
- •Тульский государственный университет
- •Местоимения (Pronouns)
- •Глагол to be (The Verb to be)
- •Запомните устойчивые словосочетания с глаголом to be:
- •Глагол to have (The Verb to have)
- •Множественное число существительных (Plural of Nouns)
- •Text a. Learning Foreign Languages
- •Vocabulary
- •"Hooligan"
- •"Mackintosh"
- •Text b. Handicapped people do useful work
- •Vocabulary
- •Text c. A person who happens to be blind
- •Vocabulary
- •Text d. About Poverty Level
- •About myself and my family
- •Vocabulary
- •Text. About Myself and My Family
- •2. Неопределенные и отрицательные местоимения (Indefinite and Negative Pronouns)
- •Much, many, little, few
- •3. Indefinite (Simple) Tenses
- •Text a. Education in the Russian Federation
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b. Schooling in the United Kingdom
- •Vocabulary
- •Text c. University Education in Great Britain
- •Text d. Oxford
- •Tula State University
- •Vocabulary
- •Text. Tula State University
- •Past Indefinite (Past Simple) Tense. Active Voice
- •2. Future Indefinite (Future Simple) Tense. Active Voice
- •Степени сравнения прилагательных и наречий (The Degrees of Comparison of Adjectives and Adverbs)
- •4. Числительные (Numerals)
- •Хронологические даты
- •Text a. American teenagers and their free time
- •Text b. Leisure-time activities
- •My working day
- •My working day
- •1. Повелительное наклонение (Imperative Mood)
- •2. Местоимение it (The Pronoun it)
- •3. Словообразование. Приставки dis-, un-, in- (Word-building. Prefixes dis-, un-, in-)
- •4. Времена группы Indefinite (повторение) (Indefinite Tenses. Revision )
- •Text a. The Use of leisure
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b. Culture, Leisure, Entertainment, Sports
- •Text c. Holidays and Festivals
- •Text d. What are young people doing at Christmas ?
- •Vocabulary
- •Leisure activities and skills
- •The Weekend
- •Hobbies
- •Peter’s hobby
- •At the Supermarket
- •Discover the secret You
- •Perfect Tenses. Present Perfect Tense (Active)
- •Present Perfect Tense The Present Perfect Tense употребляется для обозначения действия, которое только что (недавно) закончилось или еще продолжается в настоящем.
- •2. Функции that (The Functions of that)
- •Словообразование. Суффиксы существительных (Word-building. The suffixes of nouns)
- •Text a. Your visit to england
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b. Travelling
- •Vocabulary
- •Time off
- •Времена группы Perfect Past Perfect Tense. Future Perfect Tense Past Perfect Tense
- •Future Perfect Tense
- •Функции слова one. (The functions of one)
- •Словообразование. Приставка re- (Word –building. The prefix re-)
- •VI. Make up as many sentences as you can using
- •VII. Open the brackets using
- •VIII. Complete the sentences using Past Perfect:
- •IX. Change the following sentences according to the model.
- •X. Rewrite the sentences adding the given words. Make all necessary changes.
- •XIV.TranslateintoEnglish.
- •XV. Translate the sentences. Mind the word one.
- •XVI. Translate the verbs with the prefix re-:
- •XVII. Form new words with the prefix re-:
- •Text a. Once again about Ozone Holes
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b. Friendly to the Environment Recycling
- •Business Goes Green!
- •Vocabulaly
- •Text c. Man the loser?
- •Environment and Ecology
- •Environmental Protection
- •Questions to be answered
- •1. Времена группы Continuous. (Continuous Tenses. Продолженные времена)
- •2. Словообразование. Суффиксы прилагательных (Word-building. The suffixes of adjectives)
- •- Able, - ible
- •Text a. He Started Britain’s Railways
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b.
- •Text c. Inventors and Their Inventions
- •The Progress of Science
- •Vocabulary
- •Science
- •Passive Voice
- •Словообразование. Суффиксы глаголов (Word-building. The suffixes of verbs)
- •Text a. Science and Technology
- •Vocabulary
- •Translate the text ‘Science and Technology’.
- •Put questions to the subjects of the sentences. Give short answers.
