I. Fill in the gaps with the words best suited to the context from those in brackets. — КиберПедия 

Историки об Елизавете Петровне: Елизавета попала между двумя встречными культурными течениями, воспитывалась среди новых европейских веяний и преданий...

Опора деревянной одностоечной и способы укрепление угловых опор: Опоры ВЛ - конструкции, предназначен­ные для поддерживания проводов на необходимой высоте над землей, водой...

I. Fill in the gaps with the words best suited to the context from those in brackets.

2018-01-04 1433
I. Fill in the gaps with the words best suited to the context from those in brackets. 0.00 из 5.00 0 оценок
Заказать работу

1) (dress – wear- put on)

1. People do not ….. very long coats nowadays.

2. I took a bath, …. and went out.

3. She did not want to …. her raincoat and took an umbrella instead.

4. Yesterday at her brother’s birthday she …. a very pretty blouse.

5. I saw him …his new sweater in front of the mirror.

6. He is ….ing a new coat.

7. She ….well on very little money.

 

 

2) (fit – match - suit)

1. I think this plain cotton dress will ….. me, I want something for everyday wear.

2. You must buy grey gloves to …your hat.

3. This suit does not … you, it is tight in the shoulders.

4. Buy a green hat, this colour …you more than any other.

5. The jacket ….like a glove.

6. She bought a …..ing skirt and sweater.

7. That colour does not ….her.

8. The blue dress …..her properly now she’s lost some weight.

9. The blue of her dress … the blue of her eyes.

10. That blue dress … the girl with the blond hair.

II. Practice the dialogues for good reading and learn them by heart.

a)

- So, what do you think of this dress?

- Er, it’s OK, but I don’t think it’s your size. I like the colour, though – it’s quite fashionable.

b)

- Are you taking this suit or shall I show you something else?

- Actually, I’d like to have a look at some other models. This one is too conservative for me.

c)

- Who’s that man?

- Which one: in a red T-shirt or worn-out jeans?

- No, the tall one, in black. That suit does look expensive!

- Oh, that’s our General Manager.

III. Make up short conversations of your own. Follow the given models (1), (2) and (3). Make use of the active vocabulary.

IV. Read the conversation and pay attention to the meanings it expresses.

- Look at this catalogue, Jim. These ski parkas are on sale, and the models are brand-new!

- What’s on your mind? You have one already!

- But I bought it a long time ago, it’s all shabby and worn-out!

- Right, so one year is a long time ago now, I see. And besides, I thought you stopped buying so many casual clothes, and planned to dress smartly and elegantly.

- You don’t understand! That was last year’s style – now informal clothes are in trend.

- I think your parka still looks fashionable, even though it is from last year.

- That’s because you are not a woman.

V. Think of a new dialogue of your own. Get ready to act it out.

 

 


Part II

Reading

Reading I

 

1. Look at the following extracts of written language and match them to their sources below:

a) Small, slim, blue-eyed blond, GSH, early 30’s WLTM hunky male 28 – 38 for fun and friendship. Call me on 09765-567892.

b) The first man was small and wiry, with sharp, strong features. Behind him walked his opposite, a huge man, with wide shoulders: and he walked heavily, dragging his feet a little, the way a bear drags his paws.

c) The police are looking for a man of average height and medium build in his mid-twenties. He was last seen wearing a dark green or grey anorak.

d) The tallest man in medical history is Robert Pershing Wadlow who was born on 22nd February 1918 in Illinois, USA, and who died on 15th July 1940 in Michigan. He was last measured on 27th June 1940 and was found to be 272cm tall.

 

1. An extract from a novel.

2. An extract from a newspaper report.

3. An extract from the Guinness Book of Records.

4. An advertisement in a lonely hearts section of a newspaper.

 

What do you think WLTM and GSH mean?

 

2. Which of the people in Exercise 1 (a – d) answer the following descriptions?

(In some cases more than one answer is possible)

1) with noticeable features

E.g. 1 - b (with sharp, strong features)

2) below medium height

3) broad-shouldered

4) fair- haired

5) 8 ft11 inches tall

6) medium height

7) a little over 30

8) thin and muscular

9) about 25

10) enormous

Reading II

Read the extract and guess what creature is described:

I suppose____ need some description nowadays, since they have become rare and shy of the Big People, as they call us. They are (or were) a little people, about half our height, and smaller than the bearded dwarves. ____ have no beards. There's little or no magic about them, except the ordinary everyday sort which helps them to disappear quietly and quickly when large stupid folk like you and me come blundering along, making a noise like ele­phants which they can hear a mile off. They are inclined to be fat in the stomach, they dress in bright colours (chiefly green and yellow), wear no shoes, because their feet grow natural leathery sole and thick brown hair like the stuff on their heads (which is curly), have long clev­er brown fingers, good-natured faces, and laugh deep fruity laughs (especially after dinner, which they have twice a day when they can get it). Now you know enough to go on with.

- think of your own riddles of the kind for your group-mates to puzzle out.

Reading III

Read the texts and say what idea unites them.

What is Beauty?

When you look in the mirror, do you like what you see? Chances are you’ve got a feature or two that could be improved – after all, nobody’s perfect. But how far would you go to be more attractive?

A recent survey found that it’s no longer just women who want to become more beautiful: men are quickly catching up. In Britain, for example, 34 per cent of men are not satisfied with their bodies.

