Brunetti was at the post office at seven thirty the next morning ответы егэ

‘The school board, Commissario, is the equivalent of the dead-letter office for civil servants, or, if you prefer, the elephants’ graveyard: the place where the hopelessly incompetent have always been sent or, on the other hand, a place to stick someone until a more lucrative position can be found for them. At least it was that way until four or five years ago, when even the administration of this city had to acknowledge that certain positions there should be given to professionals with some understanding of the way children can be helped to learn. Before that time, positions there served as political plums, though they were relatively small plums. And that was a reflection of how little… how can I say this without saying it?… how little opportunity there was for the people who worked there to augment their salaries’ It seemed to Brunetti that Galvani’s phrasing was no less elegant than his own.

The judge raised his glass but set it down untouched. ‘If you’re thinking that Signora Battestini’s bank accounts could have been created to receive bribes paid to her husband or son in connection with the place where they worked, I’d suggest you reconsider your hypothesis.’ He sipped, set the glass down, and added, ‘You see, Commissario, the accumulation of such a relatively small sum over such a long period hardly speaks of the sort of graft I’m used to encountering in this city.’ Leaving no time for Brunetti to register the implications of this remark, the judge went on, ‘But, as I said, it is a department in which I have never had to involve myself, so perhaps it is merely that things are done on a smaller scale there’ Again, that smile. ‘And one must always keep in mind that corruption, like water, will always find a place, however insignificant, to collect’

For an instant, Brunetti found himself wondering if his own basilisk-eyed observations on local government would sound so profoundly dark to someone less well versed in their workings than he. Turning from this reflection as well as from the opportunity to comment on the judge’s remarks, Brunetti asked only, ‘Do you know who was in charge of the department during those years?’

Galvani closed his eyes, propped his elbows on the table, and lowered his forehead on to his palms. He remained like that for at least a minute, and when he looked up and across at Brunetti, he said, ‘Piero De Pra is dead; Renato Fedi now runs a construction firm in, I think, Mestre; and Luca Sardelli has some sort of job in the Assessorato dello Sport. To the best of my memory, they were the men who ran the office up until the professionals were brought in.’ Brunetti thought he had finished, but then Galvani added, ‘No one ever seems to stay in the job for more than a few years. As I said, it’s either a dumping ground or a launching pad, though in the case of Sardelli, he certainly wasn’t launched very far. But in either case, there seems to be very little to be had from the position.’

Brunetti made a note of the names. Two of them rang familiarly in his memory: De Pra because he had a nephew who had gone to school with Brunetti’s brother and Fedi because he had recently been elected as a deputy in the European Parliament.

Brunetti resisted the temptation to pose other offices and names to the judge and said only, ‘You’ve been very generous with your time, sir.’

Again, that childlike smile transformed the judge’s face. ‘I was glad to. I’ve wanted to meet you for some time, Commissario. It was my belief that anyone who provided so much discomfort to the Vice-Questore must be a man worth knowing.’ Telling Brunetti that he had already paid for their wine, the judge excused himself by saying it was time he was home for dinner, said goodbye, and left.

14

Brunetti was at the ufficio postale at seven-thirty the next morning, located the person in charge of the postmen, showed his warrant card, and explained that he wanted to speak to the postino who delivered mail to the area in Cannaregio near the Palazzo del Cammello. She told him to go to the first floor and ask in the second room on the left, where the Cannaregio postini sorted their mail. The room was high-ceilinged, the entire space filled with long counters with sorting racks behind them. Ten or twelve people stood around, putting letters into slots or pulling them out and packing them into leather satchels.

He asked the first person he encountered, a long-haired woman with a strangely reddened complexion, where he could find the person who delivered the mail to the Canale della Misericordia area. She looked at him with open curiosity, then pointed to a man halfway along her table and called out, ‘Mario, someone wants to talk to you’

The man called Mario looked at them, then down at the letters in his hands. One by one, merely glancing at the names and addresses, he slipped them quickly into the slots in front of him then walked over to Brunetti. He was in his late thirties, Brunetti guessed, his own height but thinner, with light brown hair that fell in a thick wedge across his forehead.

Brunetti introduced himself and started to take his warrant card out again, but the postino stopped him with a gesture and suggested they talk over a coffee. They walked down to the bar, where Mario ordered two coffees and asked Brunetti what he could do for him.

‘Did you deliver mail to Maria Battestini at Cannaregio…’

Mario cut him off by reciting the number of the house, then raised his hands as if in fake surrender. ‘I wanted to, but I didn’t do it. Believe me.’

The coffees came, and both men spooned sugar into them. While he stirred his, Brunetti asked, ‘Was she that bad?’

Mario took a sip, put the cup down and stirred in a further half-spoonful of sugar, and said, still stirring, ‘Yes.’ He finished the coffee and set the cup back on the saucer. ‘I delivered her mail for three years. I must have taken her, in that time, thirty or forty raccomandate, had to climb all those steps to get her to sign for them’

Brunetti anticipated his anger at never having been tipped and waited for him to give voice to it, but the man simply said, ‘I don’t expect to be tipped, especially by old people, but she never even said thank you.’

‘Isn’t that a lot of registered mail?’ Brunetti asked. ‘How often did they come?’

‘Once a month’ the postman answered. ‘Regular as a Swiss watch. And it wasn’t letters, but those padded envelopes, you know, the sort you send photos or CDs in.’

Or money, thought Brunetti, and asked, ‘Do you remember who they came from?’

‘There were a couple of addresses, I think’ Mario answered. ‘They sounded like charity things, you know, Care and Share, and Child Aid. That sort of thing.’

‘Can you remember any of them exactly?’

‘I deliver mail to almost four hundred people’ he said by way of answer.

‘Do you remember when they started?’

‘Oh, she was getting them already when I started on that route.’

‘Who had the route before you?’ Brunetti asked.

‘Nicolo Matucci, but he retired and went back to Sicily.’

Brunetti left the subject of the registered packages and asked, ‘Did you bring her bank statements?’

‘Yes, every month,’ he said, and recited the names of the banks. ‘Those and the bills were the only things she ever got, except for some other raccomandate.’

‘Do you remember who those were from?’

‘Most of them came from people in the neighbourhood, complaining about the television.’ Before Brunetti could ask him how he knew this, Mario said, ‘They all told me about them, wanted to be sure that the letters were delivered. Everyone heard it, that noise, but there was nothing they could do. She’s old. That is, she was old, and the police wouldn’t do anything. They’re useless.’ He looked up suddenly at Brunetti and said, ‘Excuse me.’

Ю.С. Веселова

ТЕМАТИЧЕСКИЙ
ТРЕНАЖЕР ПО АНГЛИЙСКОМУ ЯЗЫКУ

ЧТЕНИЕ

ГОТОВИМСЯ К ЕГЭ

Москва

«Интеллект-Центр»

2012

удк 373. 167.l:81 1.l l l+81 1. l l l (075.3)

ББК 81.2 Англ — 922 в 38

Веселова, Ю.С.

В38 Тематический тренажер по
английскому языку. Чтение. (Готовимся к ЕГЭ)/ ЮС. Веселова. — Москва:
Интеллект-Центр, 2012. — 64 с.

ISBN 978-5-89790-845-5

«Тематический тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по
английскому языку» поможет подготовиться к выполнению заданий по лексике
раздела «Чтение» ЕГЭ по английскому языку. В пособие включены задания
экзаменационного типа, соответствующие заданиям В2, ВЗ и А 15—A21 ЕГЭ по
английскому языку. В пособие также включены рекомендации и алгоритмы, с помощью
которых выполнять задания на чтение можно легко и без ошибок. «Тематический
тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по английскому языку» можно использовать как при классной
работе в школе, так и для самостоятельной подготовки к ЕГЭ по английскому языку
и для индивидуальных занятий с репетитором. Материалы данного пособия
пригодятся вам для подготовки к международным экзаменам FCE, IELTS, TOEFL и
других удк 373.167.l:81 1.l l l+81 1.1 1 1 (0753) ББК 81.2 Англ — 922

Генеральный
директор издательства «Интеллект-Центр»: Миндюк М.Б.

Редактор:
Локтионов Д.П.

Художественный
редактор: Воробьева ЕЮ.

Подписано в
печать 24.11.2011 г. Формат 60х84/8.

Усл. печ. ле
8,0. Тираж 5000 экз.

Заказ № 2474

ISBN
978-5-89790-845-5                                                                                 
«Интеллект-Цснтр», 2012

© ЮС. Веселова, 2011

ВВЕДЕНИЕ

«Тематический тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по
английскому языку» предназначен для подготовки учащихся 1 1 классов
общеобразовательных школ разного типа к выполнению заданий В2, В2 и A15-A21
раздела «Чтение» Единого Государственного Экзамена, для самостоятельной подготовки
к Единому Государственному Экзамену по английскому языку и для индивидуальных
занятий с репетитором. Также «Тематический тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по английскому
языку» может быть использован для подготовки к международным экзаменам FCE,
IELTS, TOEFL и других.

«Тематический тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по
английскому языку» состоит из теоретических и практических материалов, с
помощью которых можно наиболее полно подготовиться к выполнению заданий на
чтение.

В «Тематический тренажер ЧТЕНИЕ по
английскому языку» включены следующие темы:

— Описание раздела «Чтение» в ЕГЭ по
английскому языку.

 Задание В2 направлено на установление
соответствия и относится к базовому (простому) уровню сложности. При выполнении
данного задания нужно уметь понять основную тему текста. В задании В2
используются краткие тексты (или абзацы текста) информационного и
научно-популярного характера. В задании В2 нужно установить соответствие между
заголовками и текстами, один из заголовков в задании лишний. В пособие включены
12 заданий В2 и алгоритмы выполнения для данного типа заданий.

 Задание ВЗ направлено на понимание
логической структуры текста и относится к повышенному уровню сложности. В
задании ВЗ проверяется умение понять структурносмысловые части текста. В
задании ВЗ нужно заполнить пропуски в тексте частями предложений, одна из
которых лишняя. В данном задании используются публицистические (например,
рецензия) и научно-популярные тексты. В пособие включены 12 заданий ВЗ и
алгоритмы выполнения для данного типа заданий.

— Задания A15—A21 направлены на проверку
полного понимания текста и относятся к высокому уровню сложности. В заданиях
A15—A21 проверяется умение полностью понять текст, в том числе проверяется
способность делать выводы из прочитанного текста. В заданиях A15—A21 нужно
выбрать один из четырех вариантов ответа, в соответствии с прочитанным текстом.
В данном задании используются художественные или публицистические (например,
эссе) тексты. В пособие включены 12 заданий A15—A21 и алгоритмы выполнения для
данного типа заданий.

— В конце «Тематического тренажера ЧТЕНИЕ
по английскому языку» включены ответы к упражнениям.

Для подготовки к остальным разделам
экзамена рекомендуем использовать следующие книги серии «Тематический
тренажер»: ГРАММАТИКА, СЛОВООБРАЗОВАНИЕ, ЛЕКСИКА, ПИСЬМО. Более подробную
информацию по подготовке е ЕГЭ по английскому языку можно найти на сайте
www.help-ege.ru.

Успехов!

Автор и составитель ЮС. Веселова

З

РАЗДЕЛ
«ЧТЕНИЕ»

Раздел «Чтение» включает в себя 20
заданий. Рекомендуемое время выполнения раздела «Чтение» — 30 минут. Задания
включают в себя три типа заданий: задания Ю, ВЗ и задания А15—А21. Задания
различаются по формату (задание на установление соответствия и задание с
множественным выбором ответа), по уровням сложности (базовый, повышенный и
высокий уровни сложности), по проверяемым умениям (умение понять основную тему
текста, умение понять структурно-смысловые связи текста, умение понимать
логические связи в предложении и между частями текста; делать выводы из
прочитанного). В данном разделе могут быть использованы публицистические,
художественные, научно-популярные и прагматические тексты. Другими словами, это
могут быть тексты журнальных статей, брошюр, путеводителей, газетные и
журнальные статьи. Только в заданиях Al 5—A21, которые относятся к высокому
уровню сложности, могут быть использованы отрывки из художественных текстов.

ЗаДание

Количество вопросов

Проверяемые умения

Тип текста

Тип заДания

Базовый уровень

7

Умение понять
основную тему текста

Журнальные

статьи, брошюры, п теводители

Задание на установление соответствия

вз

Повышенный уровень

6

Умение
понять структурносмысловые связи текста

Газетные или журнальные статьи

Задание на установление соответствия

А15-А21 Высокий уровень

7

Умение

понимать
логические связи в предложении и между частями текста; делать выводы из п
очитанного

Журнальные

статьи,
отрывки из художественной прозы

современных авторов

Задание с

множественным выбором ответа

ЗАДАНИЕ НА
УСТАНОВЛЕНИЕ СООТВЕТСТВИЯ Ю

(понимание
основного содержания текста)

Задание В2 направлено на установление
соответствия и относится к базовому (простому) уровню сложности. Для успешного
выполнения задания В2 нужно уметь понять основную тему текста. В задании В2
используются краткие тексты (или абзацы текста) информационного и
научно-популярного характера. В задании В2 нужно установить соответствие между
заголовками и текстами, один из заголовков в задании лишний.

При выполнении данного задания можно
использовать следующие стратегии:

1.       Внимательно
прочитайте заголовки и выделите (подчеркните) в них ключевые слова.

2.       Быстро
прочитайте тексты или абзацы текста, чтобы понять, о чем они.

З. Выделите в текстах ключевые слова
или фразы, выражающие тему/ основную мысль и соотнести их с ключевыми словами в
заголовке.

4.      Подберите
заголовок, соответствующий, с Вашей точки зрения, тому или иному тексту.

5.      Не
обращайте внимания на незнакомые слова, если они не • мешают понимать основную
мысль. При выполнении этого задания вам не нужно полностью понимать значения
всех слов. Можно применить метод «языковой догадки» в отношении незнакомых слов
или просто не обращать на них внимания.

6.      Помните,
что лишний заголовок не соотносится ни с одним из текстов.

7.      Не
оставляйте ни одного вопроса без ответа. Если вы не знаете ответ — постарайтесь
угадать его.

1.

YcmŒogume coomgemcmeue
Me.ycÒy 3aeonoocapvtu 1—8 u maccma.Mu A—G. 3Œecume ceou omeembl 8 ma6nuqy.
14cn0J1b3Yüme KaoæÒyo guØpy monbK0 oÒuH pa3. B
3aòaHuu oÒuH 3azonoeoR nuumuü.

1. Cultural activities

5.
Financial assistance

2.
Exchange programs

6. Special consideration

3. Formal means of assessments

7.
Identification

4, Getting around the
campus

8,
Essay writing

A.  For many courses in the University, the
majority of your marks will be based on your written work. It is essential that
you develop your skills as a writer for the different disciplines in which you
study. Most departments offer advice and guidelines on how to present your
written assignments. But you should be aware that the requirements may vary
from one department to another.

B.  There are two formal examination periods each
year: first semester period beginning in June and the second period beginning
in November. Additionally, individual departments may examine at other times
and by various methods such as ‘take-home’ exams, assignments, orally,
practical work and so on.

c

D

C.  If you feel your performance in an
examination has been adversely affected by illness or misadventure, you should
talk to the course Coordinator in your department and complete the appropriate
form. Each case is considered on its own merits.

D.  The University has arrangements with colleges
throughout the United States, Canada, Europe and Asia. The schemes are open to
undergraduate and postgraduate students and allow you to complete a semester or
a year of your study overseas. The results you gain are credited towards your
degree at the University. This offers an exciting and challenging way of
broadening your horizons as well as enriching your academic experience in a
different environment and culture.

E.  Youth Allowance may be available to full-time
students. Reimbursement of travel costs may also be available in some cases.
Postgraduate research funds are offered for full-time study towards Masters by
Research or PhD degrees. These are competitive and the closing date for
applications is 31 October in the year prior to the one for which the funds are
sought.

F.  Your student card, obtained on co:npletion of
enrollment, is proof that you are enrolled. Please take special care of it and
carry it with you when you are at the University. You may be asked to show it
to staff at any time. This card is also your discount card and access card for
the Students’ Union as well as allowing you access to the library.

G.  The University provides opportunities for a
wide range of activities, from the production of films and plays, to concerts
and magazines, and even art and photo exhibitions. If you have a creative idea
in mind, pick up a form from ACCESS on Level 3 of the College Wandsworth
Building and fill it through. All the ideas will be considered.

2.

VcmaHoeume
coomæmcmeue Me.ycÒy 3aeon08Ka,uu 1—8 u mevccmauu A—G.
3aæcume ceou omeembl e ma6nugy. ¼cnonb3YÜme
Kaoæòyo quØpy monbK0 oÒuH pm. B 3aòaHuu
oÒuH 3azon080K nuumuü.

       1. Dancing helps to
overcome difficulties         5. Hip-Hop movement

       2, Boy’s talents                                                      6.
Senseless Life

3.  Youth’s life in Bronx  7. Youth’s
hobbies in Belafonte’s film

4.  Popularity
of breakdance 8. Personal view of the film

A.       These three young men belong to
‘Hip-Hop’. This movement developed during the seventies in the USA, especially
in the New York Bronx. It includes rap-songs, graffiti paintings as well as
breakdance. For young boys and girls this movement is becoming more and more a
kind of expression. They see it as a way to achieve something. Here they can
express their longing for admiration, their desires and their disappointments.

B.       For too many young people in the USA —
especially those living in slums such as the New York Bronx — life seems to be
without sense. «Only living people are able to cry. People murder people.
A world without sense.» This is their. reaction sung in a rap-song.

C.       The film isn’t a copy of usual
breakdance films. Belafonte shows more. He shows the life of youth in the Bronx
and their thrilling joy of life. And he demonstrates breakdance in nearly
acrobatic pictures. Little Lee, whose feet seem to be of gum when the rhythm of
breakdancing not only as a means of earning some cents. For him it is more than
just dancing. In it he expresses his disappointments and his longing for
something better.

D.      Those young people — Black and White —
create a world of their own — a wild, crazy, colourful world, and the rhythm of
their music is their pulsation. For a short time they forget the cruelty of
daily life in a world without illusions and without pity. The film tries to
seize light and darkness of that life.

E.       So it is understandable why little
Black Lee is breakdancing in the streets of New York, why Ramon — an unemployed
white boy who is painting the white trains of the New York subway — considers
himself to be an artist. And Kenny, who is unemployed, too, as a disc jockey
produces his own music, mixing it with the help of things like dropping
watertaps or brushes, thus producing a truly fascinated music. The reaction of
his audience speaks for itself.

F.       
My first
impression was that the problem dealt with is not presented as clichés,
everybody gets a lot background information. In an interview Harry Belafonte
said: «I’ve followed breakdevelopment attentively. It is an outcry of a
youth we all have forgotten. A shriek of a youth without future in reality,
with true ‘no future’ .. «

G.      Breakdance, graffiti-painting,
rap-songs, Hip-Hops… — fascinating words, but what about their background?
What make Black youth in the USA engage in such admittedly impressive hobbies?
«Beat Street», a film produced by Harry Belafonte, provides some
information. There a lot of pros and cons about this film, a lot of different
opinions about it.

B

c

3.

YcmaH06ume
coomæmcmeue Meoæòy 3aeonogŒca.Mu 1—8 u meKcma.Mu A—G
3Œecume ceou omeembz g ma6nuqy. Mcnonæyüme Kaoæòyo
uuØpy monbK0 oÒuH pa.3. B 3aòaHuu oÒuH 3azon060K
nuumuÜ.

1. Successful career   5.
Sharing impressions with a friend

2. Challenging job  6. Job offer

       3, Preparing for a job
interview 7. Enjoyable job

              4.
Personality           8. Applying for a job

A.. A bright sixteen-or-seventeen-year-old is
needed to work on Saturdays from nine till six on our market stall selling
clothes. Our stock consists of a wide range of trousers, jeans and shirts of
modern design. No previous experience is necessary as we provide full training
on the job. The main qualities required are an ability to deal with the
customers in a positive and friendly manner.

B.
You are a natural
optimist. You are happy most of the time and always expect the best. However,
you are often careless and you don’t always work hard enough, because you think
everything will be fine. Remember, nobody is lucky all the time.

B

c

D

C.
I was twenty-three when I
went to Cosmopolitan as a secretary. I had to do all the usual secretarial jobs
like answering the phone and typing letters. And at eleven o’clock I made the
coffee, and I had to clean the fridge once a month. After a year I began to
train as a sub-editor and then got my National Certificate — a qualification
for British journalists. After a time I became features editor on Cosmopolitan.
My secretarial training has been incredibly useful.

D Find out as much as you can about your prospective
employers and the business they are in. Think about the questions you are most
likely to be asked, and at least three questions you would like to ask them.
Don’t only talk about what you hope to get from the fim. Say what you can do
for them and all the things in your previous experience and training that you
think will be useful in the new job.

E.  feel I would be suitable for this position
because I have good organizational skills, and I greatly enjoy going out and
meeting new people. I have experience of this kind of work. Last summer I was
employed by Imperial Hotels as a tour organizer, and arranged excursions to
places of interest. I also worked for London Life last Christmas, which
involved taking groups of tourists around the capital. Please do not hesitate
to contact me if you require any further information. I look forward to hearing
from you.

F.  At the moment I’m staying at a hotel in
Athens and I’m doing quite a lot of sightseeing. You would not believe it but
the job doesn’t seem to be too demanding. Most of the time I deal with bookings
and answer inquiries. But I suppose it’ll be different when the tourist season
starts next month. Even now restaurants are beginning to get busier. Next, I’m
moving to the island of Crete, which is where most of the people in the company
live. See you soon.

G.  There are Search and Rescue Services all
around the coast of Britain. They must be ready to go out at any time of the
day or night and in any weather. Sometimes they must rescue people in the
mountains in a storm at night. It isn’t easy to navigate a helicopter in the
dark just a few metres from a mountain. The crews work on 24 hour shifts, so if
a ship sinks or if someone falls down a cliff, Search and Rescue will be there
to help.

4,

YcmŒoeume coomeemcmeue MeatCÒy
3aeon06Kajuu 1 — 8 u maccmauu A — G. 3aHecume ceou omeembl g ma6nuqy.
Mcn0J1b3Yüme Kaacòyo quØpy mo.WbK0 oÒuH B
3aòaHuu oÒuH 3az0J1080R nuumuÜ.

1. 
Simulating a
natural environment

2. 
Demands on space and energy are reduced

3. 
The plans for
future homes

4. 
Underground living accommodation

5. 
Some buildings do not require natural light

6. 
Developing underground services

7. 
Homes sold before completion

8. 
An underground home is discovered

A.    
The first anybody knew about Dutchman Franck Siegmund and his family
was when workmen tramping through a field found a narrow steel chimney
protruding from the glass. Closer inspection revealed a chink of sky-light
window among the thistles, and when amazed investigators moved down the side of
the hill they came across a pine door complete with leaded diamond glass and a
brass knocker set into an underground building. The Siegmund had managed to
live undetected for six years outside the border-town of Breda, in Holland.
There are the latest in a clutch of individualistic homemakers who have
burrowed underground in search of tranquillity.

B.    
Most have been forced to dismantle their individualistic homes
and return to more conventional lifestyles. But a Dutch-style houses are about
to become respectable and chic. The foundations had yet to be dug, but
customers queued up to buy the unusual part-submerged houses, whose back wall
consists of a grassy mound and whose front is a long grass gallery.

C.    
The Dutch are not the only would-be moles. Growing numbers of
Europeans are burrowing below ground to create houses, offices, discos and
shopping malls. It is already proving a way of life in extreme climates; in
winter months in Montreal, Canada, for instance, citizens can escape the cold
in an underground complex complete with shops and even health clinics. In Tokyo
builders are planning a massive underground city to be begun in the next
decade, and underground shopping malls are already common in Japan, where 90
percent of the population is squeezed into 20 percent of the landscape.

D.    
Building big commercial buildings underground can be a way to
avoid threatening a beautiful and ‘environmentally sensitive’ landscape. Indeed
many of the buildings which consume most land — such as cinemas, supermarkets,
theatres, warehouses or libraries — have no need to be on the surface since
they do not need windows.

E.     
There are big advantages too, when it comes to private homes. A
development of 194 houses which would take up 14 hectares of land above ground
would occupy 2,7 hectares below it, while the number of roads would be halved.
Under several of earth, noise is minimal and insulation is excellent.

F.     
In the US, where
energy-efficient homes became popular after oil crisis of 1973, 10,000
underground houses have been built. A terrace of five homes, Britain’s first
subterranean development, is under way in Nottinghamshire. Italy’s outstanding
example of subterranean architecture is the Olivetti residential centre in
Ivrea. Commissioned by Roberto Olivetti in 1969, it comprises 82 one-bedroomed
apartments and 12 maisonettes and forms a house-hotel for Olivetti employees.
It is built into a hill and little can be seen from outside except a glass
façade. Patricia Vallecchi, a resident since 1992, says it is little
different from living in a conventional apartment.

G.    
Not everyone adapts so
well, and in Japan scientists at the Shimuzu Corporation have developed ‘space
creation’ systems which mix light, sounds, breezes and scents to stimulate
people who spend long periods below ground. Underground offices in Japan are
being equipped with ‘virtual’ windows and mirrors, while underground
departments in the University of Minnesota have periscopes to reflect views and
light.

c

D

5,

YcmŒoeume coomeemcmgue .n,te3fCÒy 3aeon08Kauu 1—8
u maccmauu A—G. 3aHecume ceou omeembl g maõnuqy. Mcnonb3Yüme
Kaoæòyo qu(þpy monbK0 oÒuH pa3, B
3aòaŒtuu oÒuH 3a20J1080K nuuuuü.

1. Odd Hobby

5. Divorces in Britain

2. Animal Protection

6. Reserved nation?

3. Marriage: Modern View

7,
Nation of Animal Lovers

4. A National Hobby

8, Spoil Your Pet

A.    
The family in Britain is changing. People get married at a later
age and many career-oriented women don’t want to have children immediately.
They prefer to do well at their jobs first and put off having a baby until
their late thirties. However, maniage and the family are still popular. Most
people in Britain still get married and stay together until the end of their
lives. The majority of divorced people marry again, and they sometimes take
responsibility for a second family. Relationships within the family are also
changing. Parents treat their children more as equals than they used to.

B.    
Many visitors who come to Britatin often say that it is very
difficult to make friends with British people because they are cold and
resewed. This is not true. What is true is that different cultures have
different ways of showing affection. In many countries (e.g. Spain or Russia)
friends often hug and kiss each other when they get together. In Britain this
is not so common. British people are not likely to tell their whole life story
to a complete stranger or even share their problems and worries with a friend.
The reason is that they don’t want to trouble other people with their problems.

C.    
From going for picnics in the rain to playing cricket, the
British do many things that confuse people from other countries. However, there
are some sports and hobbies that confuse even British people themselves.
Perhaps the strangest of them is train spotting. Basically train spotting is
collecting trains. But a locomotive won’t fit in your house or garage, will it?
So train spotters simply write down the serial number of every train they see.
They stand for hours at major UK stations sipping tea from their thermos flasks
and waiting for the next train.

D.    
Like everybody else, British people like doing things outside
work. Gardening is a well-known favourite. As the weather in Britain is
relatively mild, British people manage to do gardening almost all the year
round. Sometimes this can be just doing a bit of weeding, and sometimes serious
vegetable and fruit growing. Mowing grass is also very important. Every Sunday
morning (except for winter) people come out to mow their lawns. The British see
an unmown lawn not only as a sign of laziness, but also as disrespect to others
(and you can get fined for it as well).

E.     
It is no secret that British people love their pets to bits and
would do anything to make their life happy. But just how far does this love go?
The answer is QUITE far. Today, half of the 24.2 million homes in Great Britain
have a pet. Cats are especially popular because many people who live alone and
go to work like independent pets. There are eight million cats in Britain.
Other popular pets are dogs, birds, rabbits, fish, guinea-pigs and hamsters.
But you can also come across such exotic pets as crocodiles, spiders, snakes
and lizards.

F.     
The British have
always loved animals. Great Britain was the first country to create a society
to protect animals in 1824. The society still exists today, and it is called
the RSPCA — the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. The
RSPCA finds new owners for 96,000 homeless animals every yeare Besides, it
organizes different public events and is involved in lots of activities in the
sphere of protecting animals’ rights. The RSPCA also provides charity support
to animal shelters.

G.    
Today’s posh pets
need more than good food. They want to be pampered, just like humans. In
Britain you can see an astrologer who will do a special horoscope for your pet.
You can take your pet to see a psychologist. You can buy pet accessories and
designer clothes. There are also special accessories designed to keep your pet
fit, such as treadmills for dogs to exercise indoors or orthopaedic beds for
dogs that suffer from a bad back. There is even a pet hotel in Newcastle that
offers cats and dogs a gym, a jacuzzi and watching videos of their owners!

c

F

6.

YcmaHoeume coomeemcmeue
auewcòy 3azonooca..uu 1—8 u meccma.uu A—G. 3Œecume cgou omgenabz e
ma6nuvy. Mcnonæyüme Kaacòyo quØpy monbK0 oÒuH
pan B 3aòaHuu oÒug 3aZ0JZ080K JIUWHuÜ.

1, Magic and Heroes

5. Images on Stone

2. Doing Business

6. Stories and Seasons

3, Early Developments

7. Personal Record

4, Sounds and Symbols

8. From Visual to Sound

A.    The
earliest stage of writing is called pre-writing or proto-literacy, and depends
on direct representation of objects, rather than representing them with letters
or other symbols. Evidence for this stage, in the form of rock and cave
paintings, dates back to about 15,000 years ago, although the exact dates are
debatable. This kind of proto-literate cave painting has been found in Europe,
with the best known examples in South-Western France, but also in Africa and on
parts of the American continent. These petrographs (pictures on rock) show
typical scenes of the period, and include representations of people, animals
and activities.

B.     Why
did ancient people put such effort into making them? Various theories have been
put forward, but the most compelling include the idea that the pictures were
records of heroic deeds or important events, that they were part of magical
ceremonies, or that they were a form of primitive calendar, recording the
changes in the seasons as they happened. These, then, are all explanations as
to why man started to write.

C.     A
related theory suggests that the need for writing arose thereafter from the
transactions and bartering that went on. In parts of what is now Iraq and Iran,
small pieces of fired earth — pottery — have been found which appear to have
been used as tokens to represent bartered objects, much as we use tokens in a
casino, or money, today. Eventually, when the tokens themselves became too
numerous to handle easily, representations of the tokens were inscribed on clay
tablets.

D.    An early
form of writing is the use of pictograms, which are pictures used to
communicate. Pictograms have been found from almost every part of the world and
every era of development, and are still in use in primitive communities
nowadays. They represent objects, ideas or conceptsmore or less directly. They
tend to be simple in the sense that they are not a complex or full picture,
although they are impressively difficult to interpret to an outsider unfamiliar
with their iconography, which tends to be localized and to differ widely from
society to society. They were never intended to be a detailed testimony which
could be interpreted by outsiders, but to serve instead as aide-memoires to the
author, rather as we might keep a diary in a personal shorthand.

E.     The
first pictograms that we know of are Sumerian in origin, and date to about 8000
BC. They show how images used to represent concrete objects could be expanded
to include abstractions by adding symbols together, or using associated
symbols. One Sumerian pictogram, for example, indicates ‘death’ by combining
the symbols for ‘man’ and ‘winter’, another shows ‘power’ with the symbol for a
man with the hands enlarged.

F.      By
about 5,000 years ago, Sumerian pictograms had spread to other areas, and the
Sumerians had made a major advance towards modem writing with the development
of the rebus principle, which meant that symbols could be used to indicate
sounds. This was done by using a particular symbol not only for the thing it
originally represented, but also for anything which was pronounced in a similar
way. So the pictogram for na (meaning ‘animal’) could also be used to mean
‘old’ (which was also pronounced na). The specific meaning of the pictogram
(whether na meant ‘old’ or ‘animal’) could only be decided through its context.

G.    It is a
short step from this to the development of syllabic writing using pictograms,
and this next development took about another half a century. Now the Sumerians
would add pictograms to each other, so that each, representing an individual
sound — or syllable — formed part of a larger word. Thus pictograms
representing the syllables he, na and mi (‘mother’, ‘old’, ‘my’) could be put
together to form henami or ‘ grandmother’.

c

7.

YcmŒoeume coomeemcmeue .Me3fCÒy 3aeOJZ06Ka.MU 1—8
u maccma.,uu A—G. 3aæcume ceou omeembl e ma6nuqy.
¼cnonæyüme RaozÒyo qu4py monbK0 oÒuH pa-3. B
3aòaHuu oÒuH 3aZOJ1080K nuumui.

1, Learning takes time

5. Ear training

2, Use of a tense

6. Public speaking

3. Opinion essay

7. Listening for note-making

4. Punctuation

8. Applying for a job

A.    
They help the reader to make good of what is being read. The
comma is second in importance to the full stop. The full stop marks a break
between sentences, and the comma marks a slightly smaller or shorter break in
the sentence. It tells the reader to pause slightly within the sentence. There
are also particular cases where commas are always used, for example, marking
off the items in a list.

B.    
Choose a topic of interest to the class as a whole. In preparing
your speech remember that it is a speech and not an essay. When you give a
speech, it should not sound as though it is being read. Some people make notes
and then address the audience using their notes. Others, though, write out the
whole speech but then read it «dramatically». In general, the
sentences in a speech are shorter than they are in an essay.

C.    
The use of the present perfect and the past simple can be one of
the most difficult things to learn in English, particularly for Russian
speakers. It won’t be possible for you to leam it very quickly.  Don’t worry.
Practice the tenses as much as possible whenever you can and little by little
you will learn how to use them properly.

D.    
The present perfect links the past and the presente It is often
used with «just» to describe an action in the recent past. It is also
used for recent actions in the past with a present result, when the evidence is
in the present. It also denotes actions which began in the past and still take
place or are happening now. Finally, we use the present perfect tense to relate
experience from the past until now.

E.     
Use the first paragraph to state your reason for writing. If you
are replying to an advertisement you should mention where you saw it. In the
second paragraph draw attention to what makes you a particularly suitable
person for the post. Use present tenses to highlight your present situation and
skills. Use the present perfect to describe relevant recent experience. Use the
past tense to describe relevant achievements in the past. Don’t use informal
expressions.

F.     
The best way of improving is to get as much practice in listening
as possible. Some of this may be «real» English on television and
radio. Use your knowledge of the world to help you predict or guess what people
are talking about. Never stop listening too early, because quite a lot of what
is said may be repeated, Don’t worry if you cannot understand every word. We
rarely follow everything we hear, even in our own language.

G.    
It is important to have a good strong opening if your writing is
aimed at persuading people to change their views. You can start by presenting
the opposite point of view to your own, using expressions like «Some
people argue etc. This is usually followed by linking words which serve to
introduce the other side of the argument. You can personalise the argument by
using real examples. Group what you want to say into main topic areas.

c

8.

YcmaHoeume coomeemcmeue
MeotcÒy meoJ108Ka.n,tu 1—8 u me,tccma.Mu A—G. 3Œecume
ceou omgembz 8 ma6nuw. 14cn0J1b3Yüme ,tcaoæòyo
guØpy monbK0 oÒuŒ{ pa.3. B 3aòaHuu OÒUH
3aeon060K JZUIUHUÜ.

1, An unexpected preference for modern items

2.    
Two distinct
reasons for selection

3.     A lengthy, but necessary task

4.     The
need to show as much as possible to visitors

5. The two roles of museums

6, Who owns the museum
exhibits

7.    
Collections for
research purposes

8.    
The ‘global’
size of the problem

A.    When, in
1938, the Smithsonian National Museum of Natural History, in Washington DC,
decided it had run out of space, it began transferring part of its collection
from the cramped attic ad basement rooms where the specimens had been
languishing to an out-of-town warehouse. Restoring those speciments to pristine
conditions was a monumental task. One member staff, for example, spent six
months doing nothing but gluing the legs back on the crane flies. But 30
million items and seven years later, the job was done.

B.     At
least for the moment. For the Smithsonian owns 130 million plants, animals,
rocks and fossils and that number is growing at 2-3% a year. On an
international scale, however, such numbers are not exceptional. The Natural
History Museum in London has 80 million speciments. And the Science Museum has
300,000 objects recording the history of science and technology. Deciding what
to do with these huge accumulations of things is becoming a problem They cannot
be thrown away, but only a tiny fraction can be put on display.

C.     The
huge, invisible collections behind the scenes at science and natural history
museums are the result of the dual functions of these institutions. On the one
hand, they are places for the public to go and look at things. On the other,
they are places of research — and researchers are not interested merely in the
big, showy things that curators like to reveal to the public.

D.    The
public is often surprised at the Science Museum’s interest in recent objects.
Neil Brown, the senior curator for classical physics, says he frequently turns
down antique brass and mahogany electrical instruments on the grounds that they
are already have enough of them, but he is happy to receive objects such as the
Atomic domestic coffee maker, and a 114-piece Do-ItYourself toolkit with canvas
case, and a green beer bottle.

E.     Natural
history Museums collect for a different reason. Their accumulations are part of
attempts to identify and understand the natural world. Some of the plants and
animals they hold are «type speciments». In other words, they are the
standard reference unit, like a reference weight or length, for the species in
question. Other speciments are valuable because of their age. One of the most
famous demonstrations of natural selection in action was made using museum
speciments. A study of moths collected over a long period of time showed that
their wings became darker (which made them less visible to birds) as the
industrial revolution made Britain more polluted.

F.      Year
after year, the value of such collections quietly and valuably increases, as
scientists find uses that would have been unimaginable to those who started
them a century or two ago. Genetic analysis, pharmaceutical development and so
on would have been unimaginable to the museum’s founders.

G.   
But as the
collections grow older, they grow bigger. Insects may be small, but there are
millions of them and entomologists would like to catalogue every one. And when
the reference material is a pair of giraffes or a blue whale, space becomes a
problem. That is why museums such as the Smithsonian are increasingly forced to
tum to out of town storage facilities. But museums that show the public only a
small fraction of their material risk losing the goodwill of governments and
the public, which they need to keep running. Hence, the determination of so
many museums is to make their back room collections more widely available.

c

9.

YcmŒoeume coomæmcmgue
MeoæÒy 3’Z20JZ08Ka.MU 1—8 u maccma,’vtu A—G. 3aHecume cgou omeembl
e ma6nuqy. 14cnonb3Yüme Kaoæòyo qz4py monbK0 oÒuH pa3,
B 3aòaHuu oÒuH 3aeonoeoK .nuumuÜ.

1. About Jago International

5. The Professional Development Unit

2. Training Outside Jago

6. Find out More

3. Personal Development

7. Routes to Professional Development

4. Achieving the Best

8. Why Jago Encourages
Personnel Development

A.   
Jago International is a by-word for quality in vocational
education. From training in the use of the humble word processor to the highest
level of negotiation skills, Jago International will arrange for employers to
gain the most from their employees’ abilities, and for employees to make the
best of themselves. Jago International has an unblemished record of achievement
after more than 50 years’ work with the world’s largest companies.

B.    
Jago International is committed to the personal and professional
development of its own staff. This is in keeping with its philosophy of
‘Achieving the best, for the best of all possible worlds’. Only if our own
staff arc fully-trained and fulfilled can our customers receive the most
up-to-date and most effective training for their own development.

C.    
Staff are encouraged to pursue both personal and professional
qualifications to ensure they fulfil their potential to the greatest degree.
There are a number of ways staff can achieve this with the support of Jago
International. Staff may take any of the wide assortment of training courses
administered through our own Professional Development Unit. Staff may be
directed to take outside qualifications from other training providers where we
do not provide these qualifications ourselves. Staff may also wish to take time
to pursue individual training goals and, where appropriate, Jago international
will support this.

D.   
Jago
International’s Professional Development Unit is housed in our Freemantle
headquarters but delivers courses on-site in each of our regional centres. A
Inonthly schedule of courses available is sent to every section and department
head and is postcd on main noticc boards and the Jago wcbsite, Thesc courses
extend from word proccssing and spreadsheet use, to staff and project
management, to our own MBA courses run in association with the University of
Freemantlc. Thcsc courses are frec to all Jago staff. Applications should bc
made through your linc supervisor or head of department.

E.    
It may be
appropriate to take courses or qualifications which are not covered in the
range offered by our P DU. Staff arc encouraged to take courses and
qualifications with other trainincr organisations with the agreement
of their line supcžvisor or head of depanment. Support and funding is
available to staff through the PDU where this is thought appropriatc and
helpful to the company as a whole. Application forms for funding can bc
obtained from Dr Bob Morley, the Director of our PDU, but must bc submitted by
the appropriate head of department. Within thc last year we have supported
staff taking courses in Advanced Marketing at the University of Freemantle. It
is company policy for staff to make sonnc financial commit:nent to the courses
they take in these circumstances.

F.     
Staff may also wish to take other courses or training for their
own personal development and there are opportunities for support here too. The
PDU has a budget for extraordinary training to provide some help to staff
undertaking training in this category. This is also administered by Dr Morley
in the PDU and an application fon•n should be sought from him. Currently being
funded are courses at the Queensland Higher College in aromatherapy and
spiritual cleansing.

G.   
For a full description of all courses and funding opportunities
available to staff through Jago International, contact Dr Bob Morley on
extension 5391 or at the Professional Development Unit at the Headquarters
Building.

D

10.

YcmŒoeume coomgemcmeue
.MeOfCÒy .3ac’0J108Ka,uu 1—8 u meKcmauu A—G. 3aHecume ceou owtgembl e
ma6nugy. Mcn0J1b3Yüme Kaoæòyo bf*).’ monbK0 oÒuH pa3.
B 3aòaHuu oÒuH 3az0J1060K nuuazuü.

          10 Stages of sleep                                                           5.
What causes insomnia

2.      
The purpose of
sleep   6. Reasons for sleep disorders

3.       How
to overcome sleep-related problems       7. Sleep helps to remain healthy

4.       Average
amount of sleep           8, How some hormone works

A.    
It is estimated that the average man or woman needs between
seven-and-a-half and eight flours’ sleep a night. Some can manage on a lot
less. Baroness Thatcher, for example, was reported to be able to get by on four
hours’ sleep a night when she was Prime Minister of Britain. Dr Jill Wilkinson,
senior lecturer in psychology at Surrey University states that healthy
individuals sleeping less than five hours or even as little as two hours in
every 24 hours are rare, but represent a sizeable minority.

B.    
The latest beliefs are that the main purposes of sleep are
to enable the body to rest and replenish, allowing time for repairs to take
place and for tissue to be regenerated. One supporting piece of evidence for
this rest-and-repair theory is that production of the growth hormone
somatotropin, which helps tissue to regenerate, peaks while we are asleep. Lack
of sleep, however, can compromise the immune system, muddle thinking, cause
depression, promote anxiety and encourage irritability.

C.    
Researchers in San Diego deprived a group of men of sleep between
3am and ‘lam on just one night, and found that levels of their bodies’ natural
defences against viral infections had fallen significantly when measured the
following morning. ‘Sleep is essential for our physical and emotional
well-being and there are few aspects of daily living that are not disrupted by
the lack of it’, says Professor William Regelson of Virginia University, a
specialist in insomnia. ‘Because it can seriously undermine the functioning of
the immune system, sufferers are vulnerable to infection.’

D.    
For many people, lack of sleep is rarely a matter of choice. Some
have problems getting to sleep, others with staying asleep until the morning.
Despite popular belief that sleep is one long event, research shows that, in an
average night, there are five stages of sleep and four cycles, during which the
sequence of stages is repeated. In the first light phase, the heart rate and
blood pressure go down and the muscles relax. In the next two stages, sleep
gets progressively deeper. In stage four, usually reached after an hour, the
slumber is so deep that, if awoken, the sleeper would be confused and
disorientated. It is in this phase that sleep-walking can occur. In the fifth
stage, the rapid eye movement (REM) stage, the heartbeat quickly gets back to
normal levels, brain activity accelerates to daytime heights and above and the
eyes move constantly beneath closed lids. During this stage, the body is almost
paralysed. This phase is also the time when we dream.

E.     
Sleeping patterns change with age, which is why many people over
60 develop insomnia. In America, that age group consumes almost half of the
sleep medication on the One theory for the age-related change is that it is due
to hormonal changes. The temperature rise occurs at daybreak in the young, but
at three or four in the morning in the elderly. Age aside, it is estimated that
roughly one in three people suffer some kind of sleep disturbance. Causes can
be anything from pregnancy and stress to alcohol and heart disease. Smoking is
a known handicap to sleep, with one survey showing that ex-smokers got to sleep
In 18 minutes rather than their earlier average of 52 minutes.

F.     
Apart from self-help therapy such as regular exercise, there are
psychological treatments, including relaxation training and therapy aimed at
getting rid of pre-sleep worries and anxieties. There is also sleep reduction
therapy, where the aim is to improve sleep quality by strictly regulating the
time people go to bed and when they gel up. Medication is regarded by many as a
last resort and often takes the form of sleeping pills, normally
benzodiazepines, which are minor tranquillisers.

G.    
Professor Regelson advocates the use of melatonin for treating
sleep disoFders. Melatonin is a naturally secreted hormone, located in the
pineal gland deep inside the brain. The main ffinction of the hormone is to
control the body’s biological clock, so we know when to sleep and when to wake.
The gland detects light reaching it through the eye; when there is no light, it
secretes the melatonin into the bloodstream, lowering the body temperature and
helping to induce steep, Melatonin pills contain a synthetic version of the
hormone and are commonly used for jet lag as well as for sleep disturbance.

c

G

11.

YcmŒoeume coomeemcmeue
MeoŒcòy 3aeon08Ka.Mu 1—8 u maccmauu A—G. 3aæcume ceou omeembl
e ma6nuqy. Mcnonæyüme KaoæÒyo quñ.’ monbK0
oÒuH pa3. B 3aòaHuu oÒuH 3azon060K nuumuü.

1.
Fashion magazines

5. Fashion houses

2.
Fashionable clothes for all

6,
Personal style

3. Preparation of a
collection

7.
Successful career

4. Conflicting interests

8. Fashion as the spirit of an age

A.
One of the most famous
fashion designers of the 20th century was Gianni Versace. At the age of
eighteen, he began working for his mother and quickly learned the skills of
dressmaking and design. By 1982 he was incredibly famous and had won the first
of many awards. His clothes were popular with famous musicians, such as Elton
John and George Michael. He was asked to design costumes for ballets, shows and
concerts. Versace died in 1997, at the age of fifty.

B.
The great dressmaking
firms are usually directed by outstanding dress designers, such as
Schiaparelli, Balenciaga, Molyneux and Chanel. They are in Paris, London, Rome,
Florence and New York, but by far the most important are French ones. This is
because France has nearly always set the fashion in clothes. Twice a year, in
January and July, they present their «collections», that is, their
displays of model clothes, which suggest the ideas on which fashion will be
based in the following spring and autumn.

C.
Some months before the
show the fabric manufacturers bring their materials to the fashion house, and
the designer makes his selection. At the same time, he makes hundreds of
sketches from which new fashion «lines» will eventually develop. If
the original idea proves a success, a «model» is made in materials of
suitable texture and colour. Accessories — hat, gloves, jewellery, etc. — are
added. After months of hard work the «models» are finally ready for
presentation.

D. Since the
beginning of the 20th century ready-made copies of very expensive and
fashionable models have been sold in shops. Clothing manufacturers developed a
method by which simplified versions of a «model» could be reproduced
in large quantities and sold to a much wider market. They employ their own
designers to adapt «models» so that they can be copied and
mass-produced in different sizes.

E.
If you wish to be not
only fashionable but also well dressed, you should bring individuality to your
clothes. Now that fashion has become universal and clothes are mass produced,
it is very difficult to avoid monotony. However, by skilful adaptation and
careful selection, you can give a certain individuality to a general fashion
«line», so that a dress manufactured by the thousands can appear to be
just the dress for you.

F.
The future of fashion as
art may be endangered by the possibility that new styles will be dictated by
businessmen rather than by dress designers. The latter are creative artists,
who are searching for new and original ideas in fashion which will reflect the
mood of the contemporary world. The aim of the businessman is to please the
mass market, which tends to be conservative in its tastes, so they cannot
afford to make a mistake, which often results in dull, lifeless fashion.

F. Fashion does not just
depend on one person’s idea of a new line or a different look, but on something
much wider. It expresses a feeling for what is going on in the world around. It
is a mirror in which are reflected the events, ideas and interests of an entire
era. Dress designers, the artists of the fashion world, try to interpret these
influences and express them in the fashions they produce.

c

D

Task 12.

YcmŒoeume coomgemcmgue
Meacòy 3aZOJZOßKa.MU 1—8 u maccma.Mu A—G. 3aHecume ceou omeernbl e
ma6nuqy. Mcnonæyüme qz4py «IOJZbKO OÒUH pa3. B
3aòaHuu OÒUH 3aZOJZ080K JZUWHUÜ,

1. New method of research

5. New phrases enter dictionary

2. Non-verbal content

6. A cooperative research project

3, The first study of
spoken language

7, Accurate word frequency counts

4. Traditional
lexicographical methods

8. Alternative expressions provided

A.    
The compiling of dictionaries has been historically the
provenance of studious professorial types — usually bespectacled — who love to
pore over weighty tomes and make pronouncements on the finer nuances of
meaning, They were probably good at crosswords and definitely knew a lot of
words, but the image was always rather dry and dusty. The latest technology is
revolutionising the content of dictionaries and the way they are put together.

B.    
For the first time, dictionary publishers are incorporating real,
spoken English into their data. It gives lexicographers (people who write
dictionaries) access to a more vibrant, up-to-date language which has never
really been studied before. In one project, 150 volunteers each agreed to tie a
Walkman recorder to their waist and leave it running for anything up Wvo weeks.
Every conversation they had was recorded. When the data was collected, the
length of tapes was 35 times the depth of the Atlantic Ocean. Teams of audio
typists transcribed the tapes to produce a computerized database of ten million
words.

C.    
This has been the basis — along with an existing written corpus —
for the Language Activator dictionary, described by lexicographer Professor
Randolph Quirk as «the book of world has been waiting for.» It shows
advanced foreign learners of English how the language is really used. In the
dictionary, key words such as ‘eat’ are followed by related phrases such as
‘wolf down’ or ‘be a picky eater’, allowing the student to choose the
appropriate phrase.

D.    
«This kind of research would be impossible without
computers,» said Delia Summers, a director of dictionaries. «It has
fransfon•ned the way lexicographers work. If you look at the word ‘like’, you  may
intuitively think that the first and most frequent meaning is the verb, as in ‘I
like swimming’. It is not. It is the preposition, as in ‘she walked like a
duck.» Just because a word or phrase is used doesn’t mean it ends up in a
dictionary. The sifting out process is as vital as ever. But the database does
allow lexicographers to search for a word and find out how frequently it is
used — something that could only be guessed at intuitively before.

E.     
Researchers have found that written English works in a very
different way to spoken English. The phrase ‘say what you like’ literally means
‘feel free to say anything you want’, but in reality it is used, evidence
shows, by someone to prevent the other person voicing disagreement. The phrase
‘it’ is a question of crops up on database over and over again. It has nothing
to do with enquiry, but it’s one of the most frequent English phrases which has
never been in a language learner’s dictionary before: it is now.

F.     
The spoken Corpus
computer shows how inventive and humorous people are when they are using
language by twisting familiar phrases for effect. It also reveals the power of
the pauses and noises we use to play for time, convey emotion, doubt and irony.

G, For the moment, those benefiting
most from the Spoken Corpus are foreign learners. «Computers allow
lexicographers to search quickly through more examples of real English,»
said Professor Geoffrey Leech of Lancaster University. «They allow dictionaries
to be more accurate and give a feel for how language is being used.» The
spoken Corpus is part of the larger British National Corpus, an initiative
carried out by several groups involved in the production of language learning
materials: publishers, universities and the British Library.

B

c

D

ЗАДАНИЕ НА ПОНИМАНИЕ СТРУКТУРНО-СМЫСЛОВЫХ СВЯЗЕЙ В ТЕКСТЕ ВЗ

(на
установление соответствия)

Задание ВЗ направлено на понимание
логической структуры текста и относится к повышенному уровню сложности. В
задании ВЗ проверяется умение понять структурносмысловые части текста. В
задании ВЗ нужно заполнить пропуски в тексте частями предложений, одна из которых
лишняя. В данном задании используются публицистические (например, рецензия) и
научно-популярные тексты,

При выполнении данного задания можно
использовать следующие стратегии:

1.      Быстро
прочитайте текст, чтобы понять, о чем он.

2.      Внимательно
прочитайте части предложения, которыми Вам следует заполнить пропуски.

3.      Старайтесь
заполнять пропуски частями предложений последовательно. Для этого внимательно
прочитайте предложения до и после пропуска.

4.      Выделите           слова]словосочетания,     в
частях предложений,     и проанализируйте слова/словосочетания, с которыми они
могут соотноситься в тексте.

5.      Решите,
какими частями предложений Вы заполните пропуск. Если у Вас появится желание
вставить какую-то часть предложения еще раз, тогда вернитесь к тексту.

6.      Чтобы
видеть, какие части предложения Вы еще не использовали, по ходу выполнения
задания вычеркивайте использованные части предложений.

7.      Обращайте
внимание на слова, стоящие до или после пропуска, а также знаки препинания.

8.      Обратите
особое внимание на согласование подлежащего со сказуемым, устойчивые выражения
и грамматические структуры.

9.      Восстановить
нужную часть предложения помогают союзы и слова-связки:

1)   moreover, also,
too, as we11 — используются для того, чтобы добавить факты, мысли к тем,
которые были уже упомянуты.

2)   however, but,
though, оп the other hand — используются для того, чтобы сообщить информацию,
противоположную той, которая уже упоминалась.

З) compared with, in comparison with —
используются для того, чтобы сравнить факты, мысли с уже упомянутыми.

4)  because, because of.
as а result, therefore — используются для того, чтобы сравнить факты, мысли с
уже упомянутыми.

5)  so, then, in
conclusion, in short, after all, as а result — используются для того, чтобы
подвести итог сказанному.

6)  so that, in order to
— используются для того, чтобы показать цель действия.

7)  for example, for
instance — используются для того, чтобы дать пример.

8)   6rstly, secondly,
fnally, 6rst, next, then, after that, at 6rst — используются для того, чтобы
установить последовательность фактов, событий.

9). this means that — используются для
того, чтобы сделать вывод, заключение.

10) if, in that case — используются для
того, чтобы объяснить условие действия.

1 1) generally — используется для того,
чтобы дать обобщение,

12)    by the
way — используется для того, чтобы ввести новую информацию или
прокомментировать то, о чем уже было сказано.

13)    that is
to say, to put it in another way — используются для того, чтобы выразить
другими словами то, что уже было сказано.

10.  Если Вы затрудняетесь
в выборе части предложения, поставьте цифру наугад, но не оставляйте в бланке
ответов соответствующую клетку незаполненной.

11.  По окончании выполнения
задания прочитайте текст с заполненными частями предложения и убедитесь, что
повествование логично.

1.

Tlpogumaüme
meKcm u 3anon,qume nponyacu A—F gacmn.uu npeònooæewü,
0603HageHHbZX
 1—7. OÒHa gacmeü 8
cnucKe 1—7 JZUIUHBB. 3aHecume quØpb1, 0603Hagarotgue coomgemcmg ue
gacmu n eònooæewü, g ma6nu

Ordinary people all over the world are willing to risk their
lives for the ultimate experience — an ‘adrenaline buzz’. What basic human need
is driving them to do it?

Risk sports are one of the fastest-growing
leisure activities. Daredevils try anything from organized bungee jumps to
illegally jumping off buildings. These people never feel so alive as

In their quest for the ultimate sensation,
thrillseekers are thinking up more and more elaborate sports.

So
why do some people’s lives seem to be dominated by the ‘thrill factor’,

? Some say that people who do risk sports are reacting against
society C
David Lewis, a psychologist, believes that
people today crave adventure. In an attempt to guarantee safety, our culture
has eliminated risk. «The world has become a bland and safe place»,
says Lewis. «People used to be able to seek adventure by hunting wild
animals, D
Now they turn to risk sports as an
escape».

Risk
sports have a positive side as well. They help people to overcome fears

This makes risk sports particularly valuable
for executives in office jobs who need to stay alert so that F

They learn that being frightened doesn’t mean they can’t be in
control.

1.       that affect them in their real lives.

2.       which they feel has become dull and
constricting.

3.       when they are risking their lives.

4.       or taking part expeditions.

5.       which means that you are about to risk your
life.

6.       while others are perfectly happy to sit at
home by fire.

7.       they can cope when things go wrong.

c

D

2,

Tlpogumaüme maccm u 3an0JIHume nponyacu A—F
gacma..uu npeònooæewü, 0603HageHHbZX guØpa.Mu 1—7,
OÒHa «3 gacmeü 8 cnucvce 1—7 nuuotga. 3aæcume
guØpbz, 0603Hagamgue coomeemcme 70 ue gacmu n eònooæeHuÜ,
8 ma6nu

On
the 14th of February 1966 Australians said goodbye to the currency
denomination

,
Naturally enough when the British established what was then a penal    colony,
they used the  currency denominations of their homeland,
. From as early as 1901, when Australia
gained independence from Britain, there had been discussion about the
introduction of decimal currency, c

Nevertheless it was more than half a century
before it was introduced. The new notes and coins, D, were roughly parallel to
the old denominations. A dollar was the same colour and size as ten shillings,
the note EThe twodollar note was greenish in colour like the pound note, whose
place it had taken. The only completely new coins introduced at this stage were
the one- and two- cent coins, though many of the old coins, such as penny, the
halfpenny and the threepence, ceased to be valid currency. Others, like the
sixpence, the shilling and the two shilling coin, Finitially mingled with the
new currency but were gradually withdrawn from circulation.

Australian school children, who had struggled with complicated
sums done in the old currency, breathed a sigh of relief on that day because
arithmetic suddenly became much easier. The government had put a lot of effort
into educating older people as well as children about currency. Perhaps what
people remember best is a little song, played constantly on radio and TV, in
which they were told ‘be prepared folks when the coins begin to mix on the 14th
of February 1966′.

l. which had an
equivalent value in the old system

2.    
which were pounds,
shillings and pence

3.    
which they had known
since the European settlement of Australia in 1788

4.    
which were the same size
respectively as the new five, ten and twenty cent coins
which has considerable advantages over
non-decimal systems

6.     
whose currency
denominations had not been accepted yet

7.     
whose names had been the
subject of quite heated debate

c

D

3.

Ilpogumaüme maccm u 3an0JIHume nponycxu A—F
gacmmau npeònooæewü, 0603HageHHbZX quØpa..uu 1—7.
OÒHa 113 qacmeü e cnucŒce 1—7 .nzuuHRB, 3Œecume
quØpbz, 0603Haga}0tgue coomeemcmg ‘oz.gue gacmu n eÒnooŒceHuü,
6 maõnug

The modern zoo is an educational institution
carefully planned and arranged to bring to the visitor the story of the animal
world. The methods of exhibiting animals have undergone certain drastic changes
in the last century. Originally, animals were kept either in cages or in open
pits A
The
cage type of exhibit remains the backbone of the average zoo display, but the
pit type, with many variations, is also very popular.

At the beginning of
the 20th century, a new trend in zoo exhibits was introduced in Germany and was
soon adopted in many other parts of the world, particularly in America,
This was the so-called barless cage exhibit.
In barless cages the animals are presented to the public with the necessary
barriers hidden or camouflaged, like, for example, on an «island»
surrounded by either a dry or water-filled ditch. Many zoos  are  slow in   adopting the  new  trend    in animal   exhibits,

c

The newer zoos, however, are incorporating the modern exhibit
design into their plans. The most up-to-date exhibits not only feature barless
cages D
. They try to reproduce the animals’ native
habitats, including vegetation and rock formations.

Often    quite    extensive records  are  in   modern   zoos
The
studies cover the longevity, diet requirements, medical histories and so on of
various animals. Zoo records are primarily of interest to other zoos
However, some of the studies originating at
zoos have proven of value to the medical profession as well.

1, but also pay close attention to the setting of the displays.

2.
because many zoos conduct
serious studies in zoology.

3.
where the original idea
was greatly developed.

4.
where zoo directors are
thinking of setting up new animal exhibits.

5.
because it involves
rebuilding the animal quarters.

6.
but animals may be
grouped according to habitat.

7.
where the public could
look down on them.

c

D

4.

Ilpogumaüme maccm u 3anom-tume nponycKu A—F
gacmm,tu npeònoozewü, 0603HageHHbLX vuØpa.Mu 1—7.
OÒŒta 113 gacmeü 6 cnucKe 1—7 nuumga. 3aHecume Zf*bl,
0603HaqaŒotgue coomeemcme ‘0 ue eacmu n eòno.ycewü, e ma6nuq

Parents are soon to be offered the ultimate weapon to win the
war over how much TV their children watch. Instead of constantly fighting to
ration viewing habits, they will have the job done for them by a coded
electronic device.

It will switch off the set once an allotted
period runs out, leaving the child to turn to other activities A

The gadget, ‘TV allowance’, was invented by
Miami photographer Randal Levenson, a former engineer, B

«There
was a lot of anger in the house about the TV and Nintendo usage», said Mr
Levenson,

47. His response was to built the calculator-sized box C

B

c

D

The Levensons now use a code to set the four
hours that the three children can watch each week. Each has his own code, and
when his time is up, the screen goes blank. He can find out how much time is
left by touching the button. The gadget, D, also controls video games and the
video. It can block out specific periods such as homework time and cannot
disconnected by frustrated youngsters.

«They’ve got their lives back»,
said Mr Levenson’s wife, Rusty. «Not that they were total couch potatoes,
but they certainly spent too much time in front of the TV. The problem before
was that we were giving up. We could only said ‘No’ so many times. But the
unemotional gadget can go on saying ‘No’ for as long as necessary».

But
being children and therefore devious, they have found ways of getting round the
system,

The set is switched off for advertisements
and they barter with each other for TV time. They also decide FAny time left
over at the end of the week can be carried over into the next.

1.       which will sell in Britain for £49 this
summer

2.       such as reading or even playing in the fresh
air

3.       if not beating it

4, who despaired of
ever reducing his three children’s screen time

5, which programmes
more than one child wants to watch

6.     
which can be used for
reducing the time in front of the TV

7.     
which plugs into the TV

5.

Ilpogumaùme
maccm u 3an0J’1Hume nponycxu A—F gacmm•tu
npeòJžooæeHuü, 0603HageHHb1X Mi4pa»tu 1—7. OÒHa
183 qacmeü 8 cnucwe 1—7 nuzuHB*. 3Œecume guØpbZ,
0603Haga10zgue coomeemcmg ‘0 ue gacmu n eÒnooæeHuÜ, e
ma6nuq

Among the most
important factors in man’s environment are those to which we give the
allembracing name of weather: rain, snow, hail, hurricanes, thunder and
lightning and clear skies. From the earliest days, man has had to reckon with
factors such as these. Even today we are often quite helpless in the face of
nature A A heavy
snowstorm can paralyze a big city and bring about great suffering in rural
communities.

The science
that deals with the study of the weather, therefore, is vitally important to
mankind. It is called meteorology, from the Greek word «meteoros»,
meaning «high in the air». The name is most appropriate, for weather
phenomena take place within the comparatively small part of the atmosphere
BThis region is known as the troposphere. The air in the troposphere is in
constant movement which accounts for all the changing conditions

c

c

Weather
observations are collected at a series of weather stations, which communicate
at regular intervals with one another. These stations form networks and they
are to be found in nearly all countries of the world. Ships and airplanes also
report the weather; so do a good many part-time observers D Observations
made at many different points are entered on a weather map. The forecaster
analyzes weather conditions and predicts changes in the weather.

Forecasting
the weather is not yet an exact science; it is still an art depending upon
personal experience. However, forecasts for a day or two ahead have become
increasingly accurate,

Weather experts have
become proficient, too, in supplying      advance         information   about  dangerous      weather          conditions

1.                  
that are called weather.

2.                  
that extends to a height of six to ten miles above the earth.

3.                  
despite occasional mistakes on the part of weathermen.

4.                  
despite all our scientific progress.

5.                  
so that their effects may not be so damaging.

6.                  
so that their predictions are based on various past observations.

7.                  
who devote a certain number of hours every week to taking and
recording weather observations.

6.

Ilpogumaüme maccm u 3anom-tume nponyacu A—F
gacma..uu npeònooæewü, 0603HageHHbZX quØpa..uu 1—7.
OÒHa gacmeü 8 cnucKe 1—7 JZUEUHAH. 3aæcume qu#z,
0603Haga’0tgue coomgemcme }0tgue qacmu n eÒJZ09fœHuÜ, g
ma6nuz.f

There is a tendency to
think of each of the arts A

Many artists, however, would testify to the fact that there has always been a
warm relationship between the various spheres of human activity. For example,
in the late nineteenth century the connection between music and painting were
particularly close. Artists were commissioned to design costumes and sets for
operas   and  ballet,  but  sometimes it   was  the  musicians B    Of the   musical  compositions
perhaps
the most famous is Mussorgsky’s

Pictures at an Exhibition. Mussorgsky composed the piece in 1874
after the death, at the age of 39, of the artist Victor Hartmann. D
Mussorgsky was shattered by Hartmann’s
untimely death. The following year a critic, Vladimir Stasov, decided to hold
an exhibition of Hartmann’s work. He suggested that Mussorgsky try to soothe
his grief by writing something to commemorate Hartmann’s life and work. The
exhibition served as Mussorgsky’s inspiration. The ten pieces that make up
Pictures at an Exhibition are intended as symbols
Between each is a promenade, as the composer
walks from one painting to another. The music is sometimes witty and playful,
sometimes almost alarming and frightening, but always spellbinding. Through a
range of startling contrasts, Mussorgsky managed to convey the spirit of the
artist and his work. F
the composer Ravel, who had already managed
to carry off successful adaptation of many works for solo instruments, wrote an
orchestral version of Pictures at an Exhibition in 1922.

l. rather than
representations of the paintings in the exhibition

2.     
although it was
originally intended as a series of pieces for solo piano

3.     
as a separate area of
activity

4.     
as they were very close
to each other in arts

5.     
though their friendship
had not been a particularly long-standing one

6.     
that were conceived as
responses to the visual arts

7.     
who were inspired by the
work of contemporary painters

c

D

70

Ilpogumaüme
maccm u 3an0JIHume nponycŒcu A—F gacmmtu npeònooæewü,
0603HageHHb1X tf*a.MU 1—7, OÒHa u.3 gacmeü e cnucxe 1—7 nuumgg.
3Œecume tf*bl, 0603Haqa}ouue coomæmcme 10tgue gacmu n
eÒzooæeHuÜ, e ma6nut4

Are there such
things as telepathy and hypnosis? Or are they just the products of some
people’s imagination? Telepathy means that you are able to pick up messages
from someone else Somehow you communicate without any
apparent messages changing hands. This can happen between people who cannot see
each other at the time, or indeed happen to be thousands of miles away from
each other. One of them is able, as they say, to read the other’s mind.

Another type of paranormal experience is connected with the
strange powers . The best example of this is hypnosis, in
which one person — the hypnotist — appears to take control of the mind of his
subject. Under hypnosis people act according to the wishes of the hypnotist.
Hypnosis is now used quite widely in doctor’s surgeries and hospitals, instead
of anaesthetics. Patients who respond to hypnosis do not need an anaesthetic
before an operation, they only need the hypnotist C

c

D

The third type
of paranormal experience is connected with similar powers D Perhaps the most
famous of these is levitation, in which a person is able to float in the air.
There have been many documented cases of such powers. Another form of such
power is firemastery, in which a person is able to walk through a raging fire
and remain unharmed.

It is also possible
for such powers to exist over things. In other words, some people can use the
force of their minds EThe celebrated Uri Geller has been reported as making a
pair of cufflinks fly all on their own across the Atlantic The same
gentleman has demonstrated many times on television programmes all over the
world his ability to make watches stop just by looking at them.

1.                  
that some people can exercise over themselves.

2.                  
when he discovered he had accidentally left them at home in New
York.

3.                  
that some people have over others.

4.                  
even though neither of you knows how this is done.

5.                  
when he is put in a trance and feels no pain.

6.                  
to tell them they will feel no pain.

7.                  
to move, make and break things.

8.

Tlpogumaüme maccm u 3anonHume
nponyocu A—F qacmn,uu npeònooŒcewü, 0603HaqeHHbžx
quØpa.,uu 1—7. OÒHa 113 gacmeü 8 cnucŒce 1—7 nuumag.
3Œecume ZfUØPbZ, 0603Hagamgue coomæmcm ‘0 ue gacmu n
eònooæewü, g ma6nutf

For some, the
advent of television marked the beginning of the end of civilized society. More
and more, people have watched TV at the cost of playing cards or board games,
or other communal pastimes. Many fear that the Internet too will further limit
social interaction.

That may be true but,
as researches at Stanford University in the USA are the first to say, further
study is needed. In a recent survey they found that AWhat’s more, people who go
online are likely to watch less television than others.

The study
makes two things clear. Contrary to all the fuss in the media, the Internet’s
popularity is still in its infancy. More than half of US households are not
connected yet, but

Workers may be using the Web on the job for such personal ends as
checking sports scores but, according to the study, C . Just 4 per cent of the
surveyed Internet users said they had cut back on their working hours since
getting connected to the Internet.

But
will the Internet make us more isolated socially? While a fourth of the
Internet users say they spend less time talking on the telephone with friends
and relatives, D . Since e-mail is free and can be sent and received at any
hour of the day, it has many built-in advantages. For some, it has actually
revived the highly social art of letter writing. As for spending less time on
the telephone,

Few would argue that
the Internet has had a profound effect on the lives of many in its first decade
on common use. But assessing its long-term impact is difficult. That’s why for
all the questions they raise, FIf we don’t pay close attention to how we use
the Internet, it will change our lives not just for better, but for worse.

1.                  
they also use the Internet to work from home.

2.                  
the continuing boom in mobile phone use makes an overall decrease
less and less likely.

3.                  
they also use it to buy and sell shares on the stock market     

4.                  
studies such as Stanford’s are so useful.

5.                  
the Internet’s potential impact on how we live and interact is
enormous

6.                  
e-mail allows them to stay in touch, regardless of distance

7.                  
the Internet and the use of e-mail have actually increased some
forms of human interaction.

9,

Ilpogumaüme meŒccm u 3an0JIHume
nponycŒcu A—F qacmzuu npeònoacewü, 0603HageHHbZX
yuØpa»tu 1—7. OÒHa «3 gacmeü 8 cnucŒce 1—7
JIUJUHBA. 3aHecume z*bl, 0603}tatmouue coomæmcme ,zoz.gue
gacmu n eðnooçceHt1ü, g maõnuu

A group of
adults are lying in a circle on the floor listening to a recording of ‘The
Laughing Policeman’. At first everyone feels ridiculous and there’s only the
odd nervous giggle,

It quickly spreads
around the room This is laughter therapy in action.

Doctors are
starting to believe that laughter not only improves your state of mind, c The people lying
in a circle are attending a workshop to learn the forgotten art of laughter.
Some have ever been referred by their family doctors.

B

c

But we could be losing our ability to laugh. A French
newspaper found that in 1930 the French laughed on average for nineteen minutes
per day. By 1980 this had fallen to six minutes. Eighty per cent of the people
questioned said that they would like to laugh more. Other research suggests
that children         laugh  on       average          about  400     times  a          day,
Somewhere in the process of growing up we
lose an astonishing 385 laughs a day.

William Fry — a
psychiatrist from California — studied the effects of laughter on the body. He
got patients to watch Laurel and Hardy films, and monitored their blood
pressure, heart rate and muscle tone. He found that E It speeds up the heart rate,
increases blood pressure and quickens breathing. It also makes our facial and
stomach muscles work. Fry thinks laughter is a type ofjogging on the sport.

Researchers from Texas tested this. They divided forty
students into four groups. The first group listened to a funny cassette for
twenty minutes, the second listened to a cassette intended to relax them, the
third heard an informative tape, while the fourth group listened to no tape at
all. Researches    found  that     if         they    produced       pain    in        the      students,
could
tolerate the discomfort for much longer.

l . laughter has a similar effect to physical exercise.

2.      but
suddenly the laughter becomes real.

3.      but
by the time they reach adulthood this has been reduced to about fifteen times.

4.      until
everyone is infected by it.

5.      those
who had listened to the humorous tape

6.      but
this will also help improve your personal relationships.

7.      but
actually affects your entire physical well-being.

10.

Ilpogumaüme
meccm u 3an0JIHume nponyacu A—F gacma.Mu npeònooæewü,
0603HageHHbZX uuØpa.juu 1—7. OÒHa «3 qacmeü 8 cnuc»ce
1—7 JZUUIHAB. 3Œecume z*bl, 0603HagŒowue coomeemcme .10tgue
gacmu n eònoaceHuü, e ma6nu

British eccentrics are famous the world over.
We breed eccentrics and we’re fascinated by them. Eccentrics are found in all
walks of life, A, teachers or train drivers. Some wear odd clothes, some
collect to the point of obsession, while others inhabit strange environments or
hold unorthodox beliefs. B, we usually just avoid them but let them carry on in
their own sweet way.

David Weeks, an American psychologist has
conducted the first in-depth psychological study of eccentrics and has
concluded that Britain’s are still the best in the world. Weeks did detailed
personality tests and taped interviews with 130 eccentrics. «A true
eccentric is never acting,» writes Dr David Weeks. «They are strong
individuals with strange inclinations of their own cThey refuse to
compromise.» He believes one in 10,000 people in the UK is a genuine
eccentric, and that for every female candidate there are nine male eccentrics.

