CL 8 - Limba Engleza
CL 8 - Limba Engleza
CL 8 - Limba Engleza
Elisaveta Onofreiciuc
Larisa Codeacova
Emilia Fabian
Marcela Calchei
Alina Legcobit
Silvia Rotaru
Tatiana Carau
Larisa Labliuc
Manualul a fost aprobat pentru reeditare prin ordinul Ministrului Educaiei al Republicii Moldova nr. 399 din 25 mai 2015.
Manualul este elaborat conform curriculumului disciplinar (aprobat n anul 2010) i finanat din sursele Fondului Special pentru Manuale.
Acest manual este proprietatea Ministerului Educaiei al Republicii Moldova.
coala . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Manualul nr. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Anul
de folosire
Numele
i prenumele elevului
Anul
colar
Aspectul manualului
la primire
la returnare
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
Dirigintele clasei trebuie s controleze dac numele elevului este scris corect.
Elevul nu va face nici un fel de nsemnri n manual.
Aspectul manualului (la primire i la returnare) se va aprecia: nou, bun, satisfctor, nesatisfctor.
Comisia de evaluare: Silviana Cupcic lector, Universitatea de Stat din Moldova, Chiinu;
Margareta Duciac profesor, grad didactic superior, Liceul de Creativitate i Inventic Prometeu-Prim, Chiinu;
Inga Chiosa profesor, grad didactic superior, Liceul Teoretic Spiru Haret, Chiinu;
Mariana Beschieru profesor, grad didactic superior, Liceul Teoretic Mihai Eminescu, Chiinu.
Redactori: Ana Gorea, conf. univ., dr. n filologie, Academia de Administrare Public, Chiinu;
Tim Schneider, Masters of Arts in English, United States Peace Corps Volunteer in Moldova;
Sarah Ewell, Masters in Political Science, California Teaching Credential, United States Peace Corps Volunteer in Moldova.
Fotografii: Iulian Sochirc, Galina Burdeniuc, Mihai Potrniche, Ion Chibzii, Nelli Subotkin, Iurie Foca, Petru Cazacu
Desene: Igor Hmelnichi, Anatoli Smleaev, Vladimir Melnik, Igor Vieru, Vitalie Roca, Alex Dimitrov, Violeta Zabulica
Copert: Sergiu Stanciu
Machetare computerizat: Mihai Bacinschi
Redactor tehnic: Mihai Dimitriu
Editura Prut Internaional, 2015
G. Burdeniuc, E. Onofreiciuc, L. Codeacova, E. Fabian, M. Calchei, A. Legcobit, S. Rotaru, T. Carau, L. Labliuc, 2015
Editura se oblig s achite deintorilor de copyright, care nc nu au fost contactai, costurile de reproducere
a imaginilor folosite n prezenta ediie.
Editura Prut Internaional, str. Alba Iulia nr. 23, bl. 1A, Chiinu, MD 2051
Tel.: (+373 22) 75 18 74; Tel./fax: (+373 22) 74 93 18; www.edituraprut.md; e-mail: editura@prut.ro
ISBN 978-9975-54-197-8
811.111(075.3)
E 57
Contents
UNIT 1
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Lesson 5
Lesson 6
Lesson 7
Lesson 8
On Vacation
Blackboard vs Computer
Life Events
Time Management
Civilization: Fast Facts
Grammar Page
Round Up
Progress Test
4
6
8
10
12
14
16
18
UNIT 2
Choices
20
Lesson 1 Politeness
Lesson 2 Its not about you.
Its about the PEOPLE around you!
Lesson 3 To Lie or Not to Lie
Lesson 4 Jobs
Lesson 5 Civilization: Museums
Lesson 6 Grammar Page
Lesson 7 Round Up
Lesson 8 Progress Test
20
22
24
26
28
30
32
34
UNIT 3
Lifestyle
36
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Lesson 5
Lesson 6
Lesson 7
Lesson 8
36
38
40
42
44
46
48
50
UNIT 4
At Leisure
52
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Lesson 5
52
54
56
58
60
62
64
66
UNIT 5
Celebrations
68
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Holidays
Presents and Wishes
School Traditions
Enjoying Together
68
70
72
74
76
78
80
82
UNIT 6
The Observer
84
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Lesson 5
Lesson 6
Lesson 7
Lesson 8
84
86
88
90
92
94
96
98
UNIT 7
My Home Country
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
Lesson 5
Lesson 6
Lesson 7
Lesson 8
UNIT 8
116
Lesson 1
Lesson 2
Lesson 3
Lesson 4
116
118
120
Lesson 5
Lesson 6
Lesson 7
Lesson 8
SUPPLEMENT 1
SUPPLEMENT 2
SUPPLEMENT 3
SUPPLEMENT 4
SUPPLEMENT 5
SUPPLEMENT 6
SUPPLEMENT 7
Tapescripts
Extended Grammar Practice
Letter Writing
Phonetic Alphabet for American and
British English Consonants
Phonetic Alphabet for British and
American English Vowels
Irregular Verbs List
Active Vocabulary
100
122
124
126
128
130
132
142
149
150
151
152
155
UNIT
LESSON
On Vacation
DISCUSSION POINTS
I quite like
I dont enjoy
I would like to
a) You are going to listen to Patricia Hedge, who tells the reporter how she went white-water rafting. Look at the beginning of the questions that the reporter asks and try to finish them. Then
listen and compare.
Can you ? Why did ? Why were ? What did ?
b) Listen again, and put the following actions in the order they happened to Patricia and her
friends.
They pulled one man into their boat.
The first few miles, the river was slow and the
water was flat.
They suddenly saw the other boat.
There was no boat, and nobody.
She saw some white water.
1 Patricia and her 7 friends checked all the things
and boats.
Patricia was terrified.
c) Listen to the story again and summarize it using the following expressions that can help you.
First ...; Second ...; Third ...; After that ...; As soon as ...; Next ...; Before ...; Then ...; Later ...; Finally ...; At last ... .
WRITING
You are going for a holiday with your family. You find a hotel on the Internet and you phone to
make a reservation. First complete the notes.
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. scenery /'si:nErI/
2. mountaineering /,maUntI'nIErIN/
3. yachting /'jtIN/
4. hiking /haIkIN/
5. snorkelling /'sn:kElIN/
6. surfing /'s:fiN/
7. skiing /'ski:IN/
8. sunbathe /'snbeIT/
9. figure skating /'fIgE 'skeItIN/
10. toboganning /tE'bgEnIN/
11. available /E'veIlEbl/
12. exotic /Ig'ztIk/
ROLE PLAY
Student A calls the hotel and makes a reservation on the phone. Follow the guidelines. Student B
answers the call and makes a reservation on the phone. Follow the guidelines.
Student A
Call Student B on the phone.
Student B
Tell how many people will stay at the hotel and how
many rooms and what types of rooms you need.
Say what type of accommodation you need. Ask Student B additional questions about services they have.
Do It at Home
Find some holiday brochures or other tourist information about a place you would like to spend
your ideal holiday. Write a 100-word paragraph about the accommodation you want and the way
you would like to spend your time.
UNIT
LESSON
Blackboard vs Computer
DISCUSSION POINTS
In pairs, match the sentences with the pictures. Which of these things do you still have in your
school?
a) This is a school bell. The teacher used to ring the
bell at the start and end of the lessons.
b) This is a copy book. Children used to practise
writing correctly over and over again.
c) This is a slate and pen. Children used to write on
these before there was paper and pencils.
1.
4.
6.
2.
3.
5.
Listen to a British teenager telling about his day in a modern school. Answer the questions:
a) How many students are there in Claytons school?
b) How long does it take Clayton to get to school?
c) Why does Clayton go to his Tutors Room?
d) How long does one lesson last?
e) Where does Clayton have all his lessons?
a.m.
a.m.
a.m.
p.m.
p.m.
READING
In groups, read about Six Thinking Hats and answer the questions that
follow.
Six Thinking Hats is a challenging technique that helps people to make a decision.
People usually look at a decision from one or two sides. However, this technique shows
a problem from different points of view. The Six Thinking Hats technique develops
critical thinking, communication, and creativity. It helps you to come up with different
solutions.
p.m.
tip
p.m.
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. slate /sleIt/
2. abacus /'AbEkEs/
3. technique /tek'ni:k/
4. cane /keIn/
5. advantage /Ed'v:ntIdZ/
6. although /:l'TEU/
7. punish /'pnIS/
New ideas,
please!
How do I feel?
What can go
wrong?
a) Which hat stands for control? b) Which hat stands for creativity? c) Which hat stands for optimism?
d) Which hat stands for pessimism? e) Which hat stands for facts? f) Which hat stands for emotions?
g) Which hat is closer to your way of thinking?
ROLE-PLAY
Work in groups of 6. Choose a hat and talk about computers in our life.
White Hat: You are one of the students.
You present the facts of the case. You
know how many computers you have in
your school and how often students use
them. You know what other equipment
they need. You also know that students
must spend no more than two hours a
day in front of the computer.
Green Hat: You understand that modern life is impossible without computers. You try to show how students
can use them more: at home, at school, while doing
their homework or spending their free time. You demonstrate the use of computers in everyday life.
Do It at Home
In 100 words, explain why you would like to have an up-to-date computer or tablet. Give 3 reasons
to support your opinion. Be convincing.
I would like to have . One reason is that I . This . I can .
A second reason is that . I like to . Finally, I believe that .
UNIT
LESSON
Life Events
DISCUSSION POINTS
In pairs, put the life events from the list into the correct categories.
Start school leave home pass your exams leave school go to university bring up children get a
degree have children rent or buy a house retire fall in love get a job start work get married
get engaged get promoted.
Education
Work
Relationships
READING
TEAM WORK
1.
2.
a) Read your text and match phrases 1-9 in ex. 2b with the gaps in
your text. After that, exchange and compare the information about
these famous people.
Group A: read about Diana Spencer. Group B: read about Elizabeth
Taylor.
3.
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. retire /rI'taiE/
2. martial arts /'m:S(E)l ':ts/
3. charity /'tSArItI/
4. engaged /In'geIdZd/
5. athletics /A'letIks/
6. ties /taIz/
7. philosophy /fI'lsEfI/
Diana Frances Spencer (be) born in Norfolk, England on July 1, 1961. She g) _____________, which (have)
strong ties to the royal family and Queen Elizabeth II. At school Diana (be) good at athletics, music, and
art. However, she h) _____________. When Diana was 18, she (take) a job as an assistant at a kindergarten. She
really loved working with kids. On July 29, 1981, she and Prince Charles (get) married. Diana gave birth to two
sons Prince William and Prince Harry. Unfortunately, Princess Diana and Prince Charles (get) divorced in 1992.
During her marriage to Prince Charles and after it, Princess Diana i) _____________. She visited sick children
and disabled people. On August 31, 1997 Diana died in a car crash in Paris.
Listen to a young man telling about his life. Complete the time line with the years of his main life
events.
1976
_____?
_____?
_____?
_____?
_____?
_____?
_____?
WRITING
f)
g)
h)
i)
j)
because .
The person that I admire is .
My dream is .
The most memorable day in my life was .
The movie/book that I will never forget is .
I would like to ... .
Do It at Home
PROJECT WORK
Research the life of some other famous people that you admire. Make some notes of their main
life events. Present your findings to the rest of the class.
UNIT
LESSON
1
4 Time Management
DISCUSSION POINTS
a) In pairs, ask each other questions. Answer the questions using always, sometimes, never.
1. Do you use a diary to keep all your assignments
and activities in one place?
2. Do you do the most important things first?
3. Are your goals realistic?
b) Count your responses. Share your results with your classmates. Do you agree or disagree?
If you answered
Mostly ALWAYS
You can manage your time very well.
Keep up the good work!
2
9
16
23
30
3
10
17
24
31
4
11
18
25
5
12
19
26
6
13
20
27
7
14
21
28
Mostly SOMETIMES
You have to make your
planning skills better.
Mostly NEVER
It is time to organize your time!
Share the results with your classmate.
Do you agree or disagree?
S
1
8
15
22
29
SPEAKING
Tick the things that help you to manage and save time. Talk to
your classmate. Share the things that you have in common.
make To Do lists;
use term, week, and daily calendars;
use the telephone or e-mail;
use post-it notes;
combine activities;
do the hard tasks first;
do physical exercise.
READING
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. assignment /E'saInmEnt/
2. management /'mAnIdZmEnt/
3. deadline /'dedlaIn/
4. strategy /'strAtIdZI/
5. schedule /'Sedju:l/ (BE)
/'skedju:l/ (AE)
6. succeed /sEk'si:d/
7. however /haU'evE/
Read the article. Which of the things from ex. 2 can help you to manage and save your time,
according to the article?
10
deadlines?
4. Why is it important for teens to control their time?
5. What helps teens to manage their time in their
own style?
something;
4. a time by which something must be done;
5. a feeling of worry because of difficult situations;
6. to do what you are trying to do.
Listen to two jokes about Sarah and George. Say who these phrases refer to:
_____ tried to be on time;
_____ was puzzled to see a briefcase full of papers;
_____ went to the doctor;
Do It at Home
Look at these two pictures and contrast the time management skills that these two people have.
Write a 100-word paragraph, using linking words to show contrast.
But, yet, in contrast to, on the other hand, on the contrary, however, although.
e.g. It is important to have a good sleep. However, the young woman doesnt plan her sleep time. The man, on
the contrary, has enough time to sleep because he looks fresh.
11
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
a) Look at the list of countries. Match the countries with their maps. Put them in order of size of the
territories they occupy: 1= the biggest.
1. The United Kingdom
of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
a.
b.
2. The USA
3. New Zealand
c.
4. Australia
5. Canada
d.
e.
b) Listen to the report (page 133) and check your predictions. Put these countries in order of the
population they have.
PAIR WORK
In pairs, fill in the FAST FACTS column with the following rubrics.
Official name
Capital
Languages
Area
Population
Money
Country
Form of government
Major rivers
Major mountain ranges
FAST FACTS
Country
London
3. ____________________
Washington, D.C
63,742,977
4. Population
318,892,103
English
5. ____________________
Pound sterling
6. ____________________
U.S. dollar
7. ____________________
8. ____________________
9. ____________________
Ask your partner what new information s/he has learned. Share the information that you have both
learned in class.
TEAM WORK
12
GEOGRAPHY
GOVERNMENT
HISTORY
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. the Appalachian
/,ApE'leitSIEN/
2. Missouri /mI'zUErI/
3. Cheviot /'tSevIEt/
4. Pennine /'penIn/
5. Thames /temz/
6. Ireland /'iElEnd/
Work with classmates from the other group. Exchange and compare the information about the two
countries.
Do It at Home
Research New Zealand, Australia or Canada. Make some notes. Present your findings to the rest
of the class in the form of a PowerPoint presentation or a poster. Use the same categories as in
exercise 2 (page 12).
13
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Grammar Focus
INTRODUCTORY THERE
We use there+be to introduce new information: a new person or thing in a particular place. There has no real meaning, it is a grammatical subject.
There were two men in the room.
There is a museum next to the library.
There will be more cars in the streets in the future.
The noun after there+be often has a/an, zero article, anyone, any + noun, or something, some + noun, nobody, no
+noun.
Grammar Focus
INTRODUCTORY IT
We use introductory it to focus on the information at the end of the sentence.
It + be
an adjective/ a noun
to-infinitive
e.g. It is important to
manage your time.
that-clause
e.g. It is a miracle
that nobody was hurt.
wh-clause
e.g. It is clear why
they have succeeded.
14
-ing-clause
e.g. It is useless asking to put her
mobile away while eating.
Grammar Focus
COLLECTIVE NOUNS
Read the following definitions to your neighbour and make him/ her guess the words.
1. a means of payment especially in the form of
metal coins or paper notes;
2. all the people working on a ship, plane, spacecraft
etc.;
3. young men and women considered as a group;
4. cows, especially as kept on farms for meat or milk;
5. a group of one or usually two adults and their chil-
15
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
SPEAKING
Work in pairs and match the phrases from the two columns in order to identify the benefits of
effective time management. Put them in order of importance to you.
e.g. If you manage your time effectively, you can
reach your goals.
1. reach your
2. do what is
3. meet
4. reduce and manage
5. work smarter instead
6. control your
7. have high academic
8. have the time of your life
a) of harder
b) performance
c) stress
d) goals
e) deadlines
f) time
g) without guilt
h) most important
Work Hard
Work Smart
ROLE PLAY
Write Vickys replies after reading Andys conversation. Practice the conversation and perform it
for the class.
Andy:
Have you been on holiday this year?
Where did you go?
Wow! What did you do there?
You are lucky!
No, I havent, but I have heard its fantastic.
What do you think?
Vicky: ______________________________
Vicky: ______________________________
Vicky: ______________________________
Vicky: ______________________________
Vicky: ______________________________
Vicky: ______________________________
READING
a) Look at the title of the text. Read the paragraph headings in exercise b). Choose the best
answer.
The text is about
1) different uses of the Internet in the future;
b) Read the text and match the headings a-g with the paragraphs 1-6. There is one extra heading.
a)
b)
c)
d)
16
e) Other gadgets;
f) The future use of the machines connected to the
Internet;
g) The Internet today.
Do It at Home
Look at these photos of the people using technology in
different ways. Compare and contrast the photos and
give your ideas. Include the following points:
Technology used for fun and for work Good and bad aspects
for young people The role of technology in your life
e.g. Both photos show people using technology, but they are
using it differently. In the photo on the right, ... .
17
UNIT
Progress Test
1
Read the article and fill in the gaps with a sentence a-e. There is one sentence you dont need.
a) Finland, Brazil and France guarantee six weeks of
time off.
b) I dream of taking a cruise or a trip to Europe, but
I cant imagine getting away for so long.
c) That makes the U.S. the only advanced nation in
the world that doesnt guarantee its workers annual leave.
a) next to
a) demand
a) have to do
a) take
a) time off
b) in addition to
b) hate
b) should do
b) refuse
b) labour
c) except
c) understand
c) dont have to do
c) give
c) happiness
VOCABULARY
The ... for entering the competition is tomorrow. You can do each ... at your own speed. One great ...
of living in town is having the shops so near. The extra money will ... me to upgrade my computer. An
example of ... is a donation of ten dollars a month to a local food bank. This information is ... free on the
Internet.
18
Use it is/there is in the spaces. In some sentences negative and interrogative forms, or the past
or future tenses are required.
a) ... autumn. ... many coloured leaves on the ground.
b) ... nothing to be done about this.
c) ... still very early and ... nobody to be seen in the
street .
Open the brackets paying attention to the collective nouns. Use both variants where it is possible.
a) The crew (is, are) waiting for instructions from the
captain.
b) A flock of sheep (is seen/ are seen) in the field.
Choose a quotation on vacation and write a paragraph explaining the way you understand it.
I hate vacations. If you can build buildings, why sit on the beach? PHILIP JOHNSON
The best thing about a vacation is planning it. ANDREW A. ROONEY
Vacations are necessities, not luxuries. LINDA BLOOM
Evaluate Yourself.
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
Yes
No
Improve
19
UNIT
LESSON
1
Choices
Politeness
DISCUSSION POINTS
In pairs, answer the following questions. Share the answers with your classmates.
a) When was the last time someone was rude to you?
What happened?
b) When was the last time you thanked somebody?
Read the following quotations. Choose the quotation that gives the best definition of politeness.
Justify your answer by giving one example.
Politeness is a wish to be
treated politely, and to
respect yourself.
Politeness is an expression
of concern for other peoples feelings.
Philippa Law
Francois de La Rochefoucauld
READING
a) Decide if the following statements about British people are true or false.
1. British people are very polite.
2. They use the words thank you and please quite
often.
3. They rarely stand in a line when they wait for a
bus.
20
2. locals
3. simple
4. unpleasant
5. the elderly
4
a)
4. to queue
5. pleasant
6. especially
Describe the situation and message of each cartoon using the information from the text.
b)
HELP!
2. Right
LIFE
BELT
LIFE
BELT
Study the following polite requests and ways of responding to them. Draw a
next to polite rejections.
acceptances of the request and a
Polite requests
Could you carry my bag for me?
Could you bring your laptop with you?
Could you tell me what time it is?
Do you know what time the museums open?
Would you mind coming with me?
Would you mind helping me with my homework?
Would you mind coming earlier tomorrow?
SPEAKING
1. Wrong
7. rather
8. young people
9. usual
next to polite
Polite responses.
Yes, of course.
Im afraid, I cant.
Im sorry, I cant.
Let me have a look.
Im not sure.
OK. Sure.
Definitely.
Listen to the following dialogues. Put down what the first speakers request and if the requests can
be fulfilled.
e.g. The first speaker is asking for the way to the bus station. The second speaker cant help because he is a
foreigner.
Do It at Home
Describe in 100 words what foreigners should know about the greeting habits in Moldova.
Explain how the young, the middle-aged and the elderly greet each other.
21
UNIT
LESSON
1
Its not about you. Its about the PEOPLE around you!
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
a) Read the text and fill in the missing information on the slide.
THEY WERE ASKED TO RANK
WHAT WAS MOST IMPORTANT TO THEM
(A) _____ ACHIEVING SUCCESS
(B)_____ BEING A HAPPY PERSON
22% (C)________ ____ ________
tip
b) Read the text and say what each number refers to.
e.g. 10,000 refers to the number of students that participated in the survey.
22
1. achieve /E'tSi:v/
2. conduct (n) /'kndkt/
3. conduct (v) /kEn'dkt/
4. caring /'ke(E)ring/
5. survey /'s:veI/
6. success /s(E)k'ses/
7. column /'klEm/
8. percent (also per cent) /pE'sent/
9. colleague /'kli:g/
Column A
an examination of opinions, behaviour, made by asking people questions
for or out of every 100
looking after something or somebody
to organize a particular activity
protecting someone or something and providing what that person or thing needs
to take some things and leave others
the most important
SPEAKING
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
Column B
1. caring
2. conduct
3. percent
4. pick
5. survey
6. top
b) Walk around the class and ask two students the questions from ex. 5a. Take notes of the
answers.
a) Listen to a radio program. Complete the table with the required information.
Speakers name
Age
Regret
Justin
13
b) Write what each speaker should have done to avoid the regret.
e.g. Justin should have learned to manage his time better.
WORK IN GROUPS
Look at the picture of Lauren and Anns dorm room. What should they have done to avoid
the mess? What shouldnt they have done? Write as many sentences as you can in 5 minutes.
Compare your sentences with your classmates.
e.g. They should have washed the dishes.
Do It at Home
Choose a question from ex. 5 and using your notes write a paragraph comparing the answers of
your classmates. Use some of the following phrases:
1. I asked my classmate ... .
2. He/she replied ... .
23
UNIT
LESSON
1
2
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
a) Read the text and say what kind of lies are discussed in it.
Great Lies
(fragment)
Jo Donelly
Every day in every area of our lives we tell and
hear a thousand lies. Not cruel lies. Not harmful lies.
Not lies that matter. No, of course not. But great lies:
Itll be ready in an hour. Your cheque is in the post.
