6. Answer the questions; choose one of the words from the brackets

1. Whose watch is on the table? (my wife) 2. Whose name is Jane? (my daughter) 3. Whose name is Nick? (my son) 4. Whose flat is this? (my friends) 5. Whose letters are those? (our engineers) 6. Whose room is it? (my friend) 7. Whose children are these? (Mike) 8. Whose books are these? (my children)

7. Choose appropriate possessive or personal pronoun:

1. (You, your) flat is nice. 2. (He, his) is an engineer. 3. (She, her) daughter is thirteen. 4. (They, their) friends are economists. 5. How old is (she, her)? 6. (They, their) are not students. 7. Is (she, her) in that room now? 8. Is (you, your) car good? 9. Is (he, his) an economist or an engineer? 10. Are (they, their) children pupils or students?

 

8. Use possessive pronouns instead possessive nouns:

1. Take Mike’s books off the table. 2. Give me Kate’s pen. 3. What is this girl’s name? 4. How old is Mr. Kotov’s son? 5. Where are your friends’ children now? 6. This is my friend’s daughter. 7. These engineers’ desks are in that room.8. Take Kate’s book from Peter. 9. These are Mr. Petrov’s telexes.10. Come up to this engineer’s desks, please.

 

Read the text.

Two brothers

Emilio and Maximilian are brothers. They are both old men now. They grew up together on a farm in Argentina, but since then they have led very different lives. When Emilio left school at the age of fourteen, he started work on their father’s farm. He really enjoyed the simple village life and when their father died, Emilio took over the farm. All his life Emilio has lived in the old farmhouse where he was born. ‘I’ve never wanted to live anywhere else,’ he says. ‘This is my home. I feel that I’m part of it and it is part of me.’

So for over 70 years Emilio’s life has changed very little. When he was 22, he married his childhood sweetheart, Pilar, from the next village, and they have been happily married ever since. Two years ago they celebrated their golden wedding anniversary. It was a big celebration. Everybody from miles around was there, including Emilio and Pillar’s six children and their fifteen grandchildren.

Emilio and Pilar have never been abroad. Until he was 60, Emilio went to Buenos Aires once a year, but since his sixtieth birthday he hasn’t left the village. ‘Well, yes, I’ve have had a good life,’ he says, ‘but I haven’t done very much. Now, look at my brother, Maximilian. He left the village as soon as he had the chance. He hasn’t visited us very much in the last twenty years, but we’ve read about him in the newspapers and we’ve seen him on TV, too. Yes, Max has had a very interesting life’