
- •Предисловие
- •Some Important Things from the Educational Environment
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •College Life
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •B. Our University Active Vocabulary
- •Our University
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •Self check
- •Unit 2 Our Studies. Our English Lesson Active Vocabulary
- •Introducing the new vocabulary
- •Our Studies
- •Career Prospects
- •II. Listening and comprehension tasks
- •2.1. Check your understanding of the dialogue by marking the following statements as True or False. Comment on your choice.
- •2.2. Listen to the dialogue focussing on the details and answer the questions.
- •2.3. Listen to the dialogue once again and while doing it write down all the information that may characterize the boys.
- •III. Follow up activities
- •Self check
- •Unit 3 Taking Exams Active Vocabulary
- •Taking Exams
- •A Students’ Guide to Exam Stress
- •After the Exams
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •Unusual Types of Houses
- •II. Listening and comprehension tasks
- •2.1. Listen to 4 people talking about their houses and mark the statements as True or False.
- •2.2 Listen to the descriptions again and fill in the chart below.
- •III. Follow up activity
- •B. American Home
- •1. Answer these questions about yourself and, if possible, find out how someone else would answer them.
- •Self Check
- •A Letter Home
- •В. Renting a Room Active Vocabulary
- •In England many people let rooms in their houses to people who need somewhere to live. The people pay money for this and are called lodgers.
- •Imagine you are going to let / rent a room / flat. The questions below will help you get all the information you need.
- •Sharing a Flat
- •Phoning a Landlord
- •II. Listening and compehenstion tasks
- •III. Follow up activity
- •Self Check
- •Unit 3 Buying a House Active Vocabulary
- •Buying a House
- •Looking for a House to Buy
- •Unit 4 Furniture and Furnishing Active Vocabulary
- •Around the Home a. Rooms
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •House for Sale
- •III. Follow up activity
- •Self Check
- •Unit 5 Your Ideal Home
- •I. Foodstuffs
- •III. Ways of Cooking
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •Use the following examples as a model.
- •В. Cooking Methods and Ways of Cooking. Recipes
- •Cooking Methods
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •Giving Instructions
- •Bread and Butter Pudding
- •Cinnamon-Sugar Apple Pie
- •Salmon In Puff Pastry
- •Special Family Food
- •How do you make…?
- •2. Listen to the recording. Rearrange the instructions in the correct order. Remember that there is one extra instruction which is not given.
- •3. Compare your answer with a partner and, if necessary, listen again to settle any disagreements.
- •Self check
- •Unit 2 National Cuisines. Customs of Having Meals a. National Cuisines
- •English Cooking
- •Traditional British Cooking
- •American Food
- •Belarusian Cookery
- •B. Customs of Having Meals Active Vocabulary
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •The Customs of Having Meals in England
- •Daily Meals in Belarus
- •I. Take turns discussing these questions with your partner.
- •II. Make up dialogues following the models given below.
- •Listen to the interview with Yves and answer the following questions:
- •Listen to the interview once again and fill in the chart.
- •Self check
- •Unit 3 Table Manners
- •A List of Do’s and Don’ts
- •Unit 4 Eating Out Active Vocabulary
- •Eating Out
- •The Old Mill, The Quay, Wardleton, Sussex
- •Fast Food
- •(A) Lunch for Two
- •1. Listen to the conversation and complete the sentences choosing the right variant:
- •2. Listen to the conversation again and answer the following questions.
- •(B) Eating Out
- •1. Listen to the conversation and fill in the gaps.
- •Conversational Formulas.
- •Invitations. Thanks. Refusals
- •Invitation
- •In a restaurant
- •With a girl-friend in a coffee bar
- •In a cafe
- •Chocolate Nut Sundae
- •Self check
- •Unit 5 Healthy Food. Dieting Active Vocabulary
- •We Ought To Eat More Fresh Fruit
- •Nutrients That Provide Energy
- •Tips for Healthy Eating and Cooking
- •Some Facts about Diet
- •Guidelines for Slimmers
- •Self check
- •Part IV. Shopping
- •Unit 1
- •Describing Shops. American and English Shops
- •Active Vocabulary
- •Baker’s / bakery
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •At the Supermarket
- •Shopping List
- •Unit 2 Shopping for Foodstuffs
- •Why is buying foodstuffs considered to be a sort of art? Read the passage and share your opinions. Buying Foodstuffs
- •At a grocery store
- •Some Hints and Tips on Shopping for Food
- •Self Check
- •Vocabulary exercises
- •The Big Stores
- •Shopping
- •Buying souvenirs
- •The spendthrift
- •Buying a present
- •Bargaining
- •Buying Clothes
- •Listen to the first recording and fill in the relevant information.
