- •Введение
- •I. План реферирования текстов
- •II. Фразы, которые рекомендуется использовать в пересказе текста
- •Remember:
- •III. Инструкция по работе со статьей
- •Bringing up intolerance
- •Vocabulary
- •Music training boosts the brain
- •Chinese new year
- •Vocabulary
- •Hooked on the net
- •No place like home
- •Vocabulary
- •Who’s afraid of the green-eyed monster?
- •Vocabulary
- •Laughter: the best medicine
- •Remembering the indians on thanksgiving
- •Vocabulary
- •Trade in services
- •Vocabulary
- •Alma mater abroad
- •Vocabulary
- •The constitution and the bill of rights
- •Vocabulary
- •Underwater adventures
- •Vocabulary
- •Alone in the wilderness
- •Vocabulary
- •The bermuda triangle a mystery of the ocean
- •Vocabulary
- •Stratford-upon-avon
- •Vocabulary
- •Tasks and Exercises
- •Mount buffalo national park
- •Vocabulary
- •Immigrants of yesteryear
- •Vocabulary:
- •Issues for discussion
- •The christmas gift
- •Vocabulary
- •Explanation of Answers:
- •Post-reading exercise
- •The heat is on for us
- •Vocabulary
- •Fashion
- •Which suits are trumps?
- •Business Men
- •Business Lady
- •Vocabulary
- •Tasks and Exercises
- •Traditions and customs in britain
- •Time for Tea
- •British Character
- •Vocabulary
- •Effective team buildinq
- •Contents
Vocabulary
horrendous - terrible
collide - run into, crash into
tomb - grave, a place where the dead are buried
to engulf – to surround or enclose
to be unfolded - to reveal or disclose
attic - the area between the ceiling and the roof
recount - to retell, like a story
charity - love
Answer the questions:
1. What event did Ray Anderson witness at the beginning of the story?
A a home fire
B. an explosion
C. an automobile accident
2. How did Ray save the baby?
A He pulled the baby out of the window.
B. He put out the flames with a fire/extinguisher.
C. He called the police and fire department.
3. What happened to Ray?
A He had extensive head injuries.
B. He was burned over much of his body.
C. Не suffered from smoke inhalation.
4. Who is Aaron?
A He is Ray Anderson's son.
B. He is Karen's older brother.
C. He was adopted by Sandra Jenkins.
5. What was Ray Anderson doing that fateful Christmas Eve?
A serving at homeless shelter in the community
B. cutting down Christmas trees for families
C. taking goods to needy people
Explanation of Answers:
Correct Answer (C). The narrator says that Ray "witnessed a horrendous accident which took place when the driver of a truck ran a red light and collided with the car of Sandra Jenkins."
Correct Answer (A). Ray "crawled into the car through the shattered rear (car) window," and pulled the baby to safety.
Correct Answer (B). "Anderson suffered third degree burns over 80 percent of his body."
Correct Answer (A). "He (Aaron) went on to reveal that the man that pulled her from the flames was the father he never knew."
Correct Answer (C). "Aaron's father was on a mission of love that fateful Christmas Eve in the process of distributing care packages to needy families in the area." These care packages could have contained food, clothing, toys, or other household items.
Post-reading exercise
1. What was the Christmas "gift" Ray gave to others?
2. What did the narrator mean when he said that Ray believed that "the best Christmas gifts came not from the gift received, but from those given, and that those acts of charity should remain anonymous"?
3. Discuss the teachings of other religio lessons when it comes to charity and kindness towards others.
The heat is on for us
The text deals with the problems of ecology and weather. The article in “The Observer” speaks about how global warming may affect the whole planet's eco-system.
John Arlidge joined scientists on a polar expedition to investigate the threat posed to the earth's eco-system.
The Arctic, the world's last great wilderness, is facing an environmental catastrophe — with potentially devastating consequences for humanity.
A unique polar study has discovered that Arctic ice Floes are melting at an unprecedented rate as the earth heats up, destroying the natural habitat of bears, migrating whales, seals, walruses and seabirds. As scientists predicted that rising sea levels could plunge many of the world's most famous cities below water in the next century, environmentalists warned last week that the Arctic crisis is a «wake-up call» to Western governments to take swift actions to reduce the fossil fuel cause global warming.
The scale of the crisis was clear when The Observer journeyed to the freezing polar ice edge hundreds of miles north of Alaska with a team of international scientists.
The expedition, aboard the ice-breaker Arctic Sunrise, uncovered shocking new evidence of how global warming is threatening the Arctic — and the planet. If the big thaw continues, the North Atlantic Ocean will cool, transforming weather patterns thousands of miles away.
Britain will be among the worst affected. Our mild climate will develop extremes of hot and cold, bringing more storms and floods. Sea levels could rise by up to three feet, engulfing coastal towns and low-lying villages.
Large areas of East Anglia and Essex could be submerged, including the Fens, Ipswich, Norwich and Colchester.
Across the channel the entire French, Dutch, Belgian and German coastline is threatened. Amsterdam, Rotterdam and Antwerp could disappear. Also at risk are some of the biggest cities on America's eastern seaboard, including New York, Washington, and Miami.
The Arctic Sunrise study uncovered clear evidence that as temperatures rise, the ice is melting.
The Arctic is now the fastest warming area of the globe, with ice floes up to one third thinner than twenty years ago. An area the size of France has melted.
As their feeding grounds retreat north, polar bears, seals and walruses, can no longer find food for their young. Once-great populations of sea mammals and several species of seabird could die out within twenty years.
The polar bear and seal populations are thought to world's largest land predator could be extinct by 2020.
Land animals, including grizzly bears, caribou, Arctic foxed, wolves and musk oxen, are also at risk from the rising temperatures. Warmer winters, drier tundra and freak cold snaps are killing off their food sources and disrupting migration patterns.
As herds of land and sea mammals decline, Eskimos, who have survived in the world's most hostile environment for thousands of years, say they can no longer sustain their traditional lifestyle. People living on remote islands off the Alaskan coast told the Sunrise crew their communities were dying. «Our animals, our people, our world are dying and the rest of the world does not care», said a fisherman from St Lawrence Island.
Steve Sawyer, chief Arctic campaigner for Greenpeace, who monitored the polar study, said: «The Arctic is the world's thermostat. What happens here regulated the oceans and determines weather patterns everywhere».
