You are on page 1of 1

1) 1. F 2. T 3. F 4. F 5. F 6.

T
2) crocodile, parrot, octopus, sheep
→ → → → →
3) 1. f. 2. e. 3. a. 4. d. 5. g. 6. c. 7. b. 8.→ → → h.
emerge-pojawiać się, ukazywać
detect- dostrzegać, zauważać, odkrywać
4) I wish I’d taken my umbrella with me yesterday. It was a little cloudy in
the morning, but by the afternoon it was raining cats and dogs and I got
really wet!
My neighbour said she once saw an alien and she also said she saw a
spaceship last summer. I think she likes to talk a lot of hot air to entertain
us.
5) 1. sensitive, 2. detect, 3. legend, 4. emerge, 5. observe, 6. reliable, 7.
forecast, 8. shadow
6) 1.Even today, people say they know a storm or cold weather is coming
because they feel pain in their joints, noses and ears, heads or even teeth.
Modern scientists have not found much evidence for this, but some studies
have shown connections.
2.Really cold air has a lot less water in it, making snow much less probable,
say experts. But there are a number of other things which make a difference
to whether it will snow or not.
3.If the sun is red in the evening,good weather is travelling east behind it. If
the sky is red when the sun rises, in the east, the good, calm weather has
probably already passed, and some storms might be coming. So, a red
sunrise promises only one thing: stormy weather. This saying works less
well in the North and South Poles and around the equator, where weather
usually moves from east to west, so the opposite is more often true.
4.After seeing a flash in the sky, you should count the number of seconds
that pass beforeyou hear the bang of the thunder. Every five seconds is one
mile (or 1.61km) of distance between you and the storm.
7) 1.cats, 2. cow, 3. zebra, 4. kangaroo, 5. bison

You might also like