- •Listen to the recording and answer the following questions.
- •Listen to the second recording and tick the words you’ve heard on the tape:
- •Listen to the recording again and match parts a-e with a-e.
- •Self Check
- •Unit 2 Career Prospects
- •Part II unit 1 Unusual Types of Houses
- •Unit 2 Phoning a Landlord
- •Unit 3 Looking for a House to Buy
- •Unit 4 House for Sale
- •References
Unit 2 Our Studies. Our English Lesson Active Vocabulary
to read for a seminar on / in linguistics
to take / make notes
to copy up the notes
to lack fluency / vocabulary
to complain about hardships
to assess one’s ability
to find out
to follow smb.
to do English
to get on well / badly at smth.
to get on well in the exam
to revise / to sit for exams
to revise from lecture notes / textbooks
to do revision
to get a distinction
to work hard at all the aspects of the language
to consult a dictionary, to look up words in a dictionary
to make rapid progress in smth.
to read aloud / to oneself; to keep silent
to be quite at home in the subject
to be good / bad / clever at smth.
to have a good ear (memory) for foreign words
to memorize long vocabulary lists
to be a quick learner / to be quick (slow) on the uptake
to be the top of the group
Introducing the new vocabulary
Exercise 1. Mind the underlined phrases. Act out the following dialogues.
CLASS. LECTURE. SEMINAR
- Are you leaving, Jane?
- Yes, I’ve got a ten o’clock class. I must be on time.
- I think you have a lot of pronunciation practice in your phonetic classes, don’t you?
- Yes, we are trained to imitate native speakers.
- There will be a lecture on Byron in room 300. Are you coming?
- I don’t know. We’ve had three classes already today. I feel rather tired.
- They are arranging a lecture on modern American drama. It will be held in room 404.
- Who’s lecturing?
- Mr. Barnett.
- Where’s Robert?
- He is reading for the seminar on / in linguistics.
- Please find out when the lecture begins.
- All right.
- Why don’t you answer my question, Jack?
- You are speaking so fast that I can’t follow you.
NOTES, TAKE NOTES, MAKE NOTES
‘Note’ means a record or reminder in writing.
‘Make a note / notes’ means to write down as a reminder or while / after reading smth. e.g. Make a note of how much money you spend.
‘Take notes’ means to write down while / after listening to smb: She takes good notes of everything that’s said in class.
Can you lend me your lecture notes (literature / history / grammar notes)?
Sorry, but I gave them to Jack.
Did you take notes at the lecture?
I missed the lecture, but I copied up the notes.
Are you prepared for the seminar?
Yes, I read the book and made some notes.
STUDY, LEARN, DO, TEACH
(Note that ‘study’ is formal and used with reference to advanced theoretical knowledge; ‘learn’ is less formal and implies elementary, practical knowledge and skills; ‘do’ is informal).
Richard is at University now, isn’t he?
Yes, he is studying psychology (English) / He is studying to be a lawyer.
Is Susan learning to type / to cook / to keep house?
Yes, and she is getting on quite well at it.
You are doing English at the University, aren’t you?
Yes, and in the next term we’re going to do French.
LEARN, TEACH
- Do you go in for cycling?
- I am not a good cyclist. I am just learning. John is teaching me. He is a first-class cyclist. John says I am learning quickly / I’m a quick learner.
Is Alec doing well?
- Yes, he is a quick learner and manages to do all the work we are given / I am sorry to say he is an unsatisfactory student. He is behind the group and has a very poor knowledge of English.
TEST, EXAM, PASS, FAIL
- How often do you do / have translation / vocabulary / grammar / spelling tests?
Well, practically every day.
Where’s Jane?
She is taking her history / English / literature test.
When are you having your end-of-term / final test?
On Monday.
What did you think of the test-paper?
It was rather difficult / It was terrible / It was quite simple.
- How did you get on in the exam?
- I passed / I failed hopelessly / Two people of our group failed / I just scraped through.
