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Gia sampler in Russian. Online Gia tests in Russian. Video news, demos

Gia sampler in Russian.  Online Gia tests in Russian.  Video news, demos

ATTENTION! All questions are answered at the end of this article.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 1

(13) Run across.




(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^*

Which answer option contains the information needed to justification answer to the question: “Why was Pavel Vasilyevich called the last old man of the village?”

1. There are no old people left in the village, except for Pavel Vasilyevich.

2. Pavel Vasilyevich was revered more than other old people.

3. This is how Pavel Vasilievich himself called himself.

4. Pavel Vasilyevich was the embodiment of a special type of people who are now leaving. OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 2

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Indicate the sentence in which the means of expressiveness of speech is phraseological unit.

1. In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness.

2. Tarpaulin boots, huge, because the dried legs stick out in standing tops, like sticks, a batog in hand, sparkling in the sun ...

3. Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small.

4. And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 3

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

From sentences 14–19 write out the word in which the spelling prefixes determined by the rule: “If a deaf consonant follows the prefix, then C is written at the end of it”.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 4

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

From sentences 14–17 write out the word in which the spelling suffix determined by the rule: “In adjective suffixes after hissing and C, O is written under stress, E without stress”.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 5

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Replace the vernacular rowing in sentence 2 stylistically neutral synonymous. Write this synonym.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 6

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Replace phrase dinner table in sentence 35, built on the basis of agreement, by a synonymous phrase with a connection control. Write the resulting phrase.

OGE 2017 in Russian.Question 7

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

You write grammatical basis offers 21.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 8

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Among sentences 38–42, find the sentence with isolated common circumstance. Write the number of this offer.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 9

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

In the sentences below from the read text, all commas are numbered. Write down the numbers for the commas introductory word.

And here, (1) I look, (2) some old man is rowing from the post office along the dusty sandy roadside. Who? Tarpaulin boots, (3) huge, (4) because the dried legs stick out in standing tops, (5) like sticks, (6) batog in hand, (7) sparkling in the sun ...

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 10

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Specify Quantity grammar basics in sentence 40. Write down the answer in numbers.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 11

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

In the sentences below from the read text, all commas are numbered. Write down the numbers denoting commas between parts of a complex sentence related subordinating connection.

I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. There were still three or four old men left in the village. But only he, (1) Pavel Vasilyevich, was called the last old man of the village. He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants, (2) who knew how to live on a grand scale, (3) and work to their heart's content, (4) and be weird.

Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, (5) in the evening, (6) when the sun was setting.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 12

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Among sentences 40–50, find a complex sentence with parallel subordination of adjectives. Write the number of this offer.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Question 13

Read the text and do tasks 1-13

(1) I know everyone in my village - old, young, even children, if not by name, then by appearance. (2) And here, I look, some old man from the post office is rowing along a dusty sandy roadside. (3) Who? (4) The boots are tarpaulin, huge, because the dried legs stick out in the standing tops, like sticks, the batog in the hand, sparkling in the sun ...

(5) I come closer and I can’t believe my eyes: Pavel Vasilyevich Savin.

(6) I lost weight, dried up, my eyes fell down, as if they were looking from the other world ... (7) And the beard? (8) Where is Savin's beard? (9) Some year ago, he will beat, fluff, straighten - a whole mop on his chest.

(10) And what he was like in his youth, this Pavel Vasilyevich! (11) What a power, what prowess walked the earth! (12) In the spring, when the flood subsides and the forest is released into Pinega, the most daring thing is to run across with a hook in your hands from one bank to another along floating logs.

(13) Run across.

(14) And what a marvel, what a picture - I was still quite, quite a child then - when he was driving for his bride! (15) In my life I have never seen such a frantic ride of drunken drunken trotters in a festive, burning harness. (16) Frost, sun, and he is standing in painted boots, in one red shirt, without a hat. (17) The very impatience, the very rage.

- (18) Pavel Vasilievich, - I ask, - is it you?
- (19) Me, boy, me. (20) Everything is more painful, it is ordered to move to another Vater.

(21) I began to speak some words of consolation.

- (22) No, no, do not console - he took his time off. (23) I went to the post office. (24) He collected money for the funeral. (25) Six hundred rubles were accumulated, everything was withdrawn. (26) I do not want the children to go bankrupt on me. (27) And I want to say goodbye to my countrymen in a good way: so that everyone who comes will be treated ... (28) So that everyone will remember how the last old man of the village retires ...

