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7. Make up short situations using the expressions given below.

1. to read is; it is impossible to; it is advisable to; it is unbearable to.

2. is to help; don't bother to; must go.

3. he was the first to; didn't mean to; was anxious to.

4. to be quite frank; came here to; was too astonished to; him to remain.

5. to be more precise; the report to be typed; the work to be done.

6. was too glad to; to see him dance; him to be feeling fine.

8. Work in small groups. Put each saying in your own words.

Model: “It is better to light one candle than to curse the darkness” (The motto of the Cristophers)

It is better to do one small, positive thing than to complain about a problem and do nothing.

1. “To be or not to be, that is the question” (William Shakespeare)

2. “It is better to die on your feet than to live on your knees” (attributed to Emiliano Zapata)

3. “To err is human, to forgive divine” (Alexandra Pope)

4. “It is better to seek than to find” (source unknown)

5. “A classic is something that everybody wants to have read and nobody wants to read” (Mark Twain)

6. “It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all” (Alfred, Lord Tennyson)

7. “The only way to have a friend is to be one” (Emerson)

8. “It is better to arrive late than never to arrive at all” (source unknown)

9. “One should eat to live, not live to eat” (Benjamin Franklin)

Grammar in Context

1. Read the following dialogue and do the tasks that follow.

A Visit to the Doctor

- Well, what’s the matter with you, Mr. Walker?

- You’d better ask me what is not the matter with me, doctor. I seem to be suffering from all the illnesses imaginable: insomnia, headaches, backache, indigestion, constipation and pains in the stomach. To make things still worse, I’ve caught a cold, I’ve got a sore throat and I’m constantly sneezing and coughing. To crown it all, I had an accident the other day, hurt my right shoulder, leg and knee, and nearly broke my neck. If I take a long walk, I get short of breath. In fact, I feel more dead than alive.

- I’m sorry to hear that. Anyhow, I hope things aren’t as bad as you imagine. Let me examine you. Your heart, chest and lungs seem to be all right. Now open your mouth and show me your tongue. Now breathe in deeply, through the nose… There doesn’t seem to be anything radically wrong with you, but it’s quite clear that you’re run down, and if you don’t take care of yourself, you may have a nervous breakdown and have to go to hospital. I advise you, first of all, to stop worrying. Take a long rest, have regular meals, keep to a diet of salads and fruit, and very little meat. Keep off alcohol. If possible, give up smoking, at least for a time. Have this tonic made up and take two tablespoonfuls three times a day before meals. If you do this, I can promise you full recovery within two or three months.

- And if I don’t, doctor?

- Then you’d better make your will, if you haven’t yet done so.

- I see. Well, thank you, doctor. I shall have to think it over and decide which is the lesser evil: to follow your advice or prepare for a better world.

1.1 Tick off the sentences where the Infinitive is used. Comment on the form and function it is used in the dialogue. Explain the absence of particle to before some infinitives.

1.2 Reproduce the dialogue using the infinitives.

2. Describe your last visit to the doctor. Use the infinitives in different forms and functions.

Unit 2. The Use of Participle I in English. Its Forms and Functions

Grammar Introduction

1. Read the text and divide the words in italics into two groups.

On Christmas Eve

One afternoon just before Christmas an old gentleman was walking through the city centre. The gaily illuminated shops were packed with good things and crowded with cheerful shoppers. Suddenly in the middle of the crowd he noticed a dirty little boy sitting on the pavement, weeping bitterly. When the kind old man asked him why he was crying, the little boy told him that he had lost a ten penny coin that his uncle had given him. Thrusting his hand into his pocket, the old man pulled out a handful of coins. He picked out a shiny, new ten penny coin and handed it to the child. “Thank you very much,” said the little boy, and, drying his eyes, he cheered up at once. An hour or so later the old man was making his way back home by the same route. To his astonishment he saw the same dirty little boy in precisely the same spot, crying just as bitterly as before. He went up to the boy and asked him if he had lost the ten pence he had given him as well. The little boy told him that actually he had not lost the second coin, but he still could not find his first ten pence. “If I could find my own ten pence”, he said tearfully, “I’d have twenty pence now.”

Explain what your criteria are based on? Where are the non-finite forms of the verbs?