
- •Предисловие
- •Introduction
- •1. Общие сведения об английском языке
- •2. The English Alphabet
- •Vowels: a, e, I, o, u, y
- •3. Word building Словообразование
- •Прочитайте текст и определите, верное или неверное утверждение:
- •Определите, к какой части речи относится выделенное слово:
- •Заполните таблицы на словообразование:
- •Переведите производные слова. Дайте свои примеры. Составьте предложения:
- •Заполните, где возможно, пропуски в таблице и дайте перевод полученных слов. Пользуйтесь словарем.
- •4. The Noun Имя существительное
- •Объясните все употребления прописной буквы в именах существительных:
- •Обсудите текст в парах:
- •5. The Article Артикль
- •Correct the mistakes:
- •Write a/an or the:
- •6. Образование основных грамматических форм
- •6.1 Present Indefinite (Simple)
- •6.2 Past Indefinite (Simple)
- •6.3 Future Indefinite (Simple)
- •Make the sentences negative:
- •Give the past form of the verbs :
- •Is the sentence right or wrong?
- •Ask the questions to the sentences:
- •Use the correct form of the verb:
- •Translate into English:
- •7. Общие сведения о структуре английского предложения.
- •Unite I System of education. My University
- •Activities:
- •Education System in Russia
- •Entry requirements for Russia's universities
- •1. Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 1-6 частями предложений a-g. Одна из частей в списке лишняя. Перенесите ответы в таблицу.
- •2. Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 1-6 частями предложений a-g. Одна из частей в списке лишняя. Перенесите ответы в таблицу.
- •Unite II Computers in the modern world
- •Activities:
- •Grammar review:
- •Fill in the missing degrees of comparison:
- •Give the comparative and the superlative forms of the adjectives:
- •Complete the sentences with the comparative or superlative:
- •Translate the following sentences into English:
- •Translate into English:
- •II. Read the text and fill the gaps 1- 4 with an appropriate variant from a-e. One point is not used.
- •III. Write an essay to the topic “Computers in the modern world”, using 150-200 words. Unite III Physics of colours
- •Colour blindness
- •Activities: Exercise 1: Answer the following questions:
- •Grammar review:
- •Meaning of colors
- •Unite 4 The sources of energy
- •Text: The sources of energy
- •Nuclear Energy
- •Activities: Exercise 1: Answer the following questions:
- •Global warming
- •Grammar review:
- •Unite 5 The latest materials
- •Activities:
- •Grammar review:
- •Правила преобразования прямой речи в косвенную:
- •Выберите правильный вариант:
- •2. Slowly simmer
- •3. The mystery ingredient
- •4. The Large Hadron Collider
- •5. The most powerful supercomputer system in the world...
- •6. The Hubble Space Telescope
- •Unite 6 The greatest developments of mankind
- •Activities:
- •Grammar review:
- •1. Put the verb into the correct form, to …or –ing.
- •2. Which alternative is correct?
- •3. Complete the questions with do/to do/doing.
- •Name by one word or term:
- •3. Fill the gaps, using one variant from the table:
- •4. Match the halves of the sentences:
- •5. Find an English equivalent to the Russian word:
- •Choose one variant to answer:
- •Fill in the missing degrees of comparison:
- •7. Use the verb in correct grammar form:
- •8. Find the antonyms.
- •9. Complete the gaps 1-6 with missing parts a-g. One part is extra. Fill the table with answers.
- •10. Преобразуйте предложение из действительного залога в страдательный (пассивный) залог:
- •Name the types of energy:
- •Give three forms of the verbs:
- •4. Match the two halves of the sentences:
- •5. Find the English equivalents to the Russian words:
- •6. Choose one variant to answer:
- •Use an appropriate modal verb:
- •Find the words with similar meaning (synonyms):
- •Use reported speech:
- •Construct the sentences with relative clause:
- •Особенности перевода научно-технической литературы
- •Appendix Present Perfect Continuous (Настоящее перфектно – длительное)
- •Past Perfect Continuous (Прошедшее перфектно-длительное)
- •Future Perfect Continuous
- •Future–in-the-Past (Будущее в прошедшем)
- •Compare the grammar forms of Future and Future-in-the-Past
- •Conditionals
- •Numerals
Activities: Exercise 1: Answer the following questions:
What is colour?
How are the colours created?
Who developed the colour theory?
How did people in the ancient time understand the colour?
What inventions in the colour theory were made by Sir Isaac Newton?
Describe the structure of a human eye.
