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Valitse oikea vaihtoehto.
1. Yawning a. are said b. says c. is said d. has said to be so contagious that it can spread to dogs and monkeys.
2. The “No animals a. was b. were c. been d. is harmed …” disclaimer listed in film credits by the American Humane Association doesn’t just cover cute and cuddly animals; they also have strict rules regarding snakes, rats and insects.
3. Chemotherapy drugs a. have designed b. are designed c. has been designed d. was designed to kill any rapidly dividing cells. Unfortunately, our hair follicles are some of the fastest-growing cells in the body, which is why most cancer patients lose their hair during treatment.
4. American gymnast George Eyser is famous for a. having been chosen b. having chosen c. choosing d. have been chosen to represent the USA in the 1904 Olympics, even though his left leg was made of wood. He won six medals.
5. Beach Boys a. will be known b. has been known c. would have been known d. are known to be the founders of surf rock; however, only Dennis Wilson knew how to surf. He died of drowning in 1983.
6. a. People b. You c. One d. They has to have a lot of courage to try what nobody has tried before. The first person to successfully go over Niagara Falls in a barrel was 63-year-old Annie Taylor, a former school teacher who needed money. She died penniless about 20 years later.
7. The famous Mount Rushmore in South Dakota featuring the heads of presidents Washington, T. Roosevelt, Jefferson, and Lincoln a. were building b. were built c. was built d. have been built solely as a tourist trap to give South Dakota tourism dollars that it desperately needed. And guess what? It worked. Almost 3 million people visit the mountain each year.
8. I a. am surprised b. surprised c. were surprised d. was surprised when I heard that the "S" in Harry S. Truman didn't stand for anything. He had a middle initial but no middle name.
9. a. People b. We c. You d. They can't choose your relatives. Leslie Nielsen's father was a Canadian Mountie (a police officer on horseback) and his brother was a member of Canadian Parliament.
10. In 1983, a tiny fleck of paint off an earlier spacecraft hit the windshield of the orbiting space shuttle Challenger at 20,000 mph (32,187 km/h). The windshield a. didn't b. wasn't c. weren't d. doesn't get smashed to pieces, but the small speck of paint caused a crater to form in its glass.
10 p
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