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3. Work in pairs and talk about your answers to the questions in the text.

4. Work in groups of three or five. Prepare a description of a home that would suit all of you. Use the following ideas:

- Type of home - Size

- Location - Number of rooms

- Furniture - Electrical appliances

- The most important items

Use the following expressions:

To make suggestions To express doubt

What about…? I have my doubts about that.

Let’s start with … Well, I’m still not sure…

I suggest that we should… I can’t say that…

(See ‘List of Speech Acts’, p. 104)

5. Work in groups of three or four and discuss your answers to the following questions:

1) Do you live in a house or flat?

2) If you live in a flat what floor is it on?

3) If you live in a house do you have a garden?

4) Do you have your own garage or personal parking space?

5) Does the house/flat belong to you (or your family) or do you rent it?

6) What sort of furniture do you have?

7) What is the most important item for you?

8) Would you describe your house/flat as comfortable, dark or light (noisy or quiet)?

B. Eating Habits

1. Make these sentences true for you. Compare with a partner.

1) We often eat together in my family.

2) A typical dinner lasts about one hour.

3) Eating together keeps the family close.

4) We often eat out.

5) I like fast food.

6) We have special meals at the weekend.

2. Read a magazine article in which two families describe their eating habits. Are they different or the same?

Separate tables

The Norris family is a monument to modern-food technology. “I can’t remember the last time we all ate together,” says husband Michael Norris. “Mostly the food comes out of the freezer and goes straight into the microwave. We have two dining-tables but they never get used, not unless my mother-in-law, who lives with us, cooks something.” The children, Sophie and Ben, eat when they come home from school, while watching TV. Pat Norris, who works irregular hours and travels a lot, boils soup and makes a salad when she’s at home; Michael often eats out. It’s informal, but everyone likes it.

The art of course eating

The Scott family like a bit of formality in their lives. “We are not stuffy,” insists Caroline, “but we always have napkins and white linen and flowers on the table. My husband always has a bath before dinner, and we always change clothes. I think it’s important for the children to have good manners.” Caroline drives across town to find food that’s not “full of all sorts of nasty chemicals”. The result is “meals that sometimes take an hour and a half, at least, and longer at weekends”. The children attend an equally civilized breakfast served at 8.00 a.m. prompt in the dining-room. “It’s a sort of ritual so we can all see one another. We all feel it’s important”, says Caroline, who doesn’t have a microwave and does most of the cooking herself. “I seem to spend a lot time cooking,” she says. “I don’t know why. I suppose it’s because we’ve always done it.”

3. Answer the questions.

Which of the families:

1) eats together every morning?

2) almost never eats together?

3) eats a lot of frozen food?

4) has special meals at the weekend?

5) has very good table manners?

4. Complete the following sentences about your eating habits. Develop the idea using the words and words expressions from the article:

1) In my family we often …

2) We usually have dinner …

3) I feel it’s important …

4) I sometimes cook …

5) At weekends we …

6) I spend a lot of my free time …

5. Read the questions in ‘Mind your manners!’ Think about your answers.

Work in pairs and discuss your answers.

Mind your manners!

1) What do you say at the start of a meal?

2) Do you usually use a knife and fork?

3) Do you use a napkin?

4) Where do you put your hands when you are at the table but not eating?

5) When do you usually drink coffee and tea?

6) When you can’t reach something on the table what must you do?

7) When you don’t want a dish what do you say?

8) How do you indicate that you have had enough?

C. Shops and Shopping

1. Match the definitions on the left with the words on the right.

1) A shop where you can buy fashionable clothes. shop assistant

2) A large shop which sells all kinds of food and household goods. sale

3) A person who works in a shop. supermarket

4) The place where you can try on clothes in a shop. butcher

5) The place where you pay for things in a shop. room

6) The shop where fruit and vegetables are sold. сash desk

7) The shop where you buy meat. chemist

8) The shop where you buy medicines, baby products, etc. florist

9) The shop where you buy flowers. greengrocer

10) An occasion when a shop sells things at less boutique

than their normal price.

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