we can see absolutely honest and decent young woman, who can be very reliable and responsible friend or partner for life. concluding all above mentioned, we can say appearance might be mistaken and under tired and sad person may be very decent and transparently clean person.
Поделитесь своими знаниями, ответьте на вопрос:
1. Sorry, Nick. I’ll call you back … (in/on/at) 5 minutes. 2. I am on holiday … (for/until/during) Monday. 3. Pushkin was born … (in/on/at) 1799. 4. Our dance class starts … (in/on/at) the evening. 5. Her husband never works … (in/on/at) weekends. 6. Let’s travel to the mountains … (in/on/at) Christmas. 7. My friend’s birthday is … (in/on/at) the 7th of January. 8. I hope to buy this yacht … (in/on/at) the future. 9. We met your teacher … (in/on/at) Friday morning. 10. Our shop is open … (in/at/from) 9 a.m. … (at/till/for) 6 p.m.
In 1875, following an open competition, the first prize for the project of a monument to Pushkin was awarded to A.M. Opekushin. At the same time, in the final version of the monument, the shape of the pedestal proposed by A.M. Opekushin (the combination of two truncated cones) was replaced by a shape close to that proposed by I.N.Shroder (a truncated trapezoid on a rectangular prism). Alexander Mikhailovich Opekushin invited the architect Ivan Semyonovich Bogomolov to conduct construction and installation work. A special commission for the construction of the monument was headed by Prince PG Oldenburgsky [5] [6].
Project M.M. Antokolsky, 1875