
- •Vocabulary:
- •Find English equivalents for:
- •Match words with similar meaning:
- •Make nouns from these verbs:
- •Make adjectives from these nouns:
- •Open the brackets for Participle I or participle II:
- •Underline the correct variant:
- •Complete the story with the correct form of the participle I or II. Use the following verbs to form participles:
- •Fill in the correct preposition:
- •Complete the sentences according to the text:
- •New Orleans sacks 3, 000 workers (5 October, 2005)
- •Circle the correct answer:
- •Match the words with their definitions:
- •Answer the questions:
- •Retell the story.
- •Hazard mitigation
- •Find English equivalents for:
- •Match English and Russian collocations with opportunity. Remember them.
- •Give the examples of:
- •Transform the sentences using complex subject:
- •Transform the sentences using complex object:
- •Fill in the correct preposition:
- •Complete the sentences according to the text:
- •Complete the text with the following words:
- •Protection; b) secure; c) resilient; d) responsible; e) disruption; f) benefits;
- •Circle the correct answer:
- •Put the sentences in correct order:
- •Match the words with their definitions:
- •Answer the questions:
- •Retell the story.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Emergency preparedness and planning
- •Find English equivalents for:
- •Make this adjectives negative using -im, -un, - in. Consult the dictionary if necessary:
- •Insert effective or efficient:
- •Make collocations:
- •Match words with similar meaning:
- •Open the brackets and use the Gerund in the correct form:
- •Combine two sentences using the Gerund:
- •Complete the sentences using the Gerund with a preposition:
- •Complete the sentences according to the text:
- •Complete the text with correct word forms:
- •Match the words with their definitions:
- •Answer the questions:
- •Retell the story.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Emergency response
- •Find English equivalents for:
- •Fill in the singular and plural forms of the nouns:
- •Fill in the prepositions:
- •Circumstances or consequence(s)? Make collocations:
- •Match words with similar meaning:
- •Complete the sentences according to the text:
- •Fill in the missing words: The September 11, 2001 Attack at the Pentagon
- •Match the beginnings of the sentences (a-j) with their endings (1-10):
- •Japan crisis: uk rescue team to withdraw
- •Put the sentences in correct order:
- •What do these numbers refer to?
- •Comment on the following:
- •4. Match the words with similar meaning:
- •5. Retell the story.
- •Vocabulary:
- •Find English equivalents for:
- •Find in the text words beginning with re-:
- •Make collocations:
- •Complete each sentence with one of the following words:
- •Complete the text with correct word forms:
- •Fill in the prepositions:
- •Circle the correct answer:
- •Find in the text the English equivalents for:
- •Retell the story.
Match the beginnings of the sentences (a-j) with their endings (1-10):
Fire-fighters managed to put … 1. fire accidentally.
After a few minutes a fire … 2. fire to the house deliberately.
It was believed that someone set … 3. spark from a passing train.
Luckily Paul carried a fire … 4. into flames.
The fire was started by a … 5. heat inside the burning car.
Metal melted from the intense … 6. out the fire after two hours.
I could hardly breathe because of the … 7. thick cloud of smoke.
The old theatre caught … 8. extinguisher in his car.
The wooden hut was burnt to … 9. a heap of ashes.
In seconds the building burst … 10. engine arrived at the blaze.
Practice the pronunciation of the following words before you read:
Withdraw, tsunami, foreign, significant, scenario
Japan crisis: uk rescue team to withdraw
UK rescuers are withdrawing from Japan after extensive searches of rubble following the earthquake and tsunami did not find any survivors.
The International Search and Rescue (ISAR) team has completed its mission in the northern town of Kamaishi. The UK government said snow and falling temperatures mean the chance of finding anybody alive was now "extremely low". The Foreign Office is chartering planes from Tokyo to Hong Kong to help Britons who want to leave Japan. The UK ISAR team, which arrived in Japan on Sunday, agreed not to extend its operations after discussions with the Japanese disaster authorities and their US counterparts.
The team - 59 search and rescue experts, four medics and two sniffer dogs - was made up of members from fire brigades across the UK and was put together by the Department for International Development. One rescuer said: "We've seen total devastation in the areas affected. It's so significant, I struggle to comprehend how any community can move on from it. But people here are getting on and dealing with what's put in front of them."
Meanwhile, Britons who want to leave Japan have been given the option of joining flights chartered by the UK government. The first, a Cathay Pacific plane to Hong Kong with 200 seats block-booked for British nationals, will leave on Friday evening. More are planned over the weekend. There will be no charge for those "directly affected" by the tsunami, but a charge of £600 will otherwise apply. The British embassy has also organized a coach to take Britons from Sendai to Tokyo.
The prime minister's spokesman said Britons were advised to stay outside an 80km (50 mile) exclusion zone around the stricken Fukushima nuclear plant, which lies 140 miles north of Tokyo. The UK's Scientific Advisory Group for Emergencies (Sage) is continuing to meet and monitor the situation in the troubled reactor. The spokesman said Sage had examined worst-case scenarios and risks to human health and concluded the risk could be managed if people stayed indoors. Foreign Secretary William Hague told the House of Commons there remained "severe concerns" about some British nationals who officials had been unable to locate. "Our consular teams in London and Japan have been working round the clock," he said. "We're following up all the leads from the helpline we have set up." Mr Hague said more than 50 extra staff had been sent to the affected regions, and they were visiting reception centers and hospitals. About 17,000 British nationals were believed to have been in Japan last Friday but there have been no reports yet of fatalities.
Japan's east coast was devastated by the tsunami triggered by last Friday's earthquake. Those areas not wiped out are suffering power cuts and water shortages.
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