Mistakes (English exercise n°35189 - Please quote this number when contacting us)Find the mistakes.Find 10 mistakes in this text.. I did not altogether belaeve my eyes. The days that had passed sence I left Wellington seemed extraordinary and unusual. Wellington is trim and neat and Anglish; it reminds you of a seaport tawn on the Sauth Coast. And for three days afterwards the sea was stormy. Gray clouds chased one another across the sky. Then the wind dropped, and the sea was colm and blue. The Pacufic is more desolated than other seas; its space seems more vast, and the most ordinery journay upon it has somehow the feeling of an adventure. The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected. I did not altogether belaeve my eyes. The days that had passed sence I left Wellington seemed extraordinary and unusual. Wellington is trim and neat and Anglish; it reminds you of a seaport tawn on the Sauth Coast. And for three days afterwards the sea was stormy. Gray clouds chased one another across the sky. Then the wind dropped, and the sea was colm and blue. The Pacufic is more desolated than other seas; its space seems more vast, and the most ordinery journay upon it has somehow the feeling of an adventure. The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected. Click on the errors : Score : If you don't manage to find all the answers, click on the button below to see them. End of the free exercise to learn English: Mistakes (28.07.2008 09:55)A free English exercise to learn English.Other English exercises on the same topic | All our lessons and exercises
I did not altogether belaeve my eyes. The days that had passed sence I left Wellington seemed extraordinary and unusual. Wellington is trim and neat and Anglish; it reminds you of a seaport tawn on the Sauth Coast. And for three days afterwards the sea was stormy. Gray clouds chased one another across the sky. Then the wind dropped, and the sea was colm and blue. The Pacufic is more desolated than other seas; its space seems more vast, and the most ordinery journay upon it has somehow the feeling of an adventure. The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected. I did not altogether belaeve my eyes. The days that had passed sence I left Wellington seemed extraordinary and unusual. Wellington is trim and neat and Anglish; it reminds you of a seaport tawn on the Sauth Coast. And for three days afterwards the sea was stormy. Gray clouds chased one another across the sky. Then the wind dropped, and the sea was colm and blue. The Pacufic is more desolated than other seas; its space seems more vast, and the most ordinery journay upon it has somehow the feeling of an adventure. The air you breathe is an elixir which prepares you for the unexpected.