What is the range of the visible light wavelength?
How is the colour created in the electronic devices?
Give the definition of RGB and CMYK.
What happens when one or more types of a person's colour-sensing cones are missing or less responsive?
Exercise 2: Find the English equivalent to the Russian word:
цвет:
light
brightness
colour
сетчатка:
a) rods
b) cones
c) retina
источник:
a) source
b) science
c) device
невидимый:
a) visible
b) invisible
c) colour-sensing
отражать:
a) to refract
b) to reflect
c) to react
дальтонизм:
a) colour blindness
b) colour separation
c) colour definition
преломление:
a )regulation
b) refraction
c) recombination
трехцветный:
a) trichromatic
b) trigonometric
c) triadic
химия:
a) chemise
b) chemistry
c) chemisette
различать:
a) develop
b) distinguish
c) discover
Exercise 3: Match a scientist with his biographical facts :
1 |
Plato (427 BC-348 BC) |
A |
A Greek Pythagorean philosopher, features in Plato’s dialogues, where he is said to come from Locri in Italy. He is credited with lost work “On the Soul of the Universe”, although all ancient references to him derived from Plato and he may be a fictional character invented for the dialogues |
2 |
Timaeus (420 BC-380 BC) |
B |
An English physicist, mathematician, astronomer, natural philosopher. He described universal gravitation and the three laws of motion. He built the first practical reflecting telescope and developed a theory of color based on the observation that a prism decomposes white light into the many colours that form the visible spectrum. |
3 |
Aristotle (384 BC-322 BC) |
C |
A German writer, artist and politician. His work includes epic, lyric poetry, prose and verse dramas, memoirs, an autobiography, literary and aesthetic criticism; treatises on botany, anatomy, and colour. |
4 |
Leonardo da Vinci (1452-1519) |
D |
A Classical Greek philosopher, mathematician, student of Socrates, writer of philosophical dialogues, and founder of the academy in Athens |
5 |
Isaac Newton (1642 -1727) |
E |
An English polymath. He is famous for deciphering Egyptian hieroglyphics. He made notable scientific contributions to the field of vision, light, solid mechanics, energy, physiology, language, musical harmony and Egyptology. |
6 |
Johann Wolfgang von Goethe (1749-1832) |
F |
A German physician and physicist who made significant contributions to several areas of modern science. He is known for his mathematics of eye, theories of vision, ideas on the visual perception of space, color vision research, and on the sensation of tone, sound and empiricism. |
7 |
Thomas Young (1773-1829) |
G |
A German physiologist who did much research into colour vision and spatial perception. He proposed opponent colour theory in 1892. He disagreed with Thomas Young and Herman von Helmholtz. |
8 |
James Clerk Maxwell (1831-1879) |
H |
A Greek philosopher and polymath, a student of Plato and teacher of Alexander the Great. Together with Plato and Socrates he is one of the most important founding figures in Western philosophy. |
9 |
Herman Ludwig Ferdinand von Helmholtz (1821-1894) |
I |
A Scottish mathematical physicist. He formulated classical electromagnetic theory. He considered being one of the greatest physicists of all times, behind only Newton and Einstein. |
10 |
Karl Ewald Konstantin Hering (1834-1918) |
J |
An Italian Renaissance polymath: painter, sculptor, architect, musician, scientist, mathematician, engineer, inventor, anatomist, geologist, cartographer, botanist and writer. |
Exercise 4: Complete the sentences with correct endings:
1. Some researchers report that humans can distinguish about:
a) 10 million different colours;
b) 16 million different colours;
c) 1 million different colous.
2. Most of the colours we see around us and all the colours we see on TV or computer monitor can be created from:
a) four different coloured lights;
b) seven different coloued lights;
c) three different coloured lights.
3. The human eye has three types of cones which receive:
a) ultraviolet wavelengths;
b) short, medium, and long wavelengths;
c) infrared wavelengths.
4. The additive primary colours are:
a) black and white;
b) cyan, magenta and yellow;
c) red, green and blue.
5. Colour blind person can distinguish:
a) fewer colours;
b) more colours;
c) no colours.
Exercise 5: Fill in the gaps, using the words from the box:
-
electromagnetic spectrum,
additive primaries,
colour, printing inks,
imaging, infrared,
subtractive primary,
ultraviolet
…………….. is a combination of the physical sensation of light and the psychological interpretation of it.
The three colours red, green and blue are called …………. ………….. .
When an additive primary colour is taken away from white light, the remaining colours form a new color which is called ………….. ………… .