(29) I was not surprised by the words of Pavel Vasilyevich. (30) Three or four old men still remained in the village. (31) But only he, Pavel Vasilievich, was called the last old man of the village. (32) He was from that outgoing breed of Russian peasants who knew how to live on a grand scale, and work to their heart's content, and be weird.

(33) Pavel Vasilievich died on the same day, in the evening, when the sun was setting.

(34) All spring and all summer he lay on his old wooden bed near the door, and then he suddenly asked for a floor.

(35) The children (sons and daughters had already arrived by that time) fulfilled the request - they spread it on the floor, where the dining table stood, a feather bed, and transferred the father.

- (36) And now let Matryona lie next to me. (37) Sons and daughters looked at each other: what else did the old man think up?
- (38) Mother, I say, knock down next to me.

(39) Matryona was sitting in an old padded jacket, leaning her back against a warm stove. (40) Once it was a written beauty, and Pavel Vasilyevich fought a mortal battle because of her with his many rivals, and even then, when he was already in years, he adored her. (41) “I have Matryonka ... My Matryonka ... I’m with Matryonka ...” - this was his favorite conversation, both drunk and sober.

(42) And now Matryona, when her husband spoke about her, didn’t even lead her ear, because she had been out of her mind for three years already.

- (43) Dad, - the eldest daughter spoke carefully (Pavel Vasilyevich kept the children in strictness), - why do you need a mother? (44) It's not good, after all.
- (45) Get down, I say, my mother is next to me.

(46) Sons and daughters looked at each other again, and what to do, how to argue with a dying father?

- (47) Matryonka, - said Pavel Vasilievich, when the old woman was laid next to him, - hug me for the last time.

(48) Matryona, to whom at that moment, apparently, by some miracle, reason returned, awkwardly, with gnarled hands, hugged her husband.

- (49) That's all right, - Pavel Vasilyevich shed tears. - (50) And now leave me alone, I will die.

(51) And soon he died in front of everyone.

(52) Pavel Vasilyevich was buried by the whole village. (53) Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small. (54) Everyone saw off their last old man on his last journey.

(According to F. Abramov ^* ).

^* Fedor Alexandrovich Abramov (1920-1983) - Russian Soviet writer, literary critic, publicist; one of the most famous representatives of the so-called rural prose, a significant trend in Soviet literature of the 1960s-1980s. The theme of the fate of a person in the Russian village became the leading one in his work and was reflected in such works as the tetralogy "Brothers and Sisters", the story "Alka", the collection of stories "Grass-Ant", etc.

Among sentences 39–45 find complex offer with subordinating and coordinative allied connection between parts. Write the number of this offer.

ANSWERS TO OGE 2017

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 1

Pavel Vasilievich was the embodiment of a special type of people, now leaving.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 2

Everyone followed the coffin - both old and small.

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 3

painted

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 4

red-brown

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 5

goes

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 6

dining table

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 7

I started talking

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 8

39

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 9

12

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 10

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 11

26

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 12

OGE 2017 in Russian. Answer to question 13

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Option 2

Work instructions

The examination paper consists of three parts, including 15 tasks.

3 hours 55 minutes (235 minutes) are allotted to complete the examination paper in the Russian language.

Part 1 includes one task and is a short written work on the text you have listened to (concise presentation). The source text for a condensed presentation is listened to 2 times.

Part 2 consists of 13 tasks (2 - 14). The tasks of part 2 are performed on the basis of read text.

Write the answer to tasks 2 and 3 in the answer sheet No. 1 in the form of one number, which corresponds to the number of the correct answer.

The answers to tasks 4 - 14 are a word (phrase), a number or a sequence of numbers. Write your answer in the answer field in the text of the work, and then transfer it to the answer sheet No. 1.

Task 3 in progressbased on the same text, which you read while working on the tasks of part 2.

Starting part 3 of the work, choose one of the three proposed tasks (15.1, 15.2, 15.3) and give a written detailed reasoned answer.

This task is performed on the answer sheet No. 2.

You are allowed to use a spelling dictionary during the exam.

When completing assignments, you can use a draft. Draft entries do not count toward work completion.

The points you get for completed tasks are summed up. Try to complete as many tasks as possible and score the most points.

We wish you success!

1 Listen to the text and write a concise summary.

Please note that you must convey the main content of both each micro-topic and the entire text as a whole.

The volume of presentation is not less than 70 words.

Write your essay in neat, legible handwriting.