- •Scientific and technological developments have drastically changed life on our planet.
- •Text b. The telegraph
- •Text c. Thomas alva edison (1847 - 1931)
- •Vocabulary
- •Text d. Coming Events
- •Great Scientists
- •Mikhail Lomonosov
- •Roentgen
- •Tsiolkovsky - Founder of Austronautics
- •A. Whom was an automobile invented by?
- •Have you ever heard of physics of high energies?
- •The Scientists and the Watches
- •Unit 9
- •1. Модальные глаголы и их заменители (Modal Verbs and Their Equivalents)
- •2. Многофункциональность глаголов to be, to have
- •Text a. British Economy
- •Vocabulary
- •Экономика Великобритании
- •Text c. The Subject of the Science of Economics
- •On Economics
- •Text. Us Economy
- •Экономика сша
- •Talking Business
- •Vocabulary
- •Unit 10
- •1. Sequence of Tenses (Согласование времен)
- •2. Direct and Indirect Speech
- •Text a. Information Age: For and Against
- •Vocabulary
- •Text b. Computer System
- •Vocabulary
- •Produce definitions to the following:
- •Text c. A message from the President
- •Text d. Hard Disk Troubles
- •Introduction
- •Text e. The new way of looking at things: MultiSync' monitors
- •Let’s dream of ai (Artificial Intelligence) Artificial intelligence
- •Input Eliza
- •I'm a bit upset. Why do you feel upset?
- •She's afraid of me. Does it please you to think she's afraid of
- •Answers:
- •The Scientists and the Watches
- •Word Bingo
- •Учебное издание
Text a. British Economy
Britain lives by manufacture and trade. For every person employed in agriculture eleven people are employed in mining, manufacturing and building. The United Kingdom is one of the world’s largest exporters of manufactured goods per head of population.
Apart from coal and iron ore Britain has very few natural resources and mostly depends on imports. Its agriculture provides only half the food it needs. The other half and most of the raw materials for its industries such as oil and various metals (copper, zinc, uranium ore and others) have to be imported. Britain also has to import timber, cotton, fruit and farm products.
Britain used to be richly forested, but most of the forests were cut down to make more room for cultivation. The greater part of land is used for cattle and sheep breeding, and pig raising. Among the crops grown on the farms are wheat, barley and oats. The fields are mainly in the eastern part of the country. Most of the farms are small (one third of them is less than one hundred acres). Farms tend to be bigger where the soil is less fertile.
In the past century Britain secured a leading position in the world as manufacturer, merchant and banker. After World War I the world demand for the products of Britain’s traditional industries - textiles, coal and machinery - fell off, and Britain began expanding trade in new engineering products and electrical goods.
The crisis of 1929 - 1933 brought about mass unemployment, which reached its peak in 1932. Britain’s share in the world industrial output decreased. After the crisis production and employment increased following some revival in world trade and as a result of the extensive armament program.
During World War II Britain’s economy was fully employed in the war effort. Massed raids of German planes on British industrial centres caused considerable damage to Britain’s industry. World War II brought about a further weakening of Britain’s might. Great Britain is no longer the leading imperialist power it used to be. It has lost its colonies which used to supply it with cheap raw materials.
Britain produces high quality expensive goods, which has always been characteristic of its industry. A shortage of raw materials, as well as the high cost of production makes it unprofitable for British industry to produce semi-finished goods or cheap articles. Britain mostly produces articles requiring skilled labour, such as precision instruments, electronic equipment, chemicals and high quality consumer goods. Britain produces and exports cotton and woollen goods, leather goods, and articles made of various kinds of synthetic (man-made) materials.
The original basis of British industry was coal mining, and the early factories grew up not far from the main mining areas. Glasgow and Newcastle became great centres of engineering and shipbuilding. Lancashire produced cotton goods and Yorkshire woollens, with Sheffield concentrating on iron and steel. Birmingham developed light engineering.
There appeared a tendency for industry and population to move to the south, particularly to the London area. (Britain’s industry is now widely dispersed). Great progress was made in the development of new industries, such as the aircraft, automobile, electronic industries and others. A number of atomic power reactors were made. Great emphasis was made on the development of the war industry.