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WEEKEND AND TRAVELLING 2

Introduction 2

1. Weekend and spare time 2

1.1 THE WEEKEND 2

1.1.1 GRAMMAR AND VOCABULARY PRACTICE 5

1.2 HARRY AND SVETLANA’S WEEKEND 11

1.3 SPARE TIME 11

1.3.1 HOBBIES 11

1.3.2 GOING OUT, STAYING IN 12

2. Travelling 14

2.1 How do we travel? 14

2.1.1 Travel and transport 14

2.1.2 ON THE GO 16

2.1.3 KINDS OF JOURNEY 17

2.1.4 Holidays 20

2.1.5 The worst holiday ever!!! 22

2.1.6 REVIEW 24

2.2 POPULAR TOURIST DESTINATIONS 24

2.2.1 GENERAL DESCRIPTIONS OF TOURIST DESTINATIONS 25

2.2.2 Youth hostel and hotel information 27

2.2.3 HOLIDAY BROCHURE 28

2.2.4 WELCOME TO MEXICO 29

2.2.5 REVIEW 31

2.3 EFFECTS OF TOURISM 31

2.3.1 Paradise lost 32

2.3.2 REVIEW 33

3. Home town 35

3.1 HELSINKI 35

4. London 36

4.1 AROUND LONDON 36

4.2 The London Eye 38

5. Review 40 weekend and travelling

Weekends are a bit like rainbows; they look good from a distance but disappear when you get up close to them.”

John Shirley

The World is a book, and those who do not travel read only a page.”

St. Augustine

Introduction

Task 1. Read the quotations above. What are weekends and travelling compared with?

Can you think of any other comparisons? Discuss your ideas with the group.

Task 2. Do you like travelling? What is your dream trip? Look at the mind-map below and get ready to share your ideas with the group.

WHERE TO GO?

H OW LONG WILL THE TRIP LAST?

WHOM TO GO WITH?

MY DREAM TRIP

HOW CAN WEATHER/CLIMATE INFLUENCE THE TRIP?

WHERE TO STAY?

1. Weekend and spare time

  READING&SPEAKING

1.1 The weekend

Task 1. Read and translate the text in the written form.

Most people in Britain work a five-day week, from Monday to Friday, schools, colleges and universities are also closed on Saturdays and Sundays. Therefore from Friday evening till Monday morning people are usually free.

Everyone looks forward to the weekend and when Friday comes along, as people leave work they say to each other, “Have a nice weekend”. Then on Monday morning they ask, “Did you have a nice weekend?” or “What did you do at the weekend?”

Students, young people working away from home and single people in general like to go away for the weekend. They may go home, go to stay with relatives or friends in different parts of the country or stay in a hotel or boarding house in the country or at the sea. Most towns in England are not more than four hours apart by train and many are much less. For example the London-Birmingham train takes 1 1/2 hours, the London-Bristol — 2 1/2; and no one in England lives more than 100 miles from the sea. Therefore it is possible to leave straight from work on Friday and come back on Sunday evening. It is of course more difficult for married couples with children to go away for the weekend. They do so sometimes but, as they usually have a house they more often have people to stay.

Those who stay at home at the weekend try both to relax and catch up with all the jobs they are too busy to do during the week. For women who go out to work these include housework, sewing, washing, shopping and sometimes gardening; for men — repairs and other odd jobs in the house, cleaning the car, mowing the lawn and gardening. Saturday morning is a very busy time for shopping, as this is the only day when people who are at work can shop for any length of time. On weekdays shops close between 5.30 and 6.00 p.m. and are closed all day on Sunday (except for newsagents and some small grocers and sweetshops). On Saturdays the shops in the centre of big cities usually close at 1 p.m.; in the suburbs and small towns they stay open till 5.30 or 6.00 p.m. as on weekdays (though they have an “early closing dayin the week to make up for it).

On Saturday afternoon the most important sporting events of the week take place — football, rugby

(in the summer, cricket and tennis), horse-racing, car and motor-cycle racing and other sports. Some men go and watch, others sit and watch the sports programmes on television. In the late afternoon the sports results are announced on the radio and television and the sports editions of the evening papers are on sale. Saturday evening is the

favourite time for parties,dances, going to the pictures or the theatre, in fact for «going out» generally. For many people it is the climax of the weekend. There is plenty of time to get ready and no one has to worry about getting up early for work the next day.

Having gone to bed late the night before, many people have a lie-in on Sunday morning. When they finally get up they have a leisurely breakfast. Some have breakfast in bed, although this depends on your having someone willing to get it and bring it up. However, some breakfast-in-bed enthusiasts will get up, get breakfast themselves and take it back to bed. While having breakfast people start reading the Sunday papers, which they either fetch themselves from the local paper shop or have delivered by the paper boy for a small extra charge. There are at least eight papers which are published weekly on Sunday (though some are the Sunday version of a daily paper). They range from serious papers of 60 or 70 pages, which publish the week's news, together with articles on political, social and cultural topics, to those which specialize in crude sensationalism. It is usual for a family to have two or three Sunday papers, and some enthusiasts have more. These people have little time for anything else on Sunday and spend the day submerged in a sea of newspapers.

