Сопоставление инфинитива после причастия II с инфинитивом в составном глагольном сказуемом
Упражнение Переведите следующие предложения, обращая внимание на инфинитив в составном глагольном сказуемом: 11. Many substances are known to dissolve in hot water. 12. A substance which is known to dissolve in acids may 13. The substance reported to dissolve in hot water was 14. This substance is reported to possess the property of 15. Substances thought to possess the property in question 16. The eclipse of the sun was predicted to occur in 1460. 17. The eclipse of the sun predicted to occur in 1460 took 18. This was the cubic equation which was believed in 19. The question is how closely these data represent the 3 Зак. 105 65 10. The following particulars have been selected as those 1. The postulates of the theory are of fundamental 2. In 1886, the Allis Lake Laboratory, a privately 28. Повторение инфинитивов и инфинитивных оборотов Упражнение Переведите следующие предложения, определяя инфинитивные обороты и функции инфинитивов: I 10. The radius of our orbit is believed to be increasing 11. The copper to be refined is cast into large plates. 12. This property allows the alpha particle to be detected. 13. The source is so weak as to add comparatively few 14. There appear to be two distinct effects in this case. 15. Electrons can be made to travel at very high speeds. 16. The idea of nuclear charge and atomic number is now 17. The cooling is effected by methods to be discussed in 18. A certain period of time must be allowed for the oil
18. There appears to be direct evidence of the existence 19. The distance d was calculated from equation 1—25 20. The best agreement is to be found in the case of 21. In our discussion the nucleus will be taken to be 22. We may suppose the alpha-particles within the nucleus 23. Ordinary objects are not likely to move with a velocity 16. The lithium nucleus is too small for so many collisions 17. Secondary radiation may be expected to rise when 20. Light is to be considered as some kind of wave motion 21. There is no reason for the conversion of mechanical II 23. Alpha-rays were shown to be identical, no matter 24. There is no definite molecular weight to be ascribed 22. Pitchblende was shown by X-ray and emission 35. It will be necessary for the observer to remain in the 36. In liquids and solids the movement of molecules must 37. One may consider the charge-exchange reaction to 38. Radium appeared to be an element, whose salts were 39. The proportion of colouring matter to be mixed with 40. The nucleus of every atom is assumed to contain 41. At first the alpha-rays were thought to be undeviated 42. As information accumulated, it became possible to plan 43. During the Dark Ages people believed the Earth to 44. All circumstances likely to affect the accuracy of the 33. Samples of two ores from a region known to be 34. When a current is said to be flowing from the positive 3* 67 pole of a battery towards the negative pole, actually electrons are running in the opposite direction. III 41. To test for a soluble iodide one adds to a test tube 42. To maintain a constant temperature in a small or 43. The speed of the particles (about ten thousand miles 44. Any metal will displace another metal, occupying a 39. The equilibrium methods of measuring relative i 40. We consider the hotness or coldness of any body to depend on the quantity of heat possessed by the body. 46. Ions have been found by numerous experiments to 47. One of the main objects of experiments on mesons 48. Galacturonic acid was shown by Hagglund and his 49. A body with total kinetic energy reduced to zero 50. With an increased production of uranium in recent outstanding properties make it seem likely to earn for itself a favourable position among special alloy steels. 51. For the growth to continue steps must be formed 52. We must discuss the actual values of — x for contacts 53. To begin with a simple example, let us in the first 54. The streams of ionized particles assumed to be emitted 55. The condition for the rays SA and SB to reinforce
53. It is quite common to use the so-called probable 54. In astronomical subjects it is customary to print to
The theorists were not sure whether what the observers In the present discussion observations of declination The discussion of too many details and special cases
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