Ratujcie:(!!

Temat przeniesiony do archwium.
Bardzo pilnię potrzebuję pomocy w uzupełnieniu poniższego tekstu!Siedze nad nim juz kilka dni i nie bardzo mogę sobie z nim poradzić :(. Jeżeli ktos mógłby mi pomóc będę bardzo wdzięczna!

The domestic life of England has undergone a complete (1)________. Modern (2) __________ is possessed by a nomadic (3) _____ , which is the sure destroyer of all home ties. A section of the English aristocracy pass their existence in a perpetual round of visits. They flit from mansion (4) _____ mansion during the country-house season; they know no peace during the London season.
They (5) ______ endure the tranquillity of their own homes in the provinces for more than a month at a (6) ______ . Existence for the fashionable and the wealthy is thus one unending (7) _________ of excitement. Here (8) ____________ there in some out-of-the-way corner of the country may be found a survival from the old school of country squires, who is regarded (9)_______ only an antiquarian interest (10) ________ his descendants of today. He is not a great landlord; he is what, in the present age of immense fortunes, would be regarded even (11) ______ a poor man. He has a rental of some forty thousand a year, and he is content if he can transmit this fortune, not largely augmented but not diminished, (12) ______ his son. His whole being is absorbed in his acres, his farms, his tenants, and his dependants. He lives among his own people, and the thought has never (13) ______ to him that he might spend half his time elsewhere. Thirty years ago he took his eldest boy to Eton, and on the occasion of that memorable (14) _____________ he accepted the hospitality of a friend and contemporary, a fellow of the royal foundation. But (15) _______ this exception he has not once slept away from home in the course of those three decades. Well stricken in years, he is still hale and vigorous; he can (16) ____ over several miles of his own ground in a day, and is fully equal to longer excursions on the (17) ______ of his stout, sure-footed horse. He is hospitable, and knows every family in the country. The hospitality, (18) __________ out with generous hand, is
there for (19) ______ to enjoy. But with the exception just (20) _______, the company is the same as regards its general composition as that which congregated there a (21) _______________ ago.
Compare now (22) __________ this specimen of a bygone age the English squire a la mode, opulent commoner, or peer, whether he is or is not in the front rank of the territorial aristocracy. He has inherited a fine estate, he has travelled much, been (23) _______ the world, and on his return to England went into the army, just in the same (24) _________ that a few years earlier he went to (25)_______ or to Oxford. He is a keen sportsman, and he is (26) ______ of a scientific
farmer. He breeds and is an excellent judge of stock of all sorts. In a word, he has all the tastes and knowledge of a country gentleman, and that is what he calls (27) _________ . But the country house of which he is proprietor probably does not see him for more than two or three (28) _______ out of the twelve, and never for more than two or three weeks at a time. There is always business, social, political, and financial or some pure pleasure scheme as urgent as business, which requires his (29) _________ in London. During the season he is, of course, in
London more or (30) __________ continuously.
dziwny ten close, bo brakuje przede wszystkim rzeczownikow. Wrzuc swoje propozycje to ci sprawdze bo troche nie chce mi sie myslec nad kazdym slowem:)
pzdr
To jest wszystko co udało mi sie zrobic, ale nie jestem pewna czy chociaż to jest ok. Z góry dzięki za pomoc!:)
The domestic life of England has undergone a complete (1) change_. Modern (2) family is possessed by a nomadic (3) lifestyle , which is the sure destroyer of all home ties. A section of the English aristocracy pass their existence in a perpetual round of visits. They flit from mansion (4) to mansion during the country-house season; they know no peace during the London season.
They (5) ______ endure the tranquillity of their own homes in the provinces for more than a month at a (6) _year. Existence for the fashionable and the wealthy is thus one unending (7) _squeal of excitement. Here (8) and there in some out-of-the-way corner of the country may be found a survival from the old school of country squires, who is regarded (9)_______ only an antiquarian interest (10) ________ his descendants of today. He is not a great landlord; he is what, in the present age of immense fortunes, would be regarded even (11) as a poor man. He has a rental of some forty thousand a year, and he is content if he can transmit this fortune, not largely augmented but not diminished, (12) to his son. His whole being is absorbed in his acres, his farms, his tenants, and his dependants. He lives among his own people, and the thought has never (13) occured to him that he might spend half his time elsewhere. Thirty years ago he took his eldest boy to Eton, and on the occasion of that memorable (14) event he accepted the hospitality of a friend and contemporary, a fellow of the royal foundation. But (15) beyond this exception he has not once slept away from home in the course of those three decades. Well stricken in years, he is still hale and vigorous; he can (16) see over several miles of his own ground in a day, and is fully equal to longer excursions on the (17) _back of his stout, sure-footed horse. He is hospitable, and knows every family in the country. The hospitality, (18) __________ out with generous hand, is
there for (19) ______ to enjoy. But with the exception just (20) _______, the company is the same as regards its general composition as that which congregated there a (21) _______________ ago.
Compare now (22) __________ this specimen of a bygone age the English squire a la mode, opulent commoner, or peer, whether he is or is not in the front rank of the territorial aristocracy. He has inherited a fine estate, he has travelled much, been (23) round the world, and on his return to England went into the army, just in the same (24) way that a few years earlier he went to (25)_______ or to Oxford. He is a keen sportsman, and he is (26) ______ of a scientific
farmer. He breeds and is an excellent judge of stock of all sorts. In a word, he has all the tastes and knowledge of a country gentleman, and that is what he calls (27) _________ . But the country house of which he is proprietor probably does not see him for more than two or three (28) _______ out of the twelve, and never for more than two or three weeks at a time. There is always business, social, political, and financial or some pure pleasure scheme as urgent as business, which requires his (29) presence_ in London. During the season he is, of course, in
London more or (30) less continuously.
gdybym wiedzial, ze przepiszesz caly tekst, to nie prosilbym o to... No ale nic, biore sie do roboty:)
1ok
2albo: society lub: aristocracy (bo w sumie o niej jest ten tekst)
3ok
4ok
5never
6time (year zle)
7ok
8ok
9with
10by
11ok
12ok
13ok
14ok
15for (but for - poza, za wyjatkiem)
16see over nie bardzo, bo jest 'in a day', ja bym dal 'go over', ale pewnie jest cos lepszego
17ok
18given (tez nie na 100%...)
19everyone
20mentioned
21decade, for example
22to
23ok
24ok
25tu moze byc cokolwiek.... (chocby London czy Harvard)
26 no idea....
27tez kilka mozliwosci, chocby progress czy civility
28months
29ok
30ok

byloby dobrze jesli ktos jeszcze rzucilby na to okiem (sam jestem ciekaw chocby 26...)
pozdrawiam
Wielkie, wielkie DZIĘKUJĘ !:)))
a może :
he is (26) __KIND____ of a scientific farmer.
nieee... byloby: he is A kind of scientific....
kind of jest bardzo czesto stosowane bez 'a'.
choc moze to zbyt potoczne jak na tego typu ćwiczenie ??
26. może He is much of a ..... Nie czytałem tekstu ale gramatycznie poprawne ;)
26) more of a scientific farmer (??)

PZdr,
Kociamama.
Temat przeniesiony do archwium.

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