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СОДЕРЖАНИЕ
Сборник учебно-методических материалов по английскому языку (Базовый курс)
Module 1: Meeting people. Introducing.
1. A) Complete the personal introduction form.
2. Describe someone in your group or a famous person. Other students must guess the person.
6. Choose the correct verb form.
2. What are your travel essentials? Why?
5. There are lots of compound nouns in the texts, like sleeping bag. How
Vocabulary booster: things you take on holiday
In pairs. Put the dialogue in the right order . Check the tapescript 3-1.
2. A) Complete the story about a holiday incident.
3. Work in pairs or small groups.
8. Read this conversation in the hotel and put the lines in the correct order.
10. Put the verbs in the box into the correct category.
3.Using the clues below, complete the words in the word grid 1-8 and find the Mystery word.
5. Match the questions with the answers:
6. Put the lines of dialogues in order:
8. Rewrite the following sentences using the construction there is/
Text c Presents and souvenirs in British shops. Read the text and answer the following questions:
1. Make the purchase word grid. Give clues for your words. The example bellow may help you:
2. Where do you buy these things?
3. Where would you hear these sentences?
6. Put the dialogue in the correct order:
1. Give Russian equivalents to the following:
4. Read the text. Translate the words and phrases in brackets.
Module 7: Free time activities.
1 Insert prepositions or adverbs:
2 Arrange the following into groups of words and word combinations close in meaning:
4 Use the following word combinations in sentences of your own:
5 Explain the difference between:
6 Correct whatever is wrong in the statements
2. Discuss in groups. Read the people’s problems. (Do you have similar problems yourself?)
3. Choose one of the topics given below and make a report.
If you do something wrong you are: if you’ve done nothing wrong, you are:
2 There are some adjectives below. Use some of them describing yourself:
4 Make up your Resume, using these points:
Interviewee. Think about these things:
Spend a week on a barge in Amsterdam. Amsterdam has a great nightlife and some of the best restaurants and cafes in the world. Just £300. |
Four days in a cottage in the heart of the British countryside. See old English villages, sip tea in a café and experience the peace of country life. Five nights in a bed and breakfast just £250. |
2. Look at these phrases and divide them into things a customer would probably say and things a travel agent would probably say. See if you can finish the phrases with suitable words.
I’d like to book…
Certainly, when would you…?
I’m afraid that’s not available, but you could…
I was wondering if…?
Could you tell me…?
That’ll cost…
Can I pay by…?
Packing your bags.
1. I never leave without a moisturiser |
a) We often have to get up at dawn to catch flights. |
2. We always take a travel alarm clock. |
b) We can keep in touch with things back home. |
3. My essential is a corkscrew. |
c) I record my feelings, and listening to the tape brings back more memories than a diary. |
4. I never leave without my cassette recorder. |
d) Long flights, hot sunshine, and hotel air conditioning really dry out my skin. |
5. I make sure I take travel sickness pills. |
e) They’re great for getting to sleep in noisy hotel rooms. |
6. I wouldn’t travel without earplugs. |
f) I’m a hopeless traveller-I get airsick, carsick and seasick. |
7. Our essential is a short-wave radio. |
g) I was once delayed at an airport in Bulgaria, and the only thing I had to drink was a bottle of wine. |
taking them. Match the travel essentials to the reasons.
2. What are your travel essentials? Why?
3. The extracts below are from guidebooks for Iceland and Zimbabwe. Read the extracts and match them to the countries.
There are three things that no traveller here should be without: a tent, a sleeping bag, and a torch. Take a tracksuit for mornings and evenings in game parks, with shorts for the daytime. A jacket and warm socks are a good idea as it can get cold at night. Other items which will be handy are a small travel alarm, a basic first aid kit, a water bottle, a towel, a camera and film, a penknife, and any batteries that you need. Take insect repellent, suncream, and a money belt.
Warm clothing will be of great importance to everyone. Between May and September you should take several pairs of thick socks, heavy windproof gloves, high-protection sunglasses, a wool hat, a jumper, hiking shorts, wool shirt and trousers ( jeans are cold and uncomfortable when wet ), and a water proof jacket. Travellers in winter need to prepare for Arctic conditions. If you’re camping, take your own stove, and as much dried food as possible.
4. Imagine you’re going to one of these countries. How many things have you got already and what would you have to buy?
5. There are lots of compound nouns in the texts, like sleeping bag. How
many can you make from these words? Match the two parts.
alarm cream
traveller’s towel
money repellent
walking clock
sun screw
beach license
cork cheques
driving boots
cassette belt
insect recorder
Vocabulary booster: things you take on holiday
passport beach towel cosmetics T-shirts sandals
diary credit cards phrase book walking boots sunglasses driving license novels jeans swimming trunks
suit and tie shorts jumper mosquito repellent traveller’s cheques raincoat guidebook suncream
Plan your dream holiday.
1. A) Look at the advertisements for three dream holidays. Which places do you visit on each holiday?
b) Which holiday do the words and phrases below relate?
