English For Junior Students

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DAUGAVPILS PEDAGOÌISKÂ UNIVERSITÂTE

ANGÏU VALODAS KATEDRA

ENGLISH FOR
JUNIOR STUDENTS
Part (a)
Compiled by
BROÒISLAVA KALNIÒA

2000
Apstiprinâts
Angïu valodas katedras sçdç
1998. gada 8. decembrî, protokols Nr. 2.

Recenzenti: Dr. paed. Larisa Sardiko,


Dr. philol. Harijs Marðavs

Grâmata “English for Junior Students” domâta universitâtes jaunâko kursu


studentiem jauna vârdu krâjuma apgûðanai, komunikatîvo iemaòu
izkopðanai un tâlâkveidoðanai, kâ arî teksta analîzes un interpretâcijas
prasmju attîstîðanai.

Redaktors: Harijs Marðavs


Teksta salicçja
un maketçtâja: Marina Stoèka

ISBN – 9984–14–101–2
© DPU izdevniecîba “Saule”, 2000
PREFACE
The textbook has been designed for the junior students of the
Daugavpils Pedagogical University. The aims of the book are:
1. to enrich students’vocabulary;
2. to consolidate the newly acquired vocabulary items;
3. to develop students’abilities and skills in discussing
appropriate problems and analysing literary texts.
The textbook consists of 10 units which include an original
text, a list of phrases from the text, vocabulary items to be acquired
and three types of exercises: vocabulary, text and discussion
exercises.
The texts of the book and vocabulary items have been selected
so that they should be thematically related to the topics included
in the bachelor programmes for the junior students of the university.
The new vocabulary items are taught and consolidated with
the help of vocabulary exercises which are focused on word
polysemy, synonymy and phraseology. The text exercises are
concerned with the comprehension of the given text and the use
of the acquired vocabulary in context. Discussion exercises are
aimed at developing students’speaking skills on a definite topic
and using the newly learnt vocabulary items creatively in a different
context. Various stories, anecdotes, puns, proverbs etc. are
provided for this purpose.
Each unit of the textbook includes also a few translation
exercises. Since students think in the categories of their native
language, it seems appropriate that they must be given a special
training to adjust their innate knowledge of their mother tongue to
the norms and requirements of the English language. Here the
translation exercises come in handy.

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CONTENTS

Unit 1. John Galsworthy .................................................. 5


Vocabulary Items ..................................................... 9
Vocabulary Exercises .............................................. 20
Text Exercises .......................................................... 33
Discussion Exercises ............................................... 35

Unit 2. Agatha Christie ..................................................... 43


Vocabulary Items ..................................................... 47
Vocabulary Exercises .............................................. 55
Text Exercises .......................................................... 69
Discussion Exercises ............................................... 71

Unit 3. O. Henry ................................................................ 79


Vocabulary Items ..................................................... 84
Vocabulary Exercises .............................................. 99
Text Exercises .......................................................... 112
Discussion Exercises ............................................... 113
Just for Fun .............................................................. 122

Unit 4. Charles Dickens .................................................... 125


Vocabulary Items ..................................................... 130
Vocabulary Exercises .............................................. 143
Text Exercises .......................................................... 159
Discussion Exercises ............................................... 161
Just for Fun .............................................................. 168

Unit 5. Archibald Joseph Cronin ..................................... 169


Vocabulary Items ..................................................... 174
Vocabulary Exercises .............................................. 180
Text Exercises .......................................................... 190
Discussion Exercises ............................................... 192
Just for Fun .............................................................. 199

