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VI. Answer the questions using the information from task V.

  1. What gift should you avoid giving to the Japanese? How should you give a

present in Japan?

  1. Should we stop offering the present to Chinese people if they refuse taking

it? What object will remind Chinese people of the word death?

  1. What quality gifts should be given to people living in the Middle East?

  2. Why is it better to avoid leather when giving gifts in South America?

  3. What can we give to the host when visiting his/her house in the US, Canada

or in a European country?

GRAMMAR REVIEW 2

Advice, obligation, necessity

  1. Advice

  • We can use should or shouldn’t to give or ask for advice.

Example. You should learn a song to sing before going to Korea.

  • For strong advice we can use must or mustn’t.

Example. You mustn’t refuse an invitation to dinner in Italy. It may cause

offence.

  1. Obligation/Necessity

  • We often use must when the obligation comes from the person

speaking or writing.

Example. We must buy a gift for our visitor.

  • We use mustn’t to say that something is not allowed.

Example. You mustn’t use a mobile phone in an aeroplane.

  • We often use have to to show that the obligation comes from another person or institution, not the speaker.

Example. You have to get a visa to enter the country. (This is the law.)

  1. Lack of obligation/Lack of necessity

  • don’t have to and mustn’t are very different.

don’t have to = it is not necessary

I. Choose the most appropriate verb. In some situations both verbs are

possible. Can you say why?

  1. Visitors must/should carry an identity card at all times when travelling.

  2. Passengers mustn’t/don’t have to smoke anywhere on the aircraft.

  3. All personnel should/must wear their badge while in the building.

  4. The visitors don’t have to/mustn’t enter this zone until authorised.

  5. I think you should/must learn how to negotiate in Chinese. It would be a

good skill if you had the time to learn it.

  1. My boss doesn’t have to/shouldn’t travel so much – he is looking ill.

  2. When going to a new country to do business, you should/must do some

research on the etiquette and taboos of the host country.

  1. Monday is a public holiday. I mustn’t/don’t have to work.

  1. Look at this advice for businesspeople about moving from the UK to another country. Choose the correct alternatives.

  1. Visitors must/don’t have to register with the police within one week of arriving. Anyone who does not can be fined $1,000.

  2. It is difficult to find somewhere to live. You will probably must/have to live

in a hotel for the first few weeks.

  1. UK citizens mustn’t/don’t have to register at the British Consulate but doing

so will help the consul to assist you if you get into trouble.

  1. You shouldn’t/ must carry your passport with you at all times. The police

carry out frequent spot checks.

  1. Visitors and residents don’t have to/mustn’t go near military installations,

especially when carrying a camera.

  1. You must/don’t have to be very careful when driving. The roads are

dangerous.

  1. Street crime is rare, but you should/shouldn’t be aware of what is going on

around you.

  1. You should/shouldn’t learn some common expressions in the local language.

Very few people outside the capital speak English.

READING

  1. Read the text about the Centre for International Briefing and complete the

paragraphs using the sentences below:

1. “In a country like Japan, the notion of personal space which we value so

much simply has no meaning,” he says.

  1. In Asian cultures most of it takes place behind the scenes.

  1. The difference between understanding a culture and ignoring its conventions

can be the measure of success or failure abroad.

  1. The Centre for International Briefing has spent more than 40 years preparing

the wary traveller for such pitfalls.

  1. John Doherty, International Marketing Director with the Irish Industrial Development Authority, explains how you can easily talk yourself into trouble at a business meeting in Japan.

  2. Greetings, gestures and terms of address are all potential hazards abroad.