RGB are the colours used in …………. .
CMYK are the system of colours, using in ……. …….
Light is the visible portion of the ………… ………… of the radiant energy.
The invisible rays vary lower than 380 nanometers are called ……………….
The invisible rays border further 740 nanometers are ………………
Exercise 6: Put the sentences into appropriate Perfect tenses:
I already (to see) during the experiment that colour derives from the spectrum of light.
I never (to think) that we see colours because of the cones’ stimulation.
We (to read) that history of colours (to date back) to the ancient Greek philosophical texts.
It was mentioned that a colour-blind reproduction system (to give) very inaccurate results for the other observers, human or non-human.
Newton (to identify) seven primary colours before he (to publish) his book Opticks .
You (to read) any philosophical texts about colours?
We arrived at work in the morning and found that somebody (to break) into the laboratory during the night.
At first, I thought I (to do) the experiment well, but I soon realised that I (to make) a big mistake.
Exercise 7: Match the term with the definition:
1 |
Light |
A |
To take a number or amount from another number or amount. The symbol for this is “-“a minus sign. |
2 |
Colour |
B |
A part at the back of human eye that sends light signals to the brain, where they are changed into images. |
3 |
Spectrum |
C |
Inability to see the difference between some colours, especially red and green, because of a medical condition. |
4 |
Retina |
D |
To put numbers or amounts together to calculate their total. |
5 |
Nanometer |
E |
The complete range of colors into which light can be separated when it passes through a prism. |
6 |
Colour blindness |
F |
Brightness from the sun or from a light source (electrical equipment, candle, etc), which allows us to see things. |
7 |
To add |
G |
The quality of being red, green, yellow etc. |
8 |
To subtract |
H |
A unite for measuring length in the metric system. There are one billion (=one thousand million) nanometers in a millimeter. |
Exercise 8: Translate into Russian:
A deep shade of red
A delicate pink tone
Reddish hair
Dark green trousers
Lovely deep blue eyes
Rich brown velvet
The men were wearing somber suits and black ties
Bright yellow paint
Curtains in vibrant shades of red
He tends to wear silk shirts and loud ties.
Look at those gaudy purple sunglasses
Garish reds and bright yellows
Pale gray feathers
Light colors work best in north-facing rooms.
She often wears pastels.
Faded blue jeans.
Exercise 9: Read and act out the dialogue:
Speaker 1: -What is a rainbow?
Speaker 2: - I think it’s one of the most spectacular light shows observed on earth. Indeed the traditional rainbow is sunlight spread out into its spectrum of colours and diverted to the eye of the observer by water droplets.
Speaker 1: - Why does the rainbow bow?
Speaker 2: - Really, this shape of rainbow describes the fact that the rainbow is a group of nearly circular arcs of the colour all having a common center.
Speaker 1: - What makes the bow?
Speaker 2: - Well, we see the formations of a rainbow by raindrops. It’s a problem in optics that was first clearly discussed by Rene Descartes in 1637. The bow appears not only in the sky, but also in the air near us, whenever there are drops of water illuminated by the sun, as we can see in some fountains. The rays of light act on these drops and pass from them to our eyes.
Speaker 1: - Why don’t we see a full circle?
Speaker 2: - Oh, that’s because the earth gets in the way. The lower the sun is to horizon, the more of the circle we see right at the sunset; we would see a full semicircle of the rainbow with the top of the arc 42 degree above the horizon. The higher the sun is, the smaller is the arc of the rainbow above the horizon.
Speaker 1: - What makes the colours in the rainbow?
Speaker 2: - The traditional description of the rainbow is that it is made up of seven colours – red, orange, yellow, green, blue, indigo, violet. Actually, the rainbow is a whole continuum of colours from red to violet and even beyond the colours that the eyes can see. The colours of the rainbow arise from two basic facts: first, sunlight is made up of the whole range of colours that the eye can defect; second, light of different colour is refracted by different amounts when it passes from one medium (for example, air) into another (water or glass).
Speaker 1: - What is the rainbow’s distance?
Speaker 2: - Well, it is nearby of far away, according to where the raindrops are.
Speaker 1: - And, do you know any proverbs or saying about rainbow?
Speaker 2: - Let me think…
“Rainbow at night, shepherd’s delight.
Rainbow in morning, shepherds take warning”
“If there be a rainbow in the eve,
It will rain and leave;
But if there be a rainbow in the morrow
It will neither lend nor borrow”
Exercise 10: Write a list of colours