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INSTITUCIÓN EDUCATIVA: RURAL NUESTRA SEÑORA DEL CARMEN

SEDE: ENCENILLOS
DOCENTE: EVA DE JESÚS CÓRDOBA
ASIGNATURA: INGLÉS
GRADO: DECIMO
NOMBRE DEL ESTUDIANTE:
Completa las frases con la forma correcta del verbo que se encuentra
entre paréntesis.
1. _____ you _____ (like) fish?

2. She _____ (not/teach) English.

3. Matthew never _____ (watch) television.

4. _____ she _____ (play) football?

5. They always _____ (eat) dinner at 7 o'clock.

6. We _____ (not/live) in a big house.

7. Valerie _____ (Study) English at university.

8. _____ he _____ (want) to eat?


1O.Samanta _____ (play) tennis twice a week.
11. Mary------------- (work) in a hospital.
Escríbe el tiempo verbal correcto en las siguientes frases present simple and
present simple continuos

1. John to Mary now (talk)


2. I television every night. (watch)
3. The children usually to bed at nine o'clock. (go)
4. A book at the moment? (Richard read)
5. They to the theatre very often. (not go)
6. I at the moment. (not Study)
7. I English, although I at the moment. (not speak) /
(Study)
8. I in Valencia, though I in Madrid at the moment. (live)
/ (Stay)
9. I in a hotel at the moment, although I my own
apartment. (stay) / (have)
10. She from Chile, though she in New York just
now. (come) / (live).

John Bull is a literary and cartoon character created to personify Britain by Dr. John
Arbuthnot in 1712 and popularized first by British print makers and then overseas by
illustrators such as American cartoonist Thomas Nast.

Bull is usually portrayed as a stout man in a tailcoat with breeches and a Union Jack
waistcoat. He also wears a low topper (sometimes called a John Bull topper) on his
head and is often accompanied by a bulldog. John Bull has been used in a variety of
different ad campaigns over the years, and is a common sight in British editorial
cartoons of the 19th and early 20th centuries.

The cartoon image of stolid stocky conservative and well-meaning John Bull,
dressed like an English country squire, sometimes explicitly contrasted with the
conventionalized scrawny, French revolutionary sans-culottes Jacobin, was
developed from about 1790 by British satirical artists James Gillray, Thomas
Rowlandson and George Cruikshank.

John Bull was also one of the names of a series of British periodicals.
John Bull is a real person.

True.

False.

We don't know.

John Bull was created in 1712.

True.

False.

We don't know.

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