Составить 10 вопросов на англ. по тексту ( 2 общих, 2 специальных, 2 альтернативных, 2 разделительных, 2 вопроса к подлежащему )
Снежана в категроии Английский язык, вопрос открыт 27.09.2017 в 21:00
Becky, Alex and Claire are 15, Liz is 16. We're having a pizza in Guildford on a Friday night. The last time i saw them, they were in school uniform and the transformation is remarkable; the schoolgirls are gone and i'm sitting with a group of young women wearing make-up and the latest fashions.
The girls are all in Year 11. This is the first time the friends have had to make choices that will affect their future - which sixth-form college to attend, which A levels to choose. I 'can't wait,' says Alex. 'We're going shopping tomorrow for clothes. You can buy your own ticket for the ball, which is great. It would be awful if you had to be asked by a boy.'
'There's not much to do in Petersfield if you're our age,' complains Claire. 'There's one club and they have fifteen-eighteen nights, but that's it. It's really addictive and it's a great way to keep in touch. There's a disco they organise for all the schools, but all the teachers go, so it's not much fun.'
Most of the group have babysitting jobs and receive an allowance from their parents. The girls are concerned with their schoolwork, and want to do well in their exams, so spend much of their time away from school studying.
They enjoy the same television programmes that i watch, listen to the same music and wear the same style of casual clothes. (One of my colleagues infuriates his teenage son by knocking on his bedroom door when the boy has stormed off to play rock music at full blast, and suggesting that the next track is better.) I wonder if this growing democracy of entertainment makes the girls relationships with their parents easier than it was when i was a teenager. 'I don't talk to my parents about anything!' Becky exclaims shocked at suggestion.
Ross is 17 years old and plays in a band called Macer. 'You should hear them. They're great. They're going to be massive,' says his best friend Matthew, also 17. They're both sixth-formers at Porth Country Comprehensive, studying drama. 'I send emails and go to chat rooms sometimes when i'm at home,' admits Matthew, 'but i've got better things to do with my time at school.'
The boys have part-time jobs and Ross spends much of his spare time working on his music. 'There's not a lot of time for just hanging around,' he says. 'We don't see as much of each other as we used to because of girlfriends and work.' The bowling alleys and multiplex cinemas in nearby towns and cities will have to wait, and they limit their socialisting to Porth and the surrounding villages.
'We try to go out when we can to play pool,' says Matthew. 'Our parents don't mind what time we come home. I take my mobile with me, so if it gets really late, my mum might phone me.' Occasionally, Matthew's mother stays up until he gets home, just to make sure he's all right. 'They want us to go off to university. We've got more choices than our parents had. There's more expected of us, though, and they still have a go at us over phone bills and spending too much money, of course.'
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