If the weather is fine, people may decide to go out for the day. Often, however, having got up late in any case, they wait till after lunch, which is at 1 or 1.30. Sunday lunch is traditionally the most important family meal of the week. Most people have a «joint» (a piece of meat for roasting in the oven) which is roasted, then carved and served with roast and boiled potatoes and one or more other vegetables, such as peas or cabbage, and gravy. Then comes the pudding, for example apple pie and custard, and finally tea or coffee.

This meal induces in most people a state of inertia, and they sit talking, reading the paper, watching television or just dozing, until tea time. In the summer they sit in the garden and more energetic people go out for a walk or to see friends. After what often seems quite a short while it is tea time, that is 5-5.30. Besides the all-important tea there are sandwiches, sometimes cold meat and salad, fruit and cream, bread and butter and jam, and cakes. Quite often friends are invited to Sunday tea.

Some people spend Sunday evening quietly at home, others go to see friends, go to a concert or film, or go out for a drink. The realization that the weekend is nearly over casts a slight melancholy on the evening.

GRAMMAR COMMENTARY:

Study carefully these examples and their explanations.

  1. People sit talking, reading the paper, watching television or just dozing, until tea time.

When two or more simultaneous actions are in progress, the first of them is usually expressed by an Indefinite tense form while the other(s) is (are) expressed by Participle I. This mostly occurs with a number of verbs denoting motion or position such as come, go, go out (round, around, about) lie, sit, stand, disappear.

They stood waiting for us.

Они стояли и ждали нас.

The same ideas can be expressed by using Continuous tense forms connected by the conjunction and: They were standing and waiting for us.

  1. Some people spend Sunday evening quietly at home, others go to see friends. People watch football, rugby, horse racing and other games and sporting events.

The pronoun other can be used as a noun pronoun and as an adjective pronoun (See the examples above). Other (people or things) or others mean several more besides those already mentioned, different from those mentioned. The other people or things or the others mean all the rest (besides those mentioned).

The Johnsons are staying for the night, other guests (the others) are leaving.

Джонсоны остаются ночевать, остальные гости уходят.

The other person or thing or simply the other, when speaking of two, means the second of the two.

On the one hand, he is quite right, on the other hand, he is not.

С одной стороны он прав, с другой — нет.

Another is always singular and has two meanings 1) a different one, 2) an additional one.

In the room Anna saw а small cupboard for plates, cups, saucers and then another, a large one: for clothes.

В комнате Анна увидела небольшой шкаф для тарелок, чашек и блюдец и другой — большой — для одежды,

She took one book, then another.

Она взяла одну книгу, потом еще одну.

  1. They have their Sunday papers delivered by the paper boy.

The verb have may take a Complex Object with Participle II as the second element.

This construction is used to show that the action expressed by Participle II is performed at the request of the person denoted by the subject of the sentence. The negative and interrogative forms of the Indefinite tense forms are built with the help of the auxiliary do.

- Do you have the lawn mown every week? - I don't have it mown, I mow it myself.

- Вам косят газон каждую неделю? - Нет, я сам его кошу.

Post-reading tasks.

Task 1. Arrange the points in logical order to be able to reproduce the original text using the given words and phrases as key words.

  1. to have a lie-in, to have a leisurely breakfast, to depend on;

  2. to publish weekly, to range from... to, to specialize in smth.;

  3. to work a five-day week, to look forward to smth., to go away for the weekend, to come along;

  4. to be four hours apart (by train), the train takes 1,5 hours, to live more than 100 miles from the sea;

  5. sporting events, to watch sports programmes on television, to announce sports results on radio and television, to be on sale;

  6. to catch up with smth., to go out to work, to do odd jobs in the house;

  7. a busy time for shopping, on weekdays, to make up for smth.;

  8. to go out, to worry about smth.

Task 2. Find evidence in the text to prove that:

  1. The English like to go away from home for the weekend.

  2. Saturday is a busy day for those who stay home.

  3. Saturday evening is the climax of the weekend.

  4. The English are newspaper enthusiasts.

  5. Habit is second nature.

  6. Every country has its customs.

Task 3. Agree or disagree with the following statements.

  1. People in Britain do not have to go out to work at weekends, do they?

  2. It is practically impossible for a family (married people) to relax if they stay home at the weekend, isn't it?

  1. Sunday lunch looks a very heavy meal, doesn't it?

  2. Shops close too early in Britain, don't they?

  3. It's a good idea to have breakfast in bed, isn't it?

  1. Sunday papers specialize in crude sensationalism rather than in serious political or social news, don't they?

  1. The English don't often ask people over, do they?

Task 4. Answer the following questions:

  1. How many days a week do English people work?

  2. How long does a weekend last?

  3. Where do most English people generally spend their weekends?

  4. What makes it possible for many people to go away for the weekend?

  5. Do you think people who stay at home at the weekend manage to relax?

  6. What is the busiest time for shopping? Why? Can you go shopping on Sundays?

  7. When do the most important sporting events take place? How can one learn the sports results?

  8. What is the favourite time for going out? Can you explain why?

  9. How do many English people spend their Sunday morning?

  1. What are the most important meals of the weekend?

  2. Do most people spend their Sunday evening at home?

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