Part 2

Read the text and complete tasks 2 - 14

(1) And it was a long time ago, Olya studied at school then. (2) In order to study well, I sat at the lessons until late at night. (3) Olya also loved reading books very much, it’s a pity that there was almost no time left for them. (4) In the morning I got up early, before daylight, - give the chickens food, then and there, then woke up the younger ones, collected them for school. (5) And there are lessons and changes. (6) And Sashka Kochetkov, the first not only in the class, but at school, a fool, started
and fidget. (7) He always got by from a deuce to a triple, but by the senior classes he suddenly settled down, took up his mind - he decided that after school he would go to Moscow, he would enter the institute. (8) Everyone laughed and made fun of him, and Olya was sure that he would achieve his goal. (9) She believed in him like no one else.
(10) From the fifth grade, she dried up on him. (11) It seemed that there was nothing unusual in him - thin, light blond, a hooked nose, and his gaze was so firm, resolute ...

(12) For five years, Olya kept this feeling inside, trying not to betray herself in any way. (13) Like high school graduated, so more than half of the classmates parted in all directions, and he studied until the last grade, stirred her soul. (14) She liked everything about him: some kind of masculinity, even ease of life, cheerfulness. (15) Olya is a closed, overly serious girl. (16) She did not know how to speak in public, she never climbed forward, she preferred a modest place in the last row. (17) And Sasha is not like that - he is cool, funny. (18) He told jokes in such a way that everyone laughed to the point of colic, participated in amateur performances, where he was always given the main roles. (19) That's why I decided to enter the theater.

(20) And how he defended her once! (21) They had such Lyoshka Ignatiev in their class, tall, obese, angry at everyone. (22) Few people communicated with him,
and no one was friendly at all. (23) But he, however, tried to draw attention to himself, but it didn’t work out. (24) I even sat at the same desk with her, Olka, whom I only knew by last name and never asked anything except for homework in Russian. (25) Somehow someone had a birthday, and handed out candy to everyone. (26) Olya also unfold her treat
before she had time, she felt a strong pain in the back of her head - it was Lyoshka who hit her with his fist, and he had him - be healthy. (27) Hit and took away the candy. (28) Tears gushed in a stream, both from pain and from resentment. (29) How Lyoshka
He was sometimes rude and arrogant, but she did not expect this from him. (30) Olya buried her wet cheeks in her palms and sobbed softly, afraid to attract attention to herself. (31) Well, a change - in the classroom there is vanity, noise, din. (32) She didn’t like scandals, and indeed, it’s embarrassing to seem roaring in front of everyone, after all, there were already big ones, seventh grade.

- (33) And are you not ashamed to beat the girl? she heard
suddenly Sasha's voice. - (34) Strongman!

- (35) What? Lyoshka stood up, and Olya felt a tremor in her knees: oh, Sashka, you shouldn’t have climbed, it will also warm you. (36) If only it would end as soon as possible, if only it would be quieter ...

- (37) Yes, nothing, come after school, we'll talk, - Olin defender bravely answered him and turned to her:

- (38) Here, take my candy! ..

(According to O. Roy) *

* Roy Oleg Yurievich(born in 1965) – Russian writer.

2 Which answer option contains the information needed to justification an answer to the question: “Why did Olya believe in Sasha Kochetkov, like in no one else?”

  1. Sashka Kochetkov was the first varmint at school, a ringleader and a fidget.
  2. Behind the outward recklessness was hiding, in Olya's opinion, a strong personality.
  3. Sashka Kochetkov was not like his classmates: he was cool, funny and told jokes in such a way that everyone laughed to the point of colic.
  4. Sashka Kochetkov participated in amateur performances, where he was always given the main roles

3 Point out the sentence in which the means of expression is phraseological unit.

  1. She did not know how to speak in public, she never climbed forward, she preferred a modest place in the last row.
  2. It seemed that there was nothing unusual in him - thin, light blond, a hooked nose, and his gaze was so firm, resolute ...
  3. He was always going from two to three, but by the senior classes he suddenly settled down, took up his mind - he decided that after school he would go to Moscow, he would enter the institute.
  4. No matter how Lyoshka was sometimes rude and arrogant, but she did not expect this from him.

