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56
6. That makes the pathologist’s work difficult. Usually. (A. Hailey)
7. He nodded curtly and went out. (A. Hailey)
8. Winston
followed her down the passage. (G. Orwell)
9. The autopsy-room doors
swung open. (A. Hailey)
10. The gin
was rising from his stomach. (G. Orwell)
XV. Analyze the structure of the following composite sentences. State the type of
connectors:
1. She was looking for a place where they might lunch, for Ashurst never
looked for anything. (J. Galsworthy)
2. Julia, however, had insisted that she must have her bedroom as she liked,
and having had exactly the bedroom that pleased her in the old house in
Regent’s Park which they had occupied since the end of the war she brought
it over bodily. (W. S. Maugham)
3. An overpowering smell of sweat, a sort of unconscious testimony to the
strenuousness of his life, followed him about wherever he went, and even
remained behind him after he had gone. (G. Orwell)
4. Bernice sighed profoundly, but Marjorie was not through. (F. S. Fitzgerald)
5. His patients trusted him because of a forthright integrity which came
through when he talked. (A. Hailey)
6. He remembered that he had thought her pretty when she first came to town,
before he had realized that she was dull. (F. S. Fitzgerald)
7. He hated using his hands, and he hated bending down, which was always
liable to start him coughing. (G. Orwell)
8. Roger McNeil smiled inwardly at the thought, though he did not betray it on
his face. (A. Hailey)
9. As a splashing stone sends ripples to the farthest edges of the pond, murder
affects the lives of many people. (E. S. Gardner)
10. Everything had a battered, trampled-on look, as though the place had just
been visited by some large violent animal. (G. Orwell)
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