
- •Meals. National Cuisine. Inviting to dinner. English Food.
- •Read, remember and write down into your vocabularies the next words and word-combinations:
- •Make 10 sentences of your own with these words and word-combinations, use them in your speech.
- •Use the next patterns of speech in your own vocabulary. Translate them. Make dialogues:
- •Match the adjectives with their meaning:
- •Learn the idiomatic constructions, use them in your speech:
- •Fill in the restaurant menu:
- •Choose adjectives from the list to describe the foods in the table. It may be used more than once.
- •Read and translate the text, write down the new words into your vocabularies, retell your friends all the interesting information from it: Ukrainian Food
- •Look at the following group of words. Which four of them cannot go with the noun ‘food’:
- •Read and translate the text, write down the new words into your vocabularies, retell your friends all the interesting information from it: English Food
- •Answer the questions:
- •Find definitions to different kinds of tea:
- •Difference in usage of ‘Going to’ and ‘will’
- •Read the dialogues, translate them and make your own one:
- •Translate into English:
- •Visiting a Doctor. Symptoms of illness.
- •Read, remember and write down into your vocabularies the next words and word-combinations:
- •Make up your own dialogues using these situations:
- •Act out a dialogue in class, translate it: The Doctor’s Visit
- •Answer the following questions:
- •Speak on the following topics. Use the phrases given below:
- •Read the text, translate it and retell all the useful information to your friends: health care in britain
- •Pick out three or four synonyms in every list suggested. Look them up in a dictionary. Use them in the situations of your own:
- •Match the adjectives in part a with the fitting nouns in part b. Comment on the meaning of each phrase.
- •Learn the vocabulary and put it down in your copy-books:
- •Make a composition on one of the next topics:
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Look at the following group of words. Which four of them cannot go with the noun ‘food’:
-rich fresh;
-fast; boiled;
-wealthy; delicious;
-disgusted; disgusting;
-home-grown; tasteless;
-vegetarian; tasteful;
-starving; plain;
-frozen; tasty.
-tasty;
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Read and translate the text, write down the new words into your vocabularies, retell your friends all the interesting information from it: English Food
How come it is so difficult to find English food in England? It is not only in restaurants that foreign dishes are replacing traditional British food. Why has this happened?
The British have in fact always imported food from abroad. From the time of Roman invasion foreign trade was a major influence on British cooking. English kitchen? Like the English language absorbed ingredients from all over the world-chickens, rabbits,. Apples, and tea. All of these and more were successfully incorporated into British dishes. Another important influence was of course the weather. The good old British rain gives us rich and green grass. But British pubs are often the best places to eat well and cheaply in Britain.
English people drink a lot of tea. They have tea for breakfast, tea in the middle of the morning, after dinner, in the middle of the afternoon, tea at tea-time and with supper.
At work they take five or ten minutes in the middle of the morning and afternoon to have a cup of tea.
At tea-time they also have bread and butter or cakes.
Some English families have ‘high tea’ or ‘big tea’ and no supper. For high tea they may have meat, bread and butter, cakes and tea. They always drink it out of cups, never out of glasses, with sugar and milk. The tea with lemon is called ‘Russian tea’ in England.
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Answer the questions:
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When do English people drink tea?
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They never drink it at work, do they?
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What do they have at tea-time?
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How is tea with lemon called?
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Find definitions to different kinds of tea:
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Herbal tea
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High tea
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Beef tea
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Green tea
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Cream tea
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A meal consisting of cooked food, bread and butter and cakes, usually with tea to drink, eaten in the late afternoon or early evening instead of dinner.
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A drink made from dried herbs and hot water;
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A pale tea made from leaves that have been fried but not fermented;
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A special meal eaten in the afternoon, consisting of tea with scones, jam and thick cream.
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A hot drink made by boiling beef in water. It used to be given to people who were sick.
Difference in usage of ‘Going to’ and ‘will’
Going to |
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Look at the child. She’s going to fall off her bike. |
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We’re going to spend the whole summer by the sea. |
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will |
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I think Jane will pass her exams without much difficulty. |
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I’ll send her a card this afternoon. |
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I will phone every day |
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I will carry one of them |
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will |
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I will get place at university. |
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Millions of people will die of hunger again next year. |
Say what you will or going to do, using the examples:
-give up smoking
-give up eating chocolate
-work harder
-work less
-be a nice person
-stop shouting at my mum
-lose weight
-decorate the house
-be tidier
-do more exercise
-travel more
-read more
-be more punctual
-watch less TV
-be more relaxed.