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UNIT 1

JOHN GALSWORTHY
(1867–1933)
John Galsworthy was born at Coombe, Surrey, on August 14,
1867. He was the son of a solisitor and was brought up in a wealthy
environment. He attended a preparatory school until he was
fourteen, when he entered Harrow, remaining there until 1886. From
1886–1889 he studied law at New College, Oxford, and was called
to the Bar in 1890. He did not practise law however, and spent the
next two years of his life in foreign travel. Galsworthy returned to
England in 1893.
He was no longer young when he started writing. Galsworthy
made his name as a novelist in the first decade of our century. He
kept up with the best traditions of realism in England.
Galsworthy is the author of many novels (“The Island of
Pharisees”, 1904; “Fraternity”, 1909 etc.), short stories (“The Apple
Tree”, “The Broken Boot” etc.) and he is known as one of the most
prominent English playwrights of his time (“The Silver Box”, 1906;
“Justice”, 1910 etc.). The most famous work of his is the epic trilogy
“The Forsyte Saga”, (1906–1921). It is a series of novels connected
by the history of several generations of the Forsyte family,
representatives of the Victorian and Edwardian moneyed class.
“The Forsyte Saga” is followed by “A Modern Comedy”, 1924–1928,
also a trilogy, depicting English post-war life. The final Forsytes
trilogy called “End of the Chapter” was written at a later period
(1934).
John Galsworthy was a novelist, dramatist, short story writer
and essayist taken together. The author deals with contemporary
social problems. He is critical of injustice, tyranny and all the evils
of life, but his criticism is not distructive. He is a great master of
creating characters. In his opinion each character should possess
features typical of a certain group of society. His novels are packed
with characters, most of them alive and full-blooded. The author
appeals both to the reader’s reason and to his heart, but at the
same time there is little sentimentality to be found in his works.

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Try and answer the following questions:
1. Can you find Coombe, Surrey, and Oxford on the map? 2. What
can you tell of England’s history and life at Galsworthy’s time?
3. When did Queen Victoria reign? What was she famous for? 4. In
front of what famous building is a monument to Queen Victoria
erected in London? 5. What do you know of King Edward VII?
6. What periods in England’s history are called Victorian and
Edwardian? What are these periods characterized by? 7. What
can you tell of Galsworthy’s life and literary career? 8. What are the
chief characteristics of Galsworthy’s works?

THE APPLE TREE


(an extract)

On the first of May, after their last year together at college,


Frank Ashurst and his friend Robert Garton were on a tramp. They
had walked that day from Brent, intending to make Chagford, but
Ashurst’s football knee had given out, and according to their map
they had still some seven miles to go. They were sitting on a bank
beside the road, where a track crossed alongside a wood, resting
the knee and talking of the universe, as young men will. Both were
over six feet, and thin as rails; Ashurst pale, idealistic, full of absence;
Garton queer, round-the-corner, knotted, curly, like some primeval
beast. Both had a literary bent; neither wore a hat. Ashurst’s hair
was smooth, pale, wavy, and had a way of rising on either side of
his brow, as if always being flung back; Garton’s was a kind of
dark unfathomed mop. They had not met a soul for miles.
“My dear fellow,” Garton was saying, “pity’s only an effect of
self-consciousness; it’s a disease of the last five thousand years.
The world was happier without.”
Ashurst, following the clouds with his eyes, answered:
“It’s the pearl in the oyster, anyway.”
“My dear chap, all our modern unhappiness comes from pity.
Look at animals, and Red Indians, limited to feeling their own
occasional misfortunes; then look at ourselves – never free from
feeling the toothaches of others. Let’s get back to feeling for nobody,
and have a better time.”

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“You’ll never practise that.”
Garton pensively stirred the hotch-potch of his hair.
“To attain full growth, one mustn’t be squeamish. To starve
oneself emotionally’s a mistake. All emotion is to the good – enriches
life.”
“Yes, and when it runs up against chivalry?”
“Ah! That’s so English! If you speak of emotion the English
always think you want something physical, and are shocked. They’re
afraid of passion, but not of lust – oh, no! – so long as they can
keep it secret.”
Ashurst did not answer; he had plucked a blue flower, and
was twiddling it against the sky. A cuckoo began calling from a
thorn tree. The sky, the flowers, the songs of birds! Robert was
talking through his hat! And he said:
“Well, let’s go on, and find some farm where we can put up.”
In uttering those words, he was conscious of a girl coming
down from the common just above them. She was outlined against
the sky, carrying a basket, and you could see that sky through the
crook of her arm. And Ashurst, who saw beauty without wondering
how it could advantage him, thought: “How pretty!” The wind,
blowing her dark frieze skirt against her legs, lifted her battered
peacock tam-o’-shanter; her greyish blouse was worn and old,
her shoes were split, her little hands rough and red, her neck
browned. Her dark hair waved untidy across her broad forehead,
her neck was short, her upper lip short, showing a glint of teeth,
her brows were straight and dark, her lashes long and dark, her
nose straight; but her grey eyes were the wonder – dewy as if
opened for the first time that day. She looked at Ashurst – perhaps
he struck her as strange, limping along without a hat, with his large
eyes on her, and his hair flung back. He could not take off what
was not on his head, but put up his hand in a salute, and said:
“Can you tell us if there’s a farm near here where we could
stay the night? I’ve gone lame.”
“There’s only our farm near, sir.” She spoke without shyness, in
a pretty soft crisp voice.
“And where is that?”
“Down here, sir.”
“Would you put us up?”

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“Oh! I think we would.”
“Will you show us the way?”
“Yes, sir.”
He limpd on, silent, and Garton took up catechism.
“Are you a Devonshire girl?”
“No, sir.”
“What then?”
“From Wales.”
“Ah! I thought you were a Celt; so it’s not your farm?”
“My aunt’s, sir.”
“And your uncle’s?”
“He is dead.”
“Who farms it, then?”
“My aunt, and my three cousins.”
“But your uncle was a Devonshire man?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Have you lived here long?”
“Seven years.”
“And how d’you like it after Wales?”
“I don’t know, sir.”
“I suppose you don’t remember?”
“Oh, yes! But it is different.”
“I believe you.”
Ashurst broke in suddenly:
“How old are you?”
“Seventeen, sir.”
“And what’s your name?”
“Megan David.”
“This is Robert Garton, and I am Frank Ashurst. We wanted to
get on to Chagford.”
“It is a pity your leg is hurting you.”
Ashurst smiled, and when he smiled his face was rather
beautiful.
Descending past the narrow wood, they came on the farm
suddenly – a long, low, stone-built dwelling with casement windows,
in a farmyard where pigs and fowls and an old mare were straying.
A short steep-up grass hill behind was crowned with a few Scotch
firs, and in front, an old orchard of apple trees, just breaking into

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flowers, stretched down to a stream and a long wild meadow. A
little boy with oblique dark eyes was shepherding a pig, and by
the house door stood a woman, who came towards them. The girl
said:
“It is Mrs. Narracombe, my aunt.”

PHRASES
1. thin as a rail
2. the pearl in the oyster
3. to talk through one’s hat
4. to have a literary bent
5. not to meet a soul
6. to starve oneself emotionally
7. to keep sth. secret
8. to take sth. up
9. to be to the good
10. to break into flower
11. full of absence

VOCABULARY ITEMS
1. make v – 1. construct or produce by combining parts or putting
materials together; bring into existence: make sth. from / out /
of sth.; sth. into sth.; make bricks, bread, a coat. She made
coffe for all of us. Cloth is made of cotton, wool, silk. Wine is
made from grapes. We make bottles (out) of glass. Glass is
made into bottles.
2. cause to appear by breaking, tearing, removing material:
to make a hole in the ground, a gap in a hedge.
3. enact, establish. The regulations were made to protect
children.
4. cause to be or become. I don’t want to make any trouble for
you. The news made her happy. The full story was never made
known / public.
5. earn; win; gain; acquire: make 5000 pounds a year. He first
made his name / reputation as a junior Minister.
make one’s living (at, as, by, from) – have as one’s work or