B

D

One of the most interesting findings was the
good health that eccentrics enjoy. «Almost all of them visit the doctor
only once every eight or nine years; the rest of us go twice a year.»
Eccentrics tend to live longer than the rest of us. The theory is that if you
have a particular obsession, Dlife becomes full of meaning and significance and
the resulting happiness strengthens the body’s immune system. «Eccentrics
are living proof that one does not necessarily have to go through life with a
fixed set of rules,» says Dr Weeks. «They are their own best leaders
and proof followers, and do not feel a need to possess the ordinary things of
everyday life. They are prepared to stand out from the crowd.»

Some of Weeks’s collection — such as the man
who climbs down tower blocks dressed as a pink elephant — would stick out
anywhere, EWeeks believes that inside lie resources of creativity and
imagination that are not sufficiently used. «They are neglected, or not
taken seriously, F
Often they are convicted that they are ahead
of their time and that others have stolen or exploited their good ideas.»

l . which they are not afraid to express

2.
whether they are lords or
lavatory cleaners

3.
but most are unremarkable
on the surface

4.
because they are happy
people on the whole

5.
provided they are in no
way a threat to society

6.
whether it is eating
cardboard or living in a cave

7.
because of the way they
express themselves

11.

Ilpoqumaüme maccm u 3anom-tume
nponyacu A—F qacrnnuu npeònooæewü, 0603HageHHbZX
quØpa.,uu 1—7. OÒHa 113 gacmeü g cnucŒce 1—7 nuuman.
3Œecume z*bZ, 0603Haqa}0tgue coomeemcme 10 ue gacmu n
eðnooæeHuü, e ma6nuzf

Looking for a
new sport that keeps you fit and gets the adrenaline flowing? How about
climbing? You can climb indoors or out, from small walls or boulders to peaks
anywhere in the world — A

«It’s a
sport that involves your mind, body and emotions,» John Gibbons of
London’s Westway sports centre says. «It’s one of the few sports where you
compete against yourself. You may be part of a club and climbing with others B And, unlike
other sports, friends of all abilities can climb together and enjoy it.

Indoor walls can be from 7 to 16 metres, C

Each wall has bolt-on holds (to
place your feet and hands) of different shapes and sizes. These can be moved
around and varied to make the climb more or less challenging

c

D

. «Big holds,
spaced comfortably apart so that you can easily move your feet and hands from
one to the other without too much trouble, are the easiest,» John
explains. «With them, you can gently climb to the top without any
difficulty. That kind of climb is called a Slab.»

Trickier
climbs have smaller holds that are harder to grip, and they are spaced more
awkwardly apart. If you do one of those, EThe angle of the wall can also make
the climb more difficult.

Falling is not
a problem at climbing centres, though. When you climb, you are attached by a
harness to a rope looped to a firm anchor at the top of the wall and held by
your instructor or one of your team mates at the bottom. A device called a
belay holds it taut,

, the rope is kept firm
in case you slip. If that happens, you don’t plunge to the ground. Instead, you
dangle safely in your harness away from the climbing wall.

Maybe you’d like a go at climbing but
don’t know where to staff. Well, you can find out on our website. We’ve found
an online Extreme Climbing game to test your skills and get you started.

l. although some centres have walls of 20 metres or more

2.       you
have to think more about how you move

3.       to
help you get climbing yourself

4.       once
you get the hang of it

5.       so
while you are climbing

6.       and
routes can be changed every few months

7.       but
you are seeing how good you can be

12.

Ilpogumaüme moccm u 3an0JIHume
nponycKu A—F gacma.,uu npeòJ100Œcewü, 0603HageHHbZX
vuØpa.Mu 1—7. OÒHa u.3 gacmeü e cnucŒce 1—7 nuzuHHH.
3Œecume 14*b1, 0603Hagamgue coomeemcme
ue gacmu n
eðnooæeHuü, e ma6nu

For some, the
advent of television marked the beginning of the end of civilized society. More
and more, people have watched TV at the cost of playing cards or board games,
or other communal pastimes. Many fear that the Internet too will further limit
social interaction.

That may be true but,
as researches at Stanford University in the USA are the first to say, further
study is needed. In a recent survey they found that AWhat’s more, people who go
online are likely to watch less television than others.

The study
makes two things clear. Contrary to all the fuss in the media, the Internet’s
popularity is still in its infancy. More than half of US households are not
connected yet, but

c

Workers may be using
the Web on the job for such personal ends as checking sports scores but,
according to the study, C . Just 4 per cent of the surveyed Internet users said
they had cut back on their working hours since getting connected to the
Internet.

But will the
Internet make us more isolated socially? While a fourth of the Internet users
say they spend less time talking on the telephone with friends and relatives, D
. Since e-mail is free and can be sent and received at any hour of the day, it
has many built-in advantages. For some, it has actually revived the highly
social art of letter writing. As for spending less time on the telephone,

Few would argue that
the Internet has had a profound effect on the lives of many in its first decade
on common use. But assessing its long-term impact is difficult. That’s why for
all the questions they raise, F . If we don’t pay close attention to how we use
the Internet, it will change our lives not just for better, but for worse.

l . they also use the Internet to work from home.

2.      the
continuing boom in mobile phone use makes an overall decrease less and less
likely.

3.      they
also use it to buy and sell shares on the stock market

4.      studies
such as Stanford’s are so useful.

5.      the
Internet’s potential impact on how we live and interact is enormous

6.      e-mail
allows them to stay in touch, regardless of distance

7.      the
Intemet and the use of e-mail have actually increased some forms of human
interaction.

ЗАДАНИЯ НА ПОЛНОЕ И ТОЧНОЕ ПОНИМАНИЕ ИНФОРМАЦИИ В ТЕКСТЕ А15-А21

(на
множественный выбор)

Задания A15—A21 направлены на проверку
полного понимания текста и относятся к высокому уровню сложности. В заданиях
A15—A21 проверяется умение полностью понять текст, в том числе проверяется
способность делать выводы из прочитанного текста. В заданиях A15—A21 нужно
выбрать один из четырех вариантов ответа, в соответствии с прочитанным текстом.
В данном задании используются художественные или публицистические (например,
эссе) тексты.

При выполнении данного задания можно
использовать следующие стратегии:

1.      Быстро
просмотрите текст, чтобы понять, о чем он.

2.      Затем
прочитайте текст внимательнее, чтобы полностью понять содержание текста.

З. Прочитайте вопросы к тексту, продумайте
ответы, не читая предложенные варианты.

4.      Найдите
отрывок в тексте или фрагмент текста, который относится к каждому из вопросов и
который подтвердит ваш ответ.

5.      Вернитесь
к вопросам и выберите из один из четырех предложенных вариантов ответов,
который вы считаете правильным.

6.      Прочитайте
оставшиеся три варианта и проанализируйте, почему они не могут быть
правильными. Обратите внимание на то, что неверные ответы часто содержат слегка
измененную информацию из текста. Часто верным будет ответ, который содержит
синонимичную информацию.

7.     
Обратите внимание на то, что во всех предложенных вариантах
ответа могут использоваться слова и словосочетания, встречающиеся в тексте,
поэтому тщательно прочитайте сам вопрос и проанализируйте соответствующий
отрывок текста.

8.      Помните,
что выбранный вами ответ должен основываться только на тексте. Ваш вариант
ответа может быть правильным и логичным, но не отвечать на конкретный вопрос.

9.      Особое
внимание обратите на то, что в тексте сформулировано четко и на то, что только
подразумевается. В данных заданиях намерения и отношение автора могут иметь
большое значение, но они не всегда выражены прямо и открыто. Поэтому, нужно
проанализировать не только использованную в тексте прямую информацию, но и
понять скрытый смысл, который может содержаться в тексте.

10.  Никогда не оставляйте
ни одного вопроса без ответа. Если вы затрудняетесь в выборе ответа, отклоните
те варианты, которые с вашей точки зрения не соответствуют содержанию текста; а
из оставшихся вариантов выберите один наугад.

11.  По окончании
выполнения задания просмотрите все вопросы и ответы еще раз.

1,

Tlpogumaüme
maccm u 6bznonHume 3aðaHua A15—A21. B RaO,CÒOM 3aòaHuu
06eeòume quÞpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomgemcm8 }0
aHHOM eauu ga uawn omeema.

Brunetti was
at the post office at seven-thirty the next morning, located the person in
charge of the postmen, showed his warrant card, and explained that he wanted to
speak to the postman who delivered mail to the area in Cannaregio near the
Palazzo del Cammello. She told him to go to the first floor and ask in the
second room on the left, where the Cannaregio postmen sorted their mail. The
room was high-ceilinged, the entire space filled with long counters with
sorting racks behind them. Ten or twelve people stood around, putting letters
into slots or pulling them out and packing them into leather satchels. He asked
the first person he encountered, a long-haired woman with a strangely reddened
complexion, where he could find the person who delivered the mail to the Canale
della Misericordia area. She looked at him with open curiosity, then pointed to
a man halfway along the table and called out, «Mario, someone wants to
talk to you.»

The man called
Mario looked at them, then down at the letters in his hands. One by one, merely
glancing at the names and addresses, he slipped them quickly into the slots in
front of him, then walked over to Brunetti. He was in his late thirties,
Brunetti guessed, with light brown hair that fell in a thick wedge across his
forehead. Brunetti introduced himself and started to take his warrant card out
again, but the postman stopped him with a gesture and suggested they talk over
coffee.

They walked
down to the bar, where Mario ordered two coffees and asked Brunetti what he
could do for him.

«Did you deliver mail to Maria Battestini at
Cannaregio …?»

«Yes. I
delivered her mail for three years. I must have taken her, in that time, thirty
or forty items of registered mail, had to climb all those steps to get her to
sign for them.»

Brunetti
anticipated his anger at never having been tipped and waited for him to give
voice to it, but the man simply said, «I don’t expect to be tipped,
especially by old people, but she never even said thank you.»

«Isn’t that a lot of registered mail?» Brunetti
asked. «How often did they come?»

«Once a
month,» the postman answered. «As regular as a Swiss watch. And it
wasn’t letters, but those padded envelopes, you know, the sort you send photos
or CDs in.»

Or money, thought Brunetti, and asked, «Do you remember
where they came from?»

«There
were a couple of addresses, I think,» Mario answered. «They sounded
like charity things, you know, Care and Share, and Child Aid. That sort of
thing.»

«Can you
remember any of them exactly?» «I deliver mail to almost four hundred
people,» he said by way of answer.

«Do you remember when they started?»

«Oh, she was getting them already when I
started on that route.» «Who had the route before you?» Brunetti
asked.

«Nicolo Matucci, but he retired and went back to
Sicily.»

Brunetti left
the subject of the registered packages and asked, «Did you bring her bank
statements?» — «Yes, every month,» he said, and recited the
names of the banks. «Those and the bills were the only things she ever
got, except for some other registered letters.»

«Do you remember where those were from?»

«Most of them came from people in the neighbourhood,
complaining about the television.»

Before
Brunetti could ask him about how he knew this, Mario said, «They all told
me about them, wanted to be sure that the letters were delivered. Everyone
heard it, that noise, but there was nothing they could do. She’s old. That is,
she was old, and the police wouldn’t do anything. They’re useless.» He
looked up suddenly at Brunetti and said, «Excuse me.»

Brunetti smiled and waved it away with an
easy smile. «No, you’re right,» Brunetti went on, «there’s
nothing we can do, not really. The person who complains can bring a case, but
that means that people from some department — I don’t know what its name is,
but it takes care of complaints about noise — have to go in to measure the
decibels of the noise to see if it’s really something called ‘aural
aggression’, but they don’t work at night, or if they get called at night, they
don’t come until the next morning, by which time whatever it was has been
turned down.» Like all policemen in the city, he was familiar with the
situation, and like them, he knew it had no solution.

Which of the following happens in the first paragraph?

l) Everyone stops working when Brunetti enters the room.

2)        
Someone wonders why Brunetti is looking for Mario.

3)        
Brunetti is confused by something he is told. 4) Brunetti becomes
impatient with someone.

When Mario mentioned getting Maria Battestini to sign for registered
mail,

l) he said that most old people weren’t polite to postmen.

2)   Brunetti asked
him if her reaction had annoyed him.

3)   he said that
his efforts deserved a tip.

4)   Brunetti formed
an incorrect opinion about how he had felt.

Mario mentions a Swiss watch to give an idea of

l) how similar the registered envelopes were. 2) the
neat appearance of the registered envelopes.

3) the constant pattern of the arrival of the
registered envelopes. 4) how unusual the registered envelopes were.

[Ãjg::] When asked exactly where the registered
envelopes came from, Mario

l) indicated that he could not be expected to remember
that information.

2)   suggested that
the addresses had seemed strange to him at first.

3)   said that
someone else might have that information.

4)   replied that
there were too many addresses for him to remember.

When they discussed other mail that Maria Battestini
received, Mario

l) explained why he knew what some of it contained.

2)   wasn’t sure
where some of the bank statements came from.

3)   expressed
surprise at the amount of it.

4)   said that he
had asked other people about it.         

When Mario mentioned the problem of noise, he made it clear
that

l) he sympathized with the police in that situation.

2)       he
didn’t want to criticize Brunetti personally.

3)       nothing
would have had any effect on the old woman. 4) he had discussed the matter with
the police himself.

When he talks about complaints about noise, Brunetti

l) suggests that he finds the system for dealing
with them ridiculous. 2) explains that he is not sure what the system for
dealing with them is.

3)   says that he
wishes that the police could deal with them.

4)   says that the
people who deal with them are always very busy.

2.

llpogumaüme naeyccm u oznonwme 3aðaHua A15—A21. B
KaOfCÒOM 3aòŒuu 06æòume quØpy 1, 2, 3
unu 4, coomeemcmg ‘0 ßb16 aHHOM ea»tu ea uaHm omeema.

Harry Houdini,
who died in 1927, was the entertainment phenomenon of the ragtime era. He could
escape from chains and padlocks, from ropes and canvas sacks. They put him in a
strait-jacket and hung him upside down from a skyscraper and he somehow untied
himself. They tied him up in a locked packing case and sank him in Liverpool
docks. Minutes later he surfaced smiling. They locked him in a zinc-lined
Russian prison van and he emerged leaving the doors locked and the locks
undamaged. They padlocked him in a milk chum full of water and he burst free.
They put him in a coffin, screwed down the lid, and buried him and… well, no,
he didn’t pop up like a mole, but when they dug him up more than half an hour
later, he was still breathing.

Houdini would
usually allow his equipment to be examined by the audience. The chains, locks
and packing cases all seemed perfectly genuine, so it was tempting to conclude
that he possessed superhuman powers. Sir Arthur Conan Doyle’s Sherlock Holmes
was the very paragon of analytical thinking but Conan Doyle believed that
Houdini achieved his tricks through spiritualism. Indeed, he wrote to the
escapologist imploring him to use his psychic powers more profitably for the
common good instead of just prostituting his talent every night at the
Alhambra. However, Houdini repeatedly denounced spiritualism and disclaimed any
psychic element to his act.

The alternative
explanation for his feats of escapism was that Houdini could do unnatural
things with his body. It is widely held that he could dislocate his shoulders
to escape from straitjackets, and that he could somehow contract his in order
to escape from handcuffs. His ability to spend long periods in confined spaces
is cited as evidence that he could put his body into suspended animation, as
Indian fakirs are supposed to do.

This is all
nonsense. If you ever find yourself in a strait-jacket, it’s difficult to
imagine anything less helpful than a dislocated shoulder. Contracting your
wrists is not only unhelpful but, frankly, impossible because the bones of your
wrist are very tightly packed together and the whole structure is virtually
incompressible. As for suspended animation, the trick of surviving burial and
drowning relies on the fact that you can live for short periods on the air in a
confined space. The air shifted by an average person in a day would occupy a
cube just eight feet square. The build-up of carbon monoxide tends to pollute
this supply, but, if you can relax, the air in a coffin should keep you going
for half an hour or so.

In other words,
there was nothing physically remarkable about Houdini except for his bravery,
dexterity and fitness. His nerve was so cool that he could remain in a coffin
six feet underground until they came to dig him up. His fingers were so strong
that he could undo a buckle or manipulate keys through the canvas of a
strait-jacket or a mail bag. He made a comprehensive study of locks and was
able to conceal lock-picks about his person in a way which fooled even the
doctors who examined him. When they locked him in the prison van he still had a
hacksaw blade with which to saw through the joins in the metal lining and get
access to the planks of the floor. As an entertainer he combined all this
strength and ingenuity with a lot of trickery. His stage escapes took place
behind a curtain with an orchestra playing to disguise the banging and sawing.
The milk chum in which he was locked had a double lining so that, while the lid
was locked onto the rim, the rim was not actually attached to the churn.
Houdini merely had to stand up to get out. The mail sack he cut open at the
seam and sewed up with similar thread. The bank safe from which he emerged had
been secretly worked on by his mechanics for 24 hours before the performance.

All Houdini’s feats are eminently
explicable, although to explain them, even now, is a kind of heresy. Houdini
belongs to that band of mythical supermen who, we like to believe, were capable
of miracles and would still be alive today were it not for some piece of low
trickery. It’s said of Houdini that a punch in his belly when he wasn’t
prepared for it caused his burst appendix. Anatomically, it’s virtually
impossible that a punch could puncture your gut, but the story endures. Somehow
the myth of the superman has an even greater appeal than the edifice of
twenty-first century logic.

In the first paragraph, what does the writer say Houdini
managed to do?

1)       Jump
upside down from a skyscraper.

2)       Escape
from a submerged box.

3)      
Break the locks
of a Russian prison van.

4)       Fight
his way out of an empty milk churn.

The writer mentions Houdini’s burial alive to illustrate
the fact that

l) his tricks sometimes went disastrously wrong.

2)        
he was not always able to do what he claimed he could.

3)        
he was capable of extraordinary feats of survival. 4) he had
overcome his tear of confined spaces.

The writer suggests that Conan Doyle

l) was less analytical about Houdini than one might
have expected.

2)       asked
Houdini if he could include him in a Sherlock Holmes story.

3)      
felt that Houdini
could make more money in other ways.

4)       thought
there were scientific explanations for Houdini’s feats.

The writer comes to the conclusion that Houdini

l) had an unusual bone structure.

2)        
could make parts of his body smaller.

3)        
was able to put himself in a trance. 4) was not physically
abnormal.

It appears that Houdini was able to escape from
strait-jackets by

l) using hidden lock-picks.

2)         
undoing buckles
from inside the material.

3)         
cutting the canvas with a hacksaw. 4) turning keys he had
concealed.

The writer states that when Houdini escaped from the milk
churn

l) the role of the orchestra was important. 2) he
made use of the hacksaw to free himself.

3) the container had been modified beforehand. 4)
he was in full sight of the audience.

How does the writer say people regard Houdini nowadays?

l) They want to hear the scientific explanations for his
feats.

2)      
They prefer to believe that he had extraordinary powers.

3)      
They refuse to believe the story of how he died.

4)      
They doubt the fact that he ever really existed.

3.

llpogumaùme mevccm u ßblnojmume 3aòanua
A15—A21. B RCžOfCÒOM 3aòanuu 06geðume quñ,’ 1, 2,
3 unu 4 coomgemcmg .70 a,t1HOM ga,vtu ga uamn omgema.

Was it poor
visibility or superstition that made Manchester United’s players abandon their
grey strip for away games in the middle of a Premiership match in 1996? The
players couldn’t pick each other out, manager Alex Ferguson told reporters at
the time. It was nothing to do with superstition. They said it was difficult to
see their team mates at a distance. But his protest failed to mention that one
of the five occasions the grey strip had been worn, the team had failed to win.

Dr Richard
Wiseman, a psychologist at Hertfordshire University, says United’s players may
have succumbed to the power of superstition without even realising it. «I
might argue that the players may have unconsciously noticed that when they do
certain things, one of which might well involve the wearing of red shirts, they
are successful.» He draws a parallel with research into stock market
speculators. Like gamblers they swore that certain days were lucky for them.
Eventually it was shown that the successful market speculators were
unconsciously picking up on numerous indicators and were shadowing market
trends but were unable to explain how they did it. Superstition plays a part
whenever people are not certain what it is they do to achieve a good
performance and people who have to perform to order are particularly
vulnerable, It is as if the imagination steps into the gap in the dialogue
between the conscious and the unconscious mind.

Many
superstitions have deep roots in the past according to Moira Tatem, who helped
edit the 1,500 entries in the Oxford Dictionary of Superstitions. People today
observe superstitions without knowing why and they’d probably be surprised to
discover origins. The idea that mail vans are lucky is a good example. Sir
Winston Churchill, the British Prime Minister during World War Il, was said to
have touched a mail van for luck whenever he saw one in the street. The reason
for this superstition resides in the ancient belief that Kings and Queens had
the ability to cure by touch. Monarchs, naturally enough, grew fed up with
being constantly touched and at some point started trailing ribbons with gold
medals or coins out of the door of their coaches •when travelling and people
touched them instead. Mail vans carry the Crown symbol on the side and touching
the van is a direct throwback to that earlier belief.

While some
ancient superstitious beliefs and practices have been maintained, others have
died out. This is because those practices with a connection to farming and a
life spent in close proximity to nature no longer make much sense now that so
many of us live in cities. Nevertheless, we continue to develop our own
sometimes very private and personal superstitions. Many people carry or wear
lucky objects although they may not in fact think of them as such. It only
becomes obvious that the object forms a part of a superstitious belief when the
person is unable to wear or carry it and feels uncomfortable as a result.

Experts agree
that these individual superstitious practices can be an effective means of
managing stress and reducing anxiety. The self-fulfilling nature of
superstitions is what can help. The belief that something brings you good luck
can make you feel calmer, and as a result, able to perform more effectively.
International cello soloist Ralph Kirshbaum says musicians are a good example
of the effectiveness of these very particular rituals. «I know string
players who won’t wash their hands on the day of a recital and others who avoid
eating for eight hours prior to a performance. They can then play with
confidence.’

But this
self-fulfilling aspect of superstitions can also work against you. This is why
Kirshbaum prefers to confront the superstitious practices of other musicians.
«If you’re in a situation where you can’t avoid eating or forget and wash
your hands, you then feel that you’ll play badly. And you often do, simply
because you feel so anxious. I wash my hands and have broken the taboo about
eating. My only vice is to insist that people leave and give me two minutes
complete silence in the dressing room before I go on.»

Superstitions can become even more
harmful when they develop into phobias or obsessions, often characterized by
elaborate collections of rituals. «It’s not a problem if I carry a lucky
object of some kind,» says psychologist Robert Kohlenberg of the
University of Washington. «But if I don’t have it with me and I get
terribly upset and turn the house upside down looking for it, that’s a bad
thing.’

According to their manager, Alex Ferguson, Manchester
United decided to change out of their grey shirts because:

l) they had lost every time they had worn them.

2)          
the colour was not bright enough.

3)          
it was difficult for the other team to see them.

4)          
a psychologist told them they might play better without them.

Dr Wiseman says MU players and stock market speculators
are similar in that:

1)        
both groups can identify the factors that contribute to improving
performance.

2)        
both groups attribute their success to wearing particular items
of clothing.

3)        
neither group can understand why they do well on some occasions
and not on others. 4) both groups believe that certain days of the week are
lucky for them.

According to Moira Tatem, what would most British people
say if you asked them why touching a mail van is considered lucky?

1)       ‘A
famous politician used to do it too.’

2)       ‘The
vans are lucky but I don’t know why.’

3)       ‘Being
touched by a monarch can cure disease.’

4)       ‘The
royal coat of arms is on the side of the van.’

Which older superstitions have been preserved?

l) Those that still seem meaningful. 2) Those
connected with life in the city.

3)       Those
connected with life in the countryside.

4)       Those
that are created and held by individuals.

How does going without food affect some string players?

l) It makes them feel too tired and hungry to play well.

2)        
It helps them play with more assurance.

3)        
It makes no difference to the way they perform. 4) It ensures
that they perform.

Why doesn’t Ralph Kirshbaum keep the superstitious
practices of other musicians?

1)        
He can’t be bothered with them.

2)        
He has his own complicated rituals.

3)        
He doesn’t think they always help. 4) He is not superstitious.

What attitude does the author of the article have to
superstitions?

l) He thinks they are harmful.

2)       He
thinks they are inevitable.

3)       He
thinks they can be nonsensical.

4)       He
thinks they can be beneficial.

4.

Ilpoqumaüme
maccm u omonnume 3aÒaHt1R Al 5421. B Ra9fCÒOM 3aÒŒuu
oõgeòume quØpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomeemcmg 10 10 BbZõ
anHOM gan,tu ea uanm omgema.