Fresh today. I will call you. Nothing like this has ever
happened before. Of course, I love only you. We pretend
with no effort and less guilt, that we dont lie through
our teeth every minute of the day and everyone else
pretends that they dont either.
But lying saves time and worries. It makes everybody happier than they would be if they always told
or had to listen to the truth. After all, you dont really
want to hear that youll be lucky if you ever see your
gadget again. When you find out that youre not going
b) Read the text again and decide if the following statements are true or false.
Make the false ones true.
1. Every day we tell one thousand lies.
2. The lies we tell everyday do not hurt anybody.
3. People choose to lie because white lies save our
lives.
c) Match the following definitions with the underlined words from the text.
1. extremely unkind
2. a feeling of being unhappy
3. a feeling of having done something wrong
4. almost not
5. causing damage
6. needing attention very soon
7. to be important
8. whole with nothing missing
Fresh today.
I will call you.
2. Does the text reflect the reality of the role of lies in our society? Bring arguments.
3. Do you agree with the authors opinion on lies? Bring arguments.
24
tip
1. lie /laI/
2. lay /leI/
3. laid /leId/
4. laying /leIIN/
5. lying /'laIIN/
6. cruel /'kru:El/
7. guilt /gIlt/
8. cheque /tSek/
9. urgently /':dZ(E)ntli/
10. entire /In'taIE/
11. fragile /'frAdZaIl/
12. cash register /kAS 'redZIstE/
13. sensitive /'sensItIv/
PAIR WORK
Choose four questions that are most relevant to you and your
classmate. Interview each other.
Have you ever been lied to?
What is the worst lie you have ever heard?
How do you feel when somebody is lying to you?
Do you think lies are a necessity in our life?
Who benefits from a lie? The liar or the person lied to? Why?
Who feels more uncomfortable the liar or the person lied to?
Why do people tolerate lies?
1
Why do some people lie?
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
2.
3.
4.
5.
Do It at Home
1 Describe the message of the cartoon in 100 words, commenting
on the effects of white lies.
2 Write two short sentences for your classmates encouraging them
to tell the truth.
e.g. Lies are your worst enemies!
SURELY
NO ONE
WAS HURT
ITS JUST
A LITTLE
THING!
TE
W HI
LI ES
TRUTH
25
UNIT
LESSON
1
Jobs
DISCUSSION POINTS
a) Which of the jobs below can you see in the photos? Label the photos.
1. an interpreter
2. a nutritionist
3. a software developer
4. a lawyer
a.
5. a physician
6. a civil engineer
7. a sales representative
8. a civil servant
9. a surgeon
10. an accountant
11. a plumber
12. a security guard
b.
d.
c.
e.
f.
7. to consult patients
8. to keep track of money
9. to negotiate a price
10. to work for the government
11. to fight for someones rights
12. to maintain the plumbing
TEAM WORK
26
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. company /'kmp(E)nI/
2. drawing /'dr:IN/
3. employee /Im'plIi:/
4. employer /Im'plIE/
5. government /'gv(E)nmEnt/
6. guard /g:d/
7. hire /'haIE/
8. install /In'st:l/
9. maintain /meIn'teIn/
10. nutritionist /nju(:)'trIS(E)nIst/
11. physician /fI'zIS(E)n/
12. plumber /'plmE/
13. simultaneously /,sIm(E)l'teInjEslI/
14. software /'soft,we(E)r/
15. surgeon /'s:dZ(E)n/
SPEAKING
Choose one topic from below. Think about it, and take
notes of what you will say. Present your answer.
a) Would you ever work for no money? Why? Why not?
b) Would you choose a job that you would enjoy, or a job that
would pay well? Bring two arguments.
c) Do you want to have a job with flexible hours or a fixed
schedule? Bring two arguments.
READING
Do It at Home
1 Choose another question from ex. 5 and write the answer in 100 words.
2 Choose 7 jobs discussed in this lesson and write what each profession is responsible for.
e.g. A translator is responsible for correct written translation.
A translator is responsible for translating correctly.
27
UNIT
LESSON
1
tip
DISCUSSION POINTS
Civilization: Museums
W (want to know)
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. Elgin /'lgIn/
2. Pantheon /'panIEn/
3. Athens /'aInz/
4. Egyptian /I'dZIpS(E)n/
5. Rosetta /rE(U)'ztE/
6. Ramses /'ramsi:z/
7. Gainsborough /'geInzbErE/
8. Constable /'knstEbl/
L (learned)
READING
Choose the correct verb to complete the description of the British Museum. Take the letter under
the verb and put it into the box below the text. There are more verbs than necessary.
walk
H
paid
M
has
X
decorated
I
lied
A
died
E
work
I
understand
T
bought
E
displayed
R
visit
B
a)
28
b)
c)
1
Read the text again and match the exhibits mentioned in the text with the pictures.
SPEAKING
In pairs, study the notes from exercise 1 and discuss what you have learned about the British
Museum. Complete column L.
WRITING
One of your friends is on holiday in London and sent you this e-mail. But, when you printed it,
some of the words were missing. Write questions to find the missing information.
E-mail
To:
My friend
From:
Ana
Subject:
I hope things are going well at home. Ill write again soon!
Hugs,
Ana
PAIR WORK
In pairs, write an e-mail to a friend in another country. Recommend things to do in your town, village or in Chiinu.
Do It at Home
Research the museums in the USA or Australia and write a 100-word description of any of the
museums located in one of these countries. Include a description of the whole collection and of
two exhibits on display in this museum.
29
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Grammar Focus
Adjectives can sometimes act as collective nouns when they describe a particular group or characteristic. They do not
have a plural form but they take a plural verb and are used with the definite article (the).
e.g. Old people are helped by the government = The old are helped by the government.
c) young
d) elderly
e) privileged
f) sick
g) deaf
h) talented
Grammar Focus
Use the modal should +have+ Participle II (e.g. should have done) to talk about actions and states that were advisable
(good idea) in the past, but they did not happen.
e.g.
I should have bought this book yesterday. (But I did not buy it yesterday so I do not have it now.)
He shouldnt have missed the class yesterday. (But he missed the class yesterday.)
Read the first sentence in each item. Circle the letter of the sentence that is closest in meaning.
1. He should have called me last night.
a) He called me last night.
b) He didnt call me last night.
2. Dan should have told the doctor about the accident that he had last year.
a) Dan informed the doctor about the accident.
b) Dan didnt inform the doctor about the accident.
3. Sam should have helped the elderly.
a) Sam didnt help the old people.
b) Sam helped the old people.
4. You shouldnt have lent your textbook. Now you can not do your homework.
a) You have your textbook now.
b) You dont have your textbook now.
5. You shouldnt have watched TV so late last night. Now you are tired.
a) You slept enough last night.
b) You didnt sleep enough last night.
6. You should have bought that blue sweater yesterday. Today they dont have it in your size.
a) I own the blue sweater.
b) I dont own the blue sweater.
Complete the regrets or complaints about the past using should have/ shouldnt have.
e.g. I feel sick. I ate all the chocolate. I shouldnt have eaten all the chocolate.
a) I ran five miles (8 kilometers) yesterday. Now I
feel tired.
b) I forgot to invite Ann to the party. Now she is
angry with me.
30
time.
h) Olivia used to lie a lot. Now nobody believes her.
i) Sophia forgot to return her classmates textbook.
Lay
laid
laying
laid
DEFINITION
PRESENT
TENSE
PAST
TENSE
PRESENT
PARTICIPLE
(with am/is/are)
PAST
PARTICIPLE
(with has/have/had)
to rest or recline
Lie
lay
lying
lain
Use the words below to complete the questions. Pay attention to the tenses of the verbs used in the
questions. Then write full answers that are true for you.
a. you / ever / tell a lie / a / friend / to?
Have you ever... .
b. you / a / museum / last / visit / year?
Did you ... .
c. you / street / help / ever / anybody / in / the?
There are 13 mistakes in the conversation. Find and correct them. The first was done for you.
William:
Jayden:
William:
Jayden:
William:
Jayden:
William:
Jayden:
William:
Jayden:
William:
Jayden:
William:
your
Are you enjoying you time in Washington DC?
Definitely. Its a amazing city.
How long have you been here?
Ive been here for less then an week.
What have you manage to visit?
Well, Ive been to the Jefferson Memorial situated on the Tidal Basin which is surrounded by cherry
trees. It is a very peacefull place.
It is, isnt it? You should visit the Smithsonian museums on the National Mall. My favorite museum is
National Air and Space Museum. Though much people love the National Museum of Natural History.
Oh, yes. The museums are on my list. But first of all, Id like to go at the National Zoo. Animal are my
passion. I have never seen pandas.
Thats a great idea! Dont forget to post some picture of your stay in the Washington DC. Id love to
see them.
Ive already posted some them. Check my page on FB.
I will. Its was nice talking at you.
The same here. See you.
See you.
31
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
WRITING
a) Write for 3 minutes on the topic I care about ... because .... Just keep writing without paying
attention to spelling, grammar, etc., and make no corrections. Feel free to write about anything
you care about.
b) Exchange your writing with a classmate. Read what he/she has written and summarise it in one
sentence
e.g. My classmate cares about ... because ...
ACT or DRAW
One person acts or draws as many of these words as you can in five minutes. Your classmates
should try to guess the word. Do not speak while you are acting or drawing.
queue
the elderly
employee
trainer
worry
to tell lies
caring
survey
plumber
civil servant
READING
a) Read about a Dutch student and the way she spent her holiday and unscramble 6 adjectives.
Most of us present our life in social networks a bit more
fcolurulo than it really is. But Dutch student Zilla van den
Born did even more: she invented an toeicx five-week holiday
across South East Asia from the comfort of her own home.
During her nmaigyiar holiday, Zilla did many activities: she
snorkeled in clare blue seas and visited temples, she sunbathed on nysnu beaches and tried new exigctni foods. In fact,
she didnt even leave the country. The 25-year-old graphics
student spent 42 days at home in Amsterdam, photoshopping
herself which she then posted on Facebook.
So why did she do it? She explained: I did this to show
people that we filter and manipulate what we have we
create an ideal world online which is not real. My goal was
to demonstrate how easy it is for people to change reality.
Everyone knows that pictures of models are manipulated, but we often forget the fact that we also manipulate
reality in our own lives.
(colourful, exotic, imaginary, clear, sunny, exciting)
b) Read again and choose the sentence that best summarizes the text.
Write what the Dutch student should not have done and what she should have done in the situation presented in the text.
Zilla shouldnt have .
Zilla should have .
32
ROLE PLAY
SITUATION 2
Student B
Student B
Student A
SITUATION 3
Student A
Student B
You are in a caf. There is only one free seat. Ask
Student A if you could share the table.
TEAM WORK
START
Heads
8. What does a
physician do?
7. Is the Coca-Cola
Company an employer
or an employee?
FINISH
33
UNIT
Progress Test
1
GRAMMAR
2. middle-aged
3. poor
4. young
5. rich
c) Write polite refusals to each of the requests you wrote in 1b. (3 points)
d) Write in a sentence what somebody should have done in the following situations. (4 points)
1. Yesterday Emma did not tell the truth to my parents. Now she feels ashamed.
2. Mike did not help an old lady to carry her bag yes-
terday.
3. Brian had a fight with his best friend.
4. Jordan didnt invite his grandma to his concert.
e) Form questions using the following words. Pay attention to the tense of the verbs. (5 points)
1. mind/would/passing/the/you/salt?
2. when/last/visit/be/ the/you/a/time/museum?
3. ever/lie/to/anybody/you?
VOCABULARY
2. physician
3. civil servant
4. accountant
5. plumber
T
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
F
PRONUNCIATION
a) Cross the silent letters (the letters that are not pronounced). (5 points)
1. column
2. plumber
3. drawing
4. half
5. colleague
4. con|duct
5. per|cent
34
2. em|ploy|ee
3. to con|duct
try. For example, one survey says Iceland is the healthiest country in the world because men and women live a
long time there, the air is very clean and there are more
doctors available per person than anywhere else in the
world.
However, there was another survey of the happiest
countries in the world and Iceland was not near the top.
The questions on this survey included: How much do you
earn? How healthy are you? How safe do you feel? After
visiting 155 different countries, the researchers decided
that Denmark feels happier than other countries. So
does happiness equal money and good health?
2. to strengthen
3. to contain
4. the same
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Evaluate Yourself.
Europen
des Langues
Yes
No
Improve
I can identify the main points of a radio program on the topic of jobs.
I can identify the main points of a radio program on regrets.
Speaking
I can request something politely.
I can refuse or accept a request politely.
I can give advice in the past.
I can express my opinion on a familiar topic.
Reading
I can identify the main idea of a text.
I can understand what the numbers in a text refer to.
I can find specific, predictable information in a text.
Writing
I can write an e-mail to a friend.
I can describe a museum from an English speaking country.
I can write a 100-word text expressing my opinion on the topic of lies.
35
UNIT
LESSON
Lifestyle
tip
DISCUSSION POINTS
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. Heracles /'herEkli:z/
2. Ulysses /ju:'lisi:z/
3. Perseus /'pE:sju:s/
4. firefighter /'faiE'faitEr/
5. Daniel Defoe /'dAnjEl di'fou/
6. Robinson Crusoe /'rbinsEn
'kru:sou/
7. Chibatman /'tSi:bat,mEn/
8. aquiline /'AkwIlaIn/
B
a) She's tall and slim, with big blue eyes and golden hair.
b) She's fine.
c) She's really nice and friendly, too.
d) She looks like her father.
b) Read the adjectives below. Choose a head word for each column from the following: hair, face,
nature, age, build, nose. The first one has been done for you.
General:
attractive,
casual,
welldressed,
good
looking,
elegant.
________
mild, suspicious,
ironic, kind,
humorous, creative,
generous, sociable,
hard-working, honest, shy, reliable,
organized.
________
a beard,
a moustache,
glasses,
dimples,
wrinkles,
freckles.
________
straight,
big,
crooked,
aquiline,
turned
up.
________
long, blonde,
short, dark, wavy,
bald, chestnut,
thin, thick, shiny,
red, fair, grey/
white, golden.
________
(quite) tall,
overweight,
short, lean,
mediumheight, slim,
well-built,
average build.
________
a teenager,
middle-aged,
about 45, in his/
her (early/late)
twenties/
thirties/forties/
fifties etc.
SPEAKING
Choose a person from the pictures; use the adjectives from exercise 2 b) and the expressions in
You cant do without them to describe the person. Tell your description in front of the class. Let
your classmates guess who you are talking about.
a
36
You cant do
without them
She is attractive. She
looks smart.
Hes got a beard. Shes
wearing glasses.
His hair is long. He has
(got) long hair. He is bald.
She is slim.
They are in their fifties.
The expression of her
eyes says that....
He gets on well with
people.
READING
Read the text and answer the question: What can a hero teach us?
Everybody needs a hero: someone you admire and
wish to resemble to. This might be a singer, an actor,
a football player, a TV star, your father or mother or
another member of your family. They have taught you
a lesson, showed you how to fight for life; to stay courageous and strong.
When a boy reads Daniel Defoes book about
Robinson Crusoes adventures often, it teaches him
not to become desperate when tough times come. He
admires his determination to survive and return home
safe and sound.
The heroes of Greek mythology like Heracles,
Ulysses and Perseus help a teenager never give up or
fear, and try to challenge those who are stronger.
People often describe someone who has done something brave, such as saving someones life, as a hero.
Firefighters are sometimes described as heroes because
they often risk their lives to save others. But heroes
dont necessarily have to be life-savers. We sometimes
describe a person with great intelligence or amazing
abilities as our hero this could be a musician or an
athlete. These are people who dont really have superpowers but they do something extraordinary.
Still, many of us have heard of superheroes like
Superman, Spiderman and Wonder Woman. These fictional characters have special superpowers amazing skills and abilities to be used for saving people and
fighting against evil. But can they exist in real life?
Do people who have dedicated their lives to doing good
COMPREHENSION CHECK
a) Read the text again and match the words in bold from the text to the following descriptions.
Compare your answers with those of your classmate.
1. important job;
2. special or very unusual;
3. character in a film or story who has special power
and uses it to do good things and help other people;
4. extreme strength or abilities that most people do
not have;
5. invented/not real;
6. people who help others who are in difficult situations;
7. respect;
8. morally good and deserving respect.
Do It at Home
Write about your favourite hero in at least 100 words. Use this plan for your writing.
1. Background information name, who he/she is/
was, how you got to know him/her
2. What has he/she done?
3. Whats he/she like?
37
UNIT
LESSON
1
2.
DISCUSSION POINTS
1.
4.
PAIR WORK
b) casual
c) sporty
d) trendy
e) fancy
5.
6.
mini-skirt
T-shirt
dress
vest
shoes
sparkling top
hat
blazer
sportswear
baggy jeans
polo-shirt
blouse
suit
tie(bow tie)
READING
38
7.
SPEAKING
b) Tick the clothes that you think are suitable for you.
c) Choose the items of clothing that are suitable for school.
3.
jumper
sundress
sweater
long
high-heeled
Some people believe that a school uniform can improve learning; it helps to reduce
distraction and focus more on schoolwork. It makes the classroom a more serious environment and helps the students to have better learning results.
Another important thing is that a uniform makes it easier for students to get dressed
each morning, and it means students dont have to worry about what their peers would say
about their clothes. When everyone is dressed the same, you do not worry about what you
look like. There is no competition to be dressed in the latest trend and it is less expensive
for the parents to buy a uniform than some brand clothes.
Another problem is that in America, where the majority of schools do not have a uniform, about 160,000 children miss school every day because they fear to be bullied.
Still, there are voices against school uniform, which say that it reduces creativity and
restricts the right to freedom of choice. Also, they say that the school uniform is sometimes
expensive for parents and uncomfortable for children.
COMPREHENSION CHECK
a) Read the text again and tick the following sentences as true (T) or false (F). Compare your
answers with those of your classmates.
1. The uniform gives the pupils the opportunity to
focus more on schoolwork.
2. Uniforms can improve academic performance.
3. School uniforms help students learn to dress smartly.
4. The clothes the pupils wear sometimes at school
b) Read the text again and find the arguments for wearing a uniform at school. Provide some
arguments against the uniform.
SPEAKING
Read the following ideas, tick them as true (T) or false (F), or not mentioned in the text.
a) The uniform encourages discipline.
b) School uniforms reduce violence at school.
c) Uniforms reduce the students individuality.
d) Students have diverse ways to express themselves.
e) Children concentrate better on their lessons.
f) Students spend less time to dress each morning.
g) School uniforms are expensive for some families.
Listen to two students speaking about school uniform. Answer the questions.
a) What are their opinions about the school uniform?
b) What are the good/bad parts about wearing a uniform?
Do It at Home
Write a paragraph of at least 100 words on your preferences in clothes, giving answers to the following questions.
1. What is your favourite style in clothes?
2. What colours do you prefer?
3. What do you usually wear at school?
39
UNIT
LESSON
1
Who Am I?
DISCUSSION POINTS
PAIR WORK
Choose words from the box to complete the spidergram to fit your interests and values. Justify your choice.
likes/ dislikes; creations; family, goals;
friends; hobbies; nationality; religion;
education; choices; values; objects (possessions); talent; appearance; happiness; practices, habits; clothes; gadgets;
age; feelings; love; respect; attitudes;
abilities; beliefs.
READING
Read the parable and identify which the most important things in a human life are.
A philosophy professor stood before his class with
some items on the table in front of him. When the class
began, without a word, he picked up a very large and
empty jar and filled it with rocks, about 2 inches in
diameter.
He then asked the students if the jar was full. They
agreed that it was.
So the professor then picked up a box of pebbles and
poured them into the jar. He shook the jar lightly. The
pebbles, of course, rolled into the open areas between
the rocks.
He then asked the students again if the jar was full.
They agreed it was.
The professor picked up a box of sand and poured it
into the jar. Of course, the sand filled up the remaining
open areas of the jar.
He then asked once more if the
jar was full. The students responded with a unanimous Yes.
Now, said the professor, I
want you to recognize that this jar
represents your life. The rocks are
the important things your family, your partner, your health, your
children things that if everything else was lost and only they
a jar
40
MY PERSONALITY
rocks
pebbles
sand
COMPREHENSION CHECK
5.
6.
7.
8.
b) Find in the text synonyms to the following words. Mind that the verbs in the text are used in
their appropriate tense.
1. to take up
2. things
3. to be of the same opinion
4. pot
5. to be important
6. to answer
7. existing
8. to stay
9. space
10. apparatus
11. to repair
12. to determine
2. closed
3. hard
4. ask
5. find
6. stop
7. break
SPEAKING
a) Retell the experiment of the professor in your own words. The sentences in 4 a) and words in 4
b) might help you. What is the moral of the story?
b) Who Am I?
The teacher will pin on your back a nametag with the name of a famous person. Try to guess who you
are by asking your classmates yes/no questions until you can guess the name of the person that is written on
the nametag.
e.g. Am I a singer? Am I young? Am I famous? and so on.
Do It at Home
Continue the following sentences in written form.
1. I want to be more sociable when.
2. I appreciate people who
3. When I speak to someone I
41
UNIT
LESSON
1
Body Image
DISCUSSION POINTS
Comment on the following sayings on beauty. Find an equivalent in your native language.
Beauty lies in the eyes of the viewer.
VOCABULARY TASK
determination
worth
explanations.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
confidence
discipline
esteem
control
READING
Read the text and find the self-compound words used to express a good/positive body image.
Almost everyone has something about
their body they dont like. According to a
survey, 56% of women and 43% of men
are not satisfied with their appearance.
Why do so many people have a negative body image?
Studies show one of several factors
that lead to self-contradiction; medias
message of beauty and happiness come
from being thin, and a teenagers body
image is greatly influenced by what they
see on television and in movies and magazines.
Much of your appearance is genetic.
Many top athletes have genetics to thank
for their success. A swimmers large, flexible shoulders pull him through the water;
a gymnasts lean, petite frame and long
arms hurl her across the mat.
Still, its important to strive for self-improvement,
But its also important to be realistic about what you
42
acceptance
COMPREHENSION CHECK
Read the text again and tick the sentences either true (T) or false (F). Compare your choices with
those of your classmate. Justify your choices.
a) Medias message of beauty might be harmful.
b) Teenagers are influenced by what they see on TV,
in movies or magazines.
c) For self-improvement, a person needs to work a lot.
SPEAKING
a) Tick the things that you think are important components of physical fitness. Discuss it in pairs.
walking
weight
self-esteem
stress
swimming
cosmetic surgery
fun
breathing
sleep
work
jogging
water
exercise
friends
diet
time
b) Choose one word from the list in point a) to fill in the following tips for good health and fitness.
1. Good health is a combination of ... and healthy
food.
2. Regular exercise, such as: ..., ... and ... are the path
to health and well-being.
3. Keep your ... under control by eating healthy food.
Listen to the incredible story of Helen Keller and say what helped her to achieve success in life.