REVISE, REVISION, DO REVISION
- I say, Helen, are you revising from the textbook?
- No, our teacher says we’d better revise from our lecture notes.
- Are you very busy just now?
- Yes, awfully. I must revise the whole term’s work for the exam / test.
- Are you going out tonight?
- No, I’ve got to do some revision. We are having a test tomorrow.
- How are you getting on with your revision?
- Jolly good. I’ve nearly finished.
- Is Helen a good student?
- She is rather capable, but she seems never to do any revision.
TO FINISH, TO LEAVE, TO GRADUATE
- He is an educated man, I understand.
- Yes, he graduated from Oxford (He is an Oxford graduate).
- What are you going to do when you leave school?
- Well, I’ll try to take exams to a college / a university.
- What college / university?
- Technological, perhaps in Minsk. I haven’t made up my mind yet. Substitute: the Medical University, the Belarusian State University, the Polytechnical University, the Academy of Veterinary Medicine.
(Note: to ‘leave school’ may also be used in the meaning of ‘give up school’)
Exercise 2. When do you say:
Example: He works by fits and starts.
We say, “He works by fits and starts” if he doesn’t work regularly.
1. She has a good command of English. 2. She lacks fluency. 3. She has done well in her exams. 4. She never misses lessons. 5. He gets behind the group in Phonetics. 6. He is quite at home in the subject. 7. She feels homesick. 8. You can’t learn a language just by picking it up. 9. It serves him right. 10. She failed in her exam. 11. His memory failed him.
Exercise 3. Study the models and use them in dialogues of your own. Discuss your studies with your partner.
1. - Have you written your composition, Ben? It’s due today.
- Of course. And what about you?
- Not yet. I didn’t think it would be so difficult and started it only yesterday.
- Well, it will teach you a lesson. Never put off till tomorrow what you can do today, you know.
2. - Would you like to go and see Nell today?
- Well, I was thinking of learning some English.
- Oh, but you can do that tomorrow.
- Yes, and I can see Nell tomorrow, too.
3. - Why doesn’t Jim work harder?
- You know that very well – because he’s lazy.
- Do you think the teacher will put up with that very long?
- I’m afraid she won’t, and Jim will have to repeat the year.
4. - As sure as eggs is eggs, Bob won’t do well in the exam.
- Why do you think so?
- He has missed much and doesn’t attend the extra lessons now.
- No fear. He’s quite at home in the subject.
5. - Paul wouldn’t like to fail in his exam, would he?
- Of course, he wouldn’t. Who would!
- But he hasn’t been working very hard. He thinks he is clever enough to pass his exams without much work, doesn’t he?
- Yes, he relies too much on his memory. But I doubt it can carry him out when doing Latin.
6. - Margaret is looking very happy this evening.
- She did well in English, you know.
- What mark?
- Excellent. Worked hard at the language. And what about Jane? Did she get through?
- On the contrary. She failed miserably.
- Oh, really!
- No wonder! She cut lectures, did not attend seminars and was late for tutorials, as a rule.
- Then it serves her right.
7. - When will your exams begin?
- Oh, they are not far off. I’m to take an exam in Linguistics next week. Here is the time-table of my exams.
- You are nervous, aren’t you?
- Of course I am. Everybody is.
- Are you revising for your exams now?
- No, not yet. Before the exams we are going to have a test in English. I’m revising for the test. We’ll have this test tomorrow.
8. - Hello, Dick! Are you taking your exams?
- I’ve already passed my last exam.
- What did you get for mathematics?
- I got a distinction. You passed your exams too, didn’t you?
- No, I didn’t. I failed in physics.
- What a pity! I’m sorry for you! How did it happen?
- It’s difficult to explain. My memory failed me and I forgot the simplest things. I think it was the result of a sleepless night.
9. - Are you still studying English?
- Yes, but I don’t get enough time for it. I have so many other things to do.
- It’s the same with me. I can read English now without much difficulty, but I still find it rather difficult to speak English. And I don’t always understand people when they speak English to me.
- We don’t hear enough spoken English, I suppose. Do you listen to the BBC programmes?
- Yes. That helps me to understand spoken English but not to speak English.
- We must speak English all the time.
- Yes, you are right. It’s the best way to master a language.
Read the following passage and say whether your studies are different from those described below.