A. True or False Questions. B. Multiple Choice.
1—6: TFTFTF
1—8: abaab cbb
C. Re-list the professions in the survey, beginning with the one that the children took as the most
favorite.
1. lawyer 2. accountant 3. physicist 4. biologist 5. economist
D. Blank-filling.
1. ―dirty job‖, ―low status‖, ―subordinate‖, take orders, give orders 2. interesting, well paid
6. civil engineer 7. electrical engineer 8. mechanical engineer 9. Sales representative 10. estate agent
Section III
Task 1: Learning to Rephrase
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7.
barter = trading goods for goods
past: seashells spices -- no value money-- stated value because economic developments, trade done in barter more valuable currency-- hard c. less valuable - - soft c. seller demand hard c., esp. from nation with hard c. inflation = abnormally rapid price increase
due to scarcity of hard c. in some nations & world-wide inflation, payments in hard c. be supplemented by other types, e.g. bartering
8. the following: example of bartering, consumer preferences in beverages in USSR & USA 9. Pepsi - Cola: 1st introduction unhappy of cola to USSR, Coca- Cola 10. Bartering presents serious difficult problems Task 2: Dictation
Passage 1: How to Make Wine
This is how wine is made in our winery. After the grapes are picked in late summer, they are pressed so that all the juice runs out. Then the juice is separated from the skins and pips and it is put into large containers and left to ferment. Later, it is put into smaller containers. Then it is left for about a year when it is put into bottles. If it is a good wine, the bottles are kept for several years but the cheaper wines are sold immediately. Passage 2: Alan Simpson
The mystery of the man found wandering in the city centre has now been solved. The man, whose name is now known to be Alan Simpson, is a medical student. Mr. Simpson was taking part in an experiment conducted by the university department of psychology, when he walked away, unnoticed by the staff supervising the experiment. He has now regained his memory, and has left hospital. Several people, including his sister, April Simpson, telephoned the police to identify Mr. Simpson after seeing his picture in the press.
Lesson 10
Section I
Task 1: News Summary 1 A. True or False Questions. B. Blank-filling.
1. the local British Steel Corporation‘s headquarters, closure plans 2. doctors, nurses and other staff, grown even faster 3. another 31 million pounds, poorer areas, regional development fund, 13.5 million pounds, 10 million pounds, industrial improvement, road works 4. 17, 5, 2, 2, landed illegally, the first 9 months, 7 more 5. derailed local train, disrupted rail services, the south of England Task 2; News Summary 2 A. Multiple Choice.
1—4: bcac
1—5: FFTFT
B. Answer the following questions briefly.
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9.
A double-barrelled. The girl‘s brother.
When the girl was being overpowered by police officers. Into the ceiling.
A 23-year-old electronics worker and a 55-year-old housewife. They are doing well. 2 months ago.
125 pounds with 25 pounds costs.
A woman was killed when a chimney on a house collapsed and 2 men were killed when their car crashed into a fallen tree. 10. More high winds and rain.
Section II
Task 1: British Newspapers A. True or False Questions. B. Multiple Choice.
1—4: FTTF
1—3: bab
C. Fill in the blanks with information about Professor Hill’s favourite paper.
News: (1) Political matters are covered in full. (2) The editorial column may support government policy on one issue and oppose it on another.
Book Reviews: a whole page for it. Art: a whole page for the latest happenings in the theatre, the cinema and the world of art. Economics: (1) Stock Exchange prices are quoted daily. (2) Exchange rates of the world‘s major currencies are reported daily. Sports: The correspondents are among the best. Reader’s Letters: The standard is first–class. Task 2: Eccentricity
A. Answer the following questions.
1. 2. 3. 4.
A person who behaves in a totally different manner from those in the society he lives in. Not specifically.
He used to share his house openly with the strangest animals and sample them as food. The hermit.
1—8: FFTT TTFF
B. True or False questions. C. Fill in the blanks.
1. touch his food, wrap, in a tissue, picking, up, a barber, too often, grew down to his waist Section III
Task 1: Learning to Rephrase
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8.
US: use more oil/day, future supply – limited current rate of use, oil not a major source of energy in 25 years a lot of coal, but problem: mining, transporting & burning with pollution production of new nuclear power plants, slow down, public concern over salty government expected 20% electricity from nuclear energy 1970s, but only 12% 1979 no fuel for solar heating system, sunshine free solar system can‘t provide 100 % heat due to sunshine solar heating possible in most US, better in areas: lot of winter sunshine, heat necessary, fuel expensive 9. hot-liquid system: basically same but contains water not air, a large hot water tank, not a container of hot rocks 10. energy from sun: answer to our need for new, cheap, clean source of energy Task 2: Dictation Voice Analysis
If we want to measure voice features very accurately, we can use a voice analyser. A voice analyser can show four characteristics of a speaker‘s voice. No two speakers‘ voices are alike. To get a voice sample, you have to speak into the voice analyser. The voice analyser is connected to a computer. From just a few sentences of normal speech, the computer can show four types of information about your voice. It will show nasalization, loudness, frequency and length of articulation. The first element, nasalization, refers to how much air normally goes through your nose when you talk. The second feature of voice difference is loudness. Loudness is measured in decibels. The number of decibels in speaking is determined by the force of air that comes from the lungs. The third feature of voice variation is frequency. By frequency we mean the highness or lowness of sounds. The frequency of sound waves is measured in cycles per second. Each sound of a language will produce a different frequency. The final point of voice analysis concerns the length of articulation for each sound. This time length is measured in small fractions for each second. From all four of these voice features — length of articulation, frequency, loudness and nasalization — the voice analyser can give an exact picture of a person‘s voice.
Listen 11
Section one:
II. Exercises:
Task 1: a way of life
A: 1. a 2. b 3. b 4. c 5. b B:
1. tense, jump on 2. cut it down
3. make a real effort, no real chance, better 4. back to normal 5. less of a hurry
6. at the end of the day, on edge 7. at stake, job
8. have a word with
C: 1. T 2. F 3. F 4. F 5. T 6. F 7. T 8. T Task 2: Do it yourself
A: 1. b 2. a 3. c 4. b 5. b 6. a B:
1. Every summer 2. He is a postman. 3. At evening schools.
4. He could not afford to pay workman.
C: 1. F 2. T 3. F 4. F 5. F 6. F 7. T 8. F
Section two:
II. Exercises:
A: 1. a 2. c 3. b 4. a 5. b 6. a B:
1. Because there were a lot of tourists that summer.
2. One is for coming into the kitchen and the other is for going out so that the waiters coming in would
not bump into the ones going out.
3. Because she went to the wrong door and collided with a waiter. All the things she was carrying –
two plates of bacon and eggs and an orange juice fell onto the floor.
4. Because the night before she had stayed up late chatting with other girls who worked in the hotel. C: 1. F 2. T 3. T 4. F 5. F 6. F 7. T 8. F 9.F 10. T
Section three:
II. Exercises:
Task 1: Learning to rephrase
1. Landsats: 2 butterfly-shaped spacecrafts around the earth 1972 & 1975 2. circle the earth 14 times/24 hours, 570 m above earth 3. photos from satellites, scientists know more about earth
4. water black, cities blue-green, rock brown, healthy plants red, diseased plants green, barren land
white