Tick the following sentences as true (T) or false (F). Correct the false sentences.
a) Helen Keller was born blind.
b) Anne Sullivan was Helens
teacher.
c) She taught her to read the words
by using manual alphabet and
making little Helen touch the
objects.
d) Helen learned to speak by touching her teachers mouth.
Do It at Home
Write a paragraph in 100 words to comment on the following saying:
Beauty isnt about having a pretty face. It is about having a pretty mind, a pretty heart, and
most importantly, a beautiful soul.
43
UNIT
LESSON
DISCUSSION POINTS
a) Read the paragraphs and match them to the pictures. There is one paragraph that does not have
a matching picture.
Non-Verbal Communication
The most important thing in communication is hearing what is not said.
Peter F Drucker
1.
2.
3.
6.
4.
5.
a) Physical gestures that involve your hands can signify everything. A shrug
of the shoulders shows one isnt sure, open hands communicate that you are
honest and open. Crossed arms, touching your face, hair, or neck indicate
irritation.
Hands open with palms down communicates that you are certain about
what you are talking about. Some gestures are part of a persons personality
trait: such as bitng the fingernails.
d) Voice and smell are other signals of meaning. The voice rises or falls with
emotions. Volume is a good indication of emotion or urgency. Finally, as with
animals, people also can smell fear, attractiveness or other emotions.
44
f) One of the most distinct indications of emotion in interpersonal conversation is facial expression. We can see anger, boredom and happiness in the
movement of the mouth, eyebrows and forehead.
g) The space near our body is our territory. But what is too close?
All over the world, people in big cities stand closer to one another than people in small towns, and people in small towns stand closer to one another than
people from the country. The idea of personal space changes in different countries. In some parts of India people stay 60 cm apart. In Britain, Australia and
North America personal space for most people is about 45 cm from the body. Researchers say it is 25 cm in Japan but only 20 cm in both Denmark and Brazil.
This difference can cause communication problems. Latin Americans and Asians often say that the British and Americans are cold and unfriendly. On the
other hand, the British and Americans often see other cultures as too aggressive. In both examples, the problems are different ideas of personal space.
Listen to the text and fill in the gaps with the missing words.
Smile!
You dont speak the ...? Dont worry, just smile! Thats what the experts on ... skills are saying. Its easy to communicate when you travel abroad. Smile, look at people in a ... way and point at things and people will understand
you. Or will they? People in different countries request things in different ... .
the Netherlands, Poland and Germany), people
The British say ... and thank you more often
request things simply and directly and their ...
than the Americans. When they buy something the
sounds like an English command.
British may say thank you two or three times during the ... . The Americans say thank you once.
In Southern Europe, a smile, friendly ... language
and eye ... are very important when youre request Americans always reply youre ... after thank you.
ing something.
The British sometimes reply thank you, or sometimes do not reply.
In Asia, people sometimes give a very small bow and
In Northern European countries (e.g. Scandinavia,
often look away when requesting something.
PAIR WORK
In pairs, decide which of the things below are important in Moldova when you ask for something.
smiling
friendly body language
eye contact
polite formulas
polite intonation
bows
Do It at Home
Write an e-mail of 100 words to your English penfriend about body language used in Moldova.
45
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Grammar Focus
thing-derivatives
body/ one-derivatives
some
something
somebody/ someone
somehow/ somewhere
any
anything
anybody/ anyone
anyhow/ anywhere
every
everything
everybody/ everyone
everywhere
no
nothing
nobody/ no one
nowhere
46
Grammar Focus
Grammar Review
5.
6.
7.
8.
Put the verbs in brackets in the right tense form. Use Present, Past and Future Progressive.
1. Who (talk) to?
I (talk) to an old friend.
2. When I entered the house, the phone (ring)
3. What (do) this afternoon?
We (have) a party tonight. So, about six
oclock this evening, my sister and I (help) our
mother.
4. He (not/practise) the guitar when I came to see
him, he (feed) the cat.
5.
6.
7.
8.
47
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
TEAM WORK
Match a sentence in column A to one in column B according to their meanings. Compare your
choices with those of your classmates. Read out the matched sentences and comment on them.
A
a. There may be days when you get up in the morning and things arent the way you had hoped they
would be.
b. There are times when people disappoint you.
c. There will be challenges to face and changes to
make in your life, and it is up to you to accept
them.
d. So when the days come that are filled with frustration and unexpected responsibilities, ...
READING
The class is divided in two groups: group A reads part I, group B part II.
Read the text and fill the gaps with the following words: motivator, mood, scared, positive,
action, choice, react, learn, die and check your answers.
I. Jerry was the kind of
guy you love to hate. He was
always in a good mood and
always had something positive to say. When someone
would ask him how he was
doing, he would reply, If I
were any better, I would be
twins!
He
was
a
unique
manager. He was a natural
_______. If an employee was
having a bad day, Jerry was there telling the employee
how to look on the _______ side of the situation.
This really made me curious, so one day I went up
to Jerry and asked him, You cant be a positive person
all of the time. How do you do it? Jerry replied, Each
morning I wake up and say to myself, Jerry, you have
two choices today. You can choose to be in a good mood
or you can choose to be in a bad _______. I choose to
be in a good mood. Each time something bad happens,
48
B
1. But those are the times when you must remind yourself to trust your own opinions, to keep your life
focused on believing in yourself.
2. Because the challenges and changes will only help
you to find the goals that you know are meant to
come true for you.
3. Remember to believe in yourself and all you want
your life to be.
4. Thats when you have to tell yourself that things will
get better.
sive care, Jerry was released from the hospital with fragments of the
bullets still in his body. When I saw Jerry about 6 months after the
accident, and asked him how he was, he replied, If I were any better, Id be twins.
I asked him what had gone through his mind as the robbery took
place. As I lay on the floor, I remembered that I had two choices: I
could choose to live, or I could choose to ____. I chose to live.
Werent you scared? I asked. Jerry continued, The doctors
were great. They kept telling me I was going to be fine. But when
they moved me into the emergency room and I saw the faces of the
doctors and nurses, I got really______. In their eyes, I read, Hes a
dead man. I knew I needed to take ______.
What did you do? I asked.
Well, there was a nurse asking me if I was allergic to anything. Yes, I replied. The doctors and nurses stopped
working as they waited for my reply I took a deep breath and yelled, Bullets! Over their laughter, I told them, I
am choosing to live. Operate on me as if I am alive, not dead.
By Francie Baltazar-Schwartz
Adapted and edited
COMPREHENSION CHECK
Each group read their part of the text again and ask and answer the following questions according to their part of the text.
Group B asks:
1. What kind of person is Jerry?
2. What does he say when someone asks how he is
doing?
3. What makes Jerry so unique (special)?
4. What is Jerrys life credo (belief)?
5. What choice did Jerry make every morning?
6. How does he manage to do so?
7. What choice does Jerry make when something bad
happens?
Group A asks:
1. What happened to Jerry one morning?
2. Did he survive? What happened next?
3. What choice did he make while he was lying on the
floor?
4. Was he scared?
5. What did doctors tell him?
6. What did Jerry read in the doctors eyes?
7. What choice did he make?
8. How did he manage it?
SPEAKING
a) Look back at the ideas expressed by the phrases in ex. 1 and say which pair of sentences
expresses the moral/main idea of the text better. Give your arguments.
b) When making choices, Jerry expresses two opposite ideas. Find them in the text.
e. g. To be in a good mood or to be in a bad mood.
PAIR WORK
Select the authors questions from the text and Jerrys replies during their meeting after the accident. Practice their conversation for 3 minutes with your classmate and role-play it in front of the
class.
Do It at Home
Describe in 100 words a situation in your life when you had to make a choice and it had a positive
outcome.
49
UNIT
Progress Test
1
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
READING
a) Read the following text and write, in your own words, what makes you unique.
Think what a remarkable and miraculous thing it
is to be you! Of all the people who have come and gone
on the earth, since the beginning of time, not ONE of
them is like YOU!
No one who has ever lived or is to come has had
your combination of abilities, talents, appearance,
friends, acquaintances, responsibilities, sorrows and
opportunities.
No ones hair grows exactly the way yours does. No
ones finger prints are like yours. No one has the same
combination of secret inside jokes and family expressions that you know.
No one prays about exactly the same concerns as
you do. No one is loved by the same people that love
you NO ONE!
No one before, no one to come. YOU ARE
ABSOLUTELY UNIQUE!
GRAMMAR
A True Story
A cat, a black one named Pluto, belonged to my
aunt Aggie and she thought he was wonderful. If
aunt Aggie was doing anything, Pluto did the same.
When she washed herself, the cat washed ...; when
50
European
Language
Evaluate Yourself.
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
Yes No Improve
51
UNIT
LESSON
1
At Leisure
Boredom Is Not an Option
DISCUSSION POINTS
Answer the questions and exchange opinions on the quotation given in point 3.
1. Have you ever been bored? When do you get
bored? How do you feel when you are bored?
2. What do you usually do to get rid of boredom? As
a class, brainstorm things you could do to get rid of
boredom.
3. Read the quotation and comment on it: He who
seeks rest, finds boredom. He who seeks work,
finds rest.
READING
Read the text and decide on the topic sentence of each paragraph. Then comment on the sentence
in italics in paragraph 3.
What Is Boredom?
1. Have you ever thought what
boredom is? Boredom is a state
of anxiety and low self-respect.
Were educated to get satisfaction
from a very limited set of activities: watching movies, eating, reading, programming, talking with
friends or daydreaming. Were in a
state of comfort and balance every
time we do something we like. But
the moment were not doing it anymore, something very
subtle, yet extremely powerful happens.
2. The bad news is that situation is contagious.
Pretty soon it will spread to other areas of your life.
Boredom likes wide spaces; it has an inner sense of
expansion.
3. There are only two things that can transpire
when someone is bored. People either use this time to
become constructive or destructive. When we become
bored, it can provide a great opportunity to explore life
and who we are. Otherwise, if we dont use this time
to be constructive, we choose to be
mentally lazy and become destructive whether with depression,
loneliness, or acting out in some
way just to get attention.
4. When boredom is not used
as an opportunity to be more constructive, it can turn into something that looks like kids getting
in trouble, becoming depressed, or
messing things up around the house. Many parents get
frustrated with their kids when this happens, yet fail
to realize that its the parents responsibility to teach
their kids how to use their time to be creative and use
their imagination to come up with something to do.
5. When we dont know how to use our imagination,
life can easily be filled with a lot of boring moments. If
we dont have a healthy imagination to create healthy
definitions and beliefs about what were doing, life is
boring.
COMPREHENSION CHECK
52
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
5. loneliness /'lEunlInEs/
1. anxiety /AN'zaIEtI/
6. frustrated /frs'treItId/
2. subtle /'stl/
3. contagious /kEn'teIdZEs/ 7. boredom /'b:(r)dEm/
4. transpire /trAns'paIE/
4
d)
VOCABULARY TASK
3 subtle
4 contagious
5 transpire
g)
TEAM WORK
2 self-respect
h)
1 anxiety
c)
f)
7 frustrated
8 fail
e)
Your best friend is going through some hard moments and you dont know how to help him. So,
you decide to write a letter to a magazine about your friends problem and ask for help. After you
finish writing, you exchange the copy-book with another pair of students who take the role of the
magazine and write an answer to your letter, and you to theirs. When everybody has finished the
task, as a class, discuss the problems and the solutions suggested by your classmates.
PROJECT WORK
In teams design a poster which will reflect your team members ways of getting rid of boredom by
drawing on it, writing, sticking and what not. Present your poster to the class. Give it a title.
Do It at Home
1 Look at the pictures and say how the pictures are similar and how they differ. Make funny comments on each of them.
2 Write a paragraph on the topic: Leisure is the time for doing something useful.
53
UNIT
LESSON
1
Teen Bestsellers
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
Read the information about a bestseller popular with teenagers. Identify five reasons why the
Twilight Series is so popular with people, especially with teenagers.
Unless you have been living
under a rock for the past few years,
you have heard of the series of movies known as the Twilight Series.
This series of movies and books have
become so popular that people often
wonder why it is so popular.
The series is about vampires
and werewolves and, of course, has
a love story, as well. Its a Romeo
and Juliet story with a supernatural
twist. Buffy, Charmed, Harry Potter and all the other
paranormal books, TV series, and movies set the stage
for a generation that is intrigued by the paranormal.
The main characters are teenagers, which makes it
easily related to those who are still in their teens. And,
naturally, older people were once teenagers too, and
perhaps it makes them nostalgic about the awkward
years they survived through.
And there is one more reason for its popularity that
54
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. twilight /'twaIlaIt/
2. vampires /'vAmpaIEz/
3. werewolves /'wiE,wulvz/
4. awkward /':kwEd/
COMPREHENSION CHECK
VOCABULARY TASK
Read the text again, and together with your partner try to deduce the meaning of the words in bold
from the context. Consult the dictionary if necessary.
WRITING
Read the opinions of two teenagers, taken from an Internet forum, about the Twilight series and
write the main idea of each of them.
I have to admit that I LOVE the Twilight series. Now I am well
work of art (at least not to me) however I have read it 3 times
time and enjoy to the fullest every single one of those times!
You go into reading Twilight with the hopes of just having fun
and escaping your own life then you should be able to see and
Susan, 13
Diana, 15
PAIR WORK
Work in pairs. Ask and answer the questions below and guess the film your partner is thinking of.
a) What type of film is it (action, thriller, adventure,
love story, etc.)?
b) Who is the director of the film?
c) Who stars in the film?
SPEAKING
Recommend or dont recommend a film or a book to the class, using the following adjectives:
interesting, boring, exciting, amusing, well-directed, sentimental, well-acted, frightening etc.
e.g. I recommend you watch Twilight because its really exciting.
Listen to and read the dialogue when inviting someone to the cinema and be ready to role-play
similar dialogues.
Do It at Home
Look at the pictures from another teen bestseller, Harry Potter and write a story about the
Magic School of Witchcraft of Hogwarts, where Harry Potter studies the Art of Witchcraft. Would
you like to study in such a school? Why? Use the following words:
magical ability, a wand, a cauldron, potion ingredients, broomstick, History of Magic, Charms,
Astronomy, Herbology, Flying lessons.
55
UNIT
LESSON
Never Give Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
rings
TEAM WORK
wall bars
net
ball
vaulting horse
READING
mattress
parallel bars
dumb-bells
Read the text and say how Michael Jordan made such a fabulous career in sport.
1. When young children are asked
why they want to become sports
stars, they will often mention money
and fame. What they dont understand about someone like Michael
Jordan is that he was always focused
on one thing, becoming a better basketball player. His fame and fortune
only followed his success on the
court. Now he is a billionaire.
2. Despite all the loving fans, the
people Michael Jordan listened to the
most were his biggest critics. When
they said he couldnt play defense, he
won the defensive player of the year.
When they said he couldnt win a
championship, he won three in a row.
He played with the flu; he played when hurt; he even
played after his fathers death. But all those difficulties never changed his passion for competition. He has
failed at every point in his life. Yet those failures never
stopped him from trying again and again. It is through
his failures that he has succeeded beyond imagination.
56
basket
COMPREHENSION CHECK
ROLE PLAY
Arrange the lines in the correct order to make a dialogue when refusing
invitiations. Then make similar dialogues and be ready to role-play them.
a) How nice, Ive met you! Would you like to come
with me to the swimming pool tomorrow?
b) Hi, Mike,
c) Oh, what a pity you cant come with me! Perhaps,
we can go there next week.
d) Hi, John,
e) It would be nice. I hope you ll enjoy yourself. Bye!
f) Bye, Mike!
g) Thanks a lot, but I think I cant. Im helping my
mum tomorrow.
Listen to the dialogue and fill in the gaps with the words: soccer, training, team, athletics, baseball, sports. Then with your partner compare sports in British and Moldovan schools.
Listen again, and with your partner compare sports in British and Moldovan schools.
Do It at Home
1 Read the rules below and select the sports and games which are used with either play, do or
go.
Play is used with ball sports or competitive games where we play against another person.
Do is used for a recreational activity or a non-team sport that does not use a ball.
Go is used with activities that end in -ing.
1. He used to _____ jogging every day when he was at the college. 2. I love _____ a good game of chess in the
evening. 3. She _____ gymnastics for over six years. 4. This summer we _____ windsurfing every day on our
vacation. 5. Hes a good athlete. He _____ basketball, baseball and hockey, too. 6. My wife _____ horse riding
three times a week. 7. Why dont we _____ a set of tennis? 8. Some people think that _____ aerobics is the
best possible way of keeping fit. 9. His idea of a perfect summer holiday is _____ sailing. 10. We like to _____
hiking.
2 Write a paragraph about your Physical Education classes, using words from ex. 2 and 6.
57
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
VOCABULARY TASK
SPEAKING
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. Mercury /'m:kjUrI/
2. Venus /'vi:nEs/
3. Earth /:/
4. Mars /m:z/
5. Jupiter /'dZu:pItEr/
6. Saturn /'sAt:n/
7. Uranus /jU'reInEs/
8. Neptune /'neptju:n/
9
5
6
7
Comment on Stanisaw Lems excerpt, taken from his famous book Solaris and compare it with
your answers to question e) in Exercise 1.
We take off into space, ready for anything: for solitude, for difficulties,
for tiredness, death. We dont want to conquer the cosmos, we simply want to
extend the boundaries of Earth to the frontiers of the cosmos. We dont want
to enslave other races, we simply want to exchange our values with them.
We are only searching for Man. We have no need of other worlds. A single
world, our own, is enough for us; but we cant accept it for what it is. We are
searching for an ideal image of our own world: we go in search for a planet, a
civilization superior to our own but developed on the basis of a prototype of
our ancient past.
58
READING
Read the text and fill in the time line you can see below with the years important in the epoch of
the Moon Conquest, and say what stands behind each of these points in time.
1964
_____?
_____?
_____?
Now
To the Moon
The
Earth's
nearest
neighbour, the Moon, was the
most studied object in the night
sky long before the first rocket
was launched a talisman for
lovers, an emblem for dreamers,
and a familiar friend to
astronomers.
The United States got its
first taste of moon dust in 1964
when its unmanned spacecraft crashed onto the lunar
surface.
On January 27, 1967, astronauts Virgil Grissom,
Edward White and Roger Chafee entered the first
Apollo capsule for a pre-flight test. All three were killed
when a fire swept through the Apollo command module.
The missions designated Apollo 4, 5, 6 ,7, 8, 9 and
10 were unmanned test flights flown in Earth orbit to
test the techniques and technology that would go to the
Moon.
On July 20, 1969, Apollo 11 reached the Moon with
two astronauts on board. Neil Armstrong took the first
steps on the Moon proclaiming: One small step for a
man, one giant leap for mankind.
Apollo 12, 14, 15, 16, 17 landed on the Moon
VOCABULARY TASK
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. launch /l:ntS/
2. module /'mdju:l/
3. capsule /'kApsju:l/
4. astronaut /'AstrEn:t/
Do It at Home
Imagine what will happen in the next 50 years in the following aspects of human life: technology
(mobile phones); media (bookshops); environment (climate); work, school (at home); entertainment (virtual reality) or society (a lot of free time), and write about it in 100 words.
59
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
Answer these questions about great explorers and their desire to travel at the risk of their lives.
1. List names of some great explorers. Discuss as a class what they are famous for.
2. What makes people set off to unknown lands, sometimes at the risk of their lives?
3. Would you fly to another planet or go into the deep of the ocean driven by wanderlust, even if it could take
years of flight, lots of risks and dangers, and the possibility of never coming back home? Why?
4. Make up sentences with the words from Word Prompt (Page 61).
READING
Read the texts about the greatest explorers of all time, and state what each explorer is famous for.
Roald Amundsen ( 1872 1928 )
His Antarctic expedition discovered the South Pole
in 1910-1912. Amundsen was a Norwegian explorer
and a key figure in the heroic age of Antarctic
exploration. He also made the first voyage through
the Northwest Passage (19031906) in the Arctic. He
disappeared in June 1928 in the Arctic while taking
part in a rescue mission by plane.
60
COMPREHENSION CHECK
Read the text about the world great explorers, split into teams and answer the questions:
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
WRITING
Make up sentences about the great explorers using relative pronouns as in the example given:
e.g. The person, who discovered America, was C. Columbus.
TEAM WORK
a) Is it better to travel or stay at home? Split into two teams and debate the topic choosing the
arguments given below by ticking the ones you need.
You learn a lot of new things
You can experience a lot at home
Its dangerous sometimes
You dont make
where you are safe
You can see how other people live
You learn
your parents worry
You dont have to speak another language,
to solve a lot of problems
You make changes in your life
it makes you feel comfortable
There are a lot of interesting proChanges are not always good
Life at home is exciting enough
grammes about life abroad on TV
Its a new experience
b) There are scientists who say people can travel in time. Do you
think it could happen? Look at the picture and discuss with your
classmates what it represents in your opinion. Would you like
to travel in time? What period of time would you like to see and
why?
PAIR WORK
Do It at Home
1 Explain the words in bold from ex. 2 and use them in sentences
of your own.
2 Find information and pictures about two places: one which you
would like to visit, and another which wouldnt suit you. Tell the
class why.
61
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Person
Thing
Person
Thing
Subject
who(that)
that (which)
Subject
who
which
Object
(that)
(that)
Object
who (whom)
which
PAIR WORK
You are pointing to a person or a thing; you are telling your friend something about that person
or thing. Connect the following sentences with relative pronouns (a) or without (b).
a) 1. Thats the school. It has a swimming pool.
2. Thats the word. It sounds strange.
3. Thats the teacher. Hes going to give a test.
4. Thats the shop. It sells English books.
5. Thats the actress. She won the prize.
Perfect
Past
The present result of the past action or experience in time so far Have? Have
Have
Has? not
+Part. II
Has
Has
not
Yet
Never
Ever
Recently
Lately
Since
For
Have?
Has?
Since
For
He has been sightseeing since 10 oclock.
62
Present
Already
Just
Have
not
Has
not
Future
After
Before
By
When
By
Because
Duration of the
action with refeHad? Had
rence to a moment
not
in the past
Had
been+verb+ing
Since
For
I had been sightseeing for an
hour when you called me.
Since By
For
I will have been sightseeing for an hour
when you join me.
Shall/Will have
+been+verb+ing
Shall? Shall
Will? not
Will
not
WRITING
Open the brackets using either the Perfect or the Perfect Continouos Tenses.
1. I (see) ... that movie four times. 2. She (work) ... for that company for three years. 3. People (not travel,yet)
... to Mars. 4. Nobody ... ever (climb) ... that mountain. 5. She (sleep) ... for 10 hours when the car arrived.
6. He ... never (travel) ... by train. 7. James (teach) ... at the university since June. 8. A: ... you ever (meet) ...
him? B: No, I ... (not meet) him. 9. You (grow) ... since the last time I saw you. 10. By this time yesterday, I
... (finish) the project. 11. My English ... really (improve) ... since I moved to Australia. 12. They (be) ... married for 40 years by the end of this month. 13. By 2020, I ... (live) in Madrid for 15 years. 14. We (wait) ... here
for over two hours! 15. Man (walk) ... on the Moon. 16. I (know) ... him since my childhood. 17. Bill ... just (
arrive) ... . 18. She (watch) ... too much television lately. 19. What ... you (do) ... ? You are dirty. 20. (finish,
you) ... this novel by next week?