4 From sentences 33-38 write out the word in which the spelling prefixes is determined by the value " approach".

Answer: ______________________________

5 From sentences 12-19 write out the word in which the spelling suffix determined by the rule:“In nouns, as much -n- is written as in adjectives from which they are formed”

Answer: ______________________________

6 Replace colloquial word " thrashed » in sentence 26 as a stylistically neutral synonym. Write this synonym.

Answer: ______________________________

7 Replace phrase"homework", built on the basis of agreement, by a synonymous phrase with a connection control write the resulting phrase.

Answer: ______________________________

8 Write out grammatical basis suggestions 10.

Answer: ______________________________

9 Among offers 12-16 find the offerwith a special circumstance.Write the number of this offer.

Answer: ______________________________

10 In the sentences below from the read text, all commas are numbered. Write down the numbers for the commas introductory word.

They had such Lyoshka Ignatiev in their class,(1) tall, (2) obese, (3) angry at everyone. Few interacted with him.(4) and no one was friendly at all. And he,(5) however, (6) trying to get attention,(7) yes it didn't work.

Answer: ______________________________

11 Specify Quantitygrammar basicsin sentence 26. Write down the answer in numbers.

Answer: ______________________________

12 In the sentences below from the read text, all commas are numbered. Write down the numbers denoting commas between parts of a complex sentence related subordinating relationship.

And it was a long time ago(1) Olga then studied at school. To study well(2) sat at the lessons until late at night. Olya also loved to read books,(3) sorry, (4) there was almost no time left for them. Got up early in the morning(5) before the light, (6) - feed the chickens,(7) this and that, (8) then woke up the younger ones,(9) collected to school.

Answer: ______________________________

13 Among the proposals 12-19 heterogeneous (parallel)subordination of adjectives. Write the number of this offer.

Answer: ______________________________

14 Among the proposals 12-19 find a complex sentencesubordinating and coordinating connection. Write the number of this offer.

Answer: ______________________________

Part 3

15. 1

Write an essay-reasoning, revealing the meaning of the statement of the modern linguist N.S. Valgina:"Punctuation marks help the writer to make very subtle semantic highlights, to focus on important details, to show their significance."

Arguing your answer, give 2 (two) examples from the read text.

You can write a work in a scientific or journalistic style, revealing the topic on linguistic material. You can start the composition with the words of I.G. Miloslavsky.

A work written without relying on the text read (not on this text) is not evaluated.

15. 2

Write an essay-reasoning. Explain how you understand the meaning of the final text:

« – Yes, nothing, come after school, we'll talk,Olin the defender bravely answered him and turned to her:

Here, take my candy! .. "

Bring in an essay 2 (two) arguments from the read text, confirming your reasoning.

When giving examples, indicate the numbers of the required sentences or use citations.

The essay must be at least 70 words.

If the essay is a paraphrase or a complete rewrite source text without any comments, then such work is evaluated by zero points.

Write an essay carefully, legible handwriting.

15. 3

How do you understand the meaning of the word LOVE ? Formulate and comment on your definition. Write an essay on the topic "What is true love”, taking as a thesis the definition given by you. Arguing your thesis, give 2 (two) examples-arguments confirming your reasoning: one example- give an argumentfrom the read text second - from your life experience.

The essay must be at least 70 words.

If the essay is a paraphrase or a complete rewrite of the source text without any comments, then such work is evaluated by zero points.

Write an essay carefully, legible handwriting.

Key

Assessment criteria for task 1

Information about the text for a concise presentation

paragraph number

microtheme

The life ideas of different generations are different, but intractable questions remain unchanged. These are questions of sympathy, love.

For a teenager, the dream of love is connected, first of all, with the need to be understood by peers, to show their qualities and abilities to them.

hit\

hit

assignment at home\

assignments at home

dried up


On this page you will find answers to the test part of the OGE-2017 manual under the guidance of I.P. Tsybulko 36 typical exam options.

Block 1. Options 1-4.

Job number: Option 1 Option 2 Option 3 Option 4
2 1 1 3 2
3 1 3 3 4
4 scatter endless ponder cover up
5 mentally circled entrusted confused
6 touched wait out the blizzard notice an error<или>notice a miss<или>come to your senses face
7 school for pilots mental strength gunpowder store joyful feeling
8 the decision was a mystery<или>it was a secret decision managed to achieve wanted to help view contacted<или>contacted submission
9 29 1 36 6
10 124 <или> 34 <или> 43 45 <или> 54 23 <или> 32
11 3 4 6 4
12 12368 <или> 24 <или> 42 145 <или>any other combination of these numbers. 356 <или>any other combination of these numbers.
13 29 12 23 15
14 2 26 55 20

Block 2. Options 5 - 8.

