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1. The money belongs to my uncle. 13. The ancestral house is large and spacious.

2. My aunt's book is very interesting. 14. The grandfather's story is long and funny.
3. My brother-in-law's car is modern. 15. Here are Toby and Emily's houses.
4. My cousin's room is comfortable.
5. My grandmother's voice is soft.
6. Tom and Sally's daughter is a student.
7. Your sister's car is red.
8. Your daughter's eyes are blue.
9. I live in my mother-in-law's house.
10. The grandchildren's toys are new.
11. Uncle's magazines are old.
12. Here are two compositions by Tina.
1. She has a new wristwatch.
2. They have three grandsons and two granddaughters.
3. Do they have an aunt?
4. The bride and groom have beautiful and expensive rings.
5. Do her in-laws have a villa?
6. Her half-brother has a camera.
7. Do you have relatives abroad?
8. Her cousins don't have children yet.
9. His son-in-law has a two-story house.
10. Their great-grandchildren have a lot of stuffed toys.
Legende referitoare la întemeiere și Londra în preistorie. Legends of London

According to the legend "Historia Regnum Britanniae" ("History of the British Kings") by Geoffrey of
Monmouth, London was founded by Brutus of Troy after defeating the giants Gog and Magog and was known as
"Caer Troy", "Troy Nova" (Latin names for "New Troy"), which, according to a rough etymology, turned into
Trinovantum. The Trinovantes were an Iron Age tribe that lived in the area before the Romans came. Geoffrey
attributes to prehistoric London a line of legendary kings such as King Lud, son of Heli, who, as the author claims,
gave the settlement the name "CaerLudein", from which London derives its name, and who he was buried at
Ludgate.
However, despite extensive excavations, archaeologists have found no evidence of an important prehistoric
settlement in the area. Archaeological evidence of the period, related to the practice of agriculture, burials and
traces of habitation, but nothing important, has been discovered. The existence of a city before the Roman era is
considered not credible, but as some of the Roman cities remain unexcavated, it is possible that such a settlement is
still undiscovered.
In prehistoric times, London was more of a rural area with outlying settlements. Expensive objects such as
the Battersea Shield, found in the River Thames near Chelsea, suggest that the area was important; important
settlements may have been at Egham and Brentford,
and there was a fort at Uppall, but no town has been
found in the region of Roman London, the area now
known as the "commercial center of London" (City
of London ).
Numerous Bronze Age and Iron Age
spearheads and weapons have been discovered[1]
near the banks of the Thames in the London area,
many of which show signs of use in battle. These
objects suggest that the Thames was an important
frontier between tribes.
In 2002, excavations for the BBC Channel 4
series 'Time Team' uncovered a series of logs
driven vertically into the ground near the SIS
building in Vauxhall suggesting that a bridge or
weir had existed there 3000 years ago. years.

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