Read the sentences and ask passive questions in order that the preposition comes in the end, as in
the example given.
e.g. They have reduced the cost by 20 %. What percentage has the cost been reduced by?
1. I eat salad with a fork. What ____?
2. I sent for the doctor 10 min ago. When ____?
3. They made a house of bricks. What ____?
4. The teacher explained the rules to the pupils.
Whom ____?
The Present Perfect Passive Voice is used according to the rules the Present Perfect Active Voice is
used. It expresses an action which has/ hasnt (just,
already) been performed.
SPEAKING
b. Model: table/lay
The table had been laid before mother came.
1. the pizza/send for; 2. the flowers/water; 3. the
cake/make; 4. the bread/buy; 5. the guest/take care
of; 6. the dining-room/air.
63
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
Britain has recently been described as a leisure society. This is because there are a great variety
of leisure activities. Read the texts and choose some activities you would like to practice. Why?
Exercise or Sports
Many teenagers love to play sports. Through
their school or through local recreation centres
and junior sports leagues, they can join teams
for everything from soccer to ice hockey or
archery. If the teen is not competitive, he can
get involved in rock climbing, canoeing, hiking
or swimming. If those dont interest him, he can do something different such as dance
lessons, martial arts or horse riding.
Summer Jobs
While a job may not sound like a hobby, for a
teenager it can be just as intriguing and exciting as one, especially when it involves making
money. Some teenagers find some kind of
work during the empty summer months, preferably related to something they like. For a teen who enjoys swimming, lifeguarding
is an ideal summer job, for instance. It will keep him busy, teach him responsibility and
help him develop useful skills. As an alternative, teens can mow grass, walk dogs or
babysit for money.
N.B.The average weekly pocket money for 12 to 16 year olds is 9.53.
Communication and
Computers
The young generation is
fond of communication.
A lot of teenagers spend
plenty of time playing on
computers. The Internet
seems really good fun. They enjoy chatting to and texting
friends on their mobiles, hanging out with their mates, listening to the latest music, shopping for the latest fashions
or just watching movies on the television or at the cinema.
VOCABULARY TASK
What text(s) are the words or word combinations taken from? Explain the words.
hitchhiking, furry, texting, soccer, lifeguarding.
64
ROLE PLAY
Acting in plays is another British teens hobby. Have you ever tried to act in a play or skit? In
teams, write a script about winter and role play it in one of the primary school classes . It could be:
Winter in the Forest, Christmas Tale or New Year Surprise or whatever other one.
SPEAKING
a) In the text Other Kinds of Activities you can see the activity helping people in need. Do you
think it could become someones hobby in our country? Would you take on such a hobby? Why?
How do you imagine doing this? In teams, work out a plan how teenagers could help people in
need. Give examples of other hobbies which can be enjoyable and useful not only to you, but also
to other people.
b) Lets talk about the plans for the next week-end. What do you think the people in each photo
are talking about.
1.
2.
4.
3.
5.
TEAM-WORK
Comment on Michael Jordans quotations and say what the connection is between failure and
success.
a) To learn to succeed, you must first learn to fail.
b) Ive failed over and over and over again in my life
and that is why I succeed.
WRITING
g) snore
h) travel a lot
Do It at Home
PROJECT WORK
a) In teams make a poster under the heading: Teenagers Hobbies and Interests in Moldova.
Illustrate it with pictures and drawings. Make it interesting and attractive. Then discuss the projects: positive and negative aspects. Give advice to your classmates how they could improve their
projects.
b)Write a short report for your school magazine in 6-8 sentences about your classmates hobbies.
It should be based on answers to the questions beginning with: What are?Where do? When
do? How many? Why do?
65
UNIT
Progress Test
1
Read the poem and give a title to it. Then write down its main idea.
What is this life if, full of care,
We have no time to stand and stare.
Read the poem again and find synonyms to the words given below.
a) to watch
c) branch
e) brook
b) under
d) forest
f) to start
Fill in the gaps with the right form of the verb in the Perfect or Perfect Progressive Tenses either
active or passive:
a) When I arrived at the party, Tom (to go already) _____________ home.
b) By this time tomorrow the book (already, to publish) _____________ .
c) I (to wait) _____________ for two hours but she has not come yet.
d) By 2013, I _____________ (to live) in Madrid for 5 years.
e) How long (you to know) _____________ him?
f) The instructions (to give) _____________ by the clerk.
g) Im not hungry. I just (to have) _____________ lunch.
Look at the pictures and make five sentences about them, using relative pronouns.
e.g. The boy who is playing in the sand is very cute.
66
Write a paragraph in 12-14 sentences about the activity you like doing when you have free time.
State how often you do it, how much time you spend on it, if it is expensive to do or not. Then state
if it is useful and if it can help you develop some skills you will need in the future.
Evaluate Yourself.
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
Yes
No
Improve
67
UNIT
LESSON
1
Celebrations
Holidays
DISCUSSION POINTS
Listen to the text and insert the missing words from the box.
a) At the heart of the festival
is a legend that when you launch
your lantern in the sky one gets
an opportunity to cleanse the...,
get in touch with ancestors to
strengthen family ... or rekindle
the feeling of love.
Fire symbolizes ... . It is therefore considered that, together
with lanterns in the sky fly away
all the ..., problems and concerns,
leaving only bright people and
good ... .
c) Every year, Venice, for 12 days turns into a giant stage with
scenery for one of the most ambitious and dazzling carnivals in
the world. Unrestrained ..., non-stop music, sleepless nights, a
parade of painted ... and masks, masks, masks
b) Chinese city of Harbin one of the centres of ... culture in the world. The International Festival begins January 5th and lasts one month.
Ice sculptures are made in the form of buildings and monuments, animals, humans and mythical ... . Lasers and ... are used to illuminate sculptures, there
are also variations on the background light of sculptures that look especially beautiful at night.
purification
ice and snow
fantasy
creatures
hardships
lights
boats
ties
feelings
soul
68
READING
Read the text and answer the questions below the text.
COMPREHENSION CHECK
tip
a) significance
b) breakout
c) due to
d) unity
e) diversity
f) rule of law
g) jointly
h) summit
1. extinct /Iks'tINkt/
2. rekindle /,ri:'kIndl/
3. lantern /'lAntEn/
4. ancestor /'AnsestE(r)/
5. sculpture /'sklptSE(r)/
6. scenery /'si:n(E)rI/
7. unrestrained /,nrI'streInd/
8. desolation /des(E)l'eIS(E)n/
9. diversity /daI'v:sEtI/
10. mythical /'mIIk(E)l/
VOCABULARY WORK
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
Do It at Home
In 100 words write about a holiday you like most of all.
69
UNIT
LESSON
tip
DISCUSSION POINTS
1. fiance /fI'nseI/
2. fiance /fI'nseI/
3. recipient /'rI'sIpIEnt/
4. gala /'g:lE/
5. diocese /'daIEsIs//
6. adage /'AdIdZ//
7. Thanksgiving /,ANks'gIvIN/
Look at the pictures and say what you would choose for:
a) your grandparents golden wedding
anniversary.
b) your mothers/ fathers birthday;
c) your little sisters/ brothers first
day at school;
d) your best friends birthday;
e) your brothers wedding.
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
3.
1.
2.
4.
7.
5.
6.
8.
Listen to the story The Vase and say what spoiled the festivity: money, poverty or dishonesty?
a) What do you think the moral of the story is? Do you agree with the adage Honesty is the best policy?
b) Who was the most to blame for what had happened?
c) Who was the least to blame? There are four characters in the story. Put the numbers from 1 to 4 opposite
each character according to the degree of blame.
The student
The girl
The saleswoman
The servant
d) What piece of advice would you give to the young student?
e) What piece of advice would you give to the shop-girl?
4
70
READING
Read the tips on how to choose the right gift and say which of them is the most useful.
Read the tips again and match them with the ideas in the boxes.
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)
i)
VOCABULARY
to play against;
to serve a purpose.
Do It at Home
In 100 words, write a paragraph about what you would/wouldnt do if you had only half an hour
to choose a present for your friend.
71
UNIT
LESSON
1
School Traditions
DISCUSSION POINTS
Teachers Day
School Reunion
First Bell
Commencement
5. Book Day
6. Last Bell for School-Leavers
7. Valentines Day
TEAM WORK
There is a language festival at every school in Moldova. It is usually a week when everybody
speaks only English, French, German or other languages. Students perform concerts in foreign
languages. Imagine you have to perform something. Dramatize: Little Red Riding Hood and the
Wolf. In order to do that: a) Read the poem minding the intonation; b) Do the Vocabulary Work;
c) distribute the parts and dramatize it.
72
tip
1. tough /tf/
2. yelping /'jelpIN/
3. furry /'f:rI/
4. knickers /'nIkEz/
3. leer /lIE/
3. cloak /klEuk/
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
VOCABULARY WORK
a)
b)
c)
d)
Explain the following adjectives: decent, horrid, terrified, tough, furry, frightful.
Infer the meaning of the verbs in the poem: to flick, to whip, to yelp.
Look up in the dictionary the meaning of the following words: helping, knickers, leer, caviar.
Use these expressions in your own sentences: to come across; to taste like; to eat up; to
put on; to be right.
Listen to these students speaking about their School Traditions and express your opinion about it.
a) Listen again and put down
what holiday each of them is
speaking about.
b) Listen again and put down
some details about each holiday.
SPEAKING
Do It at Home
Write a short description of an event you celebrate at school that you like/ dislike most of all (100
words).
73
UNIT
LESSON
1
Enjoying Together
DISCUSSION POINTS
Look at the pictures and answer the following questions. Use the
words from Mind your pronunciation when needed.
a) Is the Hram (City/Town/Village Day) a national, international or local
holiday?
b) When is your City/Town/Village Day?
c) Why do people celebrate this day?
d) What do people do on this day?
e) How would you explain what is celebrated on the City/ Town/
Village Day to a foreigner?
2.
3.
4.
5.
SPEAKING
74
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1.
1. bonfire /'bnfaIE/
2. gathering //'gATErIN/
3. flourish of trumpets /'flrIS Ev
'trmpIts/
4. fanfare /'fAnfEr/
5. illumination /I,lu:mI'neISn/
6. fireworks /'faIEw:ks/
1.
a) On which occasion can each card be sent and to whom? Name the holiday and the date when possible.
b) Who is the sender of each card?
c) Which of the cards is written in formal style and which in informal style?
More than a
4.
3.
diploma... youve
Just thinking of
got curiosity that
you on Valentines
will keep you learning
How is
Day and hopore
a friend
every day of your life. M
like you
differen
ing your heart is
ve
t fr
than plans... you ha
could ne om a light bulb
actly
happy!
? You passions to carry you ex . More than you
ver be re
to go
placed!
Happy
Happy B
Have a where youre meant ething amazing.
i
r
t
h
d
a
som
t
y
go
e
!
Valentines Day!
realize... youv
t always.
Hope you remember tha
2.
ve that
and steady lo
re
su
e
th
r
o
F
d me, the
iled to groun
fa
er
ev
n
s
a
h
ism that
ce and optim
en
ti
a
p
t
ie
u
q
e me,
iled to inspir
fa
er
ev
n
e
v
a
h
m of my
om the botto
fr
u
yo
k
n
a
th
rt.
grateful hea
ers Day!
Happy Moth
e)
VOCABULARY
Easter is Gods
way of saying I
Love You Forever.
Happy Easter!
5.
WRITING
Do It at Home
UNIT
LESSON
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
9. Photographs or videos of all stages of the ceremony are taken, including several in front of the
church after the ceremony.
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. bride /braId/
2. fianc /fI'nseI/
3. fiance /fI'nseI/
4. bridegroom /'braIdgrum/
5. engagement /In'geIdZmEnt/
6. page /peIdZ/
COMPREHENSION CHECK
Match the words with the definitions. Say what role every person plays at the wedding.
engagement
best man
brides maid
fiance
76
fiance
the public declaration of an intended marriage, usually formally announced on three successive Sundays in the parish
churches of both the engaged;
page
the woman you have said officially you are going to marry;
bann
Listen and fill in the gaps with the words from the box.
open-air; recent; common; possessor; covers; comprises; traditional; folk-constructions; reassembled; oldest; located; collections; units; village.
SPEAKING
VOCABULARY WORK
a) In pairs, tell each other what these words on folklore mean: folk-art; folk-architecture; culture; civilization, ethnography, folk constructions, workshops, open-air museum.
b) Find these words in the text and explain them: spot, research, shore, image, collection, monograph.
c) Find pairs of synonyms:
1. to cover; 2. to comprise; 3. to be located; 4. to travel all across; 5. to track down; 6. to dismantle; 7. to consist of; 8. to go everywhere; 9. to put apart; 10. to put together; 11. to register; 12. to
reassemble; 13. to include all; 14. to be placed.
Do It at Home
In 100 words write about a tradition in Moldova you would like a foreigner to learn about.
77
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Grammar Focus
SEQUENCE OF TENSES
To report statements, use a past tense in the subordinate clause if the main verb in the main clause is in a past tense.
Use a proper reporting verb to interpret the speakers attitude.
I am writing now.
He said (that) he was writing then.
Ill call you tomorrow.
She told us that she would call me the next day.
That is how I made this mistake.
He explained to us how he had made that mistake.
To report general questions, use if or whether and the verb tenses as in statements with the direct word order. Introduce
the reported question with such verbs as ask, wonder, want to know.
Do you like travelling?
She asked if I liked travelling.
To report special questions, use the same question word and the verb tenses as in statements with the direct word
order.
Where are you meeting with your friends tonight?
He asked where we were meeting our friends that evening.
To report commands and orders, use a proper reporting verb and the to-infinitive for positive sentences and not to-infinitive for negative ones.
Please, do not smoke in here!
She told us not to smoke in there.
Move to your right!
She commanded me to move to my right.
READING
Grammar Focus
Conditional clauses are subordinate clauses that
denote conditions. They are usually introduced by
conjunctions if, whether, etc...
Conditionals can be real and unreal.
Real
1. If the temperature is below 0 oC, water freezes.
2. If I have a headache, I take an aspirin.
3. If it rains tomorrow, I will stay at home.
78
CONDITIONALS
Unreal in the Present
4. If I had a headache now, I would take an aspirin.
/but I dont have a headache now and I wont take an
aspirin./
Unreal in the Past
5. If I had had a headache last week, I would have
taken an aspirin. /but I didnt have a headache last
week and I didnt take an aspirin/
Condition
If-clause/
Conditional Clause
Present Simple
Main clause
Example
But remember:
2
3
Listen to the text The Crossword is to Blame and put down the conditional sentences.
PAIR WORK
Model: What would you do if you were the director of this school?
If I were the director, I would build a swimming pool.
e) You were alone on a remote island.
f) You didnt have anywhere to live or anything to
eat.
g) You forgot about your best friends birthday.
Grammar Focus
I WISH
SPEAKING
Make wishes based on the given situations. Think of as many possible wishes as you can for each
situation.
Example: You are tired. What do you wish?
I wish I had gone to bed earlier last night.
I wish I were sleeping now.
a) You were late for school yesterday.
b) You are not ready for the lesson.
c) You missed the concert rehearsal for the Foreign
Language Week.
79
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
TEAM WORK
1.
Youve never been 21 before,
Now youve got the key of the
door, Its really great to be 21.
Now you are a man, my son.
Love, Dad
4.
3.
I was very upset to hear about your accident.
I have enclosed some magazines. You'll need
something interesting to look at! I hope the
nurses are nice.
All the best,
Freddy
5.
I was very sad to learn about Alberts death. It is difficult to know what to say. As you know, I
worked with him for thirty years. He was a wonderful person... he was always ready to help everyone. He will be sadly missed. I am sorry, but I was too ill to come to the funeral
Yours sincerely,
David Brown
Headings:
b)
3
80
a)
New Babies
Congratulations on your
Silver Wedding
c)
d)
e)
Listen to the story The Present and say what the characters speak about. Listen to the story
again and guess what present it was.
READING
Read the advertisments below and say where you would celebrate your birthday if:
a) you were 50; b) you were living in Chisinau; c) you were living in London; d) you were living in the USA;
e) you were 80.
A Typical Moldovan
Village
You can rent a small peasant house on the shore of a lake,
30 km from Chisinau. Enjoy
Moldovan music and cuisine, stay
overnight in the company of nice
birds and wild animals.
Karaoke Club
PAIR WORK
OCCASIONS:
a) Anniversary
b) Birthday
c) Holiday
d) Graduation
e) Baby Congratulations
f) Get well wishes
g) I am sorry card
a. not to dance
b. to organise a farewell party
c. to decide not to meet
d. to be present at a party
e. to organise a reception
WRITING
Do It at Home
In 100 words write a letter to your friend and invite him/her to your birthday party. Make use of
Letter Writing, page 149.
81
UNIT
Progress Test
1
Classify the topical vocabulary into personal, family, national and international celebrations.
baby shower
barbecue
dance
family get-together
going-away party
feast
fireworks display
funeral
graduation
parade
Personal
picnic
potluck dinner
reception
wedding
welcome party
cookout
christening
family gathering
get-together
party
Family
wedding
bonfire
commemorate
costume
flag
float
parade
procession
site
anniversary party
National
birthday party
cocktail party
dinner party
fancy dress party
attend a party
cancel a get-together
hold a reception
postpone a dance
throw a going-away party
International
Read the news report and fill in the text with the words from the box.
News Reporter: Hello. This is Charles Richards from Channel 7 News, and were down
here, at the City Mall, interviewing people on how they ... Christmas.
generous;
And, uh, hi young lady. What is your name?
sledding;
Young Girl:
Elizabeth Carter.
hide;
News Reporter: And, uh, Elizabeth, uh. How does your family celebrate Christmas?
celebrate;
Young Girl:
We go ..., and we go over to my grandparents house and have dinner
secret;
with them.
particular;
News Reporter: Well, that is great, and let me ask this young man. Hi, what is your
making;
name? [Johnny.] And Johnny, how old are you?
homework
Johnny:
Five.
sneak;
News Reporter: And, uh, does your family eat anything ... for Christmas?
work.
Johnny:
Turkey . . .
News Reporter: And what does Christmas mean to you?
Young Girl:
Going to my grandmas and ... their breakfast.
News Reporter: Going to grandmas and making breakfast. And let me ask another young man. Hi, what is your
name? [Steven.] Okay, and Steven, what does Christmas mean to you?
Steven:
Giving but not expecting to get.
News Reporter: Now, thats kind of hard for a young man like yourself. What does that mean: Giving but not
expecting.
Steven:
Well, one thing that we do is ... giving.
News Reporter: Secret giving? Now how does that ... in your family?
Steven:
We ... up to the porch of somebody that we want to give to, we put the gift that we want to give
to them, ring the doorbell, and ... .
News Reporter: Ring the doorbell and hide? Uh, so youre not expecting something; you just want to be ... to
someone else. Is that right?
Steven:
Yeah. Thats correct.
News Reporter: And lets interview one more. And, uh, how do you celebrate Christmas? What is the best thing
about Christmas and what does it mean to you?
Young Woman: It means getting off from school!
News Reporter: Getting off from school?! Do you all feel that way?
Group of Children: Yeah!!
Young Girl:
Because I hate ... .
News Reporter: Yeah. Well, thats all from the City Mall. Channel 7 reporting.
82
Evaluate Yourself.
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
Yes
No
Improve
83
UNIT
LESSON
1
The Observer
DISCUSSION POINTS
tip
sports results
reality show
soap
game show
films
music
sport
health
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIAT
1. technology /tek'nlEdZI/
1. magazine /mAgE'zi:n/
2. advertisement /Ed'v:tIsmEnt/
3. Chicago /SI'k:gEU/
4. broadcast /'br:dk:st/
5. charity /'tSArItI/
6. guest /gest/
7. sensational /sen'seIS(E)nl/
8. reliable /rI'laIEbl/
9. science /'saIEns/
10. tabloid /'tAblId/
READING
a) Read from Oprah Winfreys Web Page. Put the paragraphs in the right order. b) Tick the jobs
Opra has had in journalism.
a radio presenter
a news reporter
an editor
a photo reporter .
84
b) Mark sentences with T for true, F for false and E for extra information.
a. Over the years, Oprah Winfrey won a huge TV
audience.
b. Her family owned several popular magazines and
had control over US mass media industry.
c. She worked hard and was excellent at school.
d. In 1985, Oprah acted in Steven Spielbergs movie
The Color Purple.
m
a
s
s
m
e
d
i
a
o
b
n
e
w
s
d
o
s
l
t
r
e
a
l
l
i
t
y
s
v
o a
t z
w e
i p
t h
t o
e n
r e
h o
h o
d
w
s
p
o
r
t
v
w
s
c
r
e
p
o
r
t
e
r
t
a s
u c
d h
i a
e t
n r
c o
e o
u m
t m
t
w
e
b
s
i
t
e
b
y
ROLE-PLAY
Take part in a Talk Show Should We Say No to Mobile Phones in School? Choose your role.
2 Hosts
2 Guests
WRITING
Audience
votes;
asks questions;
gives opinions.
2 Guests
Give arguments for mobile
phones in schools:
pupils use a phone as a
dictionary, spell checker and
encyclopedia;
use the phone to store information;
your own arguments.
Do It at Home
1 Design the front page of your personal magazine, filled with the things you care about. Here you
can catch up on the news, discover amazing things from around the world, and stay connected to
the people closest to youall in one place. Present your news to the class.
MUSIC
LIFEST YLE
WORLD POLITICS
STREET ART
SPACE TR AVEL
3D PRINTING
UNIT
LESSON
DISCUSSION POINTS
or
a
a) Look at the shapes. Choose a shape about which you can say
Thats me. Try to feel the shape. If it is difficult for you to pick
up one, choose the shape which attracted your attention first.
triangle
square
circle
rectangle
zigzag
READING
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. palette /'palit/
2. canvas /'kAnvEs/
3. mosaic /mEu'zeIIk/
4. harlequin /''h:lIkwIn/
5. square /skwE/
6. triangle /'traIANgl/
7. rectangular /'rek'tANgjulE/
8. hexagon /'heksEgEn/
8. zigzag /'zigzAg/
a) Read the Art Catalogue. Match the paintings to their descriptions in geometrics shapes.
120
Art Catalogue
Art Catalogue
121
Wassily Kandinsky,
Swinning, 1925
GustavKlimt.
Expectation,
1905
This
artist
liked to
paint pictures that
can trick your eye. The
painting is on the flat surface,
yet by arranging the shapes and
colours he makes you think the picture
is 3 dimensional in the middle. The design of
the picture is perfectly symmetrical. This means that
the shapes are identical on both sides of an invisible line
through the centre.
86
,
rry
e
h
ex.
Re
di
sf
122
Art Catalogue
The
woman
in this painting
looks mysterious.
Only her face and
hands can be seen as
she looks for someone or
something. The picture
looks like coloured
mosaics. The artist
loved to use gold
and silver
palette.
Three-Faced Mask Ekoi people
2. Name two
things you can
find in an Art
Catalogue.
5. Name 5
objects made
up of different
shapes.
7. Draw 7 sym- 8. Name 8
bols.
things with a
flat surface.
SPEAKING
a) Work in groups of 3-4. Make a drawing of the world you would love to live in. b) Make a class gallery. Present your drawing. Share with the class what else you would like to add or take away from
the drawing. Name your world.
Do It at Home
1. Dream what you would like your future to be. Draw pictures, symbols or lines to represent your
future. 2. Look at what you have drawn and analyze it. Give a reason why the dream may be dificult to realize and give ways to overcome it. 3. Write 2-3 things you can do now to start making your
dream come true.
87
UNIT
LESSON
DISCUSSION POINTS
Work in groups of 4-5. Look at the picture and say how you feel today and what you need.
pa c
e Im tired I
m
ha
tip
pp
ee
m
so
es
g r ea t
I need
ling
a hu
fe e
In
Im
today I feel
READING
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. propriety /prE'praIEtI/
2. notoriety /nEUtE'raIEtI/
3. sobriety /sEu'braIEtI/
4. gear /gIE/
5. enemies /'enEmIz/
6. licence /'laIs(E)ns/
7. pneumonia /nju(:)'mEunjE/
8. penicillin /,penE'sIlEn/
9. strophe /'stroUfI:/
Presuppose...
Fleming was a poor Scottish farmer. One day in a field he heard a cry
for help. Fleming came to a deep bog and saw a boy in it asking for help.
After a forceful struggle, the farmer helped the boy get out of the bog. He
took him to his house where his wife, Mrs. Fleming, dried his cotton trousers and grey shirt and gave him some food.
Presuppose...
Presuppose...
88
d) Make up a class short story entitled Good Comes from Doing Good. Work in a chain. Follow
the scheme.
Who?
What?
Where?
When?
The problem
to solve.
Events.
The happy
end.
LISTENING
Listen to the song and put the stanzas in the right order.
Chorus: Im an alien
e) combat gear
f) ignorance
g) propriety
Life Wheel
SPEAKING
health/
fitness
food /
drink /
money
10
0%
family
relationships
hobby / fun
10
selftime
0%
friends
study /
personal
growth
100%
0%
Do It at Home
10
10
0%
89
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
In pairs, discuss the lessons the folktales in the pictures teach us. Share with the class.
e.g. Gogoaa: The moral is about understanding who you are, experimenting with your resources and ability
to avoid risks, knowing where to stop.
Gogoaa
Aladdin
Mowgli
King Lion
READING
a) a sly nature;
b) a peaceful hard worker;
c) the wisdom of knowing good and bad;
d) a personal spiritual nature of purity and grace;
e) stands for freedom with responsibility;
f) an independent nature.
A Courageous Falcon
Once there was a French king who received an impressive gift of two magnificent falcons. They were rare falcons, the most beautiful birds he had ever seen. He gave the precious birds to his talented falconer to be trained.
Months passed, and one day the head falconer informed the king that though one of the falcons was flying
majestically in the sky, the other bird had not moved from its branch since the day it had arrived.
The king called for healers and falconers from all the land to see the falcon, but no one could make the bird fly.
The bird is not injured. Maybe you need someone more familiar with the countryside to understand the nature
of this problem, said the kings considerate wife. It was an interesting idea. So, the king cried out to his court, Go
and get a farmer.
In the morning, the king was so delighted to see the falcon flying high above the palace gardens. It was such a
long-awaited moment. He said to his court, Bring me the doer of this miracle.
The court quickly found and brought the farmer to the king. How did you make the falcon fly? the king asked
the man.
90
6. his/your Highness
7. cling
8. cry out
d) Read the ending to the fable and say what helped the falcon become courageous.
With his head low, the farmer said to the king, It was very easy, your highness. I simply cut the branch where
the bird was sitting.
We are all made to fly to realize our incredible potential as human beings. But at times we sit on our branches, clinging to the things that are familiar to us. The possibilities are endless, but for most of us, they remain unrealistic, almost impossible. We conform to the familiar, the comfortable. So for the most part, our lives are ordinary
instead of exciting and fulfilling. Let us learn to destroy the branch of fear we hold to and free ourselves to the joy
of flight!
e) Complete the bingo suffix list with adjectives from the text. Be the first to say BINGO!
invent-ive
.........-ive
.........-ic
.........-ful
.........-ed
.........-al
.........-ing
.........-able
.........-ous
.........-cent
.........-ar
.........-ate
possible
.........-less
.........-ing
.........-ary
WRITING
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. bear /bE/
2. swan /swn/
3. falcon /'f:lkEn/
4. turkey /'t:kI/
5. courageous /kE'reIdZEs/
6. penguin /'peNgwin/
7. obedient /E'bi:djEnt/
8. panther /'pAnE/
obedient fly old enormous ant courageous happy butterfly beetle warm snake beautiful
bat mouse funny rat stupid sad slow cat dog smooth horse crazy sensible graceful dolphin elephant crocodile hard eagle ugly lion tiger panther rough strong shy wolf whale
weak free cow wild sheep loving helpful goat angry hen brave duck peaceful goose turkey fierce bear hateful cold fearful fish donkey soft tiny young gorilla friendly patient
unfriendly penguin fast wise stubborn seahorse shark noisy independent
Do It at Home
Read and write an ending to the parable (50 words).
You are a lion. A goat told you are a goat.
You create an image that you are a goat. You feel like a goat. You behave like a goat.
Every time you look at your reflection in water, you see a goat there. Although in reality, you are a lion.
One day, a donkey calls you a donkey. Another day, a snake says you are a snake. You get confused. You
lose yourself.
You wake up saying I am not a snake. I am not a donkey. And most probably, I am not a goat. I am not
helps you
91
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
tip
1.
2.
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
3.
READING
T
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
F
c) Mc Tell thought the song was sad and did not plan to record it. Give your own arguments for
his first decision.
or
92
e co r d p r o bl e
ms
a n awar
d
be
re
ach
copie
e
ss
ll
u
as
cce
ss win
a so
ng
co
ntra
st the top
Listen and fill in the words: London; the old man; alone; news; papers; home; the old girl.
Chorus:
How can you tell me youre lonely
And say, for you, that the sun doesnt shine?
Let me take you by the hand
And lead you through the streets of ...
Ill show you something
To make you change your mind.
Complete the fork with words from the song which show
that those people are poor, forgotten, homeless. Add your
own descriptions.
Play a Word-telephone. Look at phone numbers in A and B. They have six numbers with a key
word for each number. The player throws the dice twice: the first time he/she finds a number and
a key word in A phone, the second time in B phone. Every pupil tries to find a social group which
matches with both key words. The winner is the player who finds 10 social groups first. Example:
1(rich) + 4 (a big group of people) = e.g. employer, businessman.
poor
man woman
young old
children young people adults
native foreigner
factory worker office worker
rich 1.
active 6.
young 5.
2. poor
3. passive
4.
old
Do It at Home
well-educated
6.
have a job 5.
a big group 4.
of people
1.
less educated
2. have no job
3.
a small group
of people
SPEAKING
93
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
Grammar Focus
GAME
Find your way through the maze. Move from square to square horizontally or vertically.
a) You can only cross squares if it is a diminutive.
START kitty
diskette
Stress-free
waterproof
logical
elegant
washable
piglet
duckling
movie
sensible
creative
happy
practical
important
doggy
Willy
careful
careless
critical
tolerant
thoughtful
chick let
childish
It seems good.
It is delicious.
A gorgeous landscape
Special eects
A gentle rain
It sounds Scottish.
Electronic instruments
Natural sounds
A fight song
Grammar Focus
SPEAKING
Look at the two groups of adjectives. For the -ed adjectives think of a situation you feel, e.g. amazed.
For the -ing adjectives think of something that is, e.g. amazing.
e.g. I feel encouraged when my teachers help me.
interested
fascinated
encouraged
inspired
amused
entertained
surprised
94
FINISH
PARTICIPLE ADJECTIVES
Some present participles (-ing forms) and past participles (-ed forms) are used as adjectives.
Most of them come before the noun they describe or
follow linking verbs.
e.g. A fascinating idea! I am interested
FINISH
amazed
astonished
shocked
convinced
excited
delighted
amazing
astonishing
shocking
convincing
exciting
delightful
Whats something
you are inspired
with?
Whats something
you are optimistic
about?
Whats something
you are
responsible for?
Whats something
you are annoyed
about?
Whats
something you
are good at?
Who do you
feel sorry
for?
Whos
someone you
are jealous
of?
Lesson 7. Round Up task. Work in pairs (Student A, page 95, ex. 4, Student B, page 96, ex. 1).
Describe your picture to each other. Find ten differences. Mark the differences in your picture.
Student A
Read your favorite animal test interpretation (from Lesson 4, ex. 3c).
1. Your favourite animal is your-self image how you want others to see you.
2. Your second favourite animal is your image how other people see you.
3. Your third favourite animal is you how you really are.
4. The adjectives describing your least favoirite animal are the things you dont like in people.
95
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
Work in pairs (Student A, page 95, ex. 4, Student B, page 96, ex. 1). Describe your picture to each
other. Find ten differences. Mark the differences in your picture.
My picture is of an art gallery. There are three paintings ...
Student B
PAIR WORK
a) In pairs, take turns to ask your classmate about his/her Sense of Beauty. Tick the appropriate
column. Analyse the scoring.
yes
dont know
no
1. Do you read glossy magazines for ideas for your house?
2. Are your clothes fashionable?
3. Have you ever joined a flower arranging class?
4. Do you have a library card?
5. Are you a watercolour painter?
6. Have you ever written a short story?
7. Do you often visit art galleries?
8. Do you like poetry?
9. Are you a keen gardener?
10. Are you a keen photographer?
11. Are you good at DIY (do-it-yourself)?
12. Would you like to be an architect?
13. Would you like to be an illustrator for a comic publication?
96
Scoring analysis:
13-26 Innate sense of beauty
7-13 Very good sense of beauty
0-7 Good sense of beauty
SPEAKING
Comment on the headlines. What do you expect to read in the articles with the following headlines?
we s h a re
LIVING
FOR TODAY
2.
5.
3.
6.
th e Pla e t
n
LISTENING
Imagine
Imagine theres no ..
Its easy if you try
No below us
Above us only sky
Imagine all the people living for today
Imagine theres no countries
It isnt hard to do
Nothing to kill or die for
And no too
Imagine all the people living life in peace
c) 1. Imagine that you have a chance within a week to do whatever you wish. You have all the
resources you need. Take turns to tell your classmates about some of your plans. 2. Compose
news headlines of the events your classmates have planned.
Do It at Home
Complete the sentences.
1. If I were a colour, I would be because .
2. If I were an animal, I would be because .
3. If I were a source of communication, I would be
because .
4. If I were a country, I would be because .
97
UNIT
Progress Test
1
GRAMMAR
Determination
This is a (reality) 1. story about the Brooklyn
Bridge in New York, USA back in 1870.
In 1883, a (creativity)2 engineer John Roebling
was inspired by an (ambition)3 idea to build an
(impress) 4 bridge connecting New York with the
Long Island. Bridge building experts thought that this
was an (impossibility) 5 project and told Roebling to
forget the ( unreality) 6 idea.
But he convinced his son Washington, a (talent) 7
engineer to find a crew and begin to build their (desire)
8 bridge.
The (long wait ) 9 project started well, but a few
months later a (tragedy)10 accident took the life of
John Roebling. Washington was also (injure) 11 . He
was not able to talk or walk.
Everyone had a (negate) 12 comment to make
and felt that the project should be stopped since the
Roeblings were the only ones who knew how to build
the bridge.
As Washington lay on his bed in his hospital room,
with the sunlight (shine) 13 through the windows, a
(gently) 14 breeze blew the white curtains apart and
he was able to see the (sun) 15 sky and the tops of the
trees outside for just a moment.
It seemed that there was a message for him not to
give up. Suddenly a (despair) 16 idea hit him. All he
could do was move one finger and he decided to make
the best use of it. By moving this, he slowly developed a
code of communication with his wife.
For 13 years Washington tapped out his instructions
with his finger on his wifes arm, until the bridge was
finally completed. Today the spectacular Brooklyn
Bridge stands in all its glory as a tribute to the triumph
of one mans great spirit and his determination not to be
beaten by circumstances.
b) Read the text again and state whether the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
a) The Brooklyn Bridge was built about 13 years.
b) Everyone believed in the project.
c) Washington continued his fathers project.
d) His wife decoded his messages and told the crew how to work on the project.
T
T
T
T
F
F
F
F
VOCABULARY
a) Read the letter to the editor. Find 6 mistakes and correct them.
Dear editor,
I enjoy reading your paper almost every day, but please dont add any more sections. These days information
is cheap and easy to get. We have radios, Tvs, computers, faxes, cell fones, e-mail, and the internet. In addition,
there is always postal mail. And lets not forget about regular phones, and of course, newspappers. Information is
wonderful, but too much information causes problems. People dont have enough time to think things through. Most
of us get too much mail, too many phone calls, too many news reports. We need time to stop and think. We need less
infomations, not more.
Sincerely yours,
Ann Lowe
98
Magazines about
...............
...............
TV programmes
...............
...............
MEDIA
The Internet
...............
...............
Mobile phones. . .
............
...............
Newspapers. . . . .
..........
...............
The Concert
The music,
the singing,
the solos, the
songs.
The sound,
The lightning,
the words
the special
eects, the stage of the song,
lyrics.
design.
WRITING
PORTFOLIO
Evaluate Yourself.
Europen
des Langues
Yes No Improve
I can follow changes of topic in Radio news reports and understand the main
information.
I can understand simple information about people, their character and emotional
state.
I can understand topics and details of a song.
Speaking
I can find the most important information in WebPages and art catalogues.
I can understand the main points in news headlines.
Writing
99
UNIT
LESSON
1
My Home Country
How Much Do You Know about Moldova?
DISCUSSION POINTS
The Codrii
Orheiul Vechi
The sovereign independent state of the Republic of Moldova is situated ... of ... .
The Republics area is 33.800 square kilometres (km2). In the North, East and South it
borders on ... and in the West ... is between Moldova and ... . The territory of the country
from ... to the South is 350 km and from ... to ... 150 km.
The whole of Moldova is covered with ... cut up by small rivers. The territory of the
Republic includes three ... : forests, forest steppes and steppes and a plain with an average height of 147 m. The highest part of Moldova is the Codrii, which is situated in the ...
zone. Its maximum height is of 429,5 m. The territory gradually lowers from the northwest to the southeast.
Moldova is situated in the seismic Carpathian zone and it is subject to ... . Their
epicenter is focused ... on the territory of ... . The maximum intensity of the earthquakes
on Moldovas territory ranges between 6-8 on ... . In the 20th and 21st centuries ... were
registered in 1940, 1977, 1986, 1990, 1999, 2005, 2009, and 2014.
Moldova has a population of about 4.20 ... people. It is a densely populated ... .
Moldova was admitted to ... in March 1992. Moldova has started on the road to European
integration since then.
100
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. national /'nASnEl/
2. nationality /,nASE'nAlItI/
3. nation /'neISEn/
4. vary /'vErI/
5. variety /vE'raIEtI/
6. populate /'ppjuleIt/
7. populated /,ppju'leItId/
8. population /,ppju'leISn/
9. the Prut /TE 'prUt/
10. the Nistru /TE 'nIstru/
11. the Carpathians
/TE ,ka:'pAIEnz/
12. the Budzhak steppes
/TE bU'dZk 'steps/
13. guide /gaId/
14. design /dI'zaIn/
15. boulevard /'bu:lEv:d/
16. architect /':kItekt/
17. company /'kmp(E)nI/
18. officially /E'fISElI/
19. sculptor /'sklptE/
READING
SPEAKING
Do It at Home
Write a letter to your penfriend about some places of interest connected with a historical or cultural event in your native place.
101
UNIT
LESSON
DISCUSSION POINTS
1.
4.
2.
3.
5.
6.
9.
8.
10.
7.
11.
READING
12.
13.
102
There is much interest on the part of potential investors and other economic partners for cooperation with Moldova.
The Republic of Moldova signed the assosiation agreement with the
Europeean Union (the EU). This allows Moldova to build economic relations with the EU member states.
Read the text again and select the words which are connected
with Moldovas economic situation (e.g. market economy).
LISTENING
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. development /dI'velEpmEnt/
2. incentive /In'sentIv/
3. entrepreneur /,ntrEprE'n:/
4. legislation /,ledZIs'leISn/
5. infrastructure /,InfrE'strktSE/
6. peculiarity /pI,kju:lI'ArItI/
7. eventually /I'ventSUElI/
8. reliable /rI'laIEbl/
9. hospitable /'hspItEbl/
10. contribute /kEnt'rIbju:t/
11. recession /rI'seSn/
12. consumption /kEn'smpSn/
The British are a nation of video addicts, focused on driving their cars.
They have forsaken the traditional diet of beef and beer in favour of chicken
and lager.
The official handbook of Britain says that over the 50 years since the end
of the Second World War the social situation has become more miserable.
According to the Central Office of Information, the executive agency
responsible for government information and publicity, highlights that the
British are twice as rich as they were at the beginning of the century.
In old days, recessions were different. Before the computer appeared,
recessions were followed by booms and the jobs would always return. Now
they do not.
Britain has changed in more subtle ways as well. When someone talks
about drugs, for example, they are not referring to
aspirin.
A big factor has been the rise in the number of
women, particularly married women, at work. Women
now make up almost half of the workforce. Many of
them have their own businesses and companies.
The eating habits have also changed. Consumption
of beef, lamb, pork, sugar and fat declined dramatically, while vegetarian food is at its highest. Life expectancy for men is 79 and 83 for women, up from 49 and
52 respectively since the beginning of the 20th century.
Some things, however, never change. For example, the inhabitants of these islands still believe that:
Britain is the worst country in the world to live in
except, of course, for all the others.
WRITING
Do It at Home
Write about the recent changes in Moldovas economic and social life.
103
UNIT
LESSON
1
National Heritage
DISCUSSION POINTS
Answer the questions and think of what you know about historical and cultural monuments or
places of your country.
a) What interesting facts can you tell about the place
you were born in?
b) What cultural and historical monuments and places
of your native place would you like to show to your
foreign friends?
c) What do you know about the culture of the country you live in?
READING
Read the story, think and say why the monastery was in such a state at that time?
104
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. serious /'sIErIEs/
2. reminiscence /,remI'nIsns/
3. mysterious /mIs'tIErIEs/
4. disappointment /dIsE'pIntmEnt/
5. ballet /'bAleI/
6. enchanting /In'tS:ntIN/
7. tuberculosis /tju(:)'b:kjulEsIs/
8. protect /prE'tekt/
9. rustle /'rsl/
10. frequent /'fri:kwEnt/
11. frequency /'fri:kwEnsI/
12. frequently /'fri:kwEntlI/
3
4
PAIR WORK
Ask your classmates questions, and find out if they have ever taken a similar walking tour to any
historic places in Moldova or any other country. Use the You cant do without them rubric.
LISTENING (Page 140)
a) Listen to the text The Capriana Monastery and say why it is so important in the history of
Moldova. b) Listen to it again and take notes of the dates and facts. c) What other monasteries
have you already been to or would like to visit?
TEAM WORK
2.
SPEAKING
3.
4.
1.
5.
Look at the pictures, and say what you can see in these museums. What other museums would you
advise to visit in Moldova?
Do It at Home
1 Make a 5-slide PowerPoint presentation (or a picture board) about a museum.
2 Describe some most interesting exhibit(s) of the museum you have visited and write about the
event connected with it (them).
105
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
Welcome to Moldova
Millions of people all over the world spend their holidays travelling. It
is pleasant to travel in Moldova because its landscape is extremely varied,
ranging from the hills of the central and north Moldova to the Nistru
steppe land and the South plain, which is called the Budzhak steppe.
One can travel to enjoy Moldovas picturesque places, or just have a rest
from the town noise near a river or a lake, in the forest, in the hills, or in a
valley; studying different kinds of trees, flowers, plants, animals and birds.
Old Orhei is one of the most important historical sites of the Republic.
Here there are traces of the Geto-Dacian settlements and ruins of a medieval Moldovan town from the 16th century.
tip
106
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. extremely /Iks'tri:mlI/
2. picturesque /,pIktSE'resk/
3. medieval /,medI'i:vl/
4. architecture /'a:kItektSE/
5. assumption /E'smpSEn/
6. leather /'leTE/
7. deserve /dI'z:v/
8. lively /'laIvlI/
9. embrodery //Im'brId(E)rI/
10. osier /'EuzIE/
11. landscape /'lAnskeIp/
12. value /'vAlju:/
13. remarkable /rI'm:kEbl/
14. lively /'laIvlI/
SPEAKING
Do It at Home
Write about one of the famous people of Moldova.
107
UNIT
LESSON
1
READING
If you are in one of the English speaking countries, you would like to know its history. Moreover,
you could tell about your own countrys history. Look at the pictures of the monuments and learn
as much as possible about them.
TEAM WORK
a) What events concerning the monument are the following dates connected with?
1971
1942
1928
1940
1945
2005
1941
1944
1990
b) Tell the story of the monument to the other team, as if you were a guide, arranging the dates in
a proper way.
c) What other monuments connected with the past of Moldova can you see in the Republic?
108
SPEAKING
Read the description of Moldovas flag. Explain why the flag has such a design.
The Republic of Moldova has its own banner, coat of
arms and anthem. The state flag of the Republic is tricoloured and arranged vertically in the following order from
the flagpole: blue, yellow, red. The coat of arms is printed on
the central yellow stripe of the tricolour.
Moldovas coat of arms consists of a shield divided horizontally into two parts: the upper part is red, and the lower one is blue with an aurochss head that has an eight-pointed star between its horns. On its right, the aurochss head is flanked by a five-petalled rose, and on its left by a slight incline of
crescent. All heraldic elements on the shield are of golden (yellow) colour. The shield is
laid on the breast of an eagle carrying a golden cross in its beak, holding a green olive
branch in its right claw and a gold sceptre in its left one.
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. crescent /'kresEnt/
2. heraldic /he'rAldIk/
3. aurochs /':rEks/
4. shield /Si:ld/
5. breast /brest/
6. olive /'lIv/
7. sceptre /'septE/
8. incline /In'klaIn/
9. vertically /'v:tIk(E)lI/
10. horizontally /,hrI'zntlI/
PAIR WORK
a) Read the description and find the differences and similarities between these two organizations
with the help of a Venn Diagram.
b) Discuss the data in the diagram using the You cant do without them... rubric.
The Council of Europe is the continents
leading human rights organization. It
includes 47 member states, 28 of which are
members of the European Union. All Council
of Europe member states have signed up to
the European Convention on Human Rights,
a treaty designed to protect human rights,
democracy and the rule of law.
