- •Please and thank you.
- •Formal and informal manners
- •Punctuality
- •Ex. II Read and translate the information about informal greetings and leaving.
- •Informal greetings
- •Hello —Hello
- •Ex. Ill Read and translate the following dialogues.
- •Ex. IV Read and answer the following:
- •Ex. V What would you say to somebody:
- •Ex. VII Reproduce the following dialogues.
- •Практичне заняття № 2
- •Знайомство, звертання ”
- •Introducing a speaker
- •Ladies and gentlemen, Professor Borrowdale
- •Miss Lloyd: Oh, I’m sorry to hear that. They say there’s a lot of flu about just now, so I expect that’s what (On which comforting note we will leave them.)
- •Mr n. Mrs Smith, I’d like to introduce my friend from Greece, Milos.
- •Milos. How do you do?
- •A. My friend, Mr k. В. …
- •A. May I introduce my girl-friend Mary to you?
- •Практичне заняття № 3
- •Agreement
- •Disagreement
- •Ex. IV Read the examples under Disagreement and agree with them, e. G.
- •Ex. V Read the following and answer them with one of these remarks. Note where more than one remark would be suitable:
- •Ex. VI Read and disagree politely with the following.
- •Практичне заняття № 4
- •B. For help
- •C. For permission
- •D For information
- •Практичне заняття № 5
- •Thanking
- •Replies to thanks
- •As an answer
- •Ex. VI Answer the questions, using the prompt.
- •Indicate the names of the islands and parts of the country, oceans and
- •Ex. IX Translate the following words into Ukrainian. Cornish, dialect, the British Isles, alternative, Welsh, to contain, Gaelic, Manx, complete.
- •British government
- •1. What three sections of the government in Britain do you know?
- •2. What political parties in Britain do you know?
- •Тема 1.2 “Історія та сьогодення Лондона”
- •Тема 1.2 “Пам‘ятки історії та культури Лондона”
- •Gradually – поступово
- •London, the capital
- •The following are also associated by Ukrainian people with their nation.
- •Ex. V Find the right word for
- •Ex. VII Are the following statements true or false? Give your reasons.
- •Практичне заняття № 25
- •Практичне заняття № 26
- •Ex. IX Think and answer the following questions.
- •Практичне заняття № 27
- •Практичне заняття № 28
- •Тема 1.3. “Політичний устрій України”
- •State structure of ukraine
- •Ex. IV Find out.
- •Ex. VI Choose the right answer.
- •Практичне заняття № 30
- •Ex. I Read and learn new words and word-combinations by heart.
- •Ex. II Read and translate the text.
- •Ex. III Answer the following questions.
- •10. What does Ministry for Diaspora aim to? Ex. IV Translate these word-combinations into English.
- •Ex. VI Translate the following sentences into English.
British government
B
ritain
is a parliamentary democracy with a constitutional monarch – Queen
Elizabeth II – as a head of state. The Queen is impartial and acts
on the advice of her ministers.
The government in Britain is divided into three sections, the elected House of Commons, the non-elected House of Lords and the hereditary monarch.
T
he
UK is divided into 650 areas called constituencies. Each
constituency elects one person to represent them in the House
of Commons. These people, or candidates, can be any British
person except for a few cases. The candidate usually represents
a political party for example the Conservative (Tory) Party,
Labour, Liberal, Green (Ecology) or Nationalist parties.
The candidate with the most votes, even if it is less than 50 %,
represents their constituency as the member of parliament
(M.P.) for the period of time up until the next general election,
anything up to five years later.
I
f
one party has 326 or more seats then they form the government, the
leader of the party becomes the prime minister
and he or she chooses 20 members of their party to form the
cabinet. Each member of the cabinet is responsible for one
area of the government, for example, the minister for the
environment,
the minister for health or the Chancellor of the Exchequer
(finance).
These ministers are responsible for their department in the civil service who are the people who tell ministers any information they need to know and any decisions which need to be made. The civil service workers do not work for a particular political party but represent the government no matter which party it is formed from. Most civil service workers have been privately educated and attended Oxbridge universities.
T
he
House of Lords has around two to three hundred active
members. They are not paid for their political work but merely
debate a decision taken in parliament and suggest any changes
to a bill which they consider necessary before sending it to
the monarch to be signed. The monarch can refuse to sign
a bill as they see fit but has not done so for over two hundred
years.
Along with the national government, there is also a local government system for each of the 55 administrative regions known as counties. This local government is responsible for the roads, schools, hospitals and so on for their own county.
Some people in Britain think that the election system is unfair and should be changed but neither the Conservative nor the Labour parties (the two largest) have any wish to change the system at the moment.
Ex. III Answer the following questions.
How many sections are there in the government of Great Britain?
What are they?
How many constituencies is the UK divided into?
How many people are elected in the House of Commons?
What political parties of the UK do you know?
When does one party form the government?
Who becomes the prime minister?
What does the prime minister usually form?
What is each member of the cabinet responsible for?
What do the civil service usually do?
How many active members has the House of Lords?
What do the members of the House of Lords do?
Who usually sign bills?
What is there along with the national government?
What is a local government responsible for?
What do some people in Britain think about the election system in the UK?
Who has no wish to change this system?
Ex. IV Match the following. Put numbers (“1”or “2”) in brackets.
1. Three sections of the government in Britain: the elected House of Com-
mons (...)
the Conservative Party (...)
the non-elected House
of Lords (...)
2. Political parties in Britain: the Labour Party (...)
the Green Party (...)
the hereditary monarch (...)
the Liberal Party (...)
the Nationalist Party (...)
Ex. V Fill in the gaps.
