Teksti

exercise 9 Fill in the missing words according to the Finnish clues.
1. mustn't tell
2. Don't you have to / need to pay
3. didn't have to / need to stay
4. must be
5. have to be / need to be / must be
6. must have practised
5. have had to cancel
6. had to clean
7. must have been
8. mustn’t fill
9. Did they have / need to pay
10. must never / mustn’t ever call 

exercise 11 Translate. Your partner checks.
1. How well can you swim?
2. How many instruments can you play?
3. We haven’t been able to go to the gym.
4. You’re not allowed to / mustn't smoke here!
5. It might/may be difficult to remember all the rules.
6. We had to write three essays.
7. You must have been hungry after that hike!
8. Peter has had to buy five new phones this year. He always loses them / He is always losing them.

exercise 13 Fill in.
The right to vote began in 1776 but the ones who 1. were allowed to vote / could vote were white, property-owning, Protestant men. The right to vote was extended in 1856 stating that all white men in America 2. are allowed to vote / can vote. From 1889 onwards men 3. had to take literacy tests specifically designed to reduce African American voting. According to The Nineteenth Amendment from 1919-20, women 4. must be given / have to be given the right to vote. Since 1924 all Native Americans born in the USA 5. have been able to give/cast their vote. Americans under the age of 21 6. hadn’t been able to take part / participate in elections until 1971. In 1974, The Supreme Court ruled that states 7. may deny convicted felons the right to vote. In 1975, laws were passed that said that literacy tests 8. couldn’t be used anymore. In 1990, the law required services to ensure that people with disabilities 9. can go / are able to go to polling stations. One of the biggest landmarks in the history of voting 10. might / may have been the presidential election in 2008. In addition to winning, Obama got a great turnout of voters, which 11. must have been almost as great as the victory itself.