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HELPP If a line is correct put a tick. Use the letter "V" as a tick. If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word in a given space. 1. By the 1820s, it extended not much beyond the Appalachians. The move to the West as we now know it began in earnest in the mid-1840s when the expression Oregon fever erupted. 2. Encouraged by the government to settle the north-western territory claimed also by Britain, thousands of homesteaders were set off for a new life at the end of the Oregon Trail. 3. The peopling of the West became not just an opportunity to be seized, but a kind of mission. 4. The Oregon Trail is a somewhat misleading term. For one thing, it wasn’t a trail in the sense of a welldeTned track. It was a corridor, highly likely variable in width, across the grassy plains. 5. Moreover, after the Trst few years relatively a few of those who travelled the trail were heading for Oregon. 6. One of the great myths of the westward migration, compounded by a thousand movies, was that the immigrants lumbered over the prairies in Conestoga wagons. These sturdy vehicles were uselessly heavy for the long pull to Oregon or California. 7. They did not haul some freight west, but almost never did they transport families. Instead westward immigrants used lighter, smaller and much nimbler wagons universally known as prairie schooners. 8. These were hauled not by horses, but by mules or oxen, which could withstand the hardships of prairie crossings far better than any horse could. 9. A Tnal myth engendered by Hollywood was that wagons gathered in a circle whenever under attack by Indians. They didn’t, and for the simple reason that the process would have been so laborious to organize that the party would very probably have been slaughtered before the job was even a one quarter accomplished. 10. Wagons were covered with a canvas, as in the movies, though that word was seldom used. 11. The material was more generally known in the nineteenth century as twill. Though wagon train was also used (it is Trst recorded in 1849), the term wasn’t particularly apt. 12. For much of the journey the wagons fanned out into an advancing line up to ten miles wide to avoid each other’s dust — and providing yet another obstacle to their forming into circles. 13. Many of the early homesteaders had only the faintest idea of what they were being letting themselves in for, and often through no fault of their own. Until well into the third decade of the nineteenth century ignorance of the West remained so profound! 14. Those who went west, incidentally, didn’t think of themselves as still being in America. 15. Until about the time of the Civil War, America was generally taken to signify itself the eastern states, so that accounts of the time commonly contain statements like ‘Some people here [in Oregon] are talking about returning to America’.

Английский язык

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cetarbkilork82
Около половины британских молодых людей в возрасте от 12 до 16 читают журналов для подростков! два из наиболее популярных журналов для девочек "сахар" и "bliss". они имеют глянцевые, красочные обложки и включают в себя красоту и моду, знаменитости сплетни, из реальной жизни, гороскопы, викторины и проблемные страницы. конечно, мальчики обычно не находят в таких журналах интерес! вместо этого они покупают музыкальные журналы, как "nme' или журналы о спорте, как" shoot'или "match". как правило, журналы подростков, содержат много языка, которые используют только подростки! они могли бы использовать 'celeb' вместо знаменитости, например, или 'fave' вместо любимой. они также говорят, «хлопцы» вместо «мальчиков», «дош» вместо «деньги» и «наттер" вместо "поговорить с друзьями"! это делает журналы более привлекательными для подростков и их легче понять. на более серьезной ноте, хотя, многие из этих журналов могут подросткам найти решения проблем, с которыми они не чувствуют себя комфортно, обсуждая со своими родителями. вот почему проблема страницы в этих журналах популярна. на самом деле, многие подростки покупают их только для проблемной страницы. как насчет тебя? что вам больше всего нравится в журналах?

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HELPP If a line is correct put a tick. Use the letter "V" as a tick. If a line has a word which should not be there, write the word in a given space. 1. By the 1820s, it extended not much beyond the Appalachians. The move to the West as we now know it began in earnest in the mid-1840s when the expression Oregon fever erupted. 2. Encouraged by the government to settle the north-western territory claimed also by Britain, thousands of homesteaders were set off for a new life at the end of the Oregon Trail. 3. The peopling of the West became not just an opportunity to be seized, but a kind of mission. 4. The Oregon Trail is a somewhat misleading term. For one thing, it wasn’t a trail in the sense of a welldeTned track. It was a corridor, highly likely variable in width, across the grassy plains. 5. Moreover, after the Trst few years relatively a few of those who travelled the trail were heading for Oregon. 6. One of the great myths of the westward migration, compounded by a thousand movies, was that the immigrants lumbered over the prairies in Conestoga wagons. These sturdy vehicles were uselessly heavy for the long pull to Oregon or California. 7. They did not haul some freight west, but almost never did they transport families. Instead westward immigrants used lighter, smaller and much nimbler wagons universally known as prairie schooners. 8. These were hauled not by horses, but by mules or oxen, which could withstand the hardships of prairie crossings far better than any horse could. 9. A Tnal myth engendered by Hollywood was that wagons gathered in a circle whenever under attack by Indians. They didn’t, and for the simple reason that the process would have been so laborious to organize that the party would very probably have been slaughtered before the job was even a one quarter accomplished. 10. Wagons were covered with a canvas, as in the movies, though that word was seldom used. 11. The material was more generally known in the nineteenth century as twill. Though wagon train was also used (it is Trst recorded in 1849), the term wasn’t particularly apt. 12. For much of the journey the wagons fanned out into an advancing line up to ten miles wide to avoid each other’s dust — and providing yet another obstacle to their forming into circles. 13. Many of the early homesteaders had only the faintest idea of what they were being letting themselves in for, and often through no fault of their own. Until well into the third decade of the nineteenth century ignorance of the West remained so profound! 14. Those who went west, incidentally, didn’t think of themselves as still being in America. 15. Until about the time of the Civil War, America was generally taken to signify itself the eastern states, so that accounts of the time commonly contain statements like ‘Some people here [in Oregon] are talking about returning to America’.
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