- •Министерство образования и науки российской федерации
- •И.В. Атакищева, е.А. Таныгина культура и традиции стран изучаемого языка
- •Оглавление
- •Предисловие
- •Введение
- •Unit ithe british family
- •Vocabulary
- •Which of the following phrases do you think is the best description of an "average British household"?
- •Read the text a to find out if you are right.
- •Answer the questions
- •Stay in or go out!
- •Look at the table. True, false or don't know?
- •Fill in the missing prepositions.( in, of, with, for, at, …
- •Read the text and say whether these statements are true or false or there is no information in the text:
- •Use Text b to tell about yourself and your family
- •Unit iiat home
- •Vocabulary:
- •Read and translate text a
- •Study the advertisements for holiday accommodation and answer the following questions.
- •Write a dialogue in your notebook where a tourist phones one of the places in exercise VI and asks for information. Then make a reservation.
- •Match the words with the correct definitions.
- •Use Text b to describe your home.
- •Unit iiisouth-west state university
- •Vocabulary
- •I. Read and translate text a
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Fill in the blanks with the appropriate words and translate the sentences:
- •Use your dictionary to explain the difference between the following words and phrases.
- •Fill in the blanks with one of the following words: occupation, profession or trade.
- •What are the jobs of the following speakers?
- •Complete the wordgrid with words about education and school.
- •Use text b to tell about your native town.
- •Unit iveducation in great britain
- •I. Read and translate text a.
- •Vocabulary:
- •II. Answer the following questions:
- •III. Read and translate text b.
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Read the following text through. Then read it again and fill each blank with a right word . You may need to use a dictionary.
- •VI. Do you agree or disagree? Make some notes, in your notebook, for and against the following statements. Discuss your ideas in class.
- •VII . How many professions do you know? Match each person on the left with the correct definition on the right.
- •What do these expressions mean? What do the people do?
- •All of these areas of study end in –logy. Can you fit the correct beginning in each of these examples?
- •Decide whether these sentences are true or false.
- •Make phrases by combining the words in two columns.
- •Speak about the educational system in England close to the text. Unit vlondon
- •Vocabulary:
- •Read and translate text a.
- •II. Read and translate text b.
- •Vocabulary:
- •III. Answer the following questions.
- •Retell the text.
- •Read the following dialogue. Work “in pairs’’ and replace the words underlined with the alternatives below. Write the new dialogues and act them out. Work in pairs.
- •Match each word in column, with a word or expression with the same or similar meaning in column two.
- •Read and decide if the following statements are true or false.
- •Unit vibritish food
- •Vocabulary:
- •Read and translate text a.
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Put the following words under the correct heading in the box below. Translate the words.
- •Using the clues below, complete the words in the word grid 1-8 and find the mystery word.
- •Retell the text.
- •Read and translate text b.
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Practice reading the following sentences. Learn them by heart.
- •Read the following dialogues. Dramatize it.
- •Unit viishops and shopping
- •Vocabulary:
- •Read and translate text a
- •Work “in pairs’’ asking and answering the following questions:
- •What do they sell?
- •Where would you buy the items in the box? Match them with the list of shops.
- •Read text b and be ready to discuss it.
- •Answer the following questions:
- •What have your family bought recently? Discuss with your partner.
- •Practice reading the following words and word combinations. Learn them by heart.
- •Read the following dialogue. Dramatize it.
- •The left hand column lists some objects, the right hand column lists the shops( or places) where you can find them. Match the correct item from column a to the place in column b.
- •Unit viiisport in britain
- •Vocabulary:
- •Read and translate text a.
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Read and translate text b.
- •Describe one of the sports mentioned in the text. Don't
- •Do you agree or disagree? Make some notes, in your notebook, for and against the following statements. Discuss your ideas in class. Begin with “I (dis)agree that..”.
- •Find the words – games and sports.
- •Read the short article and say what some sports persons do before a game.
- •Which of the items below do you think an athlete should have if he or she wants to show better results in sport? Give arguments.
- •In the sentences below find English equivalents to the Russian phrases.
- •What do you think about risk taking (sky diving, bungee jumping, rock climbing, white-water rafting)? Discuss your ideas in class.
- •Here are the names of eight runners in a recent 100 metros race:
- •Make sure you know which sports these places are associated with.
- •XIII. Speak about the British and sport. Unit ixtransport system in britain
- •Vocabulary
- •Read and translate text a.
- •Answer the questions
- •Using the text choose the best way to travel for the following people. Give reasons for your answers,
- •Read the text and say what the differences between the driving-test in your country and in Britain are.
- •Read text b and be ready to discuss it
- •Read the sentences below and decide which ones are connected with a hotel (h) and which with a train station (t). If the sentence could be both (h) or (t), mark it (ht).
- •Look at the following questions and choose the correct answer
- •Unit xthe united states of america ("u.S.A.")
- •Read and translate text a
- •Vocabulary
- •Read and translate Text в
- •Answer the questions to text b
- •Pair work. Game “Learn about the usa”.
- •British and American vocabulary
- •The adjectives in the left-hand column were used to describe Yankees. Match each adjective with the best phrase from the right-hand column.
- •Complete the saying.
- •People who became words.
- •When people enter the usa they get the following form.
- •Part II introducing great britain section 1 edinburgh
- •Read and translate the text
- •Present perfect. Fill in the gaps in the sentences below.
- •Section 2 about roman britain
- •Read this passage and make questions for the answers below.
- •Read ad translate the text
- •Read the text again. Which of the following sentences are true (t) and which are false (f)?
