The Great Gatsby / Великий Гэтсби. Книга для чтения на английском языке. Фрэнсис Скотт Фицджеральд
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a) only one time
b) two times
c) three or four times
6. Chester McKee was
a) a painter.
b) a designer of dresses.
c) a photographer.
7. Why did Myrtle marry Mr. Wilson?
a) because she thought he was rich.
b) because she loved him.
c) because she thought he was a gentleman.
8. Tom and Myrtle first met
a) sitting opposite each other in the train to New York.
b) trying to catch a taxi.
c) getting into a subway train.
9. When Myrtle continued to repeat Daisy’s name Tom
a) shouted at her.
b) slapped her in the cheek.
c) hit her on the nose.
10. Nick ended the party sleeping
a) on Myrtle’s couch.
b) on the bed at the McKees’.
c) on the train station.
2. Practice the pronunciation of these words.
grotesque [grəʊˈtesk]
enormous [ɪˈnɔ:məs]
solemn [ˈsɒləm]
acquaintances [əˈkweɪntənsɪz]
persistent [pəˈsɪstənt]
impatiently [ɪmˈpeɪʃəntlɪ]
sensuously [ˈsensjʊəslɪ]
vitality [vaɪˈtælɪtɪ]
doubtful [ˈdaʊtfʊl]
enthusiastically [ɪnˌθjuːzɪˈæstɪk(ə)lɪ]
indistinctly [ɪndɪˈstɪŋktlɪ]
feminine [ˈfemənən]
languid [ˈlæŋgwəd]
arrogance [ˈærəgəns]
adorable [əˈdɔ:rəbl]
nephew [ˈnevju]
twilight [ˈtwaɪlaɪt]
advertisement [ədˈvε:təsmənt]
artificial [ˌɑ:təˈfɪʃəl]
furniture [ˈfε:rnɪʧə]
tapestried [ˈtæpɪstrɪd]
despair [dɪsˈpεə]
triumphantly [traɪˈʌmfəntlɪ]
elaborateness [ɪˈlæbərɪtnəs]
ambiguously [æmˈbɪgjuəslɪ]
massage [məˈsɑ:ʒ]
wreath [ri:θ]
violent [ˈvaɪələnt]
unconvincingly [ˌʌnkənˈvɪnsɪŋlɪ]
overweight [ˈəʊvərˌweɪt]
bureau [ˈbjʊrəʊ]
frivolous [ˈfrɪvələs]
interior [ɪnˈtɪrɪər]
haughtily [ˈhɔːtɪlɪ]
3. Fill in the blanks with the following adverbs and translate.
Pointlessly, haughtily, endlessly, admiringly, ambiguously, unconvincingly, accusingly, sensuously, intently, imperatively.
1. But above the gray land and the spasms of cheerless dust which move … over it, you notice, after a moment, the eyes of Doctor T. J. Eckleburg.
2. “I can’t complain,” answered Wilson … .
3. She was in the middle thirties, and faintly fat, but she carried her overweight body … as some women can.
4. “I want to see you,” said Tom … .
5. “That dog?” He looked at it … .
6. Mrs. Wilson gathered up her dog and other things she bought, and went … in.
7. Mr. McKee viewed her … with his head on one side.
8. “Well, I married him,” said Myrtle, … .
9. She looked at me and laughed … .
10. She pointed suddenly at me, and everyone looked at me … .
4. Fill in the blanks with prepositions.
1. His acquaintances were shocked by the fact that he turned … in popular restaurants with her.
2. His voice faded … and Tom looked impatiently … the garage.
3. We backed … to a gray old man who was selling very recent puppies of a doubtful breed.
4. The living-room was crowded to the doors with a set of tapestried furniture entirely too large for it, so that to move about was to stumble continually … .
5. “I just put it … sometimes when I don’t care what I look like.”
6. You have to keep … them all the time.
7. “They’re going West to live for a while until it blows … .”
8. “I almost married a little kike who’d been … me for years.”
9. He had on a dress suit and leather shoes, and I couldn’t keep my eyes … him.
10. Then I was lying half asleep in the cold lower level of the Pennsylvania Station, staring … the morning Tribune.
5. Find in the text the sentences in which the following word combinations are used. Make up your own sentences using them.