-
a safari lodge the dry season an ostrich a cruise a canal
a theme park a motel self-catering accommodation
dolphins and killer whales sailing an excursion
Discuss the questions below with the class.
How will people spend their time on each of these holidays?
What will they see?
What will be the best things about each holiday?
African Wildlife Safari: South Africa, Zimbabwe, Botswana A truly grand tour of Southern Africa: for many, the holiday experience of a lifetime. |
European City Tour: London-Paris-Amsterdam What could be better than to combine three of Europe’s greatest cities into one fabulous holiday? |
The Florida Experience
Discover fantastic Florida, fun capital of the USA! |
African Wildlife safari: Fact File
Main places to visit: The tour begins in Cape Town, South Africa’s oldest and most elegant city. We then fly to Zimbabwe, where we see one of the natural Wonders of the World – the Victoria Falls. From there we cross the border into Botswana, where we hope to find lions, rhinos and elephants in the world-famous Chobe National Park.
How many days? 14
Accommodation: In Cape Town and the Victoria Falls you will stay in comfortable four-star hotels. On our visit to Chobe you can camp out under the African stars, or stay in one of our simple but comfortable safari lodges.
Where to go? The dry season is the best time to see the animals (June to October – temperatures 25-40°C). The temperatures are highest in October (36-40 °C).
Optional excursions: You can choose three of the following optional excursions.
A visit to an ostrich farm. You can ride on an ostrich!
A visit to the vineyard region of Stellenbosch.
A relaxing cruise along the River Zambezi.
A chance to bungee-jump at Victoria Falls.
A visit to a Zulu village to see traditional Zulu dancing.
European City Tour: Fact File
Main places to visit: Your holiday begins in London, famous for its history and tradition. You can visit Buckingham Palace, and the Houses of Parliament, and of course many excellent theatres and shops. From there, we travel by high-speed Eurostar train to Paris. Take a romantic walk by the river Seine and visit Notre Dame, the Louvre and many other famous places. Finally we move on to the canals, museums and cafes of Amsterdam.
How many days? 10. Either 3 days in each city or 6 days in one city (you choose) and 2 days in others.
Accommodation: In all three cities, accommodation is in the three-star or four-star hotels in the city centre.
When to go? July and August are the warmest months (average 18-20°C), but there are fewer tourists in May-June (average 14-16°C) and in September (average 16-18°C).
Optional excursions: You can choose three of the following optional excursions.
London
Visit the Millenium Dome in Greenwich.
Take a day trip to the historic city of Cambridge.
Paris
Enjoy a family day out at Disneyland, Paris.
Day trip to the beautiful seventeenth-century palace of Versailles.
Amsterdam
Visit the Keukenhof Gardens, the world’s greatest flower show.
Take a canal trip to the historic town of Arnhem.
The Florida Experience: Fact File
Main places to visit: Your holiday begins in the city of Orlando – the world’s theme park capital. From Orlando, it’s a short trip to Disney World, where you can choose between a number of theme parks, such as Disney’s Animal Kingdom, Disney’s Water Park or Disney’s Wide World of Sport. Finally, you will spend a week relaxing in the sunshine at Clearwater Beach on Florida’s Gulf Coast.
How many days? 14
Accommodation: You can choose between accommodation in self-catering homes (most have their own swimming pool) and comfortable motels just outside Orlando.
When to go? Temperatures in Florida are high all year round, from 20-25°C in winter to 35°C or more in summer (June – August).
Optional excursions: You can choose three or the following optional excursions.
A visit to the Kennedy Space Centre.
A visit to SeaWorld Adventure Park to feed the dolphins and see the whales.
A visit to Fort Lauderdale – the ‘Venice of America’. Perfect for cruising.
A visit to Miami, with its exciting mixture of American, Caribbean and Hispanic cultures.
A visit to Universal Studios to see the magic of the movies come to life.
Text A. The least successful traveller
The least successful traveler on record is an Italian, Mr. Nicolas Scotti. In 1977, Mr. Scotti set off from San Francisco to fly to Italy. On the way, his plane stopped at Kennedy Airport for an hour to refuel. Mr. Scotti thought he was in Italy and got out. He then spent two days in New York, believing he was in Rome.
Scotti expected his friends to meet him at the airport, and when they didn’t arrive, he tried to find his own way to their address. As he travelled round the city, he was surprised to see that many of Rome’s historic monuments has disappeared, but decided it was due to modernization. He also noticed that many people spoke English with an American accent. It didn’t worry him, because he assumed that Americans got everywhere. That also explained why there were so many English street signs.
Scotti had to ask a policeman the way to the bus depot, and of course, he asked in Italian. By chance, the policeman was a native of Naples, and he replied, of course, in fluent Italian.
He travelled around on a bus for twelve hours until the driver delivered him to a second policeman, and that was when the argument started. Mr. Scotti was amazed that the Rome police force could employ someone who didn’t speak a word of Italian. Even when everyone told him he was in New York, he refused to believe it. To get him back to San Francisco, the police drove him to the airport at top speed, with sirens screaming. “You see” ,said Scotti to his interpreter, “I know I’m in Italy. That’s how they drive here”,