Denis froze. He hadn't actually read the story; he had only copied it. "Um... some... big birds?" he guessed.
Denis felt a bit ashamed. That evening, instead of just copying the answers, he used the GDZ to check his work after he tried it himself. He looked up the words he didn't know and practiced saying them out loud. gdz po anglijskomu 7 derevjanko
Frustrated, Denis did what many students do—he opened his laptop and searched for "" (Ready-Made Homework). Denis froze
The class giggled. Ms. Petrova nodded. "The text you wrote says you saw a historic castle and a waterfall, Denis." That evening, instead of just copying the answers,
One rainy Tuesday, Denis was staring at a particularly difficult homework assignment on page 84. He was supposed to write a story about his summer holidays using the Present Perfect tense, but he couldn't even remember the difference between "have" and "has."
The next day in class, his teacher, Ms. Petrova, called him to the front. "Denis, your homework was excellent. Truly impressive. Would you mind reading it aloud for the class?"