COUNCIL
OF EUROPE
CONSEIL
DE L'EUROPE
The European flag is the symbol not only of the European Union, but also of Europe's
unity and identity in a wider sense.
The European flag consists of 12 golden stars in a circle on a blue background. The
stars symbolise the ideals of unity, solidarity and harmony among the peoples of Europe.
The number of stars has nothing to do with the number of member countries, though
the circle is a symbol of unity.
The history of the flag goes back to 1955. The Council of Europe defending human rights and promoting European culture adopted the present design for its own use.
In 1983, the European Parliament adopted the flag. In 1985, it was adopted by all EU leaders as the official
emblem of the European Union (called the European Communities at the time). All European institutions now use
an emblem of their own.
Do It at Home
Write what country you would like to visit and what you expect to see in it. Cite any information
taken from the Internet.
109
UNIT
LESSON
Grammar Page
in negative sentences
Model 2 I havent read this book
Neither/ Nor have I.
She hasnt read this book.
Neither/ Nor has he.
110
I heard (he) (to run) into the room. I think he is still there.
Dont make (they) (to learn) the poem about Moldova by heart.
Let (the students) (to speak) of historical events about their country.
We saw (she) (to come to see) her grandparents some days ago.
I dont like people to make (other people) (to work) instead of them.
He never lets (we) (to go) on picnics. Why?
Did you watch (anybody) (to read) those books in the library last week?
I want (they) (to go) to the Art Museum to see the pictures of the 19th century.
He didnt make (we) (to write) about that terrible accident.
The teacher let (his students) (to come) into the classroom.
Paraphrase the following sentences using the Complex Object either with the Infinitive (with or
without to) or Participle I.
e.g. I heard their cries in the forest. They cried very loudly.
I heard them cry very loudly in the forest.
a)
b)
c)
d)
e)
f)
g)
h)
i)
j)
e.g. He saw the cars. They were moving along the road.
He saw the cars moving along the road.
The ship sailed away from the shore. They saw it.
We saw that the children were climbing the hill to reach the church on the top of it.
She bent and picked up a flower. They saw it.
They were talking about going on a hike. He heard them.
I think that Dan Blan is one of the best singers in Moldova. Everybody thinks so too.
Yesterday your son had to learn the poem by heart, but he didnt. What did you do? (Answer the question using to make)
People expect that the 21st century will bring peace on the Earth.
Everybody considers that Byron is a great poet.
The girl doesnt want to read this book. But I dont want to make her.
It was dark and he felt horror that somebody touched his hand.
111
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
DISCUSSION POINTS
READING
Read the text about Moldovas rich culture presented in the museums of the republic. Speak about
other Moldovan artists who reflected Moldovas landscape, traditions and holidays in their pictures.
Moldova has a rich culture. There are a lot of museums in
the country and its capital. The best known one the National
Museum of History represents our country from its foundation
to the present day; the National Museum of Ethnography and
Natural History with its various exhibits including fine and applied
arts; the Art Museum with its unique collections of pictures and
drawings. Besides, there are various constant and temporary
exhibitions (as the Constantin Brncui Art Gallery) which
attract Moldovans and a lot of tourists coming to the country.
***
If you want to see the pictures drawn by I. Vieru, you should go
to the Art Museum in Chiinu. You will find beautiful canvases,
devoted to the landscape in Moldova from the North to the South
and from the East to the West. People cant help admiring his pictures. They sparkle with love for nature and humanism. I.Vieru is
a realist. His pictures are true to great traditions coming from ancient times, to life creating realism and penetrating to the mystery of mysteries Moldovas nature. If you are in Chiinu, why not visit the museum?
VOCABULARY TASK
112
SPEAKING
Bogdan Vod
First mentioned in
documents in 1352. He
is supposed to be the
vice voivode of Bogdan
I. He was the founder
of several churches
made of stone.
ROLE PLAY
You are planning a trip to the countryside, but you have no experience. Talk to the instructor
and get all the necessary advice from him. Make up dialogues using the You cant do without
them rubric.
If you are setting off on a walking tour, take a compass, a map and first-aid equipment with you. Even
the most experienced can lose their way in the vast uninhabited areas. If you get lost, dont lose your head.
Instead be sensible, try to give some indication of where you are and keep yourself warm. Remember, never
go off alone, and inform someone at your point of departure where you intend to go and what route you
intend to take.
You cant do without them
!Youd
better (do) ...; gain experience; mind that ...; why not (to) ...; in
your place I would (do/ have done)
...; I advise you to ...; be sensible.
Do It at Home
PROJECT WORK
In teams, make a poster under the heading: Moldovas Holidays. Illustrate it with pictures. Make it
interesting and attractive. Then discuss the projects positive and negative aspects. Give advice to your
classmates to improve their projects. Use the You cant do without them rubric.
113
UNIT
Progress Test
1
READING
Read the legend and answer the question why the river was called the Bc.
Long, long ago these places used to be inhabited by
giants.
Once a giant girl walked about the forest and she
saw a man with six bulls ploughing the soil with a
wooden plough in a clearing. She took the peasant with
the bulls and plough and went home to her mother.
Look, mother. I have found some insects scratching
the earth. What could they be?
My dear, go and put them back where you have
taken them from. Let them go in peace and dont kill
them. When you come back Ill tell you.
The girl took them back and then went home to her
mother.
Now, mother, tell me what kind of insects were
those?
That was a man, who was ploughing the soil with
six bulls. In the distant future, men like this one will
replace us, and they will be the masters of the earth
Read the text again and write if it is True or False. Bring your arguments.
a) The places used to be inhabited by dwarfs.
b) A man with eight wolves was ploughing the soil.
c) The mother told her daughter to kill them.
d) The girl went home to her mother.
because well die, all of us, and these people will live
and own this land.
On hearing those words she grieved. What! Such
weak creatures to come instead of us, and well vanish?
Mother, Ill go and kill him and his bulls.
Dont go. You wont find him.
The girl did go. She looked for the man but she
couldnt find him. He had finished his work and was far
away going home through a forest in a valley.
The girl was so grieved that a tear fell down, and
where it fell currents of water started. The water was
whirling down the valley and one of the mans bulls
was drowned.
In that place where the giant girls tear fell, a
spring appeared and a river began there. It was named
the Bc, for that was how the bull was named.
Since then, the river has been flowing through forests and valleys and has the same name up to now.
1. a boy
2. a woman
3. a man
4. a girl
1. the Nistru
2. the Prut
114
to live ...; to go ...; the land ...; to start ...; to return ... .
3. the Reut
4. the Bc
GRAMMAR
Give three forms of the irregular verbs and complete the chart.
Re-read the text and write out the sentences with the Complex Object and Inversion.
had
to bring
saw
made
to take
found
to put
to go
done
told
fallen
to begin
WRITING
Evaluate Yourself.
Write a 100-word paragraph about what the word Home means to you.
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
Yes
No
Improve
I can listen and understand short texts about the economic and social life of Moldova.
I can listen to the texts and understand the importance of the countrys history.
I can listen to the biographies of outstanding people of Moldova and understand their significance and contribution to different fields of life of the country.
Speaking
I can speak about the geographical position of Moldova, its relief and borders.
I can speak about the capital of Moldova Chiinu.
I can speak about my native place.
I can speak about cultural and historical monuments in Moldova.
Reading
I can read and comprehend texts about Moldova and its outstanding people of the 19th,
20th and the 21st centuries.
I can read texts about Moldovas monuments and name the places they are situated in.
I can read texts about Moldovas rich culture and select specific information.
Writing
I can write a letter to a penfriend about some historical or cultural events of my native place.
I can write about recent changes in Moldovas economic and social life.
I can write about famous people of Moldova.
I can write a 100-word composition about my native place my home country.
115
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. nasty /'na:stI/
2. ecology /I'klEdZI/
3. species /'spi:Si:z/
4. exhaust /Ig'z:st/
5. extinct /Ik'stINkt/
6. environment /In'vaIErEnmEnt/
7. contamination /kEn,tAmI'neISn/
8. recycling /rI'saIklIN/
9. atmosphere /'AtmEsfIE/
10. acid /'AsId/
b) Complete the chart with ecological terms from the text. Use a dictionary if necessary. Where
there is a x, you do not have to write anything.
Verb
x
x
to contaminate
to extinct
Noun
Adjective
ecological
environmental
recycling
to pollute
wasteful
PAIR WORK
Discuss and tick the things which are good for the environment, and put a cross by the things
which are bad. Follow the model.
recycling
acid rain
litter
noise
harmful gases
industrial waste
traffic jam
deforestation
rubbish
river
exhaust fumes
bicycle
forest
public transport
nasty chemicals
plants
rain forest
dripping water
greenhouse effect
.
Model: Recycling is very good for people because waste can be used further. Traffic jam is bad for people
because it gets on the drivers nerves. Plants are very good for the climate because they make the air clean.
116
LISTENING
a) Listen to the song What Have They Done to the World?. Say who is meant by the word
They in the song.
And they (to do) this for profit and gain, my friend,
Well they (to turn) all the seas into mud, my friend,
And they (to kill) all the fish in those seas.
And they (to pour) out their oil and their waste, my friend,
Cause they think they can do as they please.
Well they (to pour) out their smoke and their fumes, my friend,
SPEAKING
WRITING
e)
f)
g)
h)
Do It at Home
Think of what measures you would take to protect the environment of Moldova if you were a
member of Parliament. Write 3 or more suggestions.
117
UNIT
LESSON
1
Be Respectful of Nature!
DISCUSSION POINTS
Answer the questions about wildlife protection on the planet. Say whether the statements are true
and why.
a) The future of humans and wildlife species
depends on significant improvement in the management of the Earths water resources. Is it true?
b) Leaking oil makes water uninhabitable to most
forms of aquatic life, and it is no longer good for
PAIR WORK
TEAM WORK
a) Study the words in the box, and name the objects in pictures 1-18.
yoghurt tub, shampoo bottle, medicine bottles, newspapers, water bottle, juice carton, paperback books, magazines, plastic bag, cereal box, glass jar, glass bottles, clear take-out boxes, notebooks, plastic disposable cups,
paper, cardboard boxes, sheet protector.
1.
2.
5.
4.
3.
12.
7.
6.
8.
11.
9.
10.
17.
13.
118
14.
15.
16.
18.
SPEAKING
b.
PAIR WORK
In picture A, the man and the wolf are ... the boat.
In picture B, the wolf is ... the bank of the river.
In picture C, the man is ... the goat and the wolf.
In picture D, the cabbage is ... the wolf.
In picture F, the wolf is ... ... the cabbage.
In picture G, the man is taking the goat ... the river.
In picture G, the cabbage is ... ... ... the wolf.
a.
c.
d.
e.
f.
Listen to the joke The Young Men and the Bull and
say which of the men was in the worst situation. Why?
g.
Do It at Home
1 Design a leaflet challenging people to protect wildlife. Be ready to participate in a contest.
2 Find equivalents to the following English idioms. Give situations in which most of them may be used:
copycat, dark horse, monkey business, white elephant, crocodile tears, horse of another colour, to take
the bull by the horns, wolf in sheeps clothing.
119
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
tip
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION
1. devastate /'devEsteIt/
2. paradise /'pArEdaIs/
3. fertile /'f:taIl/
4. drought /draUt/
5. orchid /':kId/
6. flood /fld/
7. tranquilizer /'trANkwIlaIzE/
8. irreplaceable /,IrI'pleIsEbl/
8. carbon dioxide /'k:bEn daI'ksaId/
READING
a) Read the texts below and supply titles that would challenge the readers to do something to protect rain forests.
A. An area of tropical forests the size of England, Scotland and
Wales is devastated each year. These irreplaceable forests are the
richest source of life on Earth. They are home to perhaps half the
worlds wild creatures. Tigers, mountain gorillas, birds of paradise,
rare orchids and multi-coloured butterflies are some of the unique
species found only in the rain forest. The world would be a poorer
place without them.
B. Tropical forests are the main source of raw materials for
modern medicines antibiotics, heart drugs, hormones, tranquilizers etc. One in four chemicals or medicines found in your chemists
will contain compounds derived from rain forest species.
C. Rain forests protect the soil, which is usually infertile, and
regulate the flow of water to farms, irrigation systems, rivers and
lakes. Without them, soil erosion and flooding rapidly increase.
Rain forests also help regulate global weather.
D. 50 years ago Ethiopia had forests covering 35% of its land
area, and a population of 20 million. Today, trees cover less than
11% of the land and the population is 90 million. Globally, over
1 billion people depend on water from tropical forests to irrigate
their crops.
Dear friends, Frends of the Earth is preparing a law called Wildlife and Countryside Act.
Discuss with your classmates the problem Countryside Threatened in Moldova and prepare a
short oral report with 1 or 2 proposals you want to be included into the Act project. Use the vocabulary below.
to breed, fowl, to generate, famine, to ban, to irrigate, to degrade, to retain heat.
120
PAIR WORK
a) Discuss what you know about the gradual warming of the Earths atmosphere, the so-called
Greenhouse Effect?
b) Read the text below and name the causes of the Greenhouse Effect.
Greenhouse Effect
What man has done to produce this warmer climate is to burn coal, gas, oil and wood, cut down trees faster
than they are replaced, use aerosol sprays, refrigerators and freezers. Burning fuels uses oxygen and produces carbon dioxide. Trees that are growing use carbon dioxide and produce oxygen. So there could be a healthy balance.
The result is that carbon dioxide in the atmosphere has increased by 24% over the past 150 years. Some carbon
dioxide is essential to life to help plants grow and to retain some heat.
But very large amounts now present are, in part, responsible for trapping even more heat in the Earths atmosphere, causing the greenhouse effect. Even a small rise in temperature could, scientists say, have a dramatic effect
on ice in the polar regions.
c) Describe the causes and effects of the Greenhouse Effect presented in the pictures. Use the
words below: to dry, to melt, to increase, to pollute, to extinct, drought, exhaust fumes, iceberg, etc.
Cultural Note
What wisdom is hidden in the
following limericks*?
I. An old, old owl lived on an oak.
The more he lived, the less he spoke.
The less he spoke, the more he heard.
Why cant we all
Be like that wise bird?
II. There was a young man from Bengal,
Who went to a forest dress ball,
He decided, for fun,
To dress as a bun,
But a dog ate him up in the hall.
* limericks usually humorous short
poems with 5 lines, 3 long and 2 short ones.
Listen to the text Mike Fink, the Indian, and the Deer and put down in transcription the
words you dont know.
Do It at Home
1 Find some more information about wildlife and countryside abuse and share it with your friends.
You may begin with Do you know that?
2 Write a letter to your local Nature Protection organization and state the ecological situation in
Moldova using the following idioms and expressions:
a bed of roses, the straw that broke the camels back, to rest on ones laurels, reap what you sow, turn
over a new leaf.
121
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
122
f)
g)
h)
i)
green-card
Greenpeace
green belt
green fingers
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
ROLE PLAY
Let us hold a meeting of the Green movement at which the prognosis of the Greens is discussed.
One of you is a chairman (there may be several chairmen who will take turns); there must be 6
speakers on the topics: People, Health, Wild and Green Life, Energy, Climate, International Politics.
The rest of the group will participate in the debate. The motto of the discussion is Environmental
Challenge. Make use of the vocabulary prompted.
A.
B.
TEAM WORK
Make up a general resolution of the meeting addressed to the local public to take a number of
measures to save the environment. Pass the resolution using the recommended phrases in the
table.
C.
WRITING
On the basis of the previous texts, draw a poster (large printed notice, picture
or scheme) which symbolizes their main ideas in order to call peoples attention to serious ecological problems under the title You and the Environment
as shown in the picture.
LISTENING (Page 141)
Listen to the text The Green Future and express your opinion on the problems
touched upon. Ask one another Wh questions.
Do It at Home
1 Find some more information about the Green movement in Moldova and other countries.
2 Think of 2-3 slogans of the Green movement like Be economical with all energy!, Buy organic
fruits and vegetables!.
123
UNIT
LESSON
1
DISCUSSION POINTS
Englishmen are very fond of ... . For their the traditional 5 oclock tea they have jams, ... and various sorts
of cheeses. Some cheeses are mellow but others have a strong ..., and not many people like strong smells.
However, today afternoon tea consists of just a biscuit or a small ... and a mug of tea.
READING
Read the text and ask questions to the underlined words and phrases.
Liverpool Cheeses
(adapted)
From Three Men in a Boat by J.K. Jerome
I remember a friend of
mine bought two cheeses at
Liverpool. They were, ripe and
mellow. I was in Liverpool at
the time, and my friend asked
me to take them back with me
to London. So he did not think
the cheeses could be kept
much longer in Liverpool.
I took the cheeses away in a cab. I put them on the
top, and we started. There, the wind carried a smell
from the cheeses full onto our horse. It woke the horse
up, and, he ran off at three miles an hour. The wind
still blew in his direction, and before we reached the
end of the street he was galloping at the speed of nearly
four miles an hour.
At the station I took my ticket, and marched proudly up the platform, with my cheeses, the people falling
back respectfully on either side. The train was crowd-
124
and, at the third smell, they rose up without another word and went out. The
remaining four passengers sat on for a while, until a man in the corner, said it
reminded him of a dead baby; and the other three passengers tried to get out of
the door at the same time, and hurt themselves. Soon I got the compartment to
myself, though the train was crowded.
I took the cheeses down to my friends house. When his wife came into the
room she began smelling round. Then she said: What is it? Tell me the worst.
I said: Its cheeses. Tom bought them in Liverpool, and asked me to bring them
up with me, and she said that she was sure of that, but that she would speak to
Tom about it when he came back. My friend stayed in Liverpool longer than he
expected; and, three days later, as he hadnt returned home, his wife called on
me. She said: What did Tom say about those cheeses? I said they should be
kept in a moist place, and that nobody should touch them. She said: Nobodys
likely to touch them. Had he smelt them? I thought he had, and added that
he seemed greatly attached to them. Do you object to my giving a man a shilling to take them away and bury them? I answered that I thought he would
never smile again. Very well, then, said my friends wife, I think Ill take the
children and go to a hotel until those cheeses are eaten. The hotel bill came to
fifteen guineas; and my friend, after summing everything up, found that the
cheeses had cost him too much. He said he dearly loved a bit of cheese, but it
was beyond his money; so he decided to get rid of them by taking them down
to a sea-side town, and burying them on the beach. It gained the place quite a
reputation. Visitors said they had never noticed before how strong the air was,
and weak-chested people used to go there for years afterwards.
Circle if a sentence is true (T) or false (F). Correct the false ones.
a) First, the narrator took the cheeses back to London
by train. T/ F
b) There were many people on the train. T/ F
c) The passengers in the carriage enjoyed the talk
with the narrator. T/ F
d) The narrators friend came home just in time. T/ F
e) The narrators friend ordered to keep the cheeses in
a wet place. T/ F
f) The narrator said that his friend would be happy if
his wife buried the cheeses. T/F
g) The wife waited for her husband at home. T/F
h) The narrators friend buried the cheeses on the
beach. T/F
PAIR WORK
Discuss with your partner sentences that sound funny to you. Follow the model:
Model: It sounds funny to me that cheeses smelled too strong.
5
6
SPEAKING
Retell the text in a chain (each student repeats the sentence of the previous speaker and
adds his/her own).
Explain what Barbara Taylor Bradford meant by this:
Do It at Home
1 Look for other stories by Jerome K Jerome and recommend them to your classmates.
2 Copy out of the text funny sentences and underline the words that produce a humorous effect.
125
UNIT
LESSON
1
Grammar Page
DISCUSSION POINTS
Answer these questions about the measures we can take to help children, and grown-ups to be closer to nature in order to understand
the importance of its preservation.
1. Why do you think children like to go to the zoo, zoological museums,
aquariums?
2. What animals, birds or insects can be pets? Why do people keep pets?
3. What do you know about redwoods?
READING
Read the text, select the verbs and say what tense form the verbs are in.
During the prehistoric times when dinosaurs roamed the Earth, redwoods were widespread over much of the
northern hemisphere. But the climatic change over thousands of years reduced the redwoods habitat. Today these,
the tallest trees in the world, are found only in California along a 450-mile corridor. Redwoods have a thick fibros
bark. The many fire scars seen on the bark are the result of repeated fires (see the pictures). But the trees still
continue to live. Some of the largest trees in the parks main redwood grove approach 300 feet in height and are
perhaps as much as 1500 years old.
***
A hundred years ago Henry Cowell moved his family to Santa Cruz (California) and bought 1600 acres of forest
with famous big trees called sequoias or redwoods.
Redwoods attract many tourists because they can grow to more than 100 metres high, and live for many hundreds of years. Sequoia National Park in the
Sierra Nevada mountains (California) is known for
its extremely large trees, especially the General
Sherman Tree, which is the largest living thing in
the world.
***
Interested in a journey back in time? Do you
want to experience what it was like to walk through
a primeval redwood forest or into a desert oasis
more than 200 years ago? Or, are you just tired of
the same old sights of the city? Then visit our Park!
tip
1. aquarium /E'kwErIEm/
MIND YOUR
PRONUNCIATION 2. sequoia /sI'kwIE/
4
126
Listen to the text King Rat and say whether we should condemn anyone for having pets unlike ours.
PAIR WORK
Look at the picture and tell each other the sad story of this
friendship. Try to imagine the past life of the dog.
3. dinosaur /'daInEs:/
READING
Grammar Focus
RECIPROCAL PRONOUNS
I
each
other
one
another
more concrete
(between two)
Eg. The students in the class told
one
each other about their own countries.
more general
(among many)
Eg. They often stay at
one anothers house.
DEFINING PRONOUNS
Another
one more
means one more of the same kind.
Eg. Id like another cup of tea.
Other
DEMONSTRATIVE PRONOUNS
This (singular) These (plural)
That (singular) Those (plural)
Used to avoid repetition of the noun in the main clause when a comparison is meant.
Eg. The life of a bird is easier than that of an animal substituted the life of
Eg. Children of Africa suffer more often of hunger than those of Europe substituted the children
Now, compare these drawings made by Dan, Pete and Bill. Whose drawing is more colourful, interesting, true-tolife, picturesque, realistic than that of his friends? Discuss it with your mates.
Eg.: I think Dans picture is more interesting than that of Pete.
I think Dans picture is more important than those of Pete and Bill.
Insert the appropriate pronouns and other parts of speech into the following text using the vocabulary of Unit 8.
The scientific study of the mode of relations of plants, animals, and people to _______ and their surroundings is
called _______. In _______ words it deals with _______, which is concerned about _______ of air, water and _______
of land. Water is _______ mainly through adding chemicals or poison to it which leads to _______ after-effects because
not only living conditions of man depend on water but also _______ of _______ (animals and plants). Many _______ of
animals, birds become _______. Trees and plants suffer greatly from _______ rain, _______ gases, industrial _______,
_______ (cutting down). _______ (food, plastic bags, unwanted materials) is thrown in the streets, parks, squares producing much _______ (waste material) which can certainly be _______ . With good care about _______, the love for
wildlife and for _______ of plants people will become happy. Let us love _______ .
