Afford - give, take
Agree - accept, admit, consent
Appear - show up, arise
Be - locate, live, stand
Able - capable, skillfull, clever
Choose - select, prefer, take
Decide - solve, settle
Deserve - earn, be worth
Expect - wait, look forward
Happen - take place, originate
Hesitate - scruple, hover
Hope - expect, rely
Learn - study, teach
Make - do, create, commit
Manage - control, govern
Offer - suggest, propose, submit
Plan - scheme, contrive
Pretend - simulate, dissemble
Promise - bode, pledge
Refuse - deny, disclaim
Seem - appear, show
Teach - learn, study
Tend - care, attend, look after
Want - wish, need
Admit - confess, accept
Avoid - get away, escape
Deny - refuse, reject, disclaim
Enjoy - relish, derive pleasure
Fancy - imagine, dream, represent
Feel like - think, sense
Finish - and, close, stop, complete
Keep (on) - go ahead, continue, carry, hold
Imagine - evision, dream
Involve - include, entangle
Mind - remember, care, notice
Miss - be lonely, be bored
Practise - engage, work
Recommend - advise, consult
Spend - expend, conduct
Suggest - propose, offer, submit
сделай лучшим ответом, я очень старалась и много времени потратила за понимание ❤
ответ: This is the University of London I want to tell you about.
It was to overcome these limitations that in 1827, in London, a non-denominational college, – “University College” was founded.
In 1836 these 2 institutions, University College and King’s College, joined forces. Each retained the control of its own internal organization and teaching; a separate body, the University of London, was created to “conduct the examination of, and to confer degrees upon their students”. Bedford College for women, Imperial College of Science and Technology, and many other schools and colleges became a part of the federal University.
Up until 1900 the University was only an examining body but in that year an Act of Parliament permitted to “provide lecture rooms, museums, laboratories, workshops, and other facilities for the purpose both of teaching and research”.
Today the University of London is a federation of colleges, each largely independent of the British Parliament in academic matters.
It is Birkbeck College accepting for undergraduate work “only part-time students who earn their living during the day”.
For fear you should think that size is the only claim to fame, let me drop a few names associated, with the University of London: Sir Alex Fleming, Thomas Huxley, Michael Faraday, Sir Fred Clarke, Lord Macmillian, Sidney Webb.
In many ways the University has departed from the traditions of Oxford and Cambridge, London was the first to abolish religious tests, to admit women in England for degrees, to grant degrees without residence.
Объяснение: