XIII. Write out from text B all terms concerning to animal topic. 


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XIII. Write out from text B all terms concerning to animal topic.



XIV. Agree or disagree with the following statements:

1). Many thousand years have passed since man began domesticating animals.

2). At present the most important of the three purposes the animals are used for is their being a source of food.

3) The only purpose for which dogs are known to be used now is to assist people in their various activities.

4) From the history of animal domestication it is known that the first domesticated animals were used as draft power.

5) We can say that now in the world there are neither wild cattle nor wild horses.

6) At present the process of domesticating some fur – bearing animals has started and in future they may become domesticated.

7) As the origin of domestication is unknown we cannot say what kind of animal was domesticated first.

 

XV. Using the words in brackets ask questions:

1). The last representative of the wild cattle died at the beginning of the 17th century (when).

2). Domesticated cattle belong to the family Bovidae (what family).

3). Breeding domestic animals is done under human management and control (how).

4). The horse was perhaps domesticated in central Asia (where).

5). Animals have been domesticated for three main purposes (how many).

6). Cattle are used now mostly for food (what for).

7). Great experience has been gained in improving farm animals (what experience)

 

 

Апта

Грамматикалық материал: Direct and Indirect Speech. Sequence of Tenses Лексикалық материал: Мамандық бойынша мәтін. Text 9.“ WATER” Idiom:9.miss the boat- miss a favourable opportunity; be too late to gain an advantage; e.g. It`s too late to send in an application form now. You`ve missed the boat, I am afraid. Phrasal verb: Plug in- connect an electrical appliance to the electricity supply: e.g.The fridge isn’t working because you haven’t plugged it in.

1. Read and translate the following words:

substance, cover, surface, breathe, consist, begin, wash, shape, soil, help, absorb, release, breeze, warm, rise, fall, fail, starvation, spread, destruction, property, slave, clean, cook, bath, carry, waste, irrigate, dry, wet, fresh, salty, icecaps, glaciers, evaporate, pollute, flood.

 

II. Match the words with their definitions below:

substance, absorb, starvation, irrigate, evaporate, pollute, breeze, glacier, flood,

spread

1). supply(land, crops) with water(by means of rivers, pipes)

2). (particular kind of) matter

3). (cause to) change into vapour

4). mass of ice, formed by snow on mountains, moving slowly along a valley

5). suffering or death caused by having no food

6). make dirty, impure

7). take in or suck in

8). wind, especially a gentle wind

9). (coming of a) great quantity of water in a place that is usually dry

10). extend the surface or width of something by unfolding or unrolling it

III. From the list below – pick up words which have the same meaning and which are the opposites:

 

a). synonyms:

substance, earth, pollute, soil, wet, begin, matter, muddy, dry, start

b). opposites:

salty, small, hot, evaporate, rise, fresh, cold, absorb, fall, large

 

IV. Read and translate the text A:

 

“WATER”

 

Water is the most common substance on earth. It covers more than 70 per cent of the earth’s surface. It fills the oceans, rivers, and is in the ground and in the air we breathe. Water is everywhere. Without water, there can be no life. In fact, every living thing consists mostly of water. Your body is about two- thirds water. A chicken is about three- fourths water, and a pineapple is about four- fifths water. Most scientists believe that life itself began in water – in the salty water of the sea.

Ever since the world began, water has been shaping the earth. Rain hammers at the land and washes soil into rivers. The oceans pound against the shores, chiseling cliffs and carrying away land. Rivers knife through rock, carve canyons, and build up land where they empty into the sea. Glaciers plow valleys and cut down mountains. Water helps keep the earth’s climate from getting too hot or too cold. Land absorbs and releases heat from the sun quickly. But the oceans absorb and release the sun’s heat slowly. So breezes from the oceans bring warmth to the land in winter and in winter and coolness in summer.

Throughout history, water has been people’s slave – and their master. Great civilizations have risen where water supplies were plentiful. They have fallen when these supplies failed. People have killed one another for a muddy water hole. They have worshiped rain gods and prayed for rain. Often, when rains have failed to come, crops have withered and starvation has spread across a land. Sometimes the rains have fallen too heavily and too suddenly. Then rivers have overflowed their banks, drowning large numbers of people and causing enormous destruction of property.

Today, more than ever, water is both slave and master to people. We use water in our homes for cleaning, cooking, bathing, and carrying away wastes. We use water to irrigate dry farmlands so we can grow more food. Our factories use more water than any other material. We use the water in rushing rivers and thundering waterfalls to produce electricity.

Our demand for water is constantly increasing. Every year, there are more people in the world. Factories turn out more and more products, and need more and more water. We live in a world of water. But almost all of it – about 97 per cent – is in the oceans. This water is too salty to be used for drinking, farming, and manufacturing. Only about 3 per cent of the world’s water is fresh (unsalty). Most of this water is not easily available to people because it is locked in icecaps and other glaciers. By the year 2000, the world demand for fresh water may be double what it was in the 1980's.’But there will still be enough to meet people's needs.

 

V. Answer the following questions:

 

1) What is water? What forms of water do you know?

2) How much per cent does water cover the earth’s surface?

3) Where does water flow?

4) Can we live without water? Why?

5) Every living thing consists mostly of water, doesn’t it? Do you know any facts about it?

6) Is water slave or master to people?

7) What negative or positive sides of water do you know?

 

Interesting facts about water.

1 mile = 1.609 km (one thousand 6 hundred and 9 km.)

1 gallon (gal) = 4.546 litres (British)

= 3.785 litres (US)

 

VI. Read and translate text B:

 

“ Water Is Life.”

 

Water is the natural resource we all know very well. We know its many forms – rain, snow, ice, hail, vapour, fog. Yet, water is the natural resource we least understand.

How does water get into the clouds? What happens when it reaches the Earth? Why is there sometimes too much and other times too little of it? And, most important, is there enough water for all the plants, and all the animals, and all the people?

Water covers nearly three fourths of the Earth, most being sea water. But sea water contains various salts, including those that are harmful to most land plants and animals. Still, it is from the salty seas and oceans that most of our fresh water comes- no longer salty and harmful. Water moves from clouds to land and back to the ocean in a never- ending cycle.

Ocean water evaporates into atmosphere leaving salts behind, and moves across the Earth as water vapour. Water in lakes and rivers also evaporates and rises into the air. Having cooled in the air the water vapour condenses and falls to the Earth as rain, hail or snow, depending on region, climate, season and topography. This part of the cycle is very important because man can use water stored in the atmosphere only when it falls to the land.

Every year about 450,000 cubic kilometers of water evaporates from the oceans and about 61,000 cubic kilometers from land sources.

Water is an unchanging and ever renewing resource but its distribution on the surface of the globe varies greatly – there is either too little or too much water. Many problems are caused by too much water when we do not want it or too little when we do want it.

No natural resource on our planet has so many uses as water. We need water to support our lives, to grow our crops, to water our stock, to power our industries and for many other purposes.

Our water needs are great and they continue to grow. Agriculture requires great quantities of water to provide food and raw materials for industry. Industry consumes not less water than agriculture. Per capita use of water is increasing rapidly in the world.

There is plenty of water on the Earth. But the amount of fresh water available to man is very small.

In socialist society measures are taken against waste of water and pollution of water. We have to use water more efficiently in industry, towns and cities, in agriculture and irrigation. All life depends on water.

 

VII. Find definitions to the following words:

 

Air, Earth, water, sea, nature, plant, vegetable, moisture, soil, ground, land

1. Salt water which covers most of the Earth’s surface. 2. The planet on which we live. 3. The system of things of which we ourselves are a part. 4. The mixture of gases that surrounds the earth. 5. The common liquid which fills the rivers, lakes, seas and oceans. 6. Water vapour either in the air or condensed on a surface.7. Any form of vegetable life. 8. Any kind of plant which is used for food. 9. The earth in which things grow. 10. The surface of the Earth. 11. The solid part of the Earth’s surface contrasted with water and sea.

 

VIII. Tell about “Water cycle ”.

 

IX. Find opposite words:

 

a) to fall, to appear, to heat, to evaporate, moist, cold, to give, far, always, easy, heat, to decrease, to produce, to die, useful, inefficient, salt.

b) To disappear, to rise, to cool, efficient, harmful, to live, never, difficult, to condense, to take, hot, dry, fresh, near, cold, to increase, to consume.

 

X. Find odd words:

 

1. heat, light, motion, surface; 2. a plant, a crop, an animal, a hat, a man; 3.

soil, water, land, ground, Earth; 4. autumn, summer, sunlight, winter, spring;

5. quickly, directly, fast, slowly, rapidly; 6. an ocean, a lake, an inch, a river, a sea; 7. to plow, to sow, to plant, to harm, to cultivate, to harvest.

XI. Read and translate text C:

 

“ Mice Under Water.”

 

Words To Help You Understand the Passage

 

temperature Temperature is how cold or how hot something is. It is usually

measured by a thermometer.

carbon dioxide Carbon dioxide is a gas that is passed out of the lungs during

breathing

fluid-filled Fluid is another word for liquid. Fluid- filled means something is

filled with a liquid.

 

Mice can live for many hours under water. A team of scientists has found that rodents can breath under water if two conditions are met. The water must contain salts and it must have more oxygen than is usually found in water.

The scientists were led to their experiments by a study of how animals and people drown. Mice were put under water and were watched until their breathing stopped. When the tank was filled with ordinary sea water or tap water, the mice died quickly. When it was filled with a salt solution in which the salt solution in which the salt was equal to that in the mouse’s body and when oxygen was bubbled into it, the mice lived for as long as four hours. When the temperature was held at 20º C. and a chemical was added to improve carbon dioxide exchange, the mice lived to a maximum of nearly 18 hours.

The water- breathing rodents may provide a means of studying breathing problems in newborn infants who live in a fluid- filled womb up to the moment of birth.

 



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