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livelihood. He makes his living by giving piano lessons. Can
you make a living from journalism? Does he make a living at it?
6. compel; force; persuade; cause (sb.) to do sth.; cause sth.
to happen. They made me repeat (I was made to repeat) the
story.
Phrases:
make one’s blood boil – to anger one
make one’s hair stand on end – shock or frighten one. His ghost
stories made our hair stand on end.
7. come to, equal. Twelve inches make one foot. His adventures
make excellent reading.
make (good, not much) sense – seem to have (plenty of, little)
sense. His arguments have never made much sense.
8. turn into; turn out to be; prove to be. If you train hard you
will make a good footballer. He will make an excellent husband.
Phrases:
make after sb. – pursue, chase. She made after him like a mad-
woman.
make for sb. / sth. – a) move in the direction of; head for. It’s late
we’d better turn and make for home.
b) charge at; rush towards. The bull made for me and I had to
run.
make up – a) invent, compose. The whole story is made up.
b) form, compose, constitute. Are all animal bodies made up
of cells?
c) prepare, e.g. medicine, a prescription, tonic, by mixing
ingredients. Ask the chemist to make this up for you.
make sb. / oneself up – prepare (an actor, oneself) for the stage;
to apply cosmetics to the face. It takes him more than an hour
to make up for the part of Othello. Isn’t she badly made up!
make it up with sb. – end a quarrel, dispute or misunderstanding.
They quarrel every morning and make it up every evening.
Make or Do
make a bid for do a translation
make the bed(s) do a lesson / homework
make the best of do one’s duty
make some / little difference do science

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make an effort do the flowers
make an excuse do one’s hair
make eyes at do one’s best
make a face (faces) at do well (in a subject)
make fun of do sb. a favour
make friends / enemies do good / harm
make head or tail of do sb. a service
make a good / poor job of do sb. credit
make a mistake do sb. justice
make a mess have to do with
make money
make a point of
make room (for)
make a secret of
make a report
make one’s way
make the bed – arrange the sheets, blankets, etc.
make a bed – build a bed
make-up n – cosmetics

2. bank1 n – land along each side of a river or canal; ground


near a river. A river flows between its banks. His house is on
the south bank of the river.
Synonyms: shore, bank, beach, coast.
Shore. The land adjacent to a large lake or the sea.
E.g. The waves were quietly lapping the shore.
Bank. The strip of land on the margin of a river
E.g. Many holiday makers had pitched their tents on the banks
of the river.
Beach. The part of the shore of the sea which is washed by the
waves, usually sandy or pebbly.
E.g. We sunbathed on the beach all day.
Coast. The land along the sea or ocean regarded solely as a
boundry between the sea and land.
E.g. We sailed along the Baltic Sea Coast last summer.
bank2 n – 1. establishment for keeping money and valuables
safely: the Bank – the Bank of England, which is used by the

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British Government; have money in the bank, bank clerk, clerk
working in a bank.
bank-bill n – bill drawn by one bank upon another bank.
bank-book n – (also passbook) book containing a record of a
customer’s bank account.
bank draft – bank bill.
bank holiday n – (GB) one of those days (not Sundays) on
which banks are closed by law, usu. kept as general holidays
(e.g. Good Friday, Easter Monday, Christmas Day); (US) any
weekday on which banks are closed.
banknote n – piece of paper money issued by a bank.
bank-rate n – rate at which the Bank of England (or other
national bank) will discount bills.
bankroll n – roll of paper money.
2. (gambling) sum of money held by the keeper of the gaming
table, from which he pays his losses.
3. (place for storing) reserve supplies.
blood bank n
bank v – 1. place (money) in a bank. He banks half his salary
every month.
2. bank (with), keep money in a bank. Who do you bank with.
bankrupt n – (legal) person judged by a law court to be unable
to pay his debts in full, his property being distributed for the
benefit of his creditors.
bankrupt adj – unable to pay one’s debts: go bankrupt.
bankrupt in / of – completely without. The newspapers accused
the Government of being bankrupt in ideas.
bankrupt v – make bankrupt.
bankruptcy n – bankrupt condition. There were ten
bankruptcies in the town last year.