Paragraph number: Micro theme:
1 The main thing for every person should be kind and significant, for this a person should be able to rise above his daily worries.
2 You have to be able to live for other people. Only people who served others are remembered.
3 You have to do your own thing in life. Happiness is achieved by those who strive to make others happy and are able to forget about themselves at least for a while.
Job number: Option 5 Option 6 Option 7 Option 8
2 4 2 2 1
3 3 4 3 4
4 screwed smoothed out came, brought turned
5 dug in bottomless surprised scorched
6 found<или>appeared there is<или>eat first<или>straightaway fast <или>soon<или>briskly
7 over grandfather's words took with diligence <или>diligently took spoke with kindness <или>spoke with kindness fire in the forest
8 Alyosha went <или>Alyosha went galloping horse <или>the horse galloped do not offend he horsed
9 11 25 32 43
10 45 <или> 54 2 12 <или> 21 23 <или> 32
11 3 6 1 3
12 36 <или> 63 26 <или> 62 1236 <или>any other sequence of these digits 46 <или> 64
13 25 42 20 33
14 7 52 29 10

Block 3. Options 9-12.

Job number: Option 9 Option 10 Option 11 Option 12
2 3 2 4 3
3 4 2 3 4
4 scare cried out will arrive touched
5 glass long old written
6 calmer<или>safer<или>better company<или>group<или>crowd lie down were playing
7 glass jar water windows shouted with joy<или>shouted with joy urban area
8 not transplanted who is easier afraid the third one said
9 1114 <или> 1411 10 41 36
10 34 <или> 43 45 <или> 54 234 <или>any other combination of these numbers. 1267 <или>any other combination of these numbers.
11 4 4 2 3
12 13 <или> 31 356 <или>any other combination of these numbers. 56 <или> 65 6
13 32 26 13 45
14 35 <или> 53 42 38 50

Block 4. Options 13-16.

Information about the text for a concise presentation:
Paragraph number: Micro theme:
1 City people have lost the habit of hearing the wonderful sounds of the earth. It is all the more joyful for such people to visit nature, to gain spiritual strength that everyone needs.
2 The sounds of the earth replace the music for farmers and hunters. These sounds may have been imprinted in songs and musical creations.
3 The sounds of the earth give birth to the best in the human soul. From childhood, these sounds excite and delight a person.
Job number: Option 13 Option 14 Option 15 Option 16
2 3 1 4 4
3 1 3 1 3
4 spreading endless wake up hobbling
5 filled worn out mysterious furrowed
6 by chance<или>accidentally came if came<или>came up
7 looked enthusiastically<или>looked enthusiastically whispered with fear<или>whispered in fear I walk with caution<или>I walk with caution fisherman's camp<или>fisherman's camp
8 Sanya managed to get enough sleep the rain became quieter<или>the rain got quieter we are walking boring
9 56 <или> 65 33 16 51
10 45 <или> 54 1234 <или> 45 <или> 54 167 <или>any other combination of these numbers
11 3 3 3 3
12 13 <или> 31 35 <or > 53 12 <or > 21 3
13 6 5 27 4
14 4 23 12 54

Block 5. Options 17-20.

Job number: Option 17 Option 18 Option 19 Option 20
2 4 3 3 2
3 4 1 1 4
4 got up cleared sighed exhausted
5 related recall wooden wooden
6 stolen refusal sitting down Wait
7 confidently said<или>said confidently garden in the snow market in the city said with a smile<или>said with a smile
8 you would steal remember no one will offend drawn
9 30 31 23 49
10 45 <или> 54 23 <или> 32 35 <или> 53 346 <или>any other combination of these numbers
11 2 1 3 3
12 2 1234 <или> any other combination of these numbers 3 13 <или> 31
13 28 4 20 67
14 32 46 49 69

Block 6. Options 21-24

Job number: Option 21 Option 22 Option 23 Option 24
2 3 3 3 1
3 2 2 2 2
4 Came opening wide came running peakless cap
5 Confused red-hot Wooden Deciduous
6 Shouted or shouted loudly came out Very fast or fast Today or Now
7 Mom's words yard corner Soul of a dog Fascist ranks
8 the meadow was in flowers shoot caressed They died
9 16 35 7 12
10 12 or 21 126 or any other combination of these numbers 12 or 21 56 or 65
11 4 3 3 3
12 3 13 or 31 26 or 62 56 or 65
13 11 10 35 17
14 3 41 24 30