And if creams and lotions can’t do the trick, both sexes are increasingly ready to submit to the surgeon’s knife in search of perfection.

The world record for plastic surgery is held by Cindy Jackson – who has had more than 20 operations to redesign herself from top to toe. She has spent 55,000 pounds over eight years to achieve the Barbie Doll look, and considers it money well spent. “Now I can cross the street whenever I want to because male drivers will always stop to look at my figure.”

Research shows that beautiful people get a better deal. Small babies prefer to look at them, teachers are kinder to them and even mothers pay more attention to their prettier children. At school attractive children are punished less and often get higher marks for same work.

Every day, we are bombarded with beautiful faces. They smile at us from advertising hoardings, TV screens and magazines. Their perfect smiles, flawless cheekbones and wide eyes fuel the multi-billion-dollar beauty industry.

But what exactly is beauty? For centuries men – it usually was men – have tried to come up with a mathematical formula for beauty. The ancient Greeks thought the number three was the answer – a beautiful face was one that could be divided into three exactly equal parts, hairline to eyebrows, eyebrows to mouth, and finally mouth to chin.

The Victorians believed that a face with great beauty possessed the average features of all other faces. However, this has now been debunked by recent research which found that the most attractive faces have higher cheekbones, a thinner jaw and larger eyes relative to the size of the face than an average one.

Dr Alfred Linney at University College Hospital measured the faces of models and has found out that there’s no such thing as “the” beautiful face. Instead the features of models turn out to be just as varied as everyone else’s. “Some have teeth that stick out,” he says, “others have a jutting chin. There was no one ideal of beauty that was closer to others. In fact, there were some with features that could normally make them candidates for cosmetic surgery!”

Another survey shows that all sorts of non-standard looks still count as beautiful. Just think of Gerard Depardien.

The truth is that when it comes to choosing a mate, beauty is still very much in the eye of the beholder. Some of us make the oddest choices.

So the message is: if you’ve got it flaunt it – but if you haven’t, just make the most of what you’ve got.

 

What is in Your Appearance?

“If you are tall, people expect you to be strong, even though toy might feel a complete wimp.”

(Amanda Streeter, artist)

 

“If you are small you’re landed with a “sweet image”. I am constantly having to work harder in order to be taken seriously.”

(Karen Evennett, journalist)

 

“I’ve never come to terms with being fat because I’ve never considered there was anything to come to terms with. I like being fat. What I get truly angry about is the lack of choice in clothes for fat women.

There are a lot of men around who genuinely prefer big women. Many of the nasty comments actually come from thin women; they are so insecure that they simply have to turn on somebody else. Getting thin is not the way to attract a man. You must be loved for what you are, not for what someone wants you to be; otherwise you will end up always giving in, always trying to please.”

(Jackie Broad, actress)

 

“Society makes allowances for how men look because we feel they may have something else to offer. I am convinced that the same principles do not apply when we judge women; it is just no good a woman being brilliant or fascinating if she fails to measure up to society’s physical ideal. If you call a man fat, the insult just doesn’t have the same sting.”

(Bonetta Adamson, television producer)

 

“Nobody should be treated differently because of their size. Unfortunately, we are conditioned to believe that if you are a boy, you can’t be too tall, but as a girl, you most certainly can, and many girls become extremely self-conscious. Small is seen as “charming” and people often react positively to tiny girls in later life, however, small women may feel they have to compensate by working harder than their taller colleagues in order to prove themselves professionally.”

(Penelope Leach, psychologist)

Set-work

1. Read and translate the words:

a) complete, serious, genuinely, nasty, judge, fascinating, colleague, plastic, surgery, injection, collagen, advertising, tiny, to bombard, hoarding, equal, candidate, to vary, self-conscious, insecure.

b) insult, survey, increase.

 

2. Define the words:


a wimp

to compensate

to condition

to improve

to come to terms with

to catch up

to turn on

to submit

to treat

to debunk

brilliant

increasingly

to end up (doing)

flawless

to give in

to turn out

to apply

odd

to measure up to

to flaunt


 

3. Explain what is meant:

- to land with a “sweet image”

- to make allowances

- to get a better deal

- to do the trick

- to fuel the multi-billion-dollar industry

- to be bombarded with beautiful faces

- to have the same sting

- to make the most of smth

 

4. Answer the questions:

-What is the main idea which can unite the texts?

-Are people really treated differently because of their appearance? Find some proofs in the text.

- Do you approve of plastic surgery?

- Is it always necessary to change anything or is it a whim?

 

5. Comment on the sentences:


Поделиться с друзьями:

Историки об Елизавете Петровне: Елизавета попала между двумя встречными культурными течениями, воспитывалась среди новых европейских веяний и преданий...

Адаптации растений и животных к жизни в горах: Большое значение для жизни организмов в горах имеют степень расчленения, крутизна и экспозиционные различия склонов...

Индивидуальные и групповые автопоилки: для животных. Схемы и конструкции...

Археология об основании Рима: Новые раскопки проясняют и такой острый дискуссионный вопрос, как дата самого возникновения Рима...



© cyberpedia.su 2017-2024 - Не является автором материалов. Исключительное право сохранено за автором текста.
Если вы не хотите, чтобы данный материал был у нас на сайте, перейдите по ссылке: Нарушение авторских прав. Мы поможем в написании вашей работы!

0.043 с.