- •Incredible
- •I knew he had that incredible stage-presence
- •Incredible
- •Incredible
- •1.3.6. How can the following words be divided into groups according to the stressed vowel?
- •Incredible
- •1.4.2. Comment on the following elements in the text: 'Old Vic', 'King John' and 'the Bastard'.
- •1.4.3. Test yourself.
- •1.4.4. Translate the sentences from Russian into English using the words in the box:
- •2.2.4. Which of the words in the text are stressed and which are accented? Study the words in the two boxes below and divide them into two groups — the stressed words and the
- •2.2.6. Study the rhythm within every part of the text singled out by pauses.
- •Institutions
- •Impossible
- •2.3.6. Study the words below and explain the basic peculiarity that distinguishes the articulation of consonants which precede the stressed vowel.
- •Institutions
- •Is the world that English men and women
- •Into one of superiority
- •3.2.3. Transcribe these words, dividing them into syllables (use the English Pronouncing Dictionary for this purpose).
- •3.2.4. How is the text divided into parts by means of pauses?
- •3.2.5. Which of the words in the text are stressed and which are accented?
- •3.2.6. Study the cases of 'would' and 'on' that occur in the text.
- •3.2.7. Study the rhythm within every part of the text singled out by pauses.
- •3 3.2. What is the basic peculiarity of the consonants in the stressed syllables of the following words that makes them so completely different from their Russian counterparts?
- •3.3.3. What is the basic peculiarity of initial nasals in the stressed syllables of the following words:
- •3.3.4. How are the final nasals that close up the stressed syllables to be pronounced in the following cases and why:
- •3.3.5. Explain the principal difficulty in pronouncing the stressec vowels of the words in boxes 1 and 2 below:
- •3.3.6. Explain the principal difficulty in pronouncing the stressed vowels in the following words:
- •3. 3.7. The words below are divided into groups according to a certain principle.
- •3.3.8. How can the following words be divided into groups according to the stressed vowel?
- •3.3.9. What peculiarity of articulation do the stressed vowels in the following words (boxes 1 and 2) have in common? — What are the vowels that have this peculiarity?
- •3.4.1. Explain the meanings of the words below (boxes 1 and 2), in which they occur in the text (use the explanatory dictionary for this purpose):
- •3 4.2. Comment on the following elements of the text:
- •3.4.3. Test yourself.
- •3.4.4. Fill in the blanks in the following sentences on the basis of the explanations given in 3.4.3.
- •3.4.5. Translate the sentences from Russian into English using the words in the box:
- •Verbs: nouns:
- •3.4.9. Translate the text of Video-Target 2 into Russian, with special attention being given to the following basic sequences:
- •3.5.1. Explain the differences between the cases of 'would' in:
- •3.5.2. Study the following sentences, focusing on the use of 'would' in each case.
- •3.5.3. Translate the following sentences into English.
- •3.5.5. Translate the following sentences into English with special focus on the proper use of the indefinite pronouns 'many', 'more' and 'most'.
- •3.5.6. Study all the cases of 'no' in the text:
- •3.5.7. Translate the following sentences into English with special focus on the proper use of 'no' in each case:
- •4.2.8. Study each of the prosodic contours in the text.
- •4.2.9. What prosodic means are used in different cases of accent in the text?
- •4.2.10. Comment on the use of
- •4.2.11. Comment on the modifications of tempo, loudness and pitch in the following parts of the text:
- •4.3.3. What is the basic peculiarity of initial resonants in the stressed syllables of the following words?
- •4.3.4. How are the final resonants that close up the stressed syllables to be pronounced in the following cases and why?
- •4.3.5. Study the basic peculiarities of the opening consonant clusters in the stressed syllables of the words in the three boxes below.
- •4.3.6. Study the following sequences and explain the interconnection between their segmental peculiarities and their rhythmical organization (see 4.2.):
- •4.3.7. Explain the principal difficulty in pronouncing the stressed vowels in the words below.
- •4.3.8. Explain the principal difficulty in pronouncing the stressed (primarily or secondarily) vowels in the following words (boxes 1, 2, 3):
- •4.3.9. The words below are divided into groups according to a certain principle.
- •4.3.10. How can the following words be divided into groups according to the stressed vowel?
- •4.3.11. Explain the difference in length between the stressed vowels of the following words in the text (boxes 1 and 2).
- •4.4. Words and Word-Combinations
- •4.4.4. Test yourself:
- •4.4.5. Fill in the blanks in the following sentences on the basis of the explanations given in 4.4.4.
- •4.4.6. Translate the following using the words in the box.
- •4.4.7. Translate the text of Audio-Target 2 into Russian with special attention given to the following basic sequences:
- •4.4.8. Make up your own sentences or short contexts on the basis of sequences singled out in 4.4.7.
- •4.4.10. Speak on the same subject: 'What does "home" mean to you?' in your own way.
- •4.4.11. Make up your own extended context on a subject of your own choice.
- •4.5.2. Translate the following sentences into English. Chose either 'its' or 'it's' in each case.
- •4.5.3. Translate the following sentences into English with the view to the proper use of late, latter, later, latest, last.
- •4.5.4. Translate the following into English with the view to the proper use of 'more' and 'most' in each case.
- •4.5.5. Translate the following sentences into Russian with the view to the proper use of 'more', 'little', 'less', 'least'.
- •5.1.1. See Video-Target 3.
