- •Part II collection of hand outs
- •Hand out №91
- •Family fortunes Are you a first child, a middle child, the youngest, or an only child?
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №92
- •Sleep your way to the top
- •Illnesses and injures
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №93
- •N ational wearing
- •National clothes of Kazakh women
- •N ational clothes of Kazakh men
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out № 94
- •Usefull phrases
- •Interesting flora and fauna
- •Which way of travelling do you prefer?
- •Конец формы glossary
- •References
- •Hand out № 95
- •Pollution Water, Air and Soil Contamination
- •Traffic pollution damages kids’ lungs
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out № 96
- •I expect to receive/ You must send me
- •I know/1 can accept
- •I am writing to complain about/1 am really angry about
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Adverb Phrases as Adverbials [1. P 134]
- •Glossary
- •References
- •0 A chose b fixed c dealt d wished
- •The grand designer
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Beijing is a great city in Asia
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №100
- •Feng Shui Decorating Tips
- •In five minutes write down two things you can have done at each of the following places:
- •It’s spacious and full of light. There are two rooms downstairs,…
- •Glossary
- •References
- •A real gem!
- •Glossary
- •References
- •1. Listen to the text and give t (true) or f (false) answers [Part III p. 170], [7, t 4.29, р. 96].
- •2. Retell the main idea of the listened text.
- •Boy breaks mi5 computer system
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Teenagers
- •Verbs of the senses
- •Glossary
- •References
- •The Jones family have nine tv, six computers, three cars, and every domestic appliance. What would their life be like without them? Melanie Adams reports
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №105
- •The international manager
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №106
- •Our life is the process of advertising
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №107
- •In this exercise you have to explain what some words mean. Choose the right meaning from the box and then write a sentence with who. Use a dictionary if necessary.
- •W ords borrowed from other languages and the meaning of Tingo
- •Esperanto
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №108
- •The art of architecture and civil engineering
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Key questions about modern medical science What exactly is cloning and do I need to worry about it?
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №110
- •Whitney Houston is a pop legend.
- •Glossary
- •References
- •E xercise 1. Listen to the film critic an extract from the film. Try to guess if these statements are true (t) or false (f). [Part III p. 174].
- •Film posters
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Glossary
- •Hand out №115
- •Kazakhstan’s famous landmarks
- •I thought the hotel was very comfortable…,it was a pity we.…
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №116
- •Khodja Akhmed Yasaui Mausoleum
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out №117
- •Passive construction with say, believe.
- •Hunters in the sky
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Hand out № 118
- •Kazakh culture events
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Glossary
- •References
- •Part III Collection of tests and lexical materials
- •3.1 Theory
- •3.2. Examination material for assessment of practical skills of communication (listening, speaking, reading and writing activities). Card №1
- •Family fortunes
- •Card №2
- •Sleep your way to the top
- •Card №3
- •National clothes of Kazakh women
- •Card №4
- •Card №5
- •Pollution Water, Air and Soil Contamination
- •Card №6
- •Card №7
- •Our life is the process of advertising
- •Card № 8
- •Key questions about modern medical science
- •Card №9
- •Beijing is a great city in Asia
- •Card №10
- •Card №11
- •A real gem!
- •Card №12
- •Card №13
- •Card №14
- •Hunters in the sky
- •Card №15
- •Civil Engineering
- •Card №16
- •The international manager
- •Card №17
- •Low buildings
- •Card №18
- •The art of architecture and civil engineering
- •Card №19
- •Whitney Houston is a pop legend.
- •Card №20
- •Card №21
- •Task 1. Write an essay to the given situation (80 words). (Time for preparation- 8 min., time for answering-2 min.).
- •Card №22
- •Teenagers
- •Card №23
- •Card №24
- •Before crossing
- •Card №25
- •The Jones family has nine tv, six computers, three cars, and every domestic appliance. What would their life be like without them? Melanie Adams reports
- •Card №26
- •Kazakhstan’s famous landmarks
- •Card №27
- •Khodja Akhmed Yasaui Mausoleum
- •Card №28
- •Kazakh culture events
- •Card №29
- •Card №30
- •Texts for Listening
- •New Century Global Center
- •Transcript for New inventions
- •Texts for reading
- •Family fortunes Are you a first child, a middle child, the youngest, or an only child?
- •Sleep your way to the top
- •National wearing
- •National clothes of Kazakh women
- •National clothes of Kazakh men
- •Which way of travelling do you prefer?
- •Pollution Water, Air and Soil Contamination
- •Hell and High Water
- •The grand designer
- •Beijing is a great city in Asia
- •Feng Shui Decorating Tips
- •A real gem!
