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Help me please!!!!!!!1 Task. Put the verbs in brackets into the correct forms of the Subjunctive Mood. 1 I wouldn’t have believed it if I (not to see) it with my own eyes. 2. If I (to make) coffee, you (to cut) the cake? 3. Please, don’t sign any contracts unless they (to be checked) by me. 4. He must be more careful, unless he (to want) trouble! 5. What you (to do) if you (to fail) your exam? 6. “If it (to be) an accident”, said Sir Henry gently, “I do not think Mrs. Brown (to tell) us this story now”. 7. I (not to go) if you (not to say) you’d come with me. 8. How it (to be) if I (to drop) around this evening? 9. If only I (to feel) that somebody wanted me, that I was of use to somebody, I (to become) a different person. 10. But for the toothache I (to enjoy) the concert. 11. I wish I (to be) as sure as you. 12. I wished I (to have) enough confidence so that I could transfer some to her. But I didn’t. 13. You look as though you (not to have) much sleep the last night or two. 14. It’s a pity the weather (to be) so bad, otherwise we (spend) the whole day out in the country. 15. She always smelled as if she just (to come) from a long walk in a forest. 16. She clutched the letter to her heart as though she (to think) I would take it from her. 17. He looked as if he (not to have) a meal for a week, and I hadn’t the heart to refuse him. 18. There was no piano because it (to take) much room. 19. I don’t know what we (to do) but for Nurse Martha. 20. I (to like) to say “no” but it (not to be) true. 21. But for the last remark she (not to start) a bargain. 22. You would have seen my garden at its best if you (to be) here last week.
Помогите пожалуйста,нужен перевод !CLASSIFICATION OF THE MENTALLY RETARDED In the many ways of classifying mental defectives, one of the most useful, for psychological and administrative purposes, is by the severity of grade of the defect. Three main grades are distinguished, namely, imbeciles and feeble-minded persons. Roughly speaking, one can say that idiots are so grossly subnormal in intelligence that they cannot learn to protect themselves from common physical dan¬gers. They do not learn to speak more than a few words at most. Imbeciles learn to avoid common physical dangers, and can usually carry on a simple conversation, but they do not have the wit to learn to read and write, and as adults they can only lead a sheltered existence. In imbeciles and idiots the damage to the central nervous system is severe. Idiots and imbeciles form the two great classes of what is often called "lower grade" mental defect. There is considerable agreement in all countries as to how these two terms shall be used, and because of the gravity of the disabilities from which idiots and imbeciles suffer diagnosis is relatively easy in the great majority of cases. Much more uncertainty exists in regard to what are called "high grade" mental defectives, morons, or feeble-minded persons. Both the terminology and the definition of this category are confusing. In Great Britain, the "slow learning" children are often called feeble-minded. In America the term feeble-mindedness if a synonym for mental-deficiency. And those who are called feeble-minded in England are called morons in the United States. The term feeble-minded has traditionally been applied to adults who are above imbecile grade in intelligence and attainment, but who are regarded as mentally deficient be¬cause of gross social incompetence. So the term feeble-minded is now applied only to socially incompetent persons who are also grossly subnormal in intelligence. In most feeble-minded persons the damage of the central nervous system is either not severe or is non-existent, and the main defects, which are behavioral, are in many cases due more to environmental factors impairing the efficiency of a vulnerable organism, than to physiological causes in them¬selves. Mental deficiency is to be distinguished from mental ill¬ness. a) Mentally ill patients are 1) those who need medical and social services in the community or in hospital and who are not at present subject to compulsory powers (they are many) and 2) those who are at present subject to compulsory ad¬mission to hospital or community care, in certain circumstances, as "Persons of unsound mind." (they are few). b) Psychopathic patients, or patients with psychopathic personality are those who may be called feeble-minded psycho paths.