El fin de semana.What did you and your friends do last weekend? Complete the sentences with the correct verb from the list.Use the preterite tense.
jugar
montar
nadar
patinar
sacar
Tú __________________________ fotos de una competencia de esquí acuático.
Fill in the blank(s) with the appropriate word(s).
sacaste
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In each of the following scenarios, the first action depends on the second. Use the proper conjunction from the list and the subjunctive to complete each combined sentence.
sebbene benché a condizione che in caso che affinché 1. Ti presto la macchina. Tu compri la benzina. Ti presto la macchina __________________________________________ la benzina. 2. Ecco l'indirizzo di Marcella. Vuoi visitarla oggi. Ecco l'indirizzo di Marcella __________________________________ visitarla oggi. 3. Usciamo lo stesso. Fa cattivo tempo. Usciamo lo stesso __________________________________________ cattivo tempo. 4. Comprerò due biglietti. Tu puoi andare al concerto. Comprerò due biglietti __________________________________ andare al concerto. 5. Guido va in Italia. Non ha molto tempo. Guido va in Italia ___________________________________________ molto tempo.
The best-known decision affecting prejudicial press coverage of criminal cases is Sheppard v. Maxwell. In 1954, Dr. Samuel Sheppard of Cleveland was sentenced to life imprisonment for murdering his wife. His conviction followed reams of newspaper stories, many of which proclaimed his guilt before the jury had decided the case. The jurors, who went home each evening, were told by the judge not to
read newspapers or pay attention to broadcast reports, but no one monitored what the jurors did. Twelve years later, lawyer F. Lee Bailey took Sheppard's trial to the U.S. Supreme Court, where a conviction was overturned on the premise that Sheppard had been a victim of a biased jury. In writing the decision, Justice Tom C. Clark prescribed several remedies. He said that reporters should have been limited to certain areas in the courtroom, that the news media should not have been allowed to interview the witnesses, and that the court should have forbidden statements outside of the courtroom. The outcome of the Sheppard case led to many courtroom experiments with restrictions on the press. The most widespread practices were restraining (gag) orders and closed proceedings. With a gag order, the judge limited what the press could report. But since 1980, several court cases have overturned most of these limitations so that today the press is rarely excluded from courtroom proceedings, and the exclusion lasts only as long as it takes the news organization to appeal to a higher court for access. Cameras in the courtroom is a sticky issue between judges, who want to avoid the disruption that cameras present, and broadcast newspeople, who want to photograph what is going on. In selected cases, however, cameras have been allowed to record complete trials. In 1994, for example, Court TV broadcast the entire trial of O.J. Simpson. Cameras in the courtroom is a state-by-state decision. Some states allow cameras during civil but not criminal trials. Other states try to completely limit access. The U.S. courts and the press are not yet completely comfortable partners. From this passage, you may infer that a. Sheppard was innocent of the murder charge. b. today the press is often blocked from court proceedings. c. newspaper reporters were biased against Sheppard. d. Justice Tom Clark was biased when he made his ruling.
Vittoria, non (venire) a casa alle due, (venire) all’una! _______________________ /_______________________
Scrivete la forma corretta dell’imperativo. (Write the correct form of the imperative.)
When the power was out and Tim could not access his computer, he __________ to
writing ideas for his paper the old -fashioned way, with pencil and paper. Fill in the blank(s) with correct word