Of all the
Elwell family Aunt Mehetabel was certainly the most unimportant member. Not
that she was useless in her brother’s family; she was expected, as a matter of
course, to take upon herself the most tedious and uninteresting part of the
household labours. The Elwells were not consciously unkind to their aunt, but
she was so insignificant a figure in their lives that she was almost invisible
to them. Aunt Mehetabel did not resent this treatment; she took it quite
unconsciously as they gave it. It was to be expected when one was an old maid
dependent in a busy family. She had been the same at twenty as at sixty, a
mouselike little creature, too shy for anyone to notice or to wish for a life
of her own.

Even as a girl
she had been clever with her needle in the way of patching quilts which
consisted of several layers of cloth sewn together to make an attractive
pattern or a picture. More than that she could never learn to do. The garments
which she made for herself were lamentable affairs, and she was humbly grateful
for any help in the bewildering business of putting them together. But in
patchwork she enjoyed some importance. During years of devotion to this one art
she had accumulated a considerable store of quilting patterns. Sometimes the
neighbours would send over and ask her for a loan of her sheaf-of-wheat design,
or the double-star pattern.

She never knew
how her great idea came to her. Sometimes she even wondered reverently, in the
phraseology of the weekly prayer-meeting, if it hadn’t been «sent» to
her. She never admitted to herself that she could have thought of it without
other help. It was too great, too ambitious a project for her humble mind to
have conceived. Even when she finished drawing the design with her fingers, she
gazed at it incredulously, not daring to believe that it could indeed be her
handiwork.

Now her nimble
old fingers reached out longingly to turn her dream into reality. She began to
think adventurously of trying it out — it would perhaps be not too selfish to
make one square — just one unit of her design to see how it would look. She
dared do nothing in the household where she was a dependent without asking
permission. With a heart full of hope and fear thumping furiously against her
old ribs she approached her sister-in-law, who listened to her absently and
said, «Why, yes, start another quilt if you want to». Mehetabel tried
honestly to make her see that this would be no common quilt, but her limited
vocabulary and her emotion stood between her and expression.

Mehetabel
rushed back up the steep attic stairs to her room, and in joyful agitation
began preparations for the work of her life. She had but little time during the
daylight hours filled with the incessant household drudgery. After dark she did
not dare to sit up late at night lest she burn too much candle. She was too
conscientious to shirk even the smallest part of her share of the housework,
but she rushed through it now so fast that she was panting as she climbed the
stairs to her little room. It was weeks before the little square began to show
the pattern.

Finally she
could wait no longer, and one evening ventured to bring her work down beside
the fire where the family sat, hoping that good fortune would give her a place
near the tallow candles on the mantelpiece. She had reached the last corner of
that first square and her needle flew in and out with nervous speed. To her
relief no one noticed her. As she stood up with the others, the square fell
from her trembling old hands and fluttered to the table. Up to that moment
Mehetabel had laboured in the purest spirit of selfless adoration of an ideal.
The emotional shock given to her by her sister’s-in-law cry of admiration as
she held the work toward the candle to examine it, was as much astonishment as
joy to Mehetabel.

As she lay that
night in her narrow hard bed, too proud, too excited to sleep, Mehetabel’s heart
swelled and tears ofjoy ran down from her old eyes.

Living with her
brother’s family Aunt Mehetabel l) could hardly do any household chores due to
her old age.

2)       suffered
from not having a family of her own.

3)       had
got accustomed to her humble existence.

4)       expected
to be left alone to live a life of her own.

Since her youth Aunt Mehetabel had been good at needlework
and

l) was known for making nice
dresses for herself.

2)               
was eager to help other people with sewing.

3)               
humbly accepted people’s admiration of her skills. 4) made nice
bedcovers from pieces of fabric.

Aunt Mehetabel’s new quilt followed the complicated pattern
which

l) one of the neighbours had given her.

2)               
she herself had happened to invent.

3)               
she had copied at the weekly prayer-meeting. 4) had been sent
over to her.

Aunt Mehetabel took her time about starting her new quilt
because she

1)       wanted
to make sure that the family wouldn’t object to it.

2)       wanted
to think over every detail of the pattern carefully.

3)       was
afraid that other members of the family would find her selfish.

4)       was
too old to start a new quilt with such a difficult pattern,

As Aunt Mehetabel wanted to find some time to work on her
quilt she

l) started to get up earlier to use the early hours of the
morning.

2)               
tried to do her regular chores as quickly as possible.

3)               
skipped some of her minor household chores. 4) worked in her room
at night by candlelight.

One evening Aunt Mehetabel came down to the room where the
family sat in order to

l) boast about the splendid
intricate pattern of the quilt. 2) show them the first square of the quilt she
had made.

3) demonstrate how skillfully she could use her
needle. 4) have enough light to proceed with her work.

When Aunt Mehetabel started her new quilt, she was driven by

l) a sudden flash of
inspiration of an artist. 2) an urge to get rid of her monotonous existence.

3)       her
wish to win everybody’s admiration.

4)       her
desire to become a rightful member of the family.

5.

llpoqumaüme maccm u
oznonwme 3aðaHzo A15—A21. B Kao,cò0M 3aòŒuu
oõgeòume guØpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomgemcme 10 10 6b1õ
aHHOM eauu ea uamn omeema.

«Take the Circle, District or Piccadilly Line to
South Kensington, then walk up Exhibition Road. It will take you between 10 and
15 minutes. The Royal Geographical Society is on the junction between
Exhibition Road and Kensington Gore.» The instructions are so idiot-proof
that at 9 am precisely all seven of us are in our places, like expectant
schoolchildren.

A man in a check suit, with a neatly trimmed beard,
enters and infroduces himself. Tristan Gooley. Welcome.’ He flashes a shy
smile. ‘Just to put this all into context, I think I can safely say that you
are the only people in the world studying this particular topic today.’ It is
quite an intro. There are a few oohs and ahs from the audience. Tristan Gooley,
navigator extraordinary, has his audience in the palm of his hand. We are here
because we are curious about how you get from A to B. And if you are curious about
how to get from A to B, who better to ask than Tristan Gooley? He is the only
man alive who has both flown and sailed solo across the Atlantic. You can’t
argue with that sort of CV.

Natural navigation’, his new baby, is exactly what that
phrase suggests: route-finding that depends on interpreting natural signs — the
sun, the stars, the direction of the wind, the alignment of the trees — rather
than using maps, compasses or the ubiquitous satnav. ‘Of course, 99.9 per cent
of the time, you will have other ways of finding wherever it is you want to get
to. But if you don’t … ‘t Gooley pauses theatrically, ‘there is a lot to be
said for understanding the science of navigation and directionfinding. If
people become too dependent on technology, they can lose connection with
nature, which is a pity.’

The natural navigator’s best friend, inevitably, is the
sun. We all know that it rises in the east, sets in the west and, at its
zenith, is due south. But if it is, say, three in the afternoon and you are
lost in the desert, how do you get your bearings? The answer, says Gooley, is
to find a stick. By noting the different places where its shadow falls over a
short period of time, you will quickly locate the eastwest axis. ‘The sun
influences things even if you can’t see it,’ he explains. You might not be in
the desert, but walking along a forest track in Britain. One side of the track
is darker in colour than the other. ‘Ah-ha!’ thinks the natural navigator. ‘It
is darker because it is damper, which means it is getting less sun, because it
is shaded by the trees, which means that south is that way.’ You can now stride
confidently southwards — or in whichever direction you wish to head — without
fiddling with a map.

As the day wears on, the detective work forces us to look
at the world in new and unexpected ways. Just when we think we are getting thc
hang of it, Gooley sets us a particularly difficult task. A photograph of a
house comes up on the screen. An orange sun is peeping over the horizon behind
the house. There is a tree in the foreground. «Just study the picture for
a few minutes,» Gooley says, «and tell me in which direction the
photographer is pointing the camera.» Tricky. Very tricky. Is the sun
rising or setting? Is the tree growing straight up or leaning to the right? Is
that a star twinkling over the chimney? Are we in the northern or southern
hemisphere? ‘South-east,’ I say firmly, having analysed the data in minute
detail. «Not quite.» — «Am I close?» — «Not really.
The answer is north-west.» Ah well. Only 180 degrees out.

Still, if I am bottom of the class, I have caught the
natural navigation bug. What a fascinating science, both mysterious and
universal. It is hardly what you would call a practical skill: there are too
many man-made aids to navigation at our disposal. But it connects us,
thrillingly, to the world around us — and to those long-dead ancestors who
circled the globe with nothing but stars to guide them. It reminds us what it
means to bc human.

What is the writer’s main point in the first paragraph?

l) that the Royal Geographical Society was easy for
all of them to find. 2) that the route to the Royal Geographical Society might
sound complicated.

3) that all of them wanted to arrive at the Royal
Geographical Society on time. 4) that they did not need instructions to find
the Royal Geographical Society.

What does the writer say about Tristan Gooley in the second
paragraph?

l) He was different from what he
had expected.

2)               
He began in an
impressive way.

3)               
He had always wanted to meet him. 4) He seldom gave talks to the
public.

What does Tristan Gooley say about ‘natural navigation’?

l) It can be more accurate than
using technology.

2)               
It is quite a
complicated skill to master.

3)               
It should only be used in emergency situations. 4) It is not
required most of the time.

According to Gooley, the use of a stick which he
explains

l) only works in the desert.

2)               
involves more
than one piece of information.

3)               
works best at particular times of the day. 4) may surprise some
people.

The example Of walking along a forest track
illustrates

l) the fact that the sun may not
be important to finding your way.

2)      the
difference between the desert and other locations.

3)      the
advantage of learning natural navigation.

4)      the
relationship between natural navigation and other skills.

What does the writer say about the task involving a
photograph?

l) It was not as simple as it
first appeared.

2)     
He needed more
information in order to do it successfully.

3)      He
became more confused the longer he spent on it.

4)      He
was not surprised to hear that his answer was wrong.

The writer’s attitude towards natural navigation is that

l) it would take a long time to be
good at it.

2)               
it is a valuable skill in the modern world.

3)               
it is only likely to appeal to a certain kind of person. 4) it is
exciting but not very useful.

6.

Ilpogumaüme
maccm u Bblnonwme 3aòaHun A15—A21. B KaOfCðOM 3aÒaHuu
06eeòume quÞpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomeemcmg            ‘0 8b16 aHHOM
ea-Mu ga uawn omeema.

Knowing that
Mrs. Mallard was afflicted with a heart trouble, great care was taken to break
to her as gently as possible the news of her husband’s death. It was her friend
Josephine who told her, in broken sentences veiled hints that revealed in half
concealing. Her husband’s friend Mr Richards was there, too, near her.

It was he who
had been in the newspaper office when intelligence of the railroad disaster was
received, with Brently Mallard’s name leading the list of «killed.»
He had only taken the time to assure himself of its truth by a second
telegramme, and had hastened to forestall any less careful, less tender friend
in bearing the sad message. She did not hear the story as many women would have
heard the same, with a paralysed inability to accept its significance. She wept
at once, with sudden, wild abandonment. When the storm of grief had spent
itself she went away to her room alone. She would have no one follow her.

There stood,
facing the open window, a comfortable, roomy armchair. Into this she sank,
pressed down by a physical exhaustion that haunted her body and seemed to reach
into her soul. She could see in the open square before her house the tops of
trees that were full of new spring life. The delicious breath of rain was in
the air. In the street below a peddler was crying his wares. The notes of a
distant song which someone was singing reached her faintly, and countless
sparrows were twittering in the eaves.

There were
patches of blue sky showing here and there through the clouds that had met and
piled one above the other in the west facing her window. There was something
coming to her and she was waiting for it, fearfully. What was it? She did not
know; it was too subtle and elusive to name. But she felt it, creeping out of
thê sky, reaching toward her through the sounds, the scents, the colour
that filled the air. A little whispered word escaped her slightly parted lips.
She said it over and over under her breath: «Free, free, free!» There
would be no one to live for during those coming years; she would live for
herself. There would be no powerful will bending hers in that blind persistence
with which men and women believe they have a right to impose a private will
upon a fellow-creature. And yet she had loved him — sometimes. What did it
matter! «Free! Body and soul free!» she kept whispering.

Josephine was
kneeling before the closed door with her lips to the keyhole, imploring for
admission. «Louise, open the door! I beg, open the door—you will make
yourself ill. What are you doing, Louise? For heaven’s sake open the
door.» «Go away. I am not making myself ill.» No; she was
drinking in the elixir of life through that open window. Her fancy was running
riot along those days ahead of her. Spring days, and summer days, and all sorts
of days that would be her own. She breathed a quick prayer that life might be
long. It was only yesterday she had thought with a shudder that life might be
long.

She arose at
length and opened the door to Josephine’s persistent requests. There was a
feverish triumph in her eyes, and she carried herself unwittingly like a
goddess of Victory. She clasped her friend’s waist, and together they descended
the stairs. Richards stood waiting for them at the bottom.

Someone was
opening the front door with a latchkey. It was Brently Mallard who entered, a
little travel-stained, composedly carrying his grip-sack and umbrella. He had
been far from the scene of the accident, and did not even know there had been
one. He stood amazed at Josephine’s piercing cry; at Richards’ quick motion to
screen him from the view of his wife. When the doctors came they said she had
died of heart disease — of the joy that kills.

Mrs Mallard learned the sad news of her husband’s death from

l) Mr Richards who clarified
Josephine’s vague hints.

2)      
Josephine incoherent beating around the bush.

3)      
the newspaper news of the railroad disaster.

4)      
the telegramme which Richard had hastened to bring.

When Mrs Mallard
learned the sad news she l) accepted it as other women would have done in her
position.

2)       was
paralysed and refused to believe it.

3)       failed
to cope with her acute sense of grief.

4)       sought
consolation in her friends’ company.

The peaceful atmosphere of a nice spring
day helped Mrs Mallard

l) feel real gratitude to her friends for their support.

2)               
listen to what was going on inside her.

3)               
think rationally about the steps she should take next. 4) summon
up the strength to face the tragic loss.

When Mrs Mallard repeated the word
«free» she implied that

l) according to her late husband’s
will she had inherited all the money and was free to spend it any way she
liked.

2)      
she had stopped loving her husband a long time before and now she
was free to make a fresh start in her private life.

3)      
from now on there would be no one to dominate her life and give
her orders and she was free to live the way she liked.

4)      
her husband had turned her life into a nightmare hurting her
physically and now she would be free from pain and humiliation.

Mrs Mallard wouldn’t open the door to
Josephine because Mrs Mallard

l) took her time enjoying her new position.

2)      
was praying and wanted to be left alone.

3)      
was carefully planning her future life.

4)      
wanted to recollect the events of her past life.

When Mrs Mallard finally left her room she

l) was unable to walk and
Josephine supported her. 2) was prepared to accept condolences on her tragic
loss.

3) could hardly conceal the feeling that overwhelmed
her. 4) looked majestic in her black mourning dress.

Mrs Mallard passed away because

l) she had been overcome with joy
at seeing her husband alive.

2)       all
her hopes and expectations had been brutally shattered.

3)       her
heart had stopped at Josephine’s piercing cry.

4)       she
had experienced too many emotions that day.

7.

Ilpogumaùme mezccm u gt,znonnume 3aòŒua
A15—A21. B Ka9fCÒOM 3aÒanuu oõgeÒume quØpy
1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomgemcmg ‘0 10 8bZõ al-IHOM gauvtu ga uamn omgema.

J. S. G. Boggs
is a young artist with a certain flair and panache. What he likes to do, for
example, is to invite you out to eat at an expensive restaurant, run up a bill
of, say, eighty-seven dollars, and then, while sipping coffee after dessert,
reach into his satchel and pull out a drawing he’s already been working on for
several hours before the meal. The drawing, on a small sheet of highquality
paper, might consist, in this instance, of a virtually perfect rendition of the
face-side of a onehundred-dollar bill.

He then pulls out a couple of precision pens from his
satchel — one green ink, the other black — and proceeds to apply the finishing
touches to his drawing. This activity invariably causes a stir. Guests at
neighbouring tables crane their necks. Passing waiters stop to gawk. The head
waiter eventually drifts over, stares for a while, and then praises the young
man on the excellence of his art. «Thatts good,» says
Boggs, «I’m glad you like this drawing, because I intend to use it as
payment for our meal.»

At this point,
a vertiginous chill descends upon the room — or, more precisely, upon the head
waiter. He blanches. You can see his mind reeling as he begins to plot
strategy. Should he call the police? How is he going to avoid a scene? But
Boggs almost immediately reestablishes a measure of equilibrium by reaching
into his satchel, pulling out a real hundred-dollar bill — indeed, the model of
the very drawing he’s just completed — and saying, «Of course, if you
want, you can take this ordinary hundred-dollar bill instead.» Colour is
already returning to the head waiter’s face. «But as you can see»,
Boggs continues, «I’m an artist, and I drew this. It took me many hours to
it, and it’s certainly worth something … So you have to make up your mind
whether you think this piece of art is worth more or less than this standard
one-hundred-dollar bill. It’s entirely up to you.»

As a conceptual artist, Boggs feels a work isn’t
complete until he has spent one of his bills; not only spent it, in fact, but
often also received change in real currency — and a receipt. A ‘successful
transaction’, as he explains, is one that makes people think about such
concepts as value and beauty and leads them to their own conclusions,
independent of any establishment — whether governmental or cultural.

But mightn’t his money still be counterfeit? Boggs
always makes impish changes on his bills — signing his own name instead of the
Secretary of the Treasury’s, for instance, or substituting the faces of
celebrated American women (a current project) for the men gracing US currency.
Governments, however, don’t take kindly to this. Boggs has been prosecuted,
unsuccessfully, for counterfeiting in both England and Australia; the
Australian government was even required to pay him more than $20,000 in
damages.

In the United
States things have gone less well. In 1990, just before a major exhibition of
his work opened, Boggs became embroiled with the U.S. Secret Service. Its
agents moved to prevent publication of the show’s catalogue as it was then
conceived, with actual-size, full-colour reproductions of Boggs’s drawings. In
the end, the catalogue «J. S. G. Boggs Smart Money (Hard Currency)»,
was printed using enlarged images.

This was just
the beginning for Boggs: when ‘Smart Money’ moved on to another gallery, Secret
Service agents threatened to confiscate everything but had no search warrant.
In December 1992, Boggs was preparing to embark on ‘Project Pittsburgh’ and
spend a million dollars’ ‘worth’ of a new series of drawings. The Secret
Service raided his studio and office at Carnegie Mellon University, where he
was a visiting lecturer in Art and Ethics. They confiscated 1,300 items. They
did not, however, arrest Boggs, whose suit to regain his material is currently
on appeal.

According to
Kent Yalowitz, the lawyer who has taken Boggs’ case on, «The government
has never tried to explain to the courts why they think he’s breaking the law
or why they have a right to seize his work.» Yalowitz points out that,
unlike counterfeiters, Boggs has never tried to defraud anyone with his notes,
nor has anyone ever complained of fraud in any of Boggs’ transactions. Yalowitz
said he’s offered the government a compromise solution: «So long as no one
complains of being defrauded by Boggs or anyone else using one of his drawings,
the government should not interfere with his work.»

«What’s driving them so crazy?»
Boggs asks for his part. «It must be the way these bills of mine subvert
the whole system, calling into question the very credibility of the country’s
entire currency.» Boggs commissioned Thomas Hipschen, the master engraver
whose portraits adorn the new denominations of American currency, to make a
steel-engraved portrait. This portrait — of Boggs — now also adorns a series of
$100,000 bills, which the artist foresees using to pay his legal expenses.

How do other guests and restaurant staff react initially to
J. S. G. Boggs’s behaviour?

l) They are worried by it. 2) They are curious about
it.

3) They are impressed by the quality of his work.
4) They try not to take any notice.

The head waiter is relieved when he realises that

l) Boggs’s drawing is worth more than the cost of the meal.

2)       
Boggs is not willing to pay the bill with legal currency.

3)       
Boggs is not going to cause an embarrassing incident. 4) Boggs
takes the concepts of value and art seriously.

What is Boggs’s main objective?

1)       To
trick people into accepting his drawings as payment.

2)       To
get people to question established values.

3)       To
obtain real currency as change.

4)       To
provoke a reaction from the government.

How have governments outside the United States reacted to
Boggsts art?

l) They have tried unsuccessfully to convict him of
counterfeiting.

2)       They
have asked him not to change the images on the original notes.

3)       They
have fined him as much as $20,000 for exhibiting his drawings.

4)       They
have shown quite a lot of sympathy for his work and ideas.

What difficulties has Boggs had with the authorities in
the United States?

l) They have forced him to make changes to a catalogue for
one of his exhibitions.

2)       They
have confiscated all the work from his exhibition ‘Smart Money’.

3)       They
have charged him with fraud for trying to pay with his drawings.

4)       They
have charged him with counterfeiting for reproducing images on US currency.

How does Boggs hope to pay his lawyers?

1)      
With a real $100,000 bill.

2)      
With a portrait by another famous artist.

3)      
With his latest piece of work.

4)      
With the change from a transaction with one of his drawings.

What does the writer think about
Boggs? l) He is breaking the law and should be punished.

2)       
He is a little eccentric but interesting.

3)       
He is mentally unbalanced but amusing at the same time. 4) He is
being unfairly victimised by the authorities.

8.

llpogumaüme maccm u oznonwme
3aÒaHt1H A15—A21. B Raacð0M 3aòŒuu 06æðume
vuØpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomeemcm6 }0 70 016 aHHOM ea.MU ga uŒtm
omeema.

Last October, a
land cruiser truck carrying the limp body of a month-old African elephant
pulled up to the gate of Daphne Sheldrick’s property just outside Kenya’s
Nairobi National Park. It had been found wandering alone outside another park
dazed and dehydrated, its floppy ears badly sunburned. «The babies are
always ill and sometimes severely traumatized,» says Sheldrick. «Constant
attention, affection, and communication are crucial to their will to live. They
must never be left alone.»

Remarkably,
those that make it to Sheldrick homestead never are. Until they are two, they
get all the attention that a human infant would receive, including having a
keeper sleep at their side every night. Sheldrick, 61, a widow of David
Sheldrick, a renowned naturalist and founder of Kenya’s Tsavo National Park,
opened her elephant and rhino orphanage in 1977 and has become a leading
authority on infant elephant behaviour. After 25 years of frustrating trial and
error, she developed a system for nurturing baby elephants. Her method includes
a skim milk-coconut oil fonnula devised for human babies. Since then, she and
her staff of eight keepers have raised 12 elephants from infancy — the highest
success rate in the world.

«Infant
elephants are very similar to human infants,» says Sheldrick. «They
can be naughty, competitive and disobedient. When you say, ‘No’, they want to
do it.» If punishment is called for, Sheldrick gives them ‘a little zing
on the bottom’ with a battery-powered cattle prod. «It’s an unfamiliar
sensation, so it’s unpleasant for them. But then,» she adds, «you
have to be careful to make friends with them again.» Prodigious memory may
explain why zoo keepers are occasionally killed by elephants they have known
for years. «They’ve done something to the elephant which they have
forgotten, but the elephant hasn’t,» she explains.

For every step
forward, there were painful retreats. In 1974 Sheldrick achieved a breakthrough
when she nursed a newborn, Aisha, to 6 months. But then she had to leave for 2
weeks to attend her daughter Jill’s wedding. Aisha, who had been bonded
exclusively with Sheldrick — stopped eating. «She died of a broken
heart,» she says, who now rotates keepers to prevent babies from bonding
with only one person.

The orphans
remain at Sheldrick’s compound until the age of 2, when they are fully weaned
onto a vegetable diet. Once they are able to feed themselves, they are trucked
to The National Park, 150 miles away, where they are put into a stockade and
gradually introduced to local herds. Eleanor, who was rescued and introduced to
the wild in 1970, has become a willing adoptive mother. «The little
elephants are always welcome in a wild herd,» says Sheldrick.

But the adults
can also be stern parents. «If the matriarch gives them a smack with her
trunk, they’ll come flying back to their human keepers,» says Sheldrick,
who makes sure the youngsters are free to come and go from the stockade.
«It takes 12 to 15 years (of their 60- to 70-year lifespan) before the
baby becomes independent of his human family. Eventually they get bored stiff
with people because they’re having more fun with elephants.»

For their part,
elephants can make it instantly clear when humans have overstepped their
welcome. Last year, Sheldrick was visiting The National Park when mistakenly
she thought she had spotted Eleanor. «I called her, and she came
over,» she recalls.» I talked to her for about 10 minutes and touched
her ear. She didn’t like it at all and used her tusk and truck to send me
flying into a pile of boulders.» Despite a shattered right knee and femur
from which she is still recovering, Sheldrick doesn’t hold a grudge. «On
the contrary,» she says, «I’m very flattered that a completely wild
elephant would come and talk to me.»

What is the most important element in Sheldrick’s approach to
rearing baby elephants?

l) Providing them with
companionship 24 hours a day.

2)               
Feeding them with a dairy-based milk devised for human babies.

3)               
Not giving them too much attention after they turn two. 4)
Getting the keepers to sleep with them.

Why is it important to make friends with an elephant after
you have punished it?

l) They are like human
children and can be naughty. 2) They might never forgive you for punishing
them.

3)      They
may kill you if you don’t.

4)      They
will forget the punishment too quickly.

Why was it a mistake for Sheldrick to nurse the baby elephant
Aisha on her own?

l) She couldn’t leave Aisha to attend her daughter’s
wedding.

2)      Aisha
became too attached to her.

3)      The
other keepers didn’t know how to look after Aisha.

4)      Elephants
like to have a variety of people looking after them.

Why are the baby elephants kept in a stockade after
taking to the National Park?

l) The wild elephants do not accept them. 2) They are
still not able to feed themselves.

3)      They
have not yet been adopted by Eleanor.

4)      The
process of assimilation into a herd takes time.

Why do the young elephants eventually stop coming back to the
stockade?

l) They prefer the company of other elephants. 2) The
other elephants are too rough with them.

3) The keepers stop them because they are too old. 4)
The humans get bored with them.

Why did Sheldrick touch the wild elephant’s ear?

1)               
She wanted to make the elephant feel welcome.

2)               
She had confused her with another elephant.

3)               
She had already been talking to her for about ten minutes. 4) She
was flattered by the elephant’s attention.

What overall impression does the author of the article give
of work with elephants?

l) It is dangerous. 2) It is depressing.

3)      It
is rewarding.

4)      It
is unpleasant

9.

Ilpogumaüme meŒccm u 01’10JIHume
3aòaŒ{ua A15—A21. B RaOÆCÒOM 3aÒaHuu
06eeòume tf*y 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomeemcm 10 8b16 am-IOM eauu ga uaHm
omeema.

Whether it’s
holidays, great days out or lazy days at home, you hope your children will
retain happy memories of their childhoods. But often their treasured
recollections don’t match parental expectations.

Take my
exasperated friend Sarah. Back on the train after a day at both the Natural
History and the Science museums with three children under 10, she asked:
«So what did you all learn?’ That if I bang my head on something hard,
it’s going to hurt,» came the reply from her six-year-old daughter.
Roaring dinosaurs and an expensive lunch had little impact, but the bump on a
banister was destined to become family legend. After I’d helped out on a school
trip to Tate Modern art gallery, the teacher told me that three of my
five-year-old charges drew the escalators as their most memorable bit of the
day. «On a zoo trip, Luca liked the caterpillar best,» says my friend
Barbara. «Forget lions, giraffes and gorillas. What made the most
impression (and what he still talks about five years later) is the time he
found a caterpillar at the zoo.»

My children
are masters of odd-memory syndrome, recalling the minutiae and looking
blankraced at major events. The self-catering cottage of last year is ‘the
yellow house that smelled funny’. A skiing holiday is ‘remember when we had
burgers for breakfast?’ and a summer holiday is ‘when we had two ice creams
every night’.

Food features
large in other children’s memories. ‘Did you like going on the plane?’ a friend
asked her three-year-old daughter after her first flight. «I liked the
crisps,» came the reply. Four «ears on, another friend’s daughter
still remembers Menorca for the tomato-flavoured crisps and Pembrokeshire for
the dragon ice cream (ice cream in a dragon-shaped pot). Last summer, Janey and
her husband took their three children on a three-week train trip around Europe.
«We wanted to open their minds to the joys of travel and experiencing
different cultures,» she says. «But the high point for them was the
Mickey Mouse-shaped ice cream. That was in Rome. I wonder whether the Coliseum
made any sort of impression.»

But parenting
expert Suzie Hayman is reassuring. «I think food figures high in
everybody’s memories,» she says. «I just have to think of hot
chocolate and I’m transported back to Paris. Adults tend to be less direct or
simply try hard to come up to other people’s expectations. The important thing
is that you give your children lots of stimulation. If you visit a museum, you
can convey your appreciation for something. Just don’t expect them to share it.
It’s all about laying out the buffet and letting children pick. What children
want most is you — your attention, your approval, your time. They may prefer
the box to the present, but you’re still giving them variety for their memory
pool. It’s also important that they don’t grow up expecting that happy times only
equate with spending money on expensive days out.»

My
nine-year-old has a memory theory: the more uncomfortable the bed, the better
the holiday. So sleeping on bathroom floors and bending Z-beds make for a
fantastic time and fluffy pillows and soft mattresses (more expensive) equal
boring. This is one unexpected memory I plan to nurture for years to come.

What do all of the memories mentioned in the second paragraph
have in common?

l) They concerned something
unexpected that happened during a trip.

2)      They
were not connected with the main purpose of the trip.

3)      They
concerned trips that adults particularly enjoyed.

4)      They
were not things that the children remembered for long.

What does the writer suggest about ‘major events’ in the
third paragraph?

1)       Her
children’s memories of them are different from hers.

2)      
Her children’s
memories of them change over time.

3)       Her
children are unable to remember them at all.

4)       Her
children remember only certain parts of them.

The food examples in the fourth
paragraph illustrate the fact that l) food is often what children remember
about journeys. 2) children’s memories of past events frequently involve food.

3)     
children like talking about unusual food they have had.

4)     
children keep their memories of unusual food for a long time.

What does Suzie Hayman say about
memories of food? l) Children are more likely to mention food than adults.

2)             
Adults forget what food they have had after a while.

3)             
The fact that children remember food is not important. 4) All her
best memories of childhood involve food.

What does Suzie Hayman say about parents?

l) They should not expect their children to enjoy the same
things that they enjoy.

2)             
They should not take their children on expensive days out.

3)             
They should not pay attention to what their children can remember.
4) They should not take their children to places that will not interest them.

The writer says that her child’s memory theory

l) is different from that of other children.

2)       has
an advantage for the writer.

3)       makes
logical sense to the writer.

4)       is
something that she shares with her child.

The writer’s purpose in the article is to point out

1)       how
difficult it is for children to remember the kind of things that adults
remember.

2)       how
annoying children’s memories of past events can be for adults.

3)       how
happy children’s own memories of past events make them feel.

4)       how
different children’s memories are from what adults want them to remember.

10.

llpogumaüme maccm u
oznonwme 3aðaHug A15—A21. B KCZJCÒOM 3aÒŒuu
oõæòume quØpy 1, 2, 3 unu 4, coomæmcme 10
8b1õ aHHOM gaMU ea uaHrn omeema.

In 1789 began
the celebrated French Revolution, an event which shook the old certainties of
European states and European monarchies to the core. It also raised debate on
the desired structure of the state throughout whole populations to an
unprecedented degree. In October the following year, Edmund Burke brought out
his Reflections on the Revolution in France which sold 35,000 copies within
weeks, then a huge number. It reinforced all the fears and prejudices of the
traditional aristocracy. Immediately, more progressive authors began writing
their responses including the celebrated Thomas Paine whose The Rights ofMan
sold an amazing two million copies.

But Paine’s was
not the first response. Less than a month after Burke’s book was published
there appeared the anonymous A Vindication of the Rights ofMen. It sold so well
that a second edition appeared only three weeks after the first. However, in
this edition the author was named as Mary Wollstonecraft. The involvement of
women in politics was almost unknown at the time and there was outrage. Horace
Walpole called her «a hyena in petticoats».

If she was intimidated by the outcry, it
did not show. Only two years later, at the beginning of

1792, she produced another book
with an even more inflammatory title: A Vindication of the Rights of Women.
This has been a handbook for feminists ever since. Women tended to like her
strong opinions while men were, not surprisingly, infuriated. What is surprising
is that so many of the men who attacked this piece are usually thought of as
politically advanced. Even William Godwin, for example, supported the idea that
men and women were different and complementary and this required a political
arrangement where men led and women followed. Wollstonecraft attacked this
notion and demanded independence and equality for women.

This
rebellious streak led her in quite a different direction from most of her
contemporaries. As bloodshed in Paris reached its peak during 1792 and 1793,
and most British fled from France, Wollstonecraft moved to Paris to live. She
stayed while most of her French friends were killed. Quite why is not clear
since she clearly preferred the society of the bourgeois intellectuals who were
dying to the street revolutionaries who were killing them. Perhaps it was only
after this experience that she appreciated some of the practical pitfalls of
unchecked liberty.

The reality of revolution seemed
to change her in a number of other ways. A feature of her Vindication was to
urge both men and women to subjugate passion to reason. Before her experience
in France she had remained single and, single-mindedly, celibate despite the
temptation offered by the painter Fuseli. But whilst in France she threw herself
into a passionate affair with the American adventurer Gilbert Imlay. She even
followed Imlay to Scandinavia in search of stolen silver treasure; a triumph of
passion over reason if ever there was one! How ironic that she should suffer
this fate in the middle of, what she hoped would be, the foundation of a
better, more rational, society.

She never entirely lost her principles, however, and clung to
the belief that a better world based on equality and reason was attainable.
Eventually she returned to Britain and, after a failed suicide bid, she married
the very William Godwin who had so criticised her before. She died in
childbirth not long after and pronounced herself «content to be
wretched» but refused to be a nothing and discounted.

Mary
Wollstonecraft’s life was revolutionary in many ways, even for her time. She
may have been inconsistent and contradictory but this cannot diminish the
effect she had on the political thoughts of her contemporaries. We cannot
ignore too, the degree to which she has influenced later thought, even down to
the present day. Her son-in-law, Percy Shelley, was a fervent admirer who
immortalised her in verse in The Revolt of Islam. De Beauvoir’s The Second Sex
and Greer’s The Female Eunuch both owe their origins to Wollstonecraft’s
pioneering writing. The notions of equality we take for granted today first
appeared in her work.

The revolution in France

l) frightened everybody. 2)
prejudiced the aristocracy.

3)      
concerned everybody.

4)      
challenged the established order.

Wollstonecraft’s A Vindication of the Rights ofMen

l) was an immediate best seller.

2)      
sold only slowly
at first.

3)      
hardly sold at
all.

4)      
was only read by women.

The response to A Vindicaton ofthe Rights ofMen

l) intimidated Mary. 2) made Mary
flee to France.

3) attracted William Godwin. 4) made Mary write
another book.

Men objected to the book because

l) it was written by a woman. 2)
it challenged established ideas about men and womel 3) she published before
them.

4) the writer was a female politician.

Mary’s personal life

l) always matched her published
beliefs. 2) sometimes contradicted her published beliefs.

3) never contradicted her published beliefs. 4) never
matched her published beliefs.

In refusing to be discounted she meant

l) women should be taught literacy and numeracy.

2)               
the role of women
should not be reduced.

3)               
she was not to be overlooked for being a woman. 4) she was happy
as she was.

Mary Wollstonecraft’s writing

l) was constant and
contemporary. 2) inspired modern feminist writers.

3) took equality for granted. 4) was ignored.

58

11.

Ilpogumaüme meccm u
8bžnonwme 3aòaHun A15—A21. B RaO+CÒOM 3aòaHuu
06geòume quØpy 1, 2, 3 wzu 4, coomæmcme ‘0 016 aHHOM gauu
ga uaHm omeema.

For three
centuries the greatest minds on the planet were baffled by a seemingly simple
equation set by an amateur 17th century mathematician, Pierre de
Fermat. The battle to prove Fermat’s theory about this equation was a long and
hard one and it was not until 1997 that Professor Andrew Wiles received the
prestigious Wolfskehl Prize, in recognition of his epic struggle with this
‘simple equation’ which had become one of the most notorious problems in
mathematics: Fermat’s Last Theorem.

Wiles first
read about Fermat’s Last Theorem when, as a schoolboy, he visited his local
library: «One day I borrowed a book about this ancient and unsolved
problem. It looked so simple, and yet the greatest mathematicians in history
couldn’t solve it. A 10-year-óld, I knew from that moment I would never
let it go.’

The theorem’s
creator was a civil servant and mathematician. Having studied an equation. He
claimed that he could prove it was impossible to solve this particular
equation, but the mischievous Frenchman never committed his proof to paper.

For thirty
years, teachers, lecturers and then colleagues told Wiles he was wasting his
time but he never gave up. When he eventually spotted a potential strategy, the
mathematician did not publicise his idea. Instead he worked in complete
isolation. Only his wife knew of the new direction his work had taken. He
believed his approach was right, but feared that rival mathematicians might
beat him to the proof if they discovered his plan. Making his strategy succeed
would take seven years of dedicated effort, conducted in complete secrecy.
During this period, Wiles continued to publish papers of conventional
calculations every year to put his peers off the scent.

To show that
no numbers fitted the equation, Wiles had to confront infinity — the
mathematician’s nightmare. He likens his experience to a journey through the
dark: «You enter the first room and it’s completely dark. You stumble
around, bumping into the furniture. After six months or so you find the light
switch and suddenly everything is illuminated. Then you move into the next room
and spend another six months in the dark. Although each of these breakthroughs
can be momentary, they are the culmination of many months of stumbling around
in the dark.»

In June 1993,
Wiles revealed to the world that he had proved Fermat’s Last Theorem. However,
within a few months referees spotted an error in the proof. Wiles attempted to
fix it before news of the error had leaked out, but he failed. By the end of
1993, the mathematical community was full of gossip and rumour, with many
academics criticising Wiles because he refused to release the flawed calculations,
thus preventing others from fixing the error.

Wiles spent an
agonizing year before making the final breakthrough that resurrected his proof.
«It was so indescribably beautiful. I stared at the calculation in
disbelief for 20 minutes. It was the most important moment of my working
life.» The sheer complexity of the proof shows it can’t possibly be the
proof Fermat had in mind, and some mathematicians are continuing the search for
the original 1 7th century proof.

How did Wiles feel about Fermat’s Last Theorem?

l) He was obsessed with it. 2) He
couldn’t understand it.

3)       He
was worried about it.

4)       He
didn’t think he could solve it.

Why is Fermat described as ‘mischievous Frenchman’?

l) He said it was impossible to
find a solution to the equation.

2)               
He only did mathematics in his spare time as a hobby.

3)               
The proof he claimed to have discovered was not written down. 4)
He wouldn’t say whether he had found a proof or not.

Why were Wiles’ teachers and colleagues discouraging about
his project?

l) They thought he had adopted the
wrong approach.

2)               
They did not know he had found the strategy.

3)               
They did not know his wife knew about it. 4) They thought the
problem was unsolvable.

How did Wiles avoid attracting
suspicion? l) He was very secretive about his work.

2)                
He carried on doing his normal work.

3)                
He was extremely dedicated to his work. 4) He published papers
about the proof.

What did the process of arriving at a proof involve?

l) Long periods of bewilderment
followed by flashes of understanding. 2) Careful, painstaking work which
gradually began to reveal a solution.

3)      A
series of sudden realisations leading to a final answer.

4)      A
long journey of exploration at the end of which the solution was revealed

Why did other mathematicians criticise Wiles in 1993?

l) There were errors in the
original proof.

2)               
He could not fix the errors in the original proof.

3)               
He would not let others work on his original proof. 4) He allowed
rumours about the original proof to circulate.

The equation Fermat and Wiles studied

l) was solvable but Wiles could
not work out the solution. 2) was solvable and Wiles eventually worked out the
solution.

3)      was
unsolvable but Wiles could not prove this.

4)      was
unsolvable and Wiles eventually proved this.

12.

llpoqumaüme maccm u et,znonwme 3aÒaHun A15—A21. B
KCZO+CÒOM 3aòŒuu 06eeòume 3 unu 4, coomæmcme
yo 10 8b1õ am-IOM gauu ea uaHžn omeema.

1, 2,

Sir Thomas More
was the most brilliant Englishman of his age in an age, the early Renaissance,
which is thought to be particularly brilliant. He scaled the heights in law, in
philosophy and literature, and attained high political rank as Chancellor. But the
most challenging thing about this man is nothing that he achieved in life but
the nature of his death. The facts are well known. He was executed by King
Henry VIII in 1534 for refusing to accept Henry as head of the church in
England. What is unclear is why he chose to refuse, and to die, in this way.

Clouding the
issue are the political and religious arguments which were at the root of his
refusal and his death. It will be remembered that King Henry VIII was, for the
most of his life, an ardent Catholic who was awarded the title of Defender of
the Faith for his resistance to the Protestant reformation. But his desperation
for a male heir led Henry to divorce his first wife, Catherine of Aragon, in
favour of the younger Ann Boleyn who offered the promise of a son. High
politics among the crowned heads of Europe meant that this could only be
achieved by a break with Rome and the acceptance of Protestantism in England.
In a time when religion was taken very seriously by whole populations there was
bound to be resistance.

Traditional
Catholic writers, such as Friar Anthony Foley, have cast More as a martyr who
stood up for the cause of Catholicism and perished for the true religion.
«More was a beacon of light in those dark times,» says Friar Foley,
«whose actions have shown the path of righteousness for true believers
even down to the present day. This interpretation was convenient for the
Catholic church, then as now, and resulted in More being made a saint. It
ignores, however, the fact that More took every step to stop his ideas being
made a political issue. Whatever reason he had it was not support of the
Catholic church. It also does not explain why More chose to take a stand, and
effectively commit suicide, on this issue. Even under the teachings of the Catholic
church he could have sworn the necessary oath to Henry because he was under
duress. The church in his day did not expect or require him to refuse. More’s
personal beliefs were his own but refusal to take the oath is what condemned
him.

A more recent
biography, by Paul Hardy, views More as a medieval man and not the renaissance
man he is often seen as. As such, Hardy argues, he would have been deeply
conservative. The changes which Henry was embracing, with the acceptance of
Protestantism, would have been highly offensive. «As a lawyer and
Chancellor, More had spent his life defending the status quo and now it was
turned round,» he writes. This rather ignores the deliberate modernity
which imbued every other aspect of More’s life from legal reform to the
rewriting of school textbooks.

Other writers, such as the psychotherapist Bill Blake,
see More’s demise as an example of depressive illness. Melancholy was widely
known at the time but not seen as an illness. It is not implausible that under
the sfi•ain of work and the profile of his position as Chancellor, he succumbed
to depression and, desperate and indecisive, let death sweep over him. But
contemporary reports are odds with this. He made every effort to comfort and
cheer up his own relatives and never appeared lost or undecided.

Since More
himself left no explanation we will probably never really know what his
motivation was. However, Hardy’s observations are very true in some respects in
that More lived in a very different world and one that is hard for us to
understand. Life could be very cheap 500 years ago especially if one held high
political office of intellectual views at odds with the establishment. There is
no better way of appreciating this than to consider the fate of the poets in
the Oxford Book of Sixteenth Century verse. Two thirds of these poets died
violent deaths, almost all at the hands of an executioner. With the possibility
of death ever present it seems to have been regarded then with something less
than the dread it evokes today. Perhaps this is what happened with More. After
a lifetime of good fortune, considerable luxury and achievement, the wheel of
fortune had turned, and More accepted his fate with good grace in the hope of
an even better life in the hereafter.

Which of the following was More not expert in?

l) literature 2) religion

3)      philosophy

4)      law

Henry VIII
executed More because 1) Henry VIII wanted a son.

2)       
More believed in Protestantism.

3)       
More was Chancellor.

4)       
More refused to take an oath.

Henry VIII broke from Rome because

l) He believed Protestantism was the true faith.

2)             
Rome refused him a divorce.

3)             
He wanted to ensure the succession. 4) He wanted to marry Ann
Boleyn.

Traditional Catholic writers proclaimed More as a martyr
because

l) wanted to be executed.

2)             
he did not refuse his religious belief.

3)             
he tried not to make his belief a political issue. 4) he did not
support Protestantism in England.

The writer disbelieves traditional views of More’s death
because

l) More committed suicide.

2)      More
didn’t follow Catholic teaching in refusing the oath.

3)      Theories
of depression are more persuasive.

4)      Little
is really understood of the time More lived in.

More’s death is a mystery because 1)
he chose to be executed.

2)      he
left no written explanation.

3)      the
facts of his death are not known.

4)      it
is bound up in religious controversy.

According to the writer, the life of an intellectual 500
years ago could be dangerous

1)      Because
the standard of living was cheap.

2)      Because
they held high political office.

3)      If
they held dissident views,

4)      If
they suffered from depression.

OTBETb1

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Task 1.

8362571

Task 2.

5631287

Task 3.

6413852

Task 4.

8765241

Task 5.

3614728

Task 6.

5627348

Task 7.

4612853

Task 8.

3851274

Task 9.

1875236

Task 10.

4271638

Task 11.

7532648

Task 12.

4187526

3anaHHfl Ha 110HHMaHue CTPYKTYPHO-CMb1CJIOBb1X CBfl3eÜ B TeKCTe B3

Task 1.

362417

Task 2.

325714

Task 3.

735124

Task 4.

247135

Task 5.

421735

Task 6.

376512

Task 7.

436172

Task 8.

751624

Task 9.

247315

Task 10.

251637

Task 11.

471625

Task 12.

751624

3aAaHHfl Ha no.rmoe H TOU-1HOe 1101—1HMaHHe
HHÞPMaUHH B TeKcrre A15-A21

   Task 1.                       A15-2, A16-4, 1, A20-2,A21 —
1

     Task 2.             A15-2,              3,            -3,
A18 -4, A19 -2, MO -3, A21 -2

Task 3.

Task 4. Task 5.

A15-2, A 16 —3, A17 -2,            —
1, A19 -2, A20 — 3,     

A15-3,           A 17 —2,       — 1, A19
-2, A20 — 4, A21 — 1 A15- 1, A 16—2, A17 -4, A18 -2, A19-3, A20 — 2,                       

     Task 6.              A15-2, 16 —3,            -2,             -3,
A19- 1, A20 -3, A21 -2

   Task 7.                        A15-2,A
16 —A20 —3,A21 -2

            Task 8.— 1, A16 -2,                    -2, A18
-4, A19- l, A20 — 2, A21 -3

Task 9.

Task 10.

Task 11.

Task 12.

A
15 —2, A16-3, A17 -2, A18- 1, A19- 1, A20 -2, A21 —4 A15 -4, A16 -4, Al 7-2,
A18 -2, A19 -2, -3,A21 — 3   — 1, 3,
-4, A18 -2, A19- 1,A20 —3,A21 —4 A15 -2, -4, A17 -4, A18 -2, A19- 2, A20 -2,
A21 -3

СОДЕРЖАНИЕ

ВВЕДЕНИЕ

РАЗДЕЛ «ЧТЕНИЕ»

ЗАДАНИЯ НА ПОЛНОЕ И ТОЧНОЕ ПОНИМАНИЕ
ИНФОРМАЦИИ В ТЕКСТЕ Al 5-A21 ..38

ОТВЕТЫ

Отпечатано с
готовых диапозитивов в филиале ГУП МО «КТ» «Воскресенская типография» 140200,

                       г.
Воскресенск Московской области, ул. Вокзальная, д. 30     E-mail:
vosprint@mail.ru тел.: 8 (49644) 2-45-42

Тест № 9

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

A New Experience

Mark Basso had never seen real snow before. He lived with his parents in a part of the country where it was always too warm for there to be any snow, even in the coldest winters. So, the family (1)______(plan) for the past few weeks to visit the northern hills of Italy so that Mark could see this strange cold while substance and possibly learn how to ski. They (2)______(book) a hotel in the village of Molveno, near Trento for the first two weeks in January. Mark could hardly wait for the day to arrive. He kept saying,”If only we (3)_____(leave)for Italy tomorrow!”Finally, the day Mark had been looking forward to arrive. There was excitement in the Basso household – laughter and shouting filled the air. They loaded the car and it (4)____(not be) long before they were on their way. When they arrived at their hotel, the sky was grey and it was very cold but no snow covered the ground. Mark felt very disappointed. When he went to bed that night, Mark wondered if he would ever get touch snow or if it (5)____(remain) just an image in photographs. When he (6)_____(wake up)in the morning, he noticed that the light entering the room was different. He looked out of the window. The sky was as great as it had been the day before, but something was different – thousands of fluffy bits of cotton (7)_____(fall) from it. It was finally snowing.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Jumping Spiders

The jumping spider family is the largest family of spiders and includes more than 5,000 species. Jumping Spiders are small, usually less than 2cm in length, with plump bodies, short legs and large eyes. Many species are brightly-coloured and all can jump between 20 to 80 times the (8)_____(long) of their body. Jumping Spiders are known for their (9)______(curious). If a human hand approaches it, a jumping spider will jump towards the hand instead of running away as most spiders do. In fact, jumping spiders seem to be (10)_____(interest) in everything they come across and when something attracts their attention they usually follow it closed with their big eyes. Jumping Spiders do not catch their prey in webs; they use their excellent eyesight to track it and then they jump on it. Before each jump, they spin a silk(11)_______(safe) line just in case they miss their target. At the end of each leg, jumping spiders have hundreds of tiny hairs. These hairs are split into hundreds more tiny hairs, each one ending with a ‘foot’. These ‘feet’ (12)_____(able) them to climb across almost any type of surface. In fact, jumping spiders can even climb up glass, a trick which most other spiders find (13)______(possible)to do.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

An Amazing Story

It was a strange feeling. People kept coming up to Helen and (14)____ her as if they knew her. Then they would look at her strangely and say, “I’m terribly sorry, for a moment I thought you were somebody else,” and walk (15)_____. It had started happening shortly after she had become a student at the university and it made Helen feel very uncomfortable. Then a friend told her that she had met somebody who looked just like her at a party the (16)_____evening, a girl called Susan Jackson. Helen did not know anybody by that name, but she decided she had to (17)_____out who this person was. It did not take Helen very (18)_____to discover that there was indeed a student at the university called Susan Jackson. Helen quickly (19)_____to meet her. Well, what an amazing meeting! The two girls were in fact twins who had been adopted by different families almost (20)_____ after they had been born. Both girls knew they had been adopted, but neither of them had known they had a twin sister.

14. a)greeting b)contacting c)meeting d)speaking

15. a)away b)over c)by d)up

16. a)earlier b) past c)previous d)last

17. a)bring b)find c)look d)search

18. a)long b)much c)far d)soon

19. a)made b) designed c) fixed d)arranged

20. a)this minute b)briefly c)shortly d)immediately

Тест № 10

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Late Delivery

These days, letters posted in one country can be sent to somebody (1)_____(live)on the other side of the world in less than a week, thanks to air mail. But this is not what happened to a letter (2)______(send)by a Mr Gray in 1937. He suddenly had to leave the country to go to France and so he quickly wrote a letter to his wife to say goodbye and tell her what a wonderful wife she was. He must have posted the letter just before he boarded the ship that would take him to France, but sadly the ship (3)_____(sink) and Mr Gray was never seen again. Mrs Gray finally received the letter last week – more than sixty years after her husband (4)______(write)it. An official explained that the letter had fallen behind a desk and it (5)_____(remain) undiscovered if the Post Office hadn’t decided to replace the old furniture. Today, Mr Gray could have sent his wife an email or a text message instead of a letter. In fact, the use of postal services for business correspondence, as well as for personal letters,(6)______(decline)all the time. In all probability, the number of daily postal deliveries (7)_____(continue) to drop in the future.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Portuguese Water Dogs

The Portuguese Water Dogs, or ‘Portie’, is a muscular, medium-sized dog that is very sociable and loyal. It is an extremely intelligent dog that is quick to learn and understand (8)_______(instruct). As the name suggests, another (9)_______(character)of these dogs is that they love to swim. In fact, Porties were used by Portuguese fishermen for many centuries to catch fish, carry messages between fishing boats, guard the boats when they were in port and get back anything that fell overboard. Porties were so (10)______(use) on board the fishing ships that the fishermen considered them to be part of the crew and always gave them a share of the fish that had been caught. But technology (11)_______(eventual) replaced Porties. Tge fishermen began to use radios to send messages between ships and machines to pull up nets. By the 1930s, Porties were almost extinct. Luckily, however, a rich man called Vasco Bensaude took an interest in the Portie. He began a breeding programme to try to save the breed. The programme was very (12)_____ (success). Today, although the Portie is still quite a(n) (13)_____(common) breed, it is no longer in danger of disappearing.

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The Report Card

John had never been very good (14)_______sports. He simply wasn’t an athletic kind of person. He knew it, his friends knew it, and his gym teachers at school had known it, too. On his school report for the year 1992, his Physical Education teacher had written: ‘John tries very (15)____in class, but achieves below average results.’ The teacher had obviously thought that it would be a good idea to mention John’s effort, but he only (16)_____in emphasizing his failure. As an adult in his (17)_____thirties, John did everything he could to avoid playing any sort of sport. Whenever his friends were trying to organise a friendly game of football, or his boss needed to find a tennis partner, John would always (18)_____ an excuse. Once, he even faked an injury so that he didn’t have to take (19)______in a basketball game. But it was only when Lohn had to explain to his new girlfriend why he couldn’t play squash with her that he decided that his problem with sports had gone on for long enough. It was (20)_____to change.

14. a) for b) at c) to d) on

15. a) trongly b) well c) heavily d) hard

16. a) achieved b) succeeded c) managed d) ended

17. a) beginning b) young c) early d) opening

18. a) make up b) fine out c) puy up d) think over

19. a) position b) role c) place d) part

20. a) time b) moment c) season d) point

Tест № 11

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Feeling Afraid

It was almost the end of term and Ann and Kate (1)______( sit) on Kate’s bed talking about what they were going to do during the summer break. ‘I’m so jealous you (2)______(go) to France, Kate!’ Ann said. ‘Well, why don’t you ask your parents if you can come to?’ replied Kate. “I can’t. last night, my parents told me that we (3)_______( spend) the summer in Brazil,’ said Ann. ‘Brazil?’ exclaimed Kate. ‘Ann, are you crazy? Why would you want to come to France with me when you have the opportunity to go to Brazil?’ ‘Because you can catch a boat to France, but you have to fly to Brazil,’ said Ann quietly. ‘You (4)______(not forget) that I’m scared of flying, have you?’ ‘Are you? Really? I don’t remember you (5)______(tell) me that,’ said Kate. ‘Yes, really scared. I get terrified even thinking about it,’ Ann replied. ‘Oh, Ann, don’t be afraid. Flying is really safe. And it’s a lot of fun, too.’ I wish I really (6)_____(believe)that,’ sighed Ann. ‘Look,’said Kate, squeezing her friend’s hand reassuringly. ‘I think that you (7)____(be)so busy watching films, listening to music and enjoying all the other on-board entertainment that you’ll soon forget that you’re even in the air. Just try to enjoy yourself!’’OK, I will try, Kate. Thanks for the encouragement!’

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами

Siberian Huskies

Three thousand years ago, the Chukchi people of northeastern Siberia depended on Siberian Huskies for their (8)______(survive). These cheerful dogs pulled sleds and herded reindeer in a very (9)______(challenge) environment. In the 1900s, fur traders took huskies to North America. They gained (10)____(globe) recognition when they rushed urgent medicine to sick Alaskans in 1925. Consequently, they became well known for their speed and endurance. However, it is the huskies’ gentle and sociable character that makes them (11)______(excel)family pets. If you are looking for a guard dog, however, then this breed is not for you, as huskies tend to like everyone. Also, if huskies are left alone, they can became bored and (12)______(behave). They show their boredom by howling like a wolf!it is better to get a husky when it is a puppy so that you can train it and show it who is boss. This will (13)______(sure) that your husky becomes a wonderful pet.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

Harrods

Harrods is a world-famous department store in Knightsbridge, London. Known for its quality merchandise and excellent customer service, Harrods is one of London’s biggest tourist (14)_____. Harrods, which was (15)_____by Charles Henry Harrod in 1835, started out as a tiny grocery and tea shop in London’s East Currently, Harrods comprises over 330 departments on seven floors and has a staff of about 5,000 people. Harrods’ motto is ‘All things for people, everywhere’. And it is true that you can buy almost anything you need at Harrods. (16)______you want to get a haircut, buy a pet dog, find a wedding dress, buy some property in London, or simply choose a new coat, Harrods can help. What’s more, If you want to (17)______a break from your shopping, don’t worry because the shop has twenty-nine restaurants! So when in London, don’t forget to take a (18)_______at this famous department store. You can’t (19)____it – at night, Harrods is illuminated by about 11,500 lightbulbs, 300 of which are changed every day by the shop’s electrical engineers.

14. a) features b) attractions c) stops d) places

15. a) composed b) produced c) establised d) manufactured

16. a) situation b) post c) area d) location

17. a) whether b) including c) depending d) while

18. a) give b) take c) do d) make

19. a) view b) sight c) look d ) glance

20. a) lose b) miss c) leave d) pass

Test № 12

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

The Parking Ticket

Mary enjoyed driving around town, even during rush-hour. The only thing she disliked (1)_____(be) parking her car. The other drivers were always so impatient, beeping their horns while she (2)______(try) to reverse into a space. On one occasion, she’d simply given up and driven away. There were several multi-storey car parks in the town but they were very expensive. “maybe I (3)______(find)a space quickly today,” she thought as she drove slowly around the side-streets. Suddenly, Mary spotted a gap between two cars. She waited until the car behind her (4)______(pass) and then quickly drove into the space. After a pleasant afternoon wandering around the shops, Mary made her way back to her car. But then, just before she reached it, she saw something flapping under the windscreen wiper. “Oh no!’ she said to herself, ‘I (5)_______(give) a parking ticket!” But as Mary got closer, she realized that it wasn/t a ticket after all. A local resyaurant was promoting its new menu and someone (6)______(leave) one under the windscreen wipers of all the cars parked in the area. She sighed with relief. It was only after Mary had finished loading her shopping into the boot that she noticed the big yellow clamp (7)_____(fix) on the wheel of the car. ‘Oh no!” she said to herself. She would have to pay eighty pounds to get it removed!

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Fyodor Dostoevsky

Fyodor Dostoevsky was born in Moscow in 1821. He was the son of a doctor who worked in a hospital for the poor. The young Dostoevsky went to military school and held (8)_____(govern) posts until he resigned to become an author. He became one of the most important and influential writers that has ever lived. Fyodor Dostoevsky admired the works of the English writer Charles Dickens who wrote about difficult times during the (9)______(industry) Revolution in the late 18th and early 19th centuries. Fyodor Dostoevsky also wrote novels about social issues. One of Dostoevsky’s most significant works is Crime and Punishment. The main character in the novel is Raskolnikov, a poor, (10)_____(employ) university drop-out. The novel tells the story of how Raskolnikov plans to murder a(n)(11)_____(greed) moneylender to solve his financial problems. Another major work is The Brothers Karamasov, which was Dostoevsky’s final novel and (12)______(possible) even his best. The novel focuses on a murder again but this time Dostoevsky examines other characters’ (13)______(react) to the crime. Fyodor Dostoevsky died in 1881 and is buried in Alexander Nevsky Monastery in St. Petersburg.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

Chasing a Dream

Cameron just knew that this was going to be a day that he would always remember. He had been riding horses since he was about six years old and had (14)_____ many competitions over the years. Today was different, though, because it was the day he and his favourite horse, Rock, were taking (15)______in the Grand Championships at Kettling Stables. Cameron quickly ate the huge breakfast that his mother had prepared for him and (16)_____out of the house and down to the stable where Rock was waiting for him. After loading him into the horse trailer, Cameron and his dad (17)____off on the ten mile drive to Kettling’s. (18)_____the way, his dad offered Cameron words of encouragement and quietly reminded him of all the important things that they had discussed as they had practiced together in the busy days, weeks and months leading up to these championships. Cameron’s dad, too, had (19)____of becoming a professional rider, but a terrible fall from a horse years ago, when he had badly broken his left leg in three places, had put an end to his hopes. A part of Cameron wanted to win the trophy just to see the proud (20)_____on his dad’s face. Of course, another part of him wanted to be victorious for more selfish reasons; he had worked incredibly hard and he deserved to succeed.

14. a) passed b) admitted c) entered d ) joined

15. a) part b) role c) place d ) position

16. a)wandered b) hiked c) crawled d) rushed

17. a) made b) set c) went d) left

18. a) on b) by c) over d) in

19. a) considered b) wished c) dreamt d ) imagined

20. a) sight b) look c) appearance d ) glance

Тест № 13

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Counting Sheep

For several weeks now, I (1)______(be) unable to sleep. There is nothing worrying me in particular – my job is going fine and I think of myself as a generally happy, relaxed type of person. Recently, a friend of mine told me about an article he (2)_____(read) in a magazine. According to the article, insomnia is a very common problem which (3)______(affect) nearly everyone at some time in their life. So far, medical research hasn’t managed to find an effective cure for this condition although hopes are high that one (4)____(find) soon. Because of the lack of progress in research, sometimes experts recommend the traditional remedy of counting sheep. Like most people, I’d always considered that to be a joke. But, apparently, (5)______(have)something to take your mind off sleep 9 or the lack of it) is the best thing you can do. Tonight, then, I (6)_______(go)to try counting sheep. So hopefully, I (7)_____(get) my first good night’s sleep in weeks!

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

Zorbing

Zorbing is an extreme sport and like several other extreme sports, such as bungee-jumping and jet boating, it was (14)_____ in New Zealand. A ‘zorb’ is a giant plastic ball with another smaller ball inside; the space between the two balls is (15)_____ with air. The participant climbs inside the smaller ball and is then pushed down a hill! The inflated ball is 3.2 metres in diameter and it rotates once every 10 metres, so as it goes down a hill that is 100 metres long, the zorb fully rotated only 10 times. Depending (16)______ how steep the slope is, a zorb can reach speeds of up to 50 kilometres an hour. You would probably expect the participants of zorbing to get out of the zorb (17)_____in bruises. Fortunately, however, the cushion of air between the two balls protects them. Many say they have the (18)_____ of being weightless like astronauts in space while zorbing. The zorb was originally designed for water but it was soon decided that it worked better on (19)_____. However, for those who would like to try ‘walking on water’, there is also hydro-zorbing. Zorbs have been adapted for snow, too, and NASA is considering developing a vehicle similar to a zorb to (20)______the surface of Mars.

14. a) manufactured b) discovered c) invented d ) made

15. a) filled b) poured c) put d ) crowded

16. a) on b) in c) to d) from

17. a) wrapped b) washed c) filled d) covered

18. a) reaction b) feeling c) idea d) opinion

19. a) soil b) earth c) dreamt d ) land

20. a) explore b) discover c) find d ) inquire

Тест № 14

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Night Train to Panama

It was a beautiful tropical evening and the ocean breeze (1)_______(blow) gently as I passed the town clock on my way to the train station. I could see the train (2)_____(come) down the track. As the engine slowly passed, I heard someone yell, “Hey, you! (3)______(like) you to come and ride up here with me?” I looked up at the engine, and the driver gestured me to climb up beside him. I was very excited as I (4)_____(not be) inside the cab of a train before. After we had pulled out of the station, the driver even taught me how to control the speed of the train. It (5)______( not be) as difficult as I had thought. We shared the driving as we drove through the darkness with the jungle on our left and the Panama Canal on our right. I had to pinch myself to make sure that I (6)______(not dream). I just wish that my camera (7)___ (work) because I know that none of my friends will believe me when I tell them about my incredible experience – that I actually drove the night train to Panama.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Cockney Rhyming Slang

Cockney rhyming slang is a (8)____(collect) of phrases used by people from East London, England, based on words that rhyme with the words someone wants to say. Some people believe that Londoners began to use cockney rhyming slang during the 16th century, but nobody knows for certain. This (9)_____( usual) way of speaking is often heard among the market traders of East London. Many say that they used to use this secret language among themselves so that their (10)_____(custom) were unable to understand what they were saying, others say that it was a way of keeping people together as the Cockneys had a strong sense of (11)______(commune) and wanted to exclude strangers. Today, many of the most common (12)_____(express) in cockneys rhyme slang are now used in normal everyday English. The saying ‘use your loaf’, which means ‘think’, comes from the rhyming slang ‘loaf of bread’, which rhymes with ‘head’. Some experts claim that cockneys rhyming slang used as (13)______(frequent)any more, but one thing is certain; just like any language, it is always changing and evolving.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

The Watchman

It was William’s first evening on the job, in October of 1862, and it was just getting (14)_____ . the lamplighter was busy lighting the street lamps with the wick at the end of his long pole. William’s task was clear; patrol the small cobbled streets of Whitechapel and make (15)_____the area was safe. Due to a shortage of watchmen, he was alone. However, he felt satisfied that he had received enough (16)_____ to do his job well. He wore a blue tailcoat and a top hat and (17)____ a lamp in one hand. “What was there to worry (18)_____?”he asked himself. “A drunkard sleeping at the side of the road?” Or if he witnessed a fight between two men, he could quickly separate them with his wooden baton. Indeed, it seemed that his first night was going to be a very quiet one. Suddenly, however, when he had only one hour (19)____blew out his lamp and ran after the man. Before long, he heard a second set of footsteps running in front of the man; those of a woman. Then, it all happened so quickly; the moment he turned the corner, the lady’s scream, the swing of his baton and (20)____a wanted criminal lying on the road.

14. a) dusk b) late c) dark d )night

15. a) positive b) sure c) clear d) settled

16. a) training b) exercise c) lessons d) learning

17. a) brought b) carried c) took d) moved

18. a) for b) from c) about d) at

19. a) extra b) over c) still d ) left

20. a) finally b) at last c) after all d ) latest

Тест № 15

Грамматика и лексика.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные в скобках, обозначенных номерами1-7, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Trip to London

It was Saturday afternoon and Ann (1)______(sit) in her bedroom talking on her mobile phone to her best friend Kelly. “ Look, we (2)____(talk) about going to London for a weekend break for months now,” said Ann. “I know!” laughed Kelly. “So when (3)______(go) we?””Well, what about the weekend after next?” asked Ann. “Are you free? I (4)_______(hear) on the radio this morning that there’s a big jazz festival in London then.” “Oh, I can’t that weekend,” Kelly replied. I’ve promised my grandmother that I’ll spend that Saturday with her and I really don’t want to cancel because we (5)_____(not see) each other for ages.””Never mind. What about the weekend after that?” said Ann. “My older brother and one of his friends (6)____(drive) down to London that weekend. We could get a lift with them.’” Sound great,” said Kelly excitedly, ‘but are you sure your brother and his friend (7)____(not mind) us going with them/” ‘Well, even if they do, my mum will make sure they don’t have any say in the matter!” laughed Ann. “So, it’s settled then. Now all we need to do is book a hotel.”

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные скобках, обозначенных номерами 8-13, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами.

Easter Food

In many countries, different (8)_____(tradition) foods are associated with Easter. In England, for example, many bakers make a type of small cake with a white cross on the top called a ‘hot cross bun’ on Good Friday. These buns taste like sweet bread and are (9)_____(absolute) delicious! Pancakes are also eaten in England the day before the Easter fast begins. This provides a good (10)______(opportune) to use up all uneaten eggs, fat and flour. Which some people don’t eat again until after Easter. Eggs are also associated with Easter in many countries because they symbolize new life. The (11)_____(decorate) of eggs dates back to 1290, when the English king, Edward I, ordered 450 eggs to be covered in gold and given as presents. Chocolate Easter eggs first appeared in Germany in the 1800s. nowadays, chocolate eggs are often wrapped in (12)____(colour) foil paper and given to children a gifts at Easter. The most (13)______(fame) Easter eggs were made by Faberge, a jeweler for the Czr of Russia, in the 19th century the eggs were covered in gold and precious stones. Nowadays, just one of these small eggs is worth millions of pounds.

Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст с пропусками, обозначенных номерами 14-20, в которых представлены возможные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответ.

The Creature

It was evening, and I had been fishing all afternoon. I hadn’t had much (14)_____, however, so I decided to go home and try again the next day. My truck was parked close by so it didn’t take me long to load up my (15)____, but I had to make two trips. I made it to my truck with the first load. Then, as I turned to get the (16)_____of my things, I saw it. I could not believe my eyes. There was a large, hairy creature sitting (17)______the pond I had just been fishing in. it appeared to be drinking from the pond. It also seemed to be unaware that it was being watched or perhaps it knew, but didn’t (18)____. When the creature had finished drinking, it made a strange noise, stood up and walked away from the pond and out of (19)_____. I stood there for what seemed like hours. I could not make sense of what I had just seen. After all, I didn’t believed (20)_____such things! I suppose it might have been some kind of bear, but all the same, I am never going to fish in that pond again.

14. a) chance b) luck c) opportunity d ) possibility

15. a) equipment b) luggage c) appliances d) instruments

16. a) addition b) rest c) second d) others

17. a) down b) to c) by d) over

18. a) interest b) trouble c) concern d) care

19. a) appearance b) sight c) look d ) scene

20. a) to b) about c) in d ) of

Test 9: had been planning, 2- had booked, 3- were leaving, 4- wasn’t, 5- would remain, 6- woke up, 7- were falling 8- length, 9- curiosity, 10- interested, 11- safety, 12- enable, 13- impossible, 14- greeting 15- away, 16- previous, 17- find, 18- long, 19- arranged, 20- immediately.

Test 10: living, 2- sent, 3- sank/had sunk, 4- wrote/had written, 5- would have remained, 6- is declining, 7- will continue, 8- instructions, 9- characteristic, 10- useful, 11- eventually, 12- successful, 13- uncommon, 14- at, 15- hard, 16- succeeded, 17- early, 18- make up, 19- part, 20- time.

Test 11: were sitting, 2- are going, 3- are/will be/would be spending, 4- haven’t forgotten, 5- telling, 6- believed, 7- will be, 8- survival, 9- challenging, 10- global, 11- excellent, 12- misbehave 13- ensure, 14- attractions, 15- established 16- location, 17- whether, 18- take, 19- look 20- miss.

Test 12: was, 2- was trying, 3- will find, 4- had passed, 5- have been given, 6- had left, 7-fixed, 8- government, 9- industrial, 10- unemployed 11- greedy, 12- possibly 13- reaction, 14- entered, 15- part, 16- rushed, 17- set, 18- on, 19- dreamt, 20-look

Test 13: have been, 2- had read, 3- affects, 4- will be found, 5- having, 6- am going, 7- will get, 8- continuous, 9- amazing, 10- conversation 11- adventurous, 12- beautiful, 13- memorable, 14- invented, 15- filled, 16-on, 17-covered, 18-feeling, 19-land, 20- explore

Test 14: was blowing, 2-coming, 3- would you like, 4-hadn’t been, 5- wasn’t, 6- wasn’t dreaming, 7- had been working, 8- collections, 9- usual 10- customers, 11-community, 12-expressions 13-frequently, 14- dark, 15- sure 16-training, 17- carried, 18- about, 19- left, 20-finally.

Test 15: 1)-was sitting, 2)- have been talking, 3-are we going, 4- heard, 5-haven’t seen, 6- are driving,7- won’t mind 8- traditional, 9-absolutely, 10- opportunity, 11- decoration, 12- colourful, 13- famous, 14- luck, 15- equipment, 16- rest, 17- by, 18- care, 19- sight, 20- in.

I was up at seven-thirty the next morning and when I was having breakf перевод - I was up at seven-thirty the next morning and when I was having breakf русский как сказать

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I was up at seven-thirty the next morning and when I was having breakfast I remembered a job I’d been putting off for some time. Our vegetable garden has a white fence which I built with my own hands five years ago.
That garden fence is my pride and joy, and now that it needed a fresh coat of paint, I wanted to do the job. I got out a bucket half full of white paint and a brush. While I was getting things ready, I heard footsteps and there stood Lautisse. I said I had been getting ready to paint the fence but now that he was up, I’d postpone it. He protested. I took up the brush but he seized it from my hand and said, ‘First, I show you!’
I’m no Tom Sawyer — I wasn’t looking for anybody to paint that fence. I let him finish two sides of the post and then interrupted.
‘I’ll take it from here,’ I said, reaching for the brush. ‘No, no!’ he said, with an impatient wave of the brush.

0/5000

Результаты (русский) 1: [копия]

Скопировано!

Я был в семь тридцать утром следующего дня, и когда у меня завтрак, я вспомнил, что работу я откладывал на некоторое время. Наш огород имеет белый забор, который я построил своими руками пять лет назад. Это садовые ограждения-это моя гордость и радость, и теперь, когда он нужен свежий слой краски, я хотел бы делать эту работу. Я достал ведро наполовину белой краски и кисти. Пока я готовился вещи, я слышал стопам и там стоял Lautisse. Я сказал, я получал готов к покраске забора, но теперь, когда он был, я бы отложить его. Он протестовал. Я взял кисть, но он заел его из моей руки и сказал, «Во-первых, я покажу вам!» Я не том Сойер — я был не глядя для кого писать что забор. Я позволяю ему закончить обе стороны поста и затем прервана. «Я возьму его здесь,» я уже сказал, достигнув кисти. «Нет, нет!»,-сказал он, с нетерпение волна кисти.

переводится, пожалуйста, подождите..

Результаты (русский) 2:[копия]

Скопировано!

