Full resolution (JPEG) - On this page / på denna sida - Sidor ...
<< prev. page << föreg. sida << >> nästa sida >> next page >>
Below is the raw OCR text
from the above scanned image.
Do you see an error? Proofread the page now!
Här nedan syns maskintolkade texten från faksimilbilden ovan.
Ser du något fel? Korrekturläs sidan nu!
This page has never been proofread. / Denna sida har aldrig korrekturlästs.
54 L. 12. llepet. ’Should o. Would. Kond. o. öfr. sammans. tider.
had been there. 14. He wanted me to pay for you. 15.
Should I not take these shoes with me? — Yes, vou should.
16. Baby was sleeping very calm in his cradle. 17. What
shall I (am I to) say to Mr P., if he should ask? — You
shall not say anything to him. 18. Should vou wish to set
JO J c
it, you shall have it. 19. If they should come to-morrow, I
will see them. 20. That would be a pity. 21. It is a pity
they should not be there. 22. Should not this letter be from
my mother? it is her hand-writing. 23. Good night, sleep
well, my clear child. 24. There (se så), be a good boy, and
I will read to you the pretty tale of »Snow-white». 25.
Master Henry would have got a little wooden horse and a whip
from the joiner, if he had been kind to his sisters, but now
he will get only a paper bat. — How sorry I should be, if
it had been I who had lost those nice things! 26. Were
you sure that the groom would (was to) be here before
evening? 27. I want to walk out. 28. I would give much, if
O O
I had your good horse. 29. Should I have got sight of you,
if I had stayed here all the morning? — To be sure you would.
— Then I am sorry I should have had to go so soon. —
Oh! never mind that! 30. It would be a good thing, if they
had (should have) only half the money they are said to have.
31. It was not right of you to use my shoes. 32. I should
have believed it would not be so very easy to sleep all the
night in an arm-chair. 33. Would it had always been
summer! 34. I have seen a sheep in the garden; was it yours?
— Xo, sir, it is my sister Eliza’s. 35. Sir Hugh had a white
falcon on his hand. 36. Lucy’s arms are as white as snow.
37. Were you to make an easy-chair out of this wood? 38.
These naughty girls were playing at hide and seek, when
the school-mistress entered the room. 39. Is not that black
bird a raven? 40. Have Jane and Mary still a use for their
sisters’ inkstand? 41. I will give you some yellow citrons.
— Thank you, sir. 42. If you will write your letters well,
you shall take a walk with me this evening. — Shall I ? but
if 1 will not. what then? — Then you shall stay here, that
is all I have to say. 43. If we shall write a letter to aunt
Alice, we want some paper, ink and pens. 44. Who is to
fetch the slates and the slate-pencils out of the school-room?
iSot I. 45. »Take this», said the black man to Mrs. D.,
<< prev. page << föreg. sida << >> nästa sida >> next page >>