- •5.1.2. See Video-Target 3 once more with the help of the text below:
- •5.1.3. Translate the text into Russian with the help of the dictionary.
- •5.1.4. Listen to the pragmaphonetic variant of Video-Target 3, where some of the most important aspects are specially brought out and pragmalingulstically modelled:
- •5.2.1. Divide the words of the text into fully meaningful and syn-categorematic ones.
- •5.2.2. Listen to the text and comment on the pronunciation of the stressed syllables in the following words (boxes 1 and 2):
- •5.2.3. Transcribe these words dividing them into syllables (use the English Pronouncing Dictionary for that purpose).
- •5.2.4. How is the text divided into parts by means of pauses?
- •5.2.5. Which of the words in the text are stressed and which are accented?
- •5.2.6. Study the cases of 'is', 'and' and 'one' which occur in the text in terms of stress.
- •5.2.7. Study the rhythm within every part of the text singled out by pauses.
- •5.2.8. Study each of the prosodic contours in the text. — Use the following analysis as a model:
- •5.3.7. The words below are divided into groups according to a certain principle:
- •5.3.8. Explain the principal difficulty in pronouncing the stressed (primarily or secondarily) vowels in the following words (boxes 1,2, 3,4, 5, 6, 7):
- •5.3.9. The words below are divided into groups according to a certain principle.
- •5.3.10. Explain the difference in length between the stressed vowels in the following words in the text (boxes 1 and 2):
- •5.4.1. Explain the meanings of the words below in which they occur in the text (use the Explanatory Dictionary for this purpose):
- •5.4.2. Explain the meanings of the following elements of the text (use Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English and Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary for this purpose):
- •5.4.4. Test yourself:
- •5.4.5. Fill in the blanks in the following sentences on the basis of the explanations given in 5.4.4.
- •5.4.6. Translate the following using the words in the box:
- •5.4.11. Make up your own sentences or short contexts on the basis of the sequences singled out in 5.4.10.
- •5.4.12. Translate the following into English applying the target principles expounded in 5.4.11.
- •5.4.13. Make up your own extended context on a subject of your own choice.
- •5.5.1. Explain the uses of 'can', 'could' and 'must' in the text:
- •5.5.2. Translate the following sentences into English by using a construction with the verb 'can, 'could' or 'must'.
- •5.5.4. Explain the uses of participles in
- •5.5.5. Translate the following sentences into English with special attention being given to the proper use of participles:
4.4.10. Speak on the same subject: 'What does "home" mean to you?' in your own way.
— Follow the target principle expounded in 4.4.7., 4.4.8., 4.4.9.
4.4.11. Make up your own extended context on a subject of your own choice.
— Mind that the subject should be interesting enough to hold the audience (it may be one of the 'topical issues' such as, for example, culture, education, world-views, history, the psychology of human relations, etc.).
— Here is an example to show how it can be done on the basis of target principle:
Social Mobility
According to Longman Dictionary of Contemporary English, 'social mobility' is 'the ability to move easily from one social class, job or place to another'. It also implies a system of social hierarchy of stratification that people have created and lived in through centuries of history. There are, generally, two main kinds of social mobility that are equally marked and have to do with changing one's position in society — the 'horizontal' and the 'vertical' one. These are more easily illustrated than described. A change in occupation without moving into another social group has led to the idea of 'horizontal mobility'. An example would be the movement from the position of a manager in one company to a similar position in another. An urge to provide one's family with everything to make it a 'microcosm' of the world underlies the idea of 'vertical mobility' where
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competition and prestige are no less important than necessity. An example here would be a situation where an industrial worker climbs to a higher rung of the social ladder and becomes a businessman, or, the other way round, when a landed aristocrat loses everything in a revolution and moves downward in the system. Nowadays, social mobility has become an important characteristic of Russian people.
How can this phenomenon be accounted for in our present-day social reality? Some reasons upon which both 'natives' and 'visitors' have tended to agree, have to do with the recent changes in our life: the formation of new ideals, attempts to imitate foreigners, seeming independence and a growing belief in private property.
Others, equally marked, have to do with the psychology of Russian people: a will to survive under any circumstances; a preoccupation with home and children, that has a sense of responsibility for their future; and that special attitude towards education that made Russian people experts in so many fields; and, last, but by no means least, a strong belief in our national values which, at every period of our history, helped to support and encourage us in all the difficulties.
—— 4.5. Grammar —————
4.5.1. Translate the following sentences into English using the adverbs in the box:
Recently, lately, just, ever, never, always, yet, since, finally.
1. Как психологи, так и социологи всегда сходятся во мнении, что особенности человеческого характера нередко зависят от его положения в обществе.
2. В детстве родители уделяли ему мало внимания, и это, в конечном счете, привело к тому, что у него появилось чувство неуверенности в себе, которое могло серьезно повлиять на его будущее.
3. Я недавно узнал, что это решение определило весь ход событий в прошлом году.
4. Я только что упомянул его имя в разговоре с нашим директором.
5. Мне никогда не приходило в голову, что это может исподволь повлиять на наши отношения.
6. Это явление еще недостаточно описано в литературе.
7. Он впервые побывал на Дальнем Востоке, когда ему было 17 лет, и с тех пор его не покидала страсть к путешествиям.
8. Вы когда-нибудь задумывались над тем, чем вызвано то особое отношение к морю, которое отличает всех англичан?
9. Последнее время я его не видел.
10. Последнее время что-то новое появилось в сфере торговли.
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