Я был в семь тридцать утром, и когда я завтракал, я вспомнил работу я откладывали в течение некоторого времени. Наша огород имеет белый забор, который я построил своими руками пять лет назад.
Это забор моя гордость и радость, и теперь, когда он нуждается в свежей краской, я хотел, чтобы сделать работу. Я достал ведро наполовину белой краски и кисти. В то время как я получаю вещи готовы, я услышал шаги и стоял Lautisse. Я сказал, что готовился рисовать забор, но теперь, что он был, я бы отложить его. Он протестовал. Я взял в руки кисть, но он схватил ее из моей руки и сказал: «Во-первых, я покажу!»
Я не Том Сойер — Я не искал кого писать, что забор. Я дал ему закончить две стороны поста, а затем прерывается.
«Я возьму его отсюда, сказал я, потянувшись за щеткой. ‘Нет нет!’ он сказал, нетерпеливо волны кисти.

переводится, пожалуйста, подождите..

Результаты (русский) 3:[копия]

Скопировано!

Я был в семь и тридцать на следующее утро и, когда я был завтрака я помнить задание я не на некоторое время. Наш сад с овощами с белым ограждения, которое я с моей собственной руки пять лет тому назад.
что сад стены, моя гордость и радость, и теперь, когда он нужен свежий слой краски, я хотел бы сделать то, что нужно. Я вышел из ковш наполовину белой краски и кисти.В то время я был чувствовать, что готов, я слышал по стопам и Lautisse. Я был готов к участию краски стены но сейчас, он был, я бы отложить. Он заявлен протест. Я щетка но он захватил с моей стороны, и сказал: «Во-первых, я хотел показать вам! ‘
я не том Сойер — я не искал кого-либо для окраски, ограждения.Я дайте ему завершить две стороны и затем прервана.
‘Я беру здесь,’ Я сказал, идущей на щетку. ‘Нет, нет!» — сказал он, с нетерпением ждет волна щетки.

переводится, пожалуйста, подождите..

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Practice Test 12

ЧАСТЬ 1 – АУДИРОВАНИЕ

3Вы услышите девушку, рассказывающую о своём путешествии в Южную Америку. В заданиях А8–А14 обведите цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую номеру выбранного вами варианта ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

14A8 The narrator wanted to go to South America because 1 she had enjoyed working on a project about it.

2 she wanted to see the nature there. 3 her father had told her a lot about it.

15A9 The narrator’s parents were worried that she 1 would get homesick while she was away. 2 wouldn’t come back from South America. 3 wanted to travel by herself.

16A10 The narrator says that she was surprised by

1 how well she did in her exams.

2 how long her trip took to plan.

3 how relaxed her parents were about the trip.

17A11 The narrator decided to do volunteer work because 1 some friends recommended it to her.

2 she thought it would be the most enjoyable way to spend her time. 3 she thought it would impress future employers.

18A12 Regarding her time in the mountain village, the narrator suggests that 1 it passed very quickly.

2 she would have liked to stay longer.

3 it had made her want to become a teacher.

19A13 The narrator says that she is glad that, while on her trip, she 1 spent time getting to know the locals.

2 knew how to speak some Spanish.

3 visited every country in South America.

20A14 Now that she is back from her trip, the narrator 1 is keen to travel again.

2 is recovering from an illness she caught in South America. 3 is considering going to university in South America.

93

ЧАСТЬ 2 – ЧТЕНИЕ

Practice Test 12

1Установите соответствие между заголовками A–Н и текстами 1–7. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу B2. Используйте каждую букву только один раз. В задании один заголовок лишний.

A A better method

B Responsible shopping

C Lucky winners

DHelp from nature

1 Two families – one from London, and one from Liverpool – have won last night’s national lottery. Speaking from outside their home in London’s East End, Mr and Mrs Miller said that they will ‘not let the money change their lives’ and that they will both be at work as usual on Monday morning. The Liverpool family, who do not wish to be named, plan to move abroad.

2 For many years now, Changi Airport in Singapore has been voted the world’s best airport by airline travellers. Changi Airport does not simply provide travellers with wonderful restaurants and shops in a calm and pleasant atmosphere. You can also swim in its rooftop swimming pool, have a massage in one of its spas, sit quietly in the ‘garden’ area of its main hall, or watch TV in comfortable chairs while waiting for your flight.

3Before the invention of the compass, sailors looked to the sun in the daytime and to the stars at night to help them find their way across the oceans. For example, by locating Polaris (or ‘the North Star’) in the night sky, sailors could identify the direction of North. This is because Polaris never moves from its position in the night sky directly above the North Pole.

4Long ago, zoos obtained their animals by going out into the wild and capturing them. Today, this happens very rarely. For one thing, it is extremely stressful for the animals involved and there is a high risk of injury.

E A great shopping experience

F Working to protect animals

G Everything you need

H Waiting in comfort

Also, wild animals often carry diseases that would harm the other animals in the zoo. Today, therefore, most zoos get their animals from the captive breeding programmes of other zoos.

5Gyms these days are full of all kinds of fancy exercise equipment; treadmills, rowing machines, exercise bikes, resistance machines and much more. But the biggest gyms also have swimming pools, steam rooms and cafeterias. They offer classes in yoga, dance, aerobics and many other forms of exercise. And they have expert trainers on hand to answer all your fitness questions.

6Here is one thing that we can all do to help species that are close to extinction. When travelling overseas, be very careful not to buy any souvenirs that have been made from species nearing extinction. This means avoiding purchasing items made from ivory, coral and fur and also ‘medicinal’ products as they often contain rhino, tiger and bear parts.

7Wildlife parks and zoos are very educational places but perhaps their greatest purpose is the conservation of endangered species. Animal centres all around the world work together in order to breed rare and endangered species. For example, today there are only a few hundred giant pandas left in the wild. If breeding programmes and conservation efforts are successful, future generations may still be able to see these beautiful animals in the flesh, not just in books.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

B2 C

H

D

A

G

B

F

94

Practice Test 12

ЧАСТЬ 2 – ЧТЕНИЕ

2 Прочитайте текст и заполните пропуски 1–6 частями предложений, обозначенными буквами A–G. Одна из частей в списке А–G лишняя. Занесите букву, обозначающую соответствующую часть предложения, в таблицу B3.

In 2004, a grave containing the skeletons of a human and a cat, lying close together, was excavated in Cyprus.

The grave was around 9,500 years old, 1) …….. .

The ancient Egyptians kept cats as pets,

2) …….. .

People often placed statues of cats outside their homes, 3) …….. . When a cat died, their former owners and the other occupants of the house would go into deep mourning and would often even shave their eyebrows as a sign of grief.

Moreover, cats were frequently mummified and bowls of milk and dead rats and mice were placed in their tombs, 4) …….. .

Awhich seems very strange to modern cultures

Band showed that cats had been kept by humans for far longer than we had previously thought

Cso that they would have food for their journey into the afterlife

Das they kept rats and mice away from homes

Cats were so respected in ancient Egypt that they were even protected by law. People could be sentenced to death if they killed a cat, 5) …….. .

One record documents the execution of an unfortunate Roman soldier whose chariot had run over a cat.

There are many tomb scenes that show cats as part of everyday life in ancient Egypt. They often showed them wearing jewellery including earrings, necklaces and fancy collars. The Egyptians even took their cats on hunting expeditions, 6) …….. .

Today, it is estimated that there are over 600 million domestic cats around the world, which makes the cat the most popular of all pets. However, the cat no longer has any religious significance in any culture.

Eand they also worshipped the cat like one of their gods

Fbecause they believed that this would protect the inhabitants

G even by accident

1

2

3

4

5

6

B3 B

E

F

C

G

A

95

ЧАСТЬ 2 – ЧТЕНИЕ

Practice Test 12

3Прочитайте рассказ и выполните задания А15–А21. В каждом задании обведите цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному вами варианту ответа.

A New Life

“Are you looking for a room?” the man had asked. We’d only just got off the bus. Ian was still pulling the bags out of the luggage

prices,” the man

A15

We’d been all around the country that summer, finding temporary work to pay for our travels. Ian had grown up in a village, so

A16

the local farmers had been happy to hire him to help them out for a week or two. I’m a city boy myself, but because I’m pretty well-built I didn’t have a problem either. Of course, that meant that I got all the heavy work!

Once we had collected our bags, we followed the man up a nearby side-street. He didn’t stop talking the whole way. After a few twists

That first night we strolled around the town to see what opportunities there might be for work. Our last job had given us enough to live off for a few weeks so we weren’t desperate,

A19

possible. Everyone we met was very friendly and we went back to our rooms feeling quite optimistic.

Within a couple of days, I had started work

at a fish restaurant in the town washing up the

A20

pots and dishes. Maybe it wasn’t the best job in the world, but after weeks of manual labour in the fields it was a welcome change. I could watch the chef preparing the food and sometimes, when the restaurant was particularly busy, I would help him. He knew

these rooms would be too expensive for us. The man must have read my thoughts. “Now, normally I’d be asking twice as much for these rooms,” he began, “but you’re in luck because the tourist season is practically over.”

The rooms were perfect. The décor was slightly shabby but, as if to make up for it, the balcony had a stunning view over the town. We decided to stay for a month initially, and depending on what happened, we would come to an arrangement after that. It was a relief to be settled somewhere, if only for a few weeks. I could now pack my suitcase in record time and we’d met so many people that I’d lost count. Sometimes when I was introduced to yet another stranger I would change my name, just to make it more interesting.

tasted amazing. I’d go home at night and write down the recipes and tips that I’d learnt.

Our first month in the town came to an end and we decided to stay for another three. Ian had found some painting and decorating work and I was quite happy. Those three months turned into six, and before I knew it I had been at the restaurant for a whole year. The chef asked me if I would like to become his assistant — he said I had a natural gift for cooking. So that’s how I ended up here, ten years later, as Head Chef at Alberto’s Fish

Restaurant. Ian is still here as well, running

A21

his own decorating business. One day I hope to achieve something similar for myself, too.

96

Practice Test 12

ЧАСТЬ 2 – ЧТЕНИЕ

The man waiting at the bus stop was very

14

A15

1

rude.

2

impatient.

3

unhelpful.

4

persistent.

15A16 The farmers gave the narrator and his friend Ian work because

1 they thought they would be suitable for it.

2 they needed seasonal workers.

3 they had known Ian since he was young.

4 they found both boys cheerful and friendly.

16A17 The narrator thought the rooms could be too expensive after he realised 1 how popular they were.

2 what time of year it was.

3 how nice the exterior was.

4 where they were.

17A18 In paragraph four, the narrator suggests that he had become tired of 1 staying in hotels.

2 packing his suitcase.

3 moving from place to place.

4 meeting new people.

18A19 In paragraph five, the narrator uses the phrase ‘put out feelers’ to mean 1 meet as many people as possible.

2 speak to people to get information about work.

3 find a suitable job to earn some money.

4 get to know a new place.

19A20 The narrator enjoyed his new job because 1 all his food was cooked for him.

2 it was different from his previous jobs.

3 his boss took an interest in teaching him to cook. 4 the time passed quickly.

20A21 In the final paragraph, we learn that the narrator 1 would like to start a business with Ian.

2 regrets staying so long at Alberto’s restaurant.

3 hopes that his career as a chef will continue to advance. 4 wishes that he had achieved as much as Ian.

97

ЧАСТЬ 3 – ГРАММАТИКА И ЛЕКСИКА Practice Test 12

1Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, сло* ва, напечатанные заглавными буквами в конце строк, обозначенных номера* ми B4–B10, так, чтобы они грамматически соответствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами. Каждый пропуск соответствует отдельному заданию из группы B4–B10.

B4

was

B5

was trying

B6

will find

B7

had passed

B8

have been given

B9

had left

B10

fixed

2 Прочитайте приведённый ниже текст. Преобразуйте, если необходимо, слова, напечатанные заглавными буквами в конце строк, обозначенных номерами В11–B16, так, чтобы они грамматически и лексически соответ* ствовали содержанию текста. Заполните пропуски полученными словами. Каждый пропуск соответствует отдельному заданию из группы В11–В16.

The Trans Siberian Railway

Travelling on the

Trans Siberian

Express is an

extraordinary journey. It

is the

longest

continuous

B11 8)

railway in the world — 10,000 kilometres long, or one third of the distance

around

the globe.

Travellers on

the Trans Siberian railway describe the

journey

as a(n)

amazing

B129)

adventure; seven days or more of exotic travel from Moscow to Vladivostok.

10)B13

conversation

with other passengers that

However, many travellers say that it is the

makes the journey special. You can spend many hours making new friends and discussing the

landscape of the Ural Mountains and Siberia.

You can either stay on

the

train

for the

whole journey

or,

if

you are

feeling more

1B14)

adventurous

,

you

can

arrange

stops along the

way.

A

stopover

at Irkutsk is

recommended for a few days. Here you can explore the city and visit the

12)B15

beautiful

Lake Baikal; the deepest lake in the world.

The journey ends on the east coast of Russia in Vladivostok, whose name means “Lord of the East”. However you decide to spend your time on the Trans Siberian Express, it will be an extremely

13)B16

memorable

experience.

CONTINUE

AMAZE CONVERSE

ADVENTURE BEAUTY

MEMORY

98

Practice Test 12

ЧАСТЬ 3 – ГРАММАТИКА И ЛЕКСИКА

3Прочитайте текст с пропусками, обозначенными номерами А22–А28. Эти номера соответствуют заданиям A22–A28, в которых представлены возмож* ные варианты ответов. Обведите номер выбранного вами варианта ответа.

The Report Card

John had never been very good 14)A22…….. sports. He simply wasn’t an athletic kind of person. He knew it, his

friends knew it, and his gym teachers at school had known it, too. On his school report for the year 1992, his

Physical Education teacher had written: ‘John tries very

……..15)A23

in class, but achieves below average results.’

The teacher had obviously thought that it would be a good idea to mention John’s effort, but he only

16)A24……..

in emphasising his failure.

As an adult in his

thirties, John did everything he could to avoid playing any sort of sport. Whenever

17)A25………

his friends were trying to organise a friendly game of football, or his boss needed to find a tennis partner, John

would always 18)A26…….. an excuse. Once, he even faked an injury so that he didn’t have to take 19)A27…….. in

a basketball game. But it was only when John had to explain to his new girlfriend why he couldn’t play squash with

her that he decided that his problem with sports had gone on for long enough. It was

……..20)A28

to change.

A22

1

for

2

at

3

to

4

on

A23

1

strongly

2

well

3

heavily

4

hard

A24

1

achieved

2

succeeded

3

managed

4

ended

A25

1

beginning

2

young

3

early

4

opening

A26

1

make up

2

find out

3

put up

4

think over

A27

1

position

2

role

3

place

4

part

A28

1

time

2

moment

3

season

4

point

ЧАСТЬ 4 – ПИСЬМО

C11 You have received a letter from your English speaking pen friend Jack who writes:

… Well, my exams start next week and I’m feeling a little stressed even though I’ve studied hard. How often do you have exams at your school? Do you like taking exams? How do you

cope with the pressure?

It’s my best friend John’s birthday this weekend …

Write a letter to Jack. In your letter answer his questions

ask 3 questions about his best friend’s birthday Write 100 140 words. Remember the rules of letter writing.

C22 Comment on the following statement.

“Extreme sports have become more and more popular. However, some say that they are too risky.”

What is your opinion? Does the thrill of the sport outweigh the risk? Write 200 250 words.

Use the following plan:

write an introduction (state the problem/topic)

express your personal opinion and give reasons for it

give arguments for the other point of view and explain why you don’t agree with it

draw a conclusion

99

ЧАСТЬ 1 – АУДИРОВАНИЕ

Practice Test 13

1 Вы услышите высказывания шести людей о путешествиях. Установите соответствие между высказываниями каждого говорящего 1–6 и утверждениями, данными в списке A–G. Используйте каждое утверждение, обозначенное буквой,

только один раз. В задании есть одно лишнее утверждение. Вы услышите запись дважды. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу B1.

A I appreciate travelling for my job.

B I have found a way to travel quite cheaply.

C I don’t have to travel far to find what I want. D I prefer to travel by myself.

E Thinking about my holiday helps me to cope with my busy schedule. F I think people should think about the negative effects of travelling. G I want to travel more but I have a problem that stops me.

1

2

3

4

5

6

B1 C

E

F

A

G

B

2Вы услышите беседу двух друзей о мобильных телефонах и Интернете. Определите, какие из приведённых утверждений А1–А7 соответствуют содержанию текста (1– True), какие не соответствуют (2 – False) и о чём в тексте не сказано, то есть на основании текста нельзя дать ни положи’ тельного, ни отрицательного ответа (3 – Not stated). Вы услышите запись дважды. Обведите правильный ответ.

A17 Laura is looking at mobile phones in a shop window.

1 True

2 False

3 Not stated

A28 Dave doesn’t own a mobile phone.

1

True

2

False

3

Not stated

A39

Dave believes that using technology has made people more anti-social.

1

True

2

False

3

Not stated

Both Laura and Dave would like to use the Internet when they are not at home.

A410

1

True

2

False

3

Not stated

Dave is worried about the Internet having harmful effects on young people.

A511

1

True

2

False

3

Not stated

A612 Laura’s parents monitor her use of the Internet.

1 True

2 False

3 Not stated

A713 In the end, Laura decides not to buy an Internet phone.

1 True

2 False

3 Not stated

100

Practice Test 13

ЧАСТЬ 1 – АУДИРОВАНИЕ

3Вы услышите рассказ молодого человека о вегетарианстве. В заданиях А8–А14 обведите цифру 1, 2 или 3, соответствующую номеру выбранного вами варианта ответа. Вы услышите запись дважды.

A814 While growing up, the narrator ate food that was 1 unhealthy.

2 badly cooked.

3 not very varied.

A915 The narrator says his university served food that was 1 liked only by the foreign students.

2 good value but not very healthy.

3 worse than what he was used to.

A1016 The narrator tried a vegetarian dish because

1 his vegetarian friends encouraged him to.

2 he thought the quality might be better.

3 the meat dishes had started to make him ill.

A1117 After he started eating vegetarian meals, the narrator

1 realised his attitude towards vegetarians had been wrong.

2 began to really dislike the smell of meat.

3 began to lose weight.

A1218 While deciding whether to become a vegetarian or not, the narrator

1 did some research into vegetarianism.

2 continued to eat some meat.

3 realised how healthy he felt.

A1319 The narrator finally made his decision based on

1 what he found out about the benefits of vegetarianism. 2 how much healthier he was feeling.

3 the opinions of others.

A1420 The narrator’s parents

1 are slowly accepting his decision to be a vegetarian. 2 are now thinking about becoming vegetarians too. 3 are unhappy that he is a vegetarian.

101

ЧАСТЬ 2 – ЧТЕНИЕ

Practice Test 13

1Установите соответствие между заголовками A–Н и текстами 1–7. Занесите свои ответы в таблицу B2. Используйте каждую букву только один раз. В задании один заголовок лишний.

A Travel with a purpose

B Make a discovery

C Getting a good view

DA difficult task

1 For hundreds of years, people have been competing in bizarre ‘gurning’ contests around England. What is gurning? Well, it is simply the act of making the ugliest face possible. Some elderly people can make some spectacular gurns. If they have false teeth, they can take them out and bring their lower lip so far up that it can cover their nose! But even younger people can make amazing gurns – just look at celebrity Jim Carrey!

2Thousands of spectators line the route of the Tour de France bike race each year, trying to see over other people’s heads. Then when the competitors pass, they flash by so quickly that it is hard to get even a glimpse of them. Therefore, it’s worth buying a tour guide with route information so that you can plan well in advance the best place to stand to see your favourite cyclists speed by.

3The goal of responsible tourism is to help people in need as well as the holidaymakers themselves. Some tour operators, for example, organise charity bike rides. Visitors cycle around places of interest following a pre-arranged route. They enjoy a valuable new experience and at the same time part of the cost of the holiday is donated to local community projects.

4The Sibit-sibit Festival is held each year to give tourists a rich and colourful picture of the history of Olongapo in the Philippines. Sibit-sibits are ancient paddle boats that

E Greatest invention

F An unusual competition

G Keeping traditions alive

H Still popular today

were used by fishing villages. During past celebrations, fishermen held races and won with their great physical strength alone. Today, the traditional Sibit-sibit Festival is a lively and enchanting event that brings together Olongapo’s rich past, successful present and promising future.

5Bicycles were first introduced in the 19th century and there are now over one billion of them worldwide. Many people still prefer this eco-friendly mode of transport. Postmen, delivery personnel and even police officers can often be seen riding bicycles.

6The Archaeological Seminars Foundation offers visitors of all ages the opportunity to ‘Dig for a Day’. This programme allows the unskilled enthusiast to get their hands dirty while getting the chance to make a fabulous discovery. Activities include digging, pottery examination and touring the latest excavation site. Thousands of people have already participated in this memorable experience!

7What is the most important mechanical invention of all time? The wheel no doubt! The earliest known use of the wheel was probably the potter’s wheel in 3500 BC in Mesopotamia. Interestingly enough, the wheel was used for manufacturing before it was used for transporting. Today, nearly every machine includes the wheel; from the smallest of pocket watches to the largest of aeroplanes.

1

2

3

4

5

6

7

B2 F

C

A

G

H

B

E

102

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1) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Does it ever snow in Brazil?

During winter and sometimes even autumn and spring it snows in some cities of southern Brazil. There are several cities ___ (KNOW) for their snow, like Urupema and Urubici.


2) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

These cities ___ (BE) all in high areas, but even places at sea level can have snow, although in small amounts and not every year.


3) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Brazil ___ (THINK) to be a “tropical paradise” which is very wrong. Foreigners who travel to southern Brazil during autumn or winter in search for some heat and beaches are often disappointed.


4) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

The North Pole is melting

Do you know how the global warming affects the Arctic? A survey by the Japan Agency for Science and Technology shows that Arctic ice is melting at a far ___ (QUICK) rate than anticipated. Today Arctic ice is melting at previously unseen rates.


5) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

The coastal ice in parts of Canada and Alaska has become quite brittle. Ice easily breaks away in large pieces and melts in the open ocean. Now there is also ___ (LITTLE) sea ice in the Arctic Ocean.


6) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

It happens because ice ___ (FLOAT) into the Atlantic Ocean.


7) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Scientists say that the lack of ice represents clear proof that the planet ___ (WARM). Back in the past it could take three years to get through the waterway’s thick ice successfully, now – just a few weeks.


8) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

The most important liquid on Earth

Water is a vital element in each of our lives. Not only is it essential to our health, but we also use it for ___ (VARY) household tasks. Every day we use water for cooking, bathing, and cleaning, and drinking; but how often do we think about its source?


9) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

___ (CONSUME) receive their water from one of two sources: a private well, or a community water system.


10) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Approximately 15 percent of the U.S. population relies on ___ (INDIVIDUAL) owned and operated sources of drinking water, such as wells, cisterns, and springs. The majority of household wells are found in rural areas.


11) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Those who receive their water from a private well are solely ___ (RESPONSE) for the safety of the water.


12) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Private wells are not subject to different federal ___ (REGULATE), and are generally regulated on a very limited basis by states.


13) Вставьте слово, которое грамматически и лексически будет соответствовать содержанию текста.

Local health departments may assist well owners with ___ (PERIOD) testing for bacteria or nitrates, but the bulk of the responsibility for caring for the well falls on the well owner.


14) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

At the office

The following morning I visited our local newsagent Mr. Bales. He always seemed to know exactly what was going on in the neighbourhood and was only too happy to ___ his knowledge with anyone who wanted to pass the time of day.

1) divide
2) split
3) share
4) separate


15) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

Then I ___ at the office of John D. Wood in Mount Street. I had to wait for some time, but eventually one of four assistants came over, introduced himself to me as Mr. Palmer and asked how he could help.

1) arrived
2) reached
3) achieved
4) completed


16) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

After a closer inspection of the young man, I doubted that he could help anyone. He must have been about seventeen and was so pale and thin he looked as if a gust of wind might blow him ___.

1) about
2) over
3) around
4) away


17) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

“I’d like to know some details concerning Number 147 Chelsea Terrace,” I said. “Would madam please excuse me?” he ___ and walked over to a filing cabinet.

1) spoke
2) said
3) talked
4) told


18) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

He ___ no attempt to invite me in or even to offer me a chair. He placed the single sheet on the countertop and studied it closely.

1) made
2) did
3) took
4) held


19) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

“A greengrocer’s shop,” he said. “Yes. What price is the owner asking for the property?” I asked. I was becoming more and more annoyed by being so obviously ignored. “One hundred and fifty guineas is being asked for the shop,” ___ the assistant, his eyes fixed on the bottom line of the schedule.

1) admitted
2) agreed
3) stated
4) expressed


20) Запишите в поле ответа цифру 1, 2, 3 или 4, соответствующую выбранному Вами варианту ответа.

The shop turned out to be ridiculously expensive. I made my ___ back to Chelsea, only too aware that I had no intention of buying a shop in the neighbourhood.

1) track
2) road
3) path
4) way

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