 
  


         ,     ,     .        ,   . ,    . , -, , .                   ,                .






1.Prepositions-


1.1.     ,         .



sounded like a whole herd of buffaloes.

     .

Better he were logged as incurable sea-sick

    ,      

Permit me to give you an extract from it.

      .

At six oclock that evening, Bannerman was at his desk

     ,     

I was unable to throw any light upon it.

       - .




2.Aboard


2.1.  aboard   ,  ,  -  -    - .



Youre sure the homing beacon is secure aboard their ship?

 ,  ,  ,      ?

Soon I was on my way across the Atlantic aboard the Mauritania.

        .




3.About


 about  :



3.1.  , ,       -  -.



We must ask about this right away.

      .

I will not speak about it just now

       



3.2. -   -,    -.



Nelson, standing on the quarter-deck with his immediate officers about him

,   ,    

It is men about him who have changed.

 ,   ,   .



3.3.  ,    -    .



I drawled about the lawn with an August sun on my back

    ,      

and I had to get up and move about the room.

        .



I was following her about the country roads.

       .

His hopes and ambitions were all crumbling about him.

        .

They looked about them

 



3.4. -  -  - .



There is something tropical and exotic about her

   -   

There was something about her that attracted him

 -,     .



3.5.     .



Last night, about two in the morning

 ,   

The walk in the centre is about 8 ft.

      8 



3.6. -    -.

there was no time to do anything about them now.

    -   .

there was nothing he could do about it.

      .



3.7. - - .



I was beaten about the head by their wings

     




4.About- 


4.1.  about     .



4.1.1. Angry about something.



Parents are justifiably angry about the decision to close the school. (








.)

     .



4.1.2. Excited about.



Thus, Paul was excited about the possibilities for the future of the church.

 ,    ,    .



4.1.3. Smile about something.



Ive got nothing to smile about. (





.)

  .




5.Above


5.1.  above ,  -  - ,  -   - .     above    ,     .



the two thin towers of Baskerville Hall rose above the trees.

       .

the other parts of him which appeared above the table

  ,    

The cliffs towered above him

   



He could not have been much above twenty years of age.

       .

Above the noise of the flames came monstrous explosions from the soldiers

    ,  

Matthew, in an easy mood, was not above a taunt

,    ,     




6.Across


 across  :



6.1. - ,    -     .



You just go straight across the Borough Bridge

     

and shot one single yellow beam across the gloom of the corridor.

       .

and glared at Matthew across the table.

     .



6.2. -          .



an eleven-foot-long control chart spread across the table.

,    ,    .



6.3.  -  -   -.



and welted her across the face with the stick

     

Rain squalls drifted across their russet face

        



6.4. -  -    .



But as executives across America have learned

       

a TV series that became popular across five continents.

 ,      .



6.5. - -  .



I ran across two scorched cardboard boxes containing files

       ,  

on the way home they came across spoor of a wounded elephant.

      ,    .




7.After


 after  :



7.1. -   -    .



Mr. Gettys asked me to stay after class.

      .

and after a long private interview with Sir Henry

       



7.2. -   ,  ,   - .



After the first shock, they were all deft fishermen astonished by good fortune

  ,       

After such a bout, the Secretary was released immediately into thought and action

  ,    -   .



7.3. -  - , ,  .



little Bac trotted after him

    

We are after the convict

   

You dont mean to say that you came after me in spite of all?

     ,       ?

I think shes after Glenn.

 ,     .



7.4. -    -.



Well have high schools named after us.

      .

It is called after the pioneer who discovered it.

     ,   .



7.5. -    .



to achieve incremental improvements in process after process.

      .

Hour after hour, for four straight days

  ,     




8.After  


8.1.  after     .



8.1.1. Look after.



to look after us when he was dead

  ,      

but he had engaged a lady-housekeeper to look after his establishment.

     ,     .



8.1.2. Take after.



Do you think he takes after me?

 ,     ?




9.Against


 against  :



9.1. -  -   .



the lady staggered against the trunk of the tree for support.

     ,    .

he steadied his plump body against the leather strap at his side.

      .



9.2. -  -  -   .



the wind screamed and rattled against the window

    

all pitted against the malice of the sea

  ,     

with the icy water slapping and pounding against their hull

      



9.3. -  -  -  -.



What has he against me?

    ?

There is nothing more stimulating than a case where everything goes against you.

   ,  ,    .



9.4.      -.



shading his weak eyes against the sun and the rippling gleam of water.

        .

and securely locked against any fury which the Atlantic Ocean might launch

     ,       



9.5. -  - ,     .



As you look at their grey stone huts against the scarred hills

           

and set it against my successes.

     .




10.Along


 along  :



10.1. -  - .



Von Dorn, along with many of his colleagues was convinced

 ,       



10.2. -  -     ,   . .



It was a pleasant walk of four miles along the edge of the moor

     

to check what passed along this road during the night in question.

,         .




11.Alongside


 alongside  :



11.1. -  -    -  - .



The second was to lay alongside the nearest enemy

        



11.2. -      - .



Sir Francis Drake fights alongside us

      




12.Among


 among  :



12.1. -  -  -  -.



I could see him standing among the trees.

  ,     .

we tore him up and rushed among the trunks.

      .

I stood among the rocks watching them

   ,   

He felt his way among the furniture

    



12.2. -   - ,   .



Martina Navrotilova, Chris Evert and dozens of others among our list of more than 500 clients

 ,            500 

During the war, Deming was among a different group of statistical experts

  ,      -



12.3.    .



and the distribution of land and resources among the nations of Europe

       




13.As


 as  :



13.1.  ,    -  - ,    ,    .



When Geneen first took over as chairman of the International Telephone and Telegraph Company

          

Both countries refuse to use the exchange rate solely as an anti-inflationary weapon

              .



13.2. - .



Theyre Indians dressed up as Eskimos.

  ,   .

and it was as Diana, goddess of the moon

     ,  




14.At


 at  :



14.1. - -   - .     ,    .



That means hes gone. Hes at the cemetery.

 ,    .    .

O. K., I was at Ronny Templetons house

, ,     

When I was at Yale Law School

        

when he was seventeen and studying at Cambridge.

   ,     .



14.2.        , ,   .



and seated himself at his desk

    

What were you doing at that window?

     ?

was standing at the door.

  .

stopped the cab at the corner of Cavendish Square

     



14.3. -      .



At breakfast, however, I informed him

 , ,   

it was only this moment at breakfast

      



14.4. -   - .



They give him to me at human services

      



14.5.  .



His absence was discovered at seven oclock

     

the train which leaves Waterloo at 9.50

,     9.50



14.6.  .



who graduated from Yale at 19

      19 

How James Cook, at thirty, had attained

  ,   , 



14.7.  , , .



to make themselves useful in any way at a payment of fifteen dollars a month.

            .

and shouted at the top of his voice.

 ,   .

Well enough at any rate for him to strangle her while she was nude in her own flat.

    ,    ,       .



14.8.  , .



He hurried at his top speed down Baker Street

 ,      

She went up to London at intervals

      



14.9.   .



I cant forget the look in his eyes when he ran at me this morning

      ,       

It sped right at Morton, knocked him flat and

      ,     



Mangler growled ferociously and leapt at Murphy

      ̸

You see the size of that gun he fired at us?

    ,      ?



14.10.    -.



he grew impatient at the delay.

  .

Yes, he snapped, already annoyed at the interruption.

,  ,   ,   .




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