- •Boy breaks mi5 computer system
- •Teenagers
- •The Jones family have nine tv, six computers, three cars, and every domestic appliance. What would their life be like without them? Melanie Adams reports
- •The international manager
- •Our life is the process of advertising
- •Words borrowed from other languages and the meaning of Tingo
- •The art of architecture and civil engineering
- •Whitney Houston is a pop legend
- •Titanic – the most expensive film ever made
- •Kazakhstan’s famous landmarks
- •Khodja Akhmed Yasaui Mausoleum
- •Hunters in the sky
- •Kazakh culture events
- •Modern Building Materials Part 1
- •Geodesy and Geodetic measurements
- •Different methods of heating and ventilation
- •Building materials mortar
- •Ancient Wonders of the world
- •Modern Building Materials Part 2
- •Drainage general principles applicable to any drainage scheme
- •Separate, partially separate, and combined drainage systems
- •Civil Enginering
- •Ventilation and water heating
- •Concrete structure
- •Steel mill buildings
- •Precast and prestressed concrete
- •*** A closet full of shoes
- •Vachel Lindsay
- •Block III
- •Kyz aittyru
- •Saukele kigizu
- •Kyz uzatu
- •Otau koteru
- •Kursak shashu
- •Torkindeu
- •Samples of congratulations
- •Samples of business letters
- •150 People were present: (list attached)
- •1. The report of the Staff "Student searchlight ". Reporter: Abilov n., the Head of the Staff "ss".
- •2 .The question on preparing for the scientific student conference
- •References
Ancient Wonders of the world
The Great Pyramid is only one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World that still stands.
It was built at the order of the Paraoh Cheops, who once ruled Egypt. More than 100,000 slaves labored for twenty years to build it. They had no machines, not even carts-all the work was done by human strength alone. Yet each huge block was so well laid that the Pyramid has stood for 5,000 years.
Near the Great Pyramid in Egypt stands a huge sculptured rock called the Sphynx. The face is that of a man, perhaps the Paraoh Kharfe who had it built almost 5,000 years ago. But the body is that of a lion, and between its great stone paws is a small temple. Since no one knows exactly why is the Sphynx was built, it remains a symbol of mystery- a riddle.
In Babylon, one of the great cities of the Ancient World, there was a famous garden which amazed visitors for hundreds years. It was called the Hanging Gardens, because it was built along arches and towers and looked like a wall of flowers and green shrubs. The garden was kept alive by a hidden pool on the highest terrace, from which the water was drawn to appear in a series of fountains. The gardens were built by the King Nebuchodnozzor, who mentioned in the Bible as a cruel conqueror of Jerusalem.
The greatest god of the ancient Greeks was Zeus, for whom the Roman name was called Jupiter. The greatest statue of Zeus was at Olympia, where the famous Olympic Games were held in its honor. The statue was 40 feet high-about seven times a man’s height-and was made of marble, decorated with pure gold and ivory. After 1,000 years, an earthquake tumbled it down.
The Temple of Artemis is one of the most famous temples of the ancient world. It stood for 600 years in Ephesus, a great city of Syria. The temple was sacred to Artemis, also called Diana, goodness of the moon. The finest sculptors and painters of Greece decorated this beautiful building, which was destroyed by the barbaric Goths. Only a few pieces of statues columns remained. Modern scientists dug them up.
Few remember the tiny kingdom of Caria, which once flourished in what is now southwestern Turkey. But the name of its king, Mausolus, is known of the world “mausoleum”- a massive tomb. The original Artemisia, was so magnificent that it was one of the Wonders of the Ancient World.
Rhodes, an island near Greece, was so magnificent that it was one of the Wonders of the Ancient World. Standing across the entrance to its big harbour, was a huge statue of the sun god Helios, famous as the Colossus of Rhodes. Although ships sailed beneath these of Liberty.
The most famous lighthouse in ancient times was the Pharos of Alexandria, the Great. It guarded the harbor of Alexandria, in Egypt, and light atop a high tower could be seen for sixty miles. To keep the beacon the powerful electric lamps behind glass lenses used in our lighthouses were not yet.
Great sphinx . From the 15lh century AD European travellers carried home tales of the mysterious and amazing remains of the civilization of Egypt. One of its most remarkable monuments, which still evokes this sense of awe and might, is the Great Sphinx of Gizeh, the oldest surviving sphinx, dating from c2550 ВС, carved from a rock with the crouchingbody of a lion and a human face (74, 4 m. long, 20, 1 m. high, and 4, 2 m. broad, at its widest point; the head is 8, 7 m. high from chin to crown). The human head was the means of individualizing the sculpture, so that the Great Sphinx probably bears the idealized features of Khephren whose pyramid is nearby. The concept of the king as a powerful lion goes back into prehistoric times, and several ceremonial objects have survived which depict him in this guise, overthrowing his enemies. The sphinx was, therefore, a natural development, personifying the divine power of the king as a force protecting his land and repelling the power of evil. The Great Sphinx is one of the most distinctive and dominant of all the images of ancient Egypt, which is perhaps the source of the misconception that sphinxes are of central importance in Egyptian culture. However, those that have survived are among the most impressive as well as intriguing examples of Egyptian sculpture
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