Вопрос задан 01.05.2019 в 18:43. Предмет Английский язык. Спрашивает Коновалов Дмитрий.

Определите, соответствуют ли данные предложения содержанию текста: 1. If a candidate doesn’t belong

o one of the main political parties he can’t stand for election. 2. MPs must always support their own party and they are strongly controlled by it. 3. The MP’s wages have always been higher than those of the industrial worker’s. Members of parliament in Great Britain. Each Member of Parliament (MP) represents one of 650 constituencies in the UK. British elections are usually between political parties, not individuals. Therefore, people , who want to be elected to Parliament need to be nominated by one of the main political parties. There is nothing to stop unconventional candidates from standing for election, however. A candidate has only to put down a deposit of 500 pounds and collect ten signatures from residents in the constituency where he wants to stand. A candidate who gets less than 5 per cent of the total votes loses his deposit. For somebody who is standing for publicity purposes, this is a small price to pay. Although MPs will support a particular party, they are not controlled by that political party and theoretically do not have to vote with their party in Parliament. MPs represent everyone in the constituency, not just the people who voted for them. A lot of MPs’ work has nothing to do with voting in Parliament/ there are hundreds of things MPs have to deal with in the day-to-day business of constituency life, such as housing or health care. MPs are there to help people and to try make sure their rights under the law are not violated. Members of Parliament have been paid salaries since 1911. The rate has lately been nearly twice the average industrial worker’s wages. Since 1965 the allowances for travel, living in London, and paying part-time secretaries and research assistants, have all been increased. Still many MPs insist that they need to have outside earning, though journalism, work in the law courts or business, to enable them to live the standard they expect.
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Отвечает Евхута Паша.
1)true
2)false
3)true
Здесь сказано про депутатов, про партии и их заработную плату.
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Отвечает нейросеть ChatGpt. Будьте внимательны, ответы нейросети могут содержать ошибочные или выдуманные данные.

Sentence 1:

"If a candidate doesn’t belong to one of the main political parties, he can’t stand for election."

This sentence is consistent with the content of the text. It states that in order to stand for election in the UK, a candidate needs to be nominated by one of the main political parties. Candidates who do not belong to a political party can still stand for election, but they need to put down a deposit of 500 pounds and collect ten signatures from residents in the constituency where they want to stand.

Sentence 2:

"MPs must always support their own party and they are strongly controlled by it."

This sentence is not consistent with the content of the text. While MPs may support a particular party, they are not controlled by that party and theoretically do not have to vote with their party in Parliament. MPs represent everyone in their constituency, not just the people who voted for them.

Sentence 3:

"The MP’s wages have always been higher than those of the industrial worker’s."

This sentence is consistent with the content of the text. Members of Parliament in the UK have been paid salaries since 1911, and the rate has lately been nearly twice the average industrial worker's wages.

Based on the information provided, sentences 1 and 3 are consistent with the content of the text, while sentence 2 is not.

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