
- •2. Listen and remember the following phrases:
- •II Reading skills.
- •1. Read and remember:
- •2. Read and translate the following text:
- •Introducing London
- •2. Open the brackets using the Present Perfect or the Past Simple Tense and translate
- •IV Communicative skills.
- •1. Read the dialogues and reproduce them:
- •2. Speak on the following situations:
- •V Rendering.
- •1. Read the text and translate it using a dictionary: Getting about London
- •2. Make up a plan of the text in the form of questions.
- •3. Give the summary of the text according to your plan in a written form.
- •VI Comprehensive skills.
- •1. Read and remember:
- •2. Listen to the text ‘London College of Fashion’ and try to understand it.
- •3. True or false statements:
- •4. Listen to the text once again and answer the following questions:
- •The Present Perfect Tense
- •Present Perfect / Past Indefinite
- •Degrees of Comparison of Adjectives
- •2. Possessive Case
- •3. Make and do
- •I Phonetic skills.
- •1. Listen and repeat:
- •2. Listen and remember the following phrases:
- •II Reading skills.
- •1. Read and remember:
- •2. Read and translate the following text: The United Kingdom
- •3. Find the answers to the questions:
- •4. Match the words:
- •5. True or false statements:
- •III Grammar skills.
- •1. Choose the correct form:
- •2. Complete the sentences:
- •3. Put the words into correct word order:
- •4. Ask questions to which the following sentences are the answers:
- •5. Choose the correct form:
- •6. Translate into English:
- •IV Communicative skills.
- •1. Read the dialogues and reproduce them:
- •2. Speak on the following situation:
- •V Rendering.
- •1. Read the text and translate it using a dictionary: The Queen’s Role
- •2. Make a plan in the form of questions.
- •3. Give a summary according to your plan in a written form.
- •VI Comprehensive skills.
- •1. Read and remember:
- •2. Listen to the text “Cambridge” and try to understand it.
- •3. Listen to the text once again and answer the following questions:
- •4. True or false statements:
- •The Past Perfect Tense
- •Possessive case
- •Future Simple.
- •Exclamation Sentences.
- •I Phonetic skills.
- •1. Listen and repeat:
- •2. Listen and remember the following words and phrases:
- •II Reading skills.
- •1. Read and remember:
- •2. Read and translate the text:
- •3. Find the answers to the questions:
- •4. Ask questions оn the points below and answer them:
- •5. Get ready to speak about the following:
- •6. Complete the sentences using the prepositions against, at, bу, for, in, оn, of, to where necessary:
- •7. Match the sentence parts:
- •III Grammar skills.
- •1. Add "the " in the spaces where necessary:
- •2. Choose the correct form:
- •3. Complete the sentences:
- •IV Communicative skills.
- •1. Read the dialogues and reproduce them:
- •2. Complete the dialogue:
- •V Rendering.
- •1. Read the text and translate it using a dictionary: Who rules the country?
- •Proper nouns and the definite article (означeний артикль та власне ім'я)
- •The Future Simple Tense
- •Exclamation sentences (окличні речення) What...! What a ....! How....!
2. Speak on the following situations:
1. Imagine you are a guide. Give a short commentary on any well known place of
interest in London.
2. Suppose you are a tourist in London and you want to visit some sights on foot. Ask a hotel receptionist what directions you should choose.
3. You live in London. A foreign tourist asks you the way to different places of interest in your city. Suggest different routes. The student who suggests the easiest and the most interesting route wins.
V Rendering.
1. Read the text and translate it using a dictionary: Getting about London
When you are in London for the first time join a circular tour, and you will see every major sight from an open top double-decker bus.
Trafalgar Square makes a good place to meet sightseeing buses, to walk around, to take photographs and to feed pigeons. Admiral Nelson’s Statue guarded by four lions stands on the top of an impressive column in the middle of the square commemorating the Battle of Trafalgar. The north side of the square is formed by the long, low National Gallery, housing the national collection of art and containing some of the word’s greatest paintings.
Then you drive a wide street called the Mall south-west of Trafalgar square. The street is decorated with gilded crowns and banners whenever there is a state visit or any other excuse for a procession. Several great houses there are occupied by various members of royal family. The Mall leads to Buckingham Palace which is the British monarch’s main residence in London. Today the Palace contains 600 rooms and is a mine of priceless art treasures, ornaments, tapestries and furniture, including the Coronation Throne of the present queen.
The main street running south of Trafalgar Square is Whitehall. There used to be a palace once but it doesn’t exist now. Today’s Whitehall is a street of government offices, so the name ‘Whitehall’ stands for the British Government.
Across the square you will be dazzled by the Palace of Westminster, the palace and the name of the British Parliament. When Parliament is sitting, a flag flies from the Victoria Tower and a light shines by night. The Houses of Parliament contain the universal symbol of London, Big Ben, the famous clock, which chimes the hours to the tune of Handel’s music. Close to the Houses of Parliament stands Westminster Abbey. As a royal church it has been the scene of coronations for centuries and the final resting place of countless monarchs, statesmen, poets and heroes.
If you love art and architecture you will be amused by the breathtaking and unique St. Paul’s Cathedral, the most spectacular church in Britain, baroque masterpiece of Sir Christopher Wren.
Your tour continues to the Tower of London, filled with the haunting memories of torture and imprisonment, as well as the richness of the Royal Ceremonies it has hosted. You meet the Beefeaters in their Tudor Uniforms; hear the legend of the ravens and some spine chilling tales from the Tower’s 900 year history.
You can’t leave London without seeing Fleet Street taken its name from the Fleet Ditch, once an open stream. When used figuratively, Fleet Street means ‘the British press’ as the publishing houses of most British newspapers are situated there.
It often comes as a shock to Londoners that Madame Tussaud’s is one of the capital’s top tourist attractions. But millions of visitors from overseas and from parts of Britain would not consider their trip to the capital worthwhile without a stop at the unusual waxwork exhibition in Marylebone Road.
The unforgettable tour includes everything you have ever heard about in London… and much more.