2
A: What's your address?
B: 128 Bogenbai Batyr Street.
A: How do you spell it?
B: B-O-G-E-N-B-A-I, B-A-T-Y-R.
A: What's your telephone number?
B: It's double five-two-four-three-five-eight-nine.
3
A: What's your address?
B: 16 Abai Avenue.
A: How do you spell it?
B: A-B-A-I.
A: What's your telephone number?
B: It's double two-nine-four-double three-one-eight.
4
A: What's your address?
B: 97 Newton Street.
A: How do you spell it?
B: N-E-W-T-O-N.
A: What's your telephone number?
B: It's seven-two-three-nine-eight-six-three-two.
5
A: What's your address?
B: 38 Melrose Street.
A: How do you spell it?
B: M-E-L-R-O-S-E.
A: What's your telephone number?
B: It's three-double seven-two-five-nine-two-one.
1. Are you capable to shorten unnecessary and meaningless paper's strings?
2. Who was supposed to recognize a "toughie"?
3. Tomorrow at 2 o'clock he will be allowed to publish a very interesting story, won't he?
4. If she had been able to drive an extraordinary car, she have cared about the common cold?
5. He should have vetted by the doctor with blue eyes yesterday. Probably at that moment he got a sore-ache, that's why he was not capable to invite him.
6. Yesterday at 2 o'clock she was supposed to look for a nearby hospital, but she didn't.
7. I publish helpful posts in the newspaper every day at 2 o'clock.
8. What terms and directions are you useful in?
9. What age did he learn to interview brilliant speakers?
10. At what age will they apparently become older?
11. I have the right and own opinion to hate slow music.
12. When I knew her (the widow), I had already been permitted to read dramatic poetry.
13. Only when I, according to the age, look like my father-in-law, I will visit music concerts.
14. I have to be signed in several magazines at the same time.
15. Why will you be allowed to publish a good deal of interesting books?