- •Change the sentences below from active to passive.
- •Section 3 the lake district
- •Read and translate the text
- •Section 4 york
- •Read and translate the text
- •Look at these sentences. Three are false. Which ones?
- •Make a sentence with 'still' to go with each of the sentences below.
- •Read the passage, then make questions for the answers below.
- •Section 5 oxford and stratford-upon-avon
- •Read and translate the text
- •Choose the right answer.
- •Write a paragraph about William Shakespeare using these notes and what you remember from the text.
- •Section 6 wales
- •Read and translate the text
- •Choose the right answer.
- •Which sentences below are true and which are false?
- •Read the sentences and choose the correct preposition.
- •Put 'have to' or 'don't have to' in the sentences below.
- •Section 7 bath
- •Read and translate the text
- •Answer the questions.
- •3. Imagine you are talking to a guide in the Pump Room. These are the guide's answers. What are your questions?
- •Section 8 brighton
- •Read and translate the text
- •Which of the following sentences are true and which are false?
- •Part III texts for additional reading
- •International activities of swsu
- •Faculties and their specialties
- •Information Computing Technology Faculty
- •National emblems of the united kingdom
- •The royal family
- •Diana — the people's princess
- •Transport system in britain
- •Road rage
- •The problems of public transport
- •Integrated transport
- •American symbols
- •Independence day
- •History of the united states
- •Independence and expansion
- •Civil war and industrialization
- •Parties, ideology, and politics
- •New york
- •Education in the usa
- •National food in the usa
- •Sports in the usa
- •Halloween
- •Australia
- •Christmas in australia
- •Sport in australia
- •Government and politics of canada
- •Geography and climate of canada
- •Библиографический список
- •Заключение
- •Аткищева Ирина Викторовна Таныгина Елена Александровна культура и традиции стран изучаемого языка
Read text b and be ready to discuss it
Trains.
a How often do you travel by train?
b Define the word commuter. Use a dictionary to help you.
Commuting to work
Many people in Britain live a long way from their work. They often travel by train from the suburbs into the town centre to work. These people are commuters. Some people travel more than 200 miles every day and spend up to two hours going to work and two hours going home. Train tickets may appear to be expensive (£2500 a year for an annual season ticket from Brighton to London), but this form of transport is a fast and environmentally friendly alternative to using a car.
On some trains, there are study clubs which offer language lessons to commuters on their way to and from work.
The organisation of the railway system in Britain has changed recently. For many years the railway was run by a public company, British Rail. In 1994, this company was split into two parts: Rail track, which owns the track and the stations, and several private companies, which operate the trains.
Some people are worried about the change. They believe that private companies will only run one or two trains a day to small country villages or that they will close village stations.
Train spotting
Train spotters are fans of trains. You can see train spotters at many train stations. They stand at the end of the platform and spend hours writing down the numbers of the trains. Serious train spotters travel thousands of miles by train trying to collect the number of trains in Britain.
Travelling by boat
The English Channel has kept out invaders for a thousand years. Nowadays, Britain wants to welcome tourists, but the crossing makes travelling between Britain and the rest of Europe inconvenient and time-consuming. Despite that, about 18.1 million people visit Britain every year. Half of these people come to England by ferry or hovercraft.
The English Channel is one of the busiest stretches of water in the world and Dover, on the south coast of England, is the busiest passenger terminal in Europe. In August, the most popular month for visitors, there arc 50 ferry and 14 hovercraft crossings between Dover and Calais every day. There are many routes across the Channel, but the fastest trip is the 35-minute hovercraft crossing between Dover and Calais.
Three hours from Paris or Brussels to London
The ferry and hovercraft companies are worried about competition from the Channel Tunnel, or the "Chunnel" as it is commonly known.
The Chunnel was officially opened on 6 May 1994. It took ten years to build and cost £9.8 billion (more than double the original estimate). All of the money came from private companies.
There are two ways of travelling through the tunnel. Lorry and car drivers take their vehicles onto special trains. They stay inside their lorries and cars for the 20-minute journey through the tunnel. Foot passengers sit in a normal train compartment.
Direct trains already run from London to Paris and Brussels. The journey between London and the English coast is relatively slow in comparison to the journey between the French coast and Brussels and Paris. There have been considerable delays in planning the high-speed rail track in England and it is not due to open until 2002 at the earliest.
Travelling by plane
London has four airports: Heathrow in the west Gatwick in the south, Stansted in the north and the City Airport in the City of London. Heathrow Airport is the busiest international airport in the world with more than 1000 planes taking off and landing every day; Gatwick is the second busiest. Nearly 70 million passengers use London's airports every year. The airports are vital not only for the success of London's financial business in the City, but also for tourism in Britain. London's links with the rest of the world are good, so many people go to London to catch long-distance flights to other parts of the globe.
People going to other parts of Britain do not always have to fly to London. Important cities with their own airports include Manchester, Glasgow, Birmingham, Edinburgh. Belfast, Aberdeen and Newcastle.
Match a word from the box on the left with one from the box on the right to form compound nouns. For example: ticket collector.
main-line |
belt |
number |
plate |
sleeping |
lounge |
Travellers’ |
desk |
departure |
station |
excess |
collector |
return |
tank |
ticket |
ticket |
buffet |
baggage |
petrol |
card |
boarding |
compartment |
check-in |
car |
steering |
cheques |
seat |
wheel |
В Which of the above compound nouns are connected with the different types of travel below? List them in the correct column.
1 Rail |
2 Air |
3 Road |
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