127
UNIT
LESSON
1
Round Up
PROJECT WORK
Dear friends,
We are going to speak about our country, we shall discuss the possibility of making our
life better. Do you think the greening of your school would save the environment of
Moldova? If there were an Ecology centre of Chiinu, what do you think its aim would
be? If you were to plan the layout of such a centres grounds, what would we find
there: any houses, gardens, laboratories, bird pavilion or any other?
SPEAKING
A centre is the main or the most active area in relation to a particular activity. Looking at the
information below, explain to each other what an Ecology Centre is. Choose 3 most important features of it.
What is it?
Its a home for trees, birds and butterflies
A resource for local schools, colleges, and community groups (lovers of birds, lovers of flowers, lovers of orchards and bees, anti-child-abuse
group etc. ...)
A new park to visit and enjoy
TEAM WORK
a) Find an appropriate place for the Ecology Centre in Chiinu and tell how to get there. Use the
information given in the box on the right.
b) Work in small groups of 3-5 people. Speak to one another and decide what is going to be there.
Use the prompts given below and draw a layout of the Centre. Choose the most preferable things.
ponds
solar and wind power
recycling
classrooms
meeting (workshop) rooms
information desk
advice
activities
school plots
garden for disabled people
orchard and bees
woodlands
grassland
birds pavilion
fish sanctuary
128
or like this
or anything else
WRITING
Use the Info Box information and write a set of laws and rules
for a friend of the Earth or for a Green Party member that visits
the Ecology Centre.
ROLE PLAY
READING
Read the story and say how it refers to people. What should people of the Earth do to keep humankind living?
Do It at Home
In 100 words write a Facebook entry about your Ecological Centre.
129
UNIT
Progress Test
1
e) environment
c) paradise
d) deforestation
to pollute
to evaporate
to improve
to irrigate
e)
f)
g)
h)
to populate
to protect
to govern
to organize
i) to move
j) to discuss
Use demonstrative pronouns to avoid repetition of the noun in the main clause.
e.g. The streets of London are busier than the streets of Chiinu. The streets of London are busier than
those of Chiinu.
a) The climate of Moldova is milder than the climate of Norway.
b) The species of the rain forest are more various than the species of the desert.
c) The lands of Moldova are more fertile than the lands of Ethiopia.
d) The buildings in New York are higher than the buildings in Chiinu.
e) The life of a man living in the city is more stressful than the life of a man living in the country.
Complete the sentences with each other or one another so that they mean the same as the first
sentence.
e.g. George helped Susie and she helped him. They helped each other.
a) Mary listened to them and they listened to her.
They listened to ... . each other/one another
b) Andrew sent Sue text messages and Sue sent him back text messages.
They sent ... text messages. each other/one another
c) We gave them a present and they gave us a present.
We gave ... presents. each other/one another
d) I didnt speak to you, Jack, and you didnt speak to me.
We didnt speak to ... each other/one another
e) My brother and I helped you and you helped us.
We helped ... each other/one another
130
The Cost of New Jobs / The Fast Way to the Future / Changing the World
The State of Pennsylvania in the USA is famous for its beautiful countryside. However, in 2004, an energy
company discovered natural gas under the ground. Since then, this discovery has changed many peoples lives in
good and bad ways. Many people have found new jobs but it has also changed the environment. Here are the opinions of some of the local people.
The farmer
Donald Roessler has lived on his farm for most
of his life. He hasnt earned much money from
farming but two years ago an energy company
wanted the gas under his farm. They offered Donald a regular monthly income and he signed the
contract immediately.
9
10
In 50 words, express your opinion of whose side you take: the farmers or the teacher and the
accountants.
Evaluate Yourself.
European
Language
PORTFOLIO
Europen
des Langues
No
Improve
131
SUPPLEMENT 1
UNIT 1
Tapescripts
LESSON
The Reporter:
Why were you so frightened?
Miss Hedge:
Well, water was pouring in and it was impossible to
see or hear anything, because the noise of the water was so
loud. Then suddenly we saw the other boat. We crashed into
them, and two of the people in the boat fell into the river.
They disappeared. Everyone was shouting, but you couldnt
hear what they were saying. At last, the people in the water
appeared. One of them came near our boat, and we pulled
him in. We left the white water and got the boat under control at last, and looked for the other boat. There was no boat,
and nobody.
The Reporter:
What did you do?
Not an easy way to begin. Now, tell me... (fade out)
Miss Hedge:
We had to go back to look for them and we found
them at last. That was my first time in white water, and I
wanted more!
LESSON
My name is Clayton. I study in a Technology College. It
specializes in Computers and Maths. My school has over 1,150
students and 1200 computers (including over 400 tablets).
I leave home at 6:45 and walk 20 minutes to catch a bus to
school. The journey on the bus takes an hour.
When I arrive at school, I collect my Tablet from the
Learning Centre. Then I go to my Tutor Room for Registration at 8:30.
Every day my first lesson is different. Normally it is Humanities, but I also have Maths, Drama and Music, and
French. Each lesson lasts an hour.
All my lessons are in different rooms and places around
the school. I have different teachers for each lesson. I have a
locker where I keep some of my school things. We dont use
our tablets in all lessons because some rooms do not have
132
LESSON
I was born in 1976 in a small town near Manchester. The
town is called Bury and I went to primary and secondary
school there. When I was thirteen, I started playing rugby for
the school team and Ive been playing ever since. I play every
Tuesday and Friday evening.
After school I didnt go to university, I went to work. I got
my first job in 1994 and I worked for a food company. I was
a manager of the company. The job was quite boring. After
6 months, I got promoted and I joined the companys sales
team. I had to start learning Spanish because I had a lot of
LESSON
Joke 1: Always Late
Sarah was always late to work no matter how much she
tried to be on time. She just could not wake up on time. Her
boss said she could lose her job. Sarah decided to go to the
doctor and ask him for some advice. He prescribed her some
medication and told her to take one pill before going to sleep.
She did and she woke up before the alarm clock and went to
work feeling very good. Sarah told her boss about the doctors
prescription and how well it worked. Her boss said, That is
great, Sarah, but where were you yesterday?
UNIT 2
LESSON
LESSON
Out of these five English-speaking countries, the largest
country by territory is Canada. With a total area of about
9,976,185 square kilometers (3,851,809 square miles), Canada is the largest country in the Western Hemisphere and
the second-largest in the world, exceeded only by Russia.
Canadas size is about the same as that of the continent of
Europe. The population is only 34,568,211people. But it is
growing very fast.
The second largest English-speaking country is in fact the
United States of America. It is also called the USA, US,
United States or sometimes America. Its territory occupies
9,826,630 sq km. With about 318 million people, the USA
is the third-largest country in the world.
1
Would you mind lending me you pen?
Sure. Here it is.
133
OK. Sure.
Could you tell me when the next bus will come.
Let me have a look. Itll come in 15 minutes.
LESSON
Hey and welcome to your favourite show We are in
charge! This is a show that allows teenagers to be in charge
of the microphone and speak their minds out. Today weve
asked our listeners to call in and tell us what they regret.
Here are some of you.
Speaker 1
Hey, Im Justin, Im 13. Last year I met some guys in the
cafeteria. They were older than me and they were discussing
a volunteer project. They planned on painting a playground
in a park. Without thinking too much, I refused the offer as I
had too much to study. A couple of months ago I was at that
playground and I saw how much the children enjoyed it. But
I didnt do anything for it.
Speaker 2
Hi, My names Pam. Im 15 and I do not have too many
regrets. The only regret I have is connected with clothes.
Sometimes I buy some clothes that I consider fashionable but
LESSON
1.
2.
3.
4.
LESSON
Interviewer: Welcome back to You Are in Charge. Today we are discussing professions and how people choose their jobs.
Our guest is Tim Barton and lets listen to how Tim got his job. Welcome Tim. So where do you work?
Interviewee: I work for an IT company.
Interviewer: And, what do you do?
Interviewee: I am an application developer.
Interviewer: Wow. Doing what?
Interviewee: I develop applications. You know for instance, a taxi company ordered an application that would connect the
taxi drivers and the clients. I developed it and I maintain it: I develop the updates.
Interviewer: Whatre the hours like, then?
Interviewee: Now thats an interesting question. I have a flexible schedule. The company monitors just my results. So I have
to do a lot of time management. I decide when I come to work and when I leave.
Interviewer: And, is it easy to manage your time?
Interviewee: I learned to manage my time when I was in school, so for me it is easy to set priorities and to reach goals.
Interviewer: That sounds interesting. Why did you choose this job?
Interviewee: Well, at school I was fond of drawings. I drew a lot and I thought that I would become a designer, but later
134
Interviewer:
Interviewee:
Interviewer:
Interviewee:
Interviewer:
Interviewee:
Interviewer:
Interviewee:
Interviewer:
Interviewee:
on I discovered web design and decided to become a web designer. And I chose to study Informational
Technology at the university.
When did you decide to develop applications?
I dont really know the exact moment. But I took a class in software design and I got interested in it.
And, how long have you been working for this company?
Let me see. I joined the company when I was 26. So it must be 7 years already.
Was this your first job?
No. First I was a sales representative. My salary was quite impressive, but I just hated selling things. So I
decided to give up my job.
Do you want to change your job?
I dont know for sure. But if somebody offers me a job that will be more interesting than the present one, I
will probably accept it.
Thats interesting, Thank you Tim for sharing your experience.
Oh, Thank YOU. It was my pleasure.
UNIT 3
LESSON
LESSON
Imagine that you couldnt hear these words or see them
written. But you could still talk, write, read, and make
friends. In fact, you went to college, wrote nearly a dozen
books, travelled all over the world, met 12 U.S. presidents,
and lived to be 87. Well, there was such a person, she was
born in 1880.
Meet Helen Keller, a woman from a small town in
Alabama who taught the world to respect people who are
blind and deaf. Her mission came from her own life; when she
was 1 1/2, she was extremely ill, and she lost both her vision
and hearing. By the time she was 7, her parents hired Anne
Sullivan, who in just a few days taught Helen the manual
alphabet or how to spell words with her hands. The trouble
was, Helen didnt understand what the words meantuntil
one morning at the water pump Anne had Helen hold one
hand under the water. Then she spelled W-A-T-E-R into
Helens other hand. It was electric! That day, she learned 30
words.
135
LESSON
Smile!
You dont speak the language? Dont worry, just smile! Thats what the experts on communication skills are saying. Its
easy to communicate when you travel abroad. Smile, look at people in a friendly way and point at things and people will
understand you. Or will they? People in different countries request things in different ways .
The British say please and thank you more often Netherlands, Poland and Germany), people request things
than the Americans. When they buy something the British simply and directly and their intonation sounds like an Engmay say thank you two or three times during the conversa- lish command.
In Southern Europe, a smile, friendly body language
tion. The Americans say thank you once.
Americans always reply youre welcome after thank and eye contact are very important when youre requesting
you. The British sometimes reply thank you, or sometimes something.
In Asia, people sometimes give a very small bow and
do not reply.
In Northern European countries (e.g. Scandinavia, The often look away when requesting something.
UNIT 4
LESSON
tors?
Yes, they are and Billy Burke is also one of the main actors.
Oh, nice.
Lets meet in front of the cinema at 6:15. The movie
starts at 6:30.
Fine. See you then.
Sure, see you.
LESSON
LESSON
Stephen Hawking is a world-renowned British theoretical
physicist, known for his contributions to the fields of cosmology, general relativity and quantum gravity, especially in the
context of black holes. In the 1960s and 1970s, he worked
on ground-breaking theorems regarding singularities within
the framework of general relativity, and made the theoretical prediction that black holes should emit radiation (known
today as Hawking radiation). When a massive star collapses
in on itself, it will keep collapsing until it gets to a point of infinite density. And thats called a singularity, and thats whats
right inside a black hole.
He has also published several works of popular science in
which he discusses his own theories and cosmology in general; including the runaway bestseller A Brief History of Time.
He has come to be thought of as one of the greatest minds in
physics since Albert Einstein.
136
UNIT 5
LESSON
Ice sculptures are made in the form of buildings and monuments, animals, humans and mythical creatures. Lasers and
lights are used to illuminate sculptures, there are also variations on the background light of sculptures that look especially beautiful at night.
c) Every year, Venice, for 12 days turns into a giant stage
with scenery for one of the most ambitious and dazzling carnivals in the world. Unrestrained fantasy, non-stop music,
sleepless nights, a parade of painted boats and masks, masks,
masks
LESSON
The Vase
A young student was in love with a beautiful girl. The
student was poor, but the girl was coming from a well off family. The girls birthday came. The student wanted to give her
a nice present. One day he went into a shop and saw there a
very beautiful vase. He wanted to buy it. But the vase was very
expensive. He didnt have enough money for it. The next day
he went to the shop again and looked at the vase for a long time
thinking how his girl-friend would like it. The shop girl noticed his sad look and asked what the matter was. He told her
his problem. The shop girl pitied him and suggested a way out.
There is one more vase like that, but it is broken- she
said. Ill wrap it up and when the servant takes it to your girls
house he will fall down when he enters the room. Nobody
will know that the vase was broken. The student agreed. The
day of the birthday party came. It was a nice celebration with
many guests. His beloved received many presents. At last the
servant came in holding his present. But stepping over the
threshold he fell and dropped the box. There was a great noise
and everybody wanted to see what happened.
When the cover of the box went off to everybodys surprise
every piece of the broken vase was wrapped separately.
LESSON
School traditions
I really like very much how we celebrate Book Day at
school. Maybe I am the only one who likes it so much because
I adore books. We organize meetings with different famous
writers and poets from Chiinu. We recite poems and make
up quizes on different topics. It is very nice and especially interesting to meet and question a writer whose book you have
read and write about it in your diary.
Well, in our school we celebrate Halloween in a very interesting way. It is a great festival of masks, plays and theatrical presentations. People should expect all sorts of surprises
on that day. It is a lot of fun.
In our school Valentines day is a tradition. We all like
the holiday. Everybody likes to receive a Valentine. There is a
competition for the best wish. And it is such fun. The prizes
are also a fun.
I would like to tell you how we spend Harvest Day at
137
December. We organize traditional Moldovan old day seatings (eztoare) and try to keep Creangas times and traditions as close as possible to the tales they are described in.
We stage different tales, we put on old national costumes, we
LESSON
LESSON
got stuck I wouldnt have missed the train. But when I got to
the station the train had just gone and I had to wait an hour
for another one. I bought an evening newspaper and hurried
over to the station buffet. I took a coffee and a packet of biscuits and started doing a crossword puzzle. I was so involved
in the crossword that I missed a second train. There were
no other trains to my village, and I had to stay at the station
overnight. I wish I hadnt bought that newspaper. Why did it
happen?
LESSON
The Present
Melinda was waiting in the garden watching the sunset.
She was so sorry for the argument she had had with Damian.
She remembered how rude she was to him. And how he cried
and asked her for forgiveness. First he denied the affair with
Laura but then she forced him to accept it. She hasnt seen him
for two weeks now, and she was missing him so much. Soon
the gate of the garden opened, and in the mist she could see
138
UNIT 6
LESSON
LESSON
Square: The hard worker. A Square collects information,
and has it organized on his shelves. The Square refers to
thinkers, who are characterized by logical thought .
Squares ideal is a planned, regular, life.
Triangle symbolizes leadership. The main ability of
triangles is to focus on goals and deeply and quickly analyze
situations. A Triangle is a very confident person who wants to
be right in everything. Triangles find it difficult to admit their
mistakes, are easy to train, and absorb information at ease.
Their career gives their life meaning.
Rectangles are busy looking for chances to better their
UNIT 7
LESSON
139
LESSON
LESSON
LESSON
UNIT
poets creative and political life, etc. Among the first actions,
included in this programme were literary and musical shows
in memory of the great poet. The monument to the poet was
set up in the Alley of Classics in Chisinau. It was also specified that the programme included the annual awarding of the
Grigore Vieru prize for outstanding achievements in philology and literature among scholars, as well as a nominal Grigore Vieru scholarship for students from Arts departments.
2011 was declared the year of Grigore Vieru. As a scholar,
Grigore Vieru was elected an Honorary Member of the Romanian Academy. One of the streets in Chisinau (former Renasterii boulevard) was renamed in honour of Grigore Vieru.
Now it is called Grigore Vieru street.
LESSON
140
LESSON
LESSON
LESSON
141
LESSON
King Rat
Nobody likes rats. Everyone thinks they are dirty, carry
diseases, bite peoples throats and steal eggs from chickens.
If you call someone a rat they know you dont like them.
Someone in a ratty mood is not much fun, and the rat race
is something we all try to escape from. Few people protest
or complain when rats are used in laboratory experiments.
Many people think rats were responsible for the Black Death
which killed half the population of England in the Middle
Ages.
But Sarah Handley shares her house with 40 rats and she
doesnt think rats started the plague. She says Some scientists think the plague was anthrax (a virus) and was carried by
the wind. The plague spread very quickly; rats cannot travel
so far or so fast. Sarah is trying to change peoples opinions
of rats. She says rats do not jump at throats If cornered, a
rat will go for the area of most daylight, and so they jump up
and over the shoulder. Sarah feels sorry for all of us who do
not know the charms of rats.
King of the rats in the Handley household is Solo. He is
a show champion, and the family pet. While the other rats
sleep in an empty bedroom, Solo sleeps with Sarah and her
husband William, in his own cage in their bedroom. He gets
up and breakfasts with them and in the evening sits at the
SUPPLEMENT 2
UNIT 1
Introductory It
Insert it is/there is in the spaces. In some sentences negative and interrogative forms, or the past or
future tenses are required.
1. a hotel in the village, so we decided to stay there. ...
a charming village and I was very happy there, but my
children were bored because .. nothing to do in the
evenings.
2. ... a pond beside your house? Yes, ... How deep
...?
Collective nouns
Open the brackets paying attention to the collective nouns. Use both variants where it is possible.
1. A pack of wolves (is seen/ are seen) in the distance.
2. Clothes (is made, are made) of various materials, such
as wool or cotton.
3. The cattle (is, are) in the shed.
142
We use USED TO to talk about states and actions in the past that are not true now or have changed.
+
3. children/ work
4. talk/ mobile phones
7. think/ the Earth was flat 8. live so long
b) Write sentences using used to and didnt use to about when you were younger. Use the ideas below to
help you or your own ideas.
e.g. I used to listen to ONE DIRECTION but now I like Ariana Grande.
Love, believe, be afraid of, have, hate, play, listen to, monsters, favourite toy, books, computer, iPod,
MP3 player, mobile phone.
c) On your own, number the statements from the most likely (1) to the least likely (8). Make groups of four,
discuss your order of statements. Use the following phrases:
I think. / I consider
because SUBJECT +VERB;
I believe / I suppose
because of NOUN;
1. People will travel to the moon on a holiday. People will travel in time.
2. People will go shopping on the other side of the world.
3. People will not need visas and passports.
4. People will not walk much.
5. People will spend their holidays in hotels situated at the bottom of the sea and also in space.
6. People will travel faster, e.g. from Sydney to London in just about 2.5 hours.
7. People will spend more money on holiday activities.
143
You are going to play a game to revise the form of the Past Simple Tense. Work in groups of three: two
players and a referee. Players take turns choosing a square. The referee asks a question. If the player
answers correctly, the referee marks a NOUGHT or a CROSS on the square. When a player gets a line of
three, they win the game.
a) Name a regular verb that ends in ed and is pronounced as /t/. e.g. laughed (work, joke, cook,
pass, wash, help, fix, check, brush, relax)
b) Name a regular verb that ends in ed and is pronounced as /d/. e.g. played (surprise, live, hug,
save, comb, arrive, turn, iron, water, open)
c) Name a regular verb that ends in ed and is pronounced as /id/. e.g. wanted (wait, end, decide,
defend, expect, hate, need, start, taste, chat)
d) Name an irregular verb with three identical forms.
e.g. cut-cut-cut (put, let, hit, cost, hurt, quit, set,
shut)
e) Name a time indicator of the Past Simple Tense.
e.g. last year (ago, in 2004, yesterday, the day
before yesterday, on December 30th, last . , on
UNIT 2
Bryan isnt happy with his day. Look at his problems and write what he should have done to avoid them.
I spilt tea on my
laptop and now I
cant do my home
assignment.
My neighbours
think I am rude
as I listen to loud
music.
144
My plants
are withered
because I forgot
to water them.
Read the answers and write a suitable question for each answer.
a) Where is______________?
St Pauls Cathedral is situated in London.
b) Who _________________?
Sir Christopher Wren designed St Pauls Cathedral.
c) When _________________?
St Pauls Cathedral was finished in 1710.
d) In what kind of style __________?
St Pauls Cathedral was built in the Baroque style.
e) Where_____________________?
Prince Charles married Lady Diana Spencer in St
Pauls Cathedral on July 29, 1981.
f) How_________________?
St Pauls Cathedral entrance ticket is about 17.
Facebook. Who______?
e) Only the British celebrate Guy Fawkes Night on
November 5. Who ____?
f) The Canadians celebrate Thanksgiving on the second Monday in October. Who _____?
g) Queen Elizabeth II is the United Kingdoms longest serving monarch. Who ______?
UNIT 3
Reflexive pronouns
Complete the sentences using the correct form of the reflexive pronoun.
1. She wrote a letter to ________ .
2. I saw an UFO ________ .
3. The cat washes _____________ with its tongue.
4. Dont blame __________ for this.
Rewrite the sentences, using a different subject and an appropriate reflexive pronoun.
1. She always looks at herself in the mirror.
2. He made himself a pullover.
3. They assembled their furniture themselves.
4. I repair my car myself.
UNIT 4
Relative Pronouns
stolen.
7. I saw a woman. Her coat was fashionable.
8. The doctor is very good. I dont remember his
telephone number.
9. The children are in the playground. You know
their mother.
10. The room is ours. Its door is open.
145
Fill in the gaps with the Active Voice Perfect Tenses. Then change the sentences into the Passive Voice.
1. She (read) ____ the book by the end of the next month.
_______________________________________________
2. Granny (bake, just) ____ a cake.
_______________________________________________
3. My friends (buy)____ a house before we moved to the
city.
_______________________________________________
Tense Usage
Put the verbs in brackets in the right tense form.
moment).
6. While he (was trying/tried) to fix the antenna he hurt his
hand.
7. The police have been waiting for you (for two hours/
now).
8. The children havent come from school (already/ yet).
UNIT 5
Conditional Sentences
6.
7.
8.
9.
10.
146
Read the following statements, then express a wish or regret in connection with them. See the models.
Models. 1. Its raining now. We cant go to the country.
2. I wish it stopped raining. We could go to the country.
3. The weather was cold and windy on Sunday.
I caught cold on that outing.
I wish the weather had not been so cold and windy on Sunday. I wouldnt have caught cold then.
1. You didnt clear up the point at once. We have to consider the matter again now. 2. The bus is packed. It wont
pick up all the passengers. 3. Its a pity you didnt mention these facts while the subject was being discussed. 4. He
always argues about everything. Its hard to work with him. 5. The doctors very busy now. Im afraid he wont
see the patient. 6. The medicine is very bitter, I cant make the child take it. 7. I havent booked a return ticket and now Im afraid it may be difficult to book it for a through train. 8. Nothing interesting happens. I am bored.
9. Youve been bothering me with questions all the time. I cant finish this work. 10. You find fault with everybody.
Youre becoming difficult to deal with.
Indirect Speech
Below there are some statements in quotation marks ( ). Report these statements using the pattern for
reported speech.
Example: John said, I want some more milk.
John said We are tired.
1. Mary said, I want some more soup.
2. Mr. Owens said, I remember you.
3. The mailman said, There arent any letters.
Below there are some yes-no questions. Report these questions in the past tense.
Example: Mary said, Do you like apples?
Mary asked me if I liked apples.
1. Dick said, Are you a teacher?
2. John said, Do you speak French?
3. Harry said, Is your name Charles?
Below there are some question-word questions. Report these questions in the past tense.
Example.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
UNIT 6
147
UNIT 7
Underline the Complex Object and explain why it is used this way.
1. My parents and teachers want me to learn English
well.
2. Id like you to travel along the Nistru.
3. He didnt expect the Capriana monastery to be so
beautiful.
4. They heard her reciting the poem My Hearts in the
Highlands by R. Burns.
5. She heard the pupils run into the classroom to take
their books to give them back to the library.
Paraphrase the following sentences using the Complex Object either with the Infinitive (with or without
to) or Participle I.
1. I heard their cheers. They cheered up their football
team.
2. The car left the town. They saw it.
3. I saw that the children were climbing the hill to reach
its top.
4. They were picking flowers. He saw that.
5. They were talking about going to Turkey. She heard
their talk.
6. I consider Dan Balan one of the best singers. Everybody
thinks so too.
7. Yesterday your daughter had to make a presentation,
but she didnt. What did you do? (Answer the question using to make)
8. People think that computers will be used everywhere
in the 21st century.
9. Everybody knows that W. Shakespeare is a great poet.
10. The pupils do not want to go on this excursion. And I
dont want to make them.
UNIT 8
148
Letter Writing
Senders address
65 Market Street V
al Haven, CT 95135
Date
Customer Service
Cool Sports, LLC
8423 Green
Terrace Road
London
SUPPLEMENT 3
30 June, 2015
Receivers address
I have recently ordered a new pair of soccer cleats (item #6542951) from your website on 21 June. I
received the order on 26 June. Unfortunately, when I opened it I saw that the cleats were used. The
cleats had dirt all over them and there was a small tear in front of the part where the left toe would
go. My order number is AF26168156.
To resolve the problem, I would like you to credit my account for the amount charged for my cleats, I
already went out and bought a new pair of cleats at my local sporting goods store so sending another
pair would result in me having two pairs of the same cleats.
D . Sampson
Body
paragraphs
Complimentary close
Yours faithfully,
Thank you for taking the time to read this letter. I have been a satisfied customer of your company
for many years and this is the first time I have encountered a problem. If you need to contact me,
you can reach me at (555) 555-5555.
Handwritten signature
Donald Sampson
British style (personal letter)
49 Northwick Avenue
Kenton, Middlesex
14th February, 2009
Dear Josef,
I am so sorry to have missed you when you came to London last week. I heard from my sister that you had
called, but as I had joined Frank on a business trip to Amsterdam, we were out of town while you were here.
However, you will be over again in June, I hear, and we are sure to be at home then. So we look forward to seeing you next time. And dont forget we have a spare room, and would be delighted if you made use of it.
With best wishes,
Yours sincerely,
H. Roston
Gulf Services Inc.
P.P. Box 388
Jeddah
Saudi Arabia
Harry Roston
149
SUPPLEMENT 4
Table 1
Symbol
150
Word
1.
[ph]
pit
[phIt]
2.
[p]
spit
[spIt]
spar, crispy
3.
[th]
tick
[t Ik]
4.
[t]
stuck
[stk]
5.
[kh]
keep
[khi:p]
6.
[k]
skip
[skIp]
scatter, sky
7.
[tS]
chip
[tSIp]
8.
[dZ]
judge
[dZdZ]
9.
[b]
bib
[bIb]
10.
[d]
dip
[dIp]
11.
[D]
butter
[bDr]
12.
[g]
get
[get]
13.
[f]
fit
[fIt]
14.
[v]
vat
[vAt]
15.
[]
thick
[Ik]
16.
[T]
then
[Ten]
17.
[s]
sip
[sIp]
18.
[z]
zap
[zAp]
19.
[S]
ship
[SIp]
20.
[Z]
azure
[AZr]
21.
[h]
hat
[hAt]
22.
[j]
yet
[jet]
23.
[w]
wall
[w:l]
24.
[ ] (hw)
which
[ ItS]
what. where, where, who (not all speakers have this sound). (AE)
25.
[l]
lip
[lIp]
26.
[r]
run
[rn]
27.
[r],
bird
[brd]
,
28.
[m]
man
[mAn]
29.
[n]
no
[nEU]
30.
[N]
sing
[sIN]
SUPPLEMENT 5
Table 2
British Symbol
American Symbol
Word
Transcription
Examples
1.
[I]
[I]
fit
[fIt]
hit, income
2.
[i:]
[ij]
feet
[fi:t]/ [fijt]
3.
[e]
[]
let
[let]/ [lt]
set, guest
4.
[A]
[A]
bat
[bAt]
cat, panic
5.
[:]
girl
[g:l]
fur, sir
6.
[E]
[E]
teacher
['ti:tSE]
letter, afford
7.
[U]
[U]
book
[bUk]
put, should
8.
[u:]
[uw]
Sue
[su:]/ [suw]
suit, loo
9.
[]
[]
shut
[St]
other, udder
10.
[a:]
[a]
car
[ka:]/ [ka]
part, far
11.
[]
[]
pot
[pt]
cot, rob
12.
[:]
[]
port
[p:t]
oral, bought
13.
[eI]
[ej]
fate
[feIt]/ [fejt]
clay, grain
14.
[aI]
[aj]
my
[maI]/ [maj]
tide, buy
15.
[I]
[j]
boy
[bI]/ [bj]
coin, loyal
16.
[EU]
[w]
note
[nEUt]/[nwt]
17.
[aU]
[w]
now
[naU]/[nw]
house, bough
IS.
[IE]
[IE]
dear
[dIE]
near, fear
19.
[E]
air
[E]
care, there
20.
[UE]
poor
[pUE]
tour, moor
In Table 1 symbols 11, 24 and 27 do not have analogues in the British System of Transcription
and in Table 2 symbols 5, 19 and 20 do not have analogues in the American System of Transcription.
151
SUPPLEMENT 6
Infinitive
152
Past Simple
Participle II
Translation
begin /bI'gIn/
began /bI'gAn/
begun /bI'gn/
a ncepe
bet /bet/
bet /bet/
bet /bet/
bind /baInd/
bound /baUnd/
bound /baUnd/
a lega, a strnge
bite /baIt/
bit /bIt/
bitten /'bItn/
a muca ()
bleed /bli:d/
bled /bled/
bled /bled/
a sngera
blow /blEU/
blew /blu:/
blown /blEUn/
a sufla
break /breIk/
broke /brEUk/
broken /'brEUkEn/
a strica
breed /bri:d/
bred /bred/
bred /bred/
a crete (animale) , ()
bring /brIN/
brought /br:t/
brought /br:t/
a aduce
broadcast
/'br:dk:st/
broadcast
/'br:dk:st/
broadcast
/'br:dk:st/
a difuza, a transmite
build /bIld/
built /bIlt/
built /bIlt/
a construi
burst /b:st/
burst /b:st/
burst /b:st/
a exploda ; ( )
buy /baI/
bought /b:t/
bought /b:t/
a cumpra
catch /kAtS/
caught /k:t/
caught /k:t/
a prinde
choose /tSu:z/
chose /tSEUz/
chosen /tSEUzn/
a alege
cost /kst/
cost /kst/
cost /kst/
a costa ,
creep /kri:p/
crept /krept/
crept /krept/
a se tr
cut /kt/
cut /kt/
cut /kt/
a tia
deal /di:l/
dealt /delt/
dealt /delt/
dig /dIg/
dug /dg/
dug /dg/
a spa
draw /dr:/
drew /dru:/
drawn /dr:n/
a desena
dream /dri:m/
dreamt /dremt/
dreamt /dremt/
a visa ;
drink /drINk/
drank /drANk/
drunk /drNk/
a bea
drive /draIv/
drove /drEUv/
driven /'drIvn/
eat /i:t/
ate /eIt/
eaten /'i:tn/
a mnca
fall /f:l/
fell /fel/
fallen /'f:lEn/
a cdea
feed /fi:d/
fed /fed/
fed /fed/
a hrni
feel /fi:l/
felt /felt/
felt /felt/
a (se)simi
fight /faIt/
fought /f:t/
fought /f:t/
a (se) lupta
find /faInd/
found /faUnd/
found /faUnd/
a gsi
fling /flIN/
flung /flN/
flung /flN/
fly /flaI/
flew /flu:/
flown /flEUn/
a zbura
forbid /fE'bId/
forbade /fE'beId/
forget /fE'get/
forgot /fE'gt/
forgotten /fE'gtEn/
a uita
forgive /fE'gIv/
forgave /fE'geIv/
forgiven /fE'gIvn/
a ierta
freeze /fri:z/
froze /frEUz/
frozen /'frEUzn/
a nghea, a congela
get /get/
got /gt/
got /gt/
a primi
give /gIv/
gave /geIv/
given /'gIvn/
a da
grow /grEU/
grew /gru:/
grown /grEUn/
a crete
hear /hIE/
heard /h:d/
heard /h:d/
a auzi
hide /haId/
hid /hId/
hidden /'hIdn/
a (se) ascunde ()
hit /hIt/
hit /hIt/
hit /hIt/
a lovi
hold /hEUld/
held /held/
held /held/
a ine, a opri
hurt /h:t/
hurt /h:t/
hurt /h:t/
a jigni, a rni
keep /ki:p/
kept /kept/
kept /kept/
a pstra, a ine ,
know /nEU/
knew /nju:/
known /nEUn/
a ti
lead /li:d/
led /led/
led /led/
a fi n frunte, a conduce
leap /li:p/
leapt /lept/
leapt /lept/
a nainta n salturi
leave /li:v/
left /left/
left /left/
a prsi, a pleca
let /let/
let /let/
let /let/
a lsa, a ngdui ,
lie /laI/
lay /leI/
lain /leIn/
a sta culcat
light /laIt/
lit /lIt/
lit /lIt/
a lumina
lose /lu:z/
lost /lst/
lost /lst/
a pierde
mean /mi:n/
meant /ment/
meant /ment/
meet /mi:t/
met /met/
met /met/
a (se) ntlni ()
pay /peI/
paid /peId/
paid /peId/
a plti
put /pUt/
put /pUt/
put /pUt/
a pune ,
read /ri:d/
read /red/
read /red/
a citi
ride /raId/
rode /rEUd/
ridden /'rIdn/
a clri
ring /rIN/
rang /rAN/
rung /rN/
a suna
rise /raIz/
rose /rEUz/
risen /'rIzn/
a se ridica ,
run /rn/
ran /rAn/
run /rn/
a fugi, a alerga
say /seI/
said /sed/
said /sed/
a zice, a rosti ,
see /si:/
saw /s:/
seen /si:n/
a vedea
sell /sel/
sold /sEUld/
sold /sEUld/
a vinde
send /send/
sent /sent/
sent /sent/
a trimite
set /set/
set /set/
set /set/
shake /SeIk/
shook /SUk/
shaken /SeIkn/
a scutura, a agita
shed /Sed/
shed /Sed/
shed /Sed/
a pierde, a lepda , ;
shine /SaIn/
shone /Sn/
shone /Sn/
a strluci ,
shoot /Su:t/
shot /St/
shot /St/
a mpuca
shrink /SrINk/
shrank /SrANk/
shrunk /SrNk/
a se contracta, a se scurta ()
shut /St/
shut /St/
shut /St/
a nchide
153
sing /sIN/
sang /sAN/
sung /sN/
a cnta
sink /sINk/
sank /sANk/
sunk /sNk/
a se neca, a se cufunda
sleep /sli:p/
slept /slept/
slept /slept/
a dormi
slide /slaId/
slid /slId/
slid /slId/
a aluneca
speak /spi:k/
spoke /spEUk/
spoken /'spEUkEn/
a vorbi, a cuvnta ,
speed /spi:d/
sped /sped/
sped /sped/
a se grbi
spend /spend/
spent /spent/
spent /spent/
a cheltui
split /splIt/
split /splIt/
split /splIt/
spread /spred/
spread /spred/
spread /spred/
a (se) rspndi ()
spring /sprIN/
sprang /sprAN/
sprung /sprN/
a sri
stand /stAnd/
stood /stUd/
stood /stUd/
a sta
steal /sti:l/
stole /stEUl/
stolen /'stEUlEn/
a fura
stick /stIk/
stuck /stk/
stuck /stk/
a nfige
sting /stIN/
stung /stN/
stung /stN/
a nepa
stink /stINk/
stank /stANk/
stunk /stNk/
sweep /swi:p/
swept /swept/
swept /swept/
a mtura ,
strike /straIk/
struck /strk/
struck /strk/
a lovi
swear /swE/
swore /sw:/
sworn /sw:n/
a jura
swim /swIm/
swam /swAm/
swum /swm/
a nota
swing /swIN/
swung /swN/
swung /swN/
a (se) legna ()
take /teIk/
took /tUk/
taken /teIkn/
a lua
teach /ti:tS/
taught /t:t/
taught /t:t/
tear /tE/
tore /t:/
torn /t:n/
a sfia, a rupe
tell /tel/
told /tEUld/
told /tEUld/
a spune, a povesti ,
think /INk/
thought /:t/
thought /:t/
a se gndi
throw /rEU/
threw /ru:/
thrown /rEUn/
a arunca
understand
/,ndE'stAnd/
understood
/,ndE'stUd/
understood
/,ndE'stUd/
a nelege
upset /p'set/
upset /p'set/
upset /p'set/
a (se) rsturna ()
wake /weIk/
woke /wEUk/
woken /'wEUkEn/
a se trezi, a se detepta
wear /wE/
wore /w:/
worn /w:n/
a purta (o hain)
weep /wi:p/
wept /wept/
wept /wept/
a plnge ,
win /wIn/
won /wn/
won /wn/
a ctiga, a nvinge
wind /waInd/
wound /waUnd/
wound /waUnd/
a se rsuci
write /raIt/
wrote /rEUt/
written /'rItn/
a scrie
154
SUPPLEMENT 7
Active Vocabulary
Abacus n. abac
abandon v. a abandona ,
;
accommodation n. cazare
,
accomplishment n. realizare
ant n. furnic
anthem n. imn
anxiety n. ngrijorare, anxietate,
nelinite ,
appealing adj. atrgtor, agreabil
appointment n. programare ,
aquarium n. acvariu
aquiline adj. acvilin
arch n. arc
archangel n. arhanghel
archery n. tragere cu arcul
area n. suprafa, teritoriu, teren
bat n. liliac
battered adj. uzat, mototolit
be on display a fi expus ;
blazer n. bluz de sport
ane n. b (baston)
canvas n. pnz
capital adj. principal, esenial; excelent
, ;
capital punishment n. pedeaps capital
captivity n. captivitate ,
care for v. a-i psa de
;
carol n. cntec de Crciun
,
carry out v. a executa, a efectua
;
cash register n. cas de marcat
cash-strapped adj. strmtorat
cast-off n. zdrean, vechitur
cauldron n. cazan
155
cave n. peter
caviar n. caviar
censorship n. cenzur
challenge n. provocare (la ntrecere,
etc.), ncercare ,
charge n. pre, plat, cost ,
charity n. caritate
chatter v. a plvrgi
chew v. a rumega
chronicle v. a face cronic, a nregistra
conservatory n. ser ;
156
crockery n. olrie
crooked adj. ncovoiat ,
dirt n. murdrie
disabled adj. inapt, invalid
disappointing adj. dezamgitor
divan n. divan
donation n. donaie
downtown n. centrul oraului
duckling n. ruc
duffer n. neghiob ,
agle n. vultur
earthquake n. cutremur
effort n. efort
effortless adj. uor, care nu necesit
effort
embarrass v. a jena
embroidery n. broderie
emergency n. urgen, caz extrem
,
emission n. emisie, degajare
employ v. a angaja
employee n. angajat ;
encourage v. ncuraja
engaged adj. interesat, angajat; logodit
, ;
estimate v. a estima
eternity n. eternitate
ethnography n. etnografie
fail v. a nu reui ;
falcon n. oim
famine n. foamete
famous (for) adj. faimos, celebru
(-)
fancy v. a-i imagina; a-i plcea (ceva)
, ;
fascinated adj. fascinat
fashionable adj. la mod, monden,
elegant
feature n. trstura distinctiv; (pl.)
trsturile fetei ,
; (.)
fertile adj. fertil
fictional adj. fictiv, imaginativ
fight v. a lupta
fine arts n. arte frumoase
fine n. amend
firework n. focuri de artificii
fission n. fisiune ;
flood n. inundaie
fly n. musc
focus v. a-i concentra atenia asupra
a
folk song n. cntec popular
foretell v. a prezice
forsake v. a abandona
fowl n. pasre (domestic)
()
fragile adj. fragil; ;
freckled adj. pistruiat
free of charge gratuit
frightful adj. nspimnttr
frustrate v. a zdrnici
()
fulfilling adj. care satisface
gear n. echipament
give credit to someone a atribui un
merit cuiva ,
glamour n. farmec, vraj; fascinaie,
prestigiu ;
glorify v. a glorifica, a (pro)slvi
greed n. lcomie
green belt n. zon (centur) verde
green fingers n. (fam.) pricepere n
cultivarea plantelor, arta grdinritului
greenhouse n. ser
greenpeace n. organizaie
internaional de protecie a mediului
grove n. crng, pdurice
growl v. a mri (amenintor); a
bombni ,
; ,
grumble v. a bodogni, a bombni, a
murmura (nemulumit)
guardian n. tutore
guilt n. vinovie; vin
at gunpoint v. sub inta armei
herd n. ciread
hide v. a ascunde
highlight v. a reliefa, a accentua, a
atribui mult importan
hike v. a cltori de plcere pe jos
,
hint n. aluzie, sugestie
hire v. a angaja
historic adj. istoric, de importan
istoric ;
historical adj. istoric, care ine de istorie
;
hitchhiking n. caltorie cu autostopul
holder n. deintor, posesor, proprietar;
acionar ;
homeless adj. fr adpost
homemade adj. de cas, fcut acas
hygiene n. igien
Habit n. obicei
illumination n. iluminare ;
impediment n. obstacol
impose v. a impune
improve v. a (se) mbunti
()
inch n. ol (25,4 mm) (25,4 )
income n. venit, beneficiu
ineffectual adj. fr rezultat, fr succes; van, zadarnic ,
;
inhabitant n. locuitor
innate adj. nnscut
inquiring adj. scruttor, iscoditor, curios
inquisitive n. iscoditor
inscription n. inscripie
intensity n. intensitate, tensiune ;
interpreter n. translator; interpret
Ignorance n. necunoatere
157
island n. insul
issue n. chestiune
item n. articol
Keep on v. a continua
keep track v. a duce eviden
keep up with v. a ine pasul
-.,
kick n. lovitur
kilt n. kilt (fust scurt i plisat din
stof cadrilat) (
)
kitchenette n. chicinet
knickers n. pantaloni scuri (pentru
copii) ()
knit v. a mpleti, a tricota
masterpiece n. capodoper
158
matter n. problem ;
melt v. a se topi
messy adj. murdar; dezordonat
;
meticulous adj. meticulos, minuios
;
mind v. a avea ceva mpotriva
mode n. metod
monograph n. monografie
mood n. dispoziie
moreover adv. n plus; mai mult dect
att ;
motto n. motto; deviz ;
mountaineering n. alpinism
,
moustache n. musta
myriad n. cantitate mare
negotiate v. a negocia ;
nevertheless adv. totui, cu toate acestea
newsletter n. circular, buletin de tiri
nobles n. nobilime ,
persuade v. a convinge
physician n. medic
pick v. a alege
pick up v. a ridica
plaza n. pia deschis (n orae)
()
pledge n. angajament, jurmnt ,
;
plumber n. instalator
pneumonia n. pneumonie
polar cap n. calot polar
rank v. a clasa ;
rate n. norm; tarif ;
realm n. aici: spaiu, ntindere :
reminiscences n. amintiri
research n. cercetare
resemblance n. asemnare ;
ail v. a naviga
sales representative n. agent de vnzri
salute n. salut, salutare, (mil.) salut
;
sanctuary n. rezervaie natural
sari n. sari
scale n. scar ,
scary adj. nfiortor
scatter v. a rspndi, a mprtia, a
risipi , ,
seek v. a cuta
self-confidence n. ncredere n sine
(),
self-improvement n. auto-perfecionare
self-respect n. respect de sine
self-worth n. auto-apreciere
shark n. rechin
shawl n. al
shield n. scut
shore n. rm
shoulder-length pn la umr (despre
pr) ( )
shriek n. strigt, ipt ,
shrug v. a ridica (din umeri)
sigh n. suspin
sightseeing n. vizita turistic
slate n. tbli
sleeping-bag n. sac de dormit
slip v. a aluneca
slot n. crptur, deschiztur ,
snake n. arpe
snorkelling n. scufundare cu tub de
respirat (la mic adncime) ,
solitude n. singurtate
sobriety n. sobrietate
sophisticated adj. sofisticat
sophomore n. student n anul doi
spell n. vraj
spot n. punct
staff n. personal, cadre
stand (for) v. a simboliza ,
159
submerge v. a se scufunda
subtle adj. subtil, delicat ;
succeed v. a reui ,
suffice v. a fi suficient
suggest v. a sugera, a propune
surgeon n. chirurg
surgery n. chirurgie
survey n. sondaj; studiu; examinare
; c; ,
survival n. supravieuire
swan n. lebd
swift-footed adj. iute de picior
,
arget n. int
tent n. cort
terrified adj. ngrozit
therapist n. terapeut
thigh n. coaps
ticket n. bilet
ties n. legturi (de snge, prietenie, etc.)
,
tiny adj. minuscul
torch n. tor, fclie
160
torture n. tortur
touch v. a atinge ;
tough adj. dur
trainee n. cursant
trainer n. antrenor; instructor ;
fine ,
and n. baghet
wanderlust n. plcere de a cltori
warm n. cald
watercolour n. acuarel
waterproof adj. rezistent la apa
wax n. cear
weave-loom n. rzboi de esut
werewolf n. vrcolac
whale n. balen
whereas conj. ntruct; n timp ce
while conj. n timp ce, pe cnd
white-water rafting n. plutrit
wig n. peruc
wildlife n. lumea animal
wisdom n. nelepciune
wise adj. nelept
witchcraft n. vrjitorie, farmec
alley n. vale ,
value n. valoare
vapour n. vapor