3. way n – 1. road, street, path, etc. in compounds: railway, byway.


A way across the fields. There is no way through.
pave the way for – prepare for, prepare people to accept (reforms
etc.)
2. route, road (to be, used) from one place to another. Which
is the best / right / quickest / shortest etc. way there / from A to
B? Can you find your way home?

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Phrases:
go out of one’s way (to do sth.) – make a special effort. He went
out of his way to be rude to me / to help me.
lead the way – go in front as leader; show by example how sth.
may be done.
make one’s way in life – succeed.
make one’s way (to, forward) – go.
out of the way – exceptional, uncommon. He has done nothing out
of the way yet.
out-of-the-way attrib. use – remote: out-of-the-way place / corner
by the way – incidentally.
on the / one’s way – being engaged in going or coming. I’ll buy
some bread on the way / my way home. He is on the way to
success.
3. method or plan; course of action: the right way (wrong, the
best) to do / of doing a thing. Is this the way to do it? Do it (in)
your own way if you don’t like my way. The work must be finished
(in) one way or another.
Phrases:
have / get one’s own way – get / do what one wants.
go / take one’s own way – act independently, esp. contrary to the
advice of others.
4. (sg. only) distance between two points. It’s a long way off /
a long way from here.
work is still a long way off perfection – is far from being perfect.
5. direction. We went this / that / the other way. Look this way,
please.
Phrase:
make way for – allow space or a free passage. All traffic has to
make way for a fire engine.
6. condition, state, degree. Things are in a bad way. She was
in a terrible way.
Synonyms: way, road, path, track, drive.
Way means a road, path, route leading from one place to
another, and followed or to be followed in going from place to
place; direction.
E.g. This is the way to our home.

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Phrases: to lose one’s way; to lead the way.
Road denotes an open way, track, a highway used as a means
of communication between one place and another; usually a
road is wide enough for vehicles and joins distant points.
E.g. Every city and town has many roads radiating from it in
different directions.
Path is a way for passing on foot; a track beaten or trodden by
the feet, often along the side of the road, a narrow way across
the country, up a mountain, through woods or fields etc.
E.g. A path through a field.
Track is a line or series of marks left by a vehicle, person,
animal etc. passing along; path or rough road made by persons
/ animals: tracks in the snow; follow the tracks left by a bear; a
track through the forest.
Drive is a private road leading to a house.

4. cross n – 1. mark made by drawing one line across another,


thus: x, +. The place is marked on the map with a cross.
make one’s cross – put a cross on a document instead of one’s
signature.
2. line or stroke forming part of a letter.
3. stake or post with another piece of wood across it, as used
in ancient times for crucifixion.
4. (fig) suffering; burden of sorrow: to bear one’s cross; to
take up one’s cross.
5. emblem, in the form of a cross or a star, (to be) worn by an
order of knighthood; decoration for personal valour: the Victoria
Cross; the Distinguished Service Cross.
6. (place of) crossing.
cut on the cross – (dressmaking) cut diagonally. This skirt
material was cut on the cross.
7. offspring of animals or plants of different sorts or breeds.
A mule is a cross between a horse and an ass.
cross v – 1.
cross (from) (to) – go across; pass from one side to the other side
of: to cross a road / river / bridge / the sea / the Sahara, etc.; to
cross from Dover to Calais.

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cross a person’s path – meet him. I hope I shall never cross that
man’s path again.
cross one’s mind – (of ideas, etc.) occur to one. The idea has just
crossed my mind that …
2. cross (off / out / through) – draw a line or lines across or
through (to cancel). Two of the words have been crossed out.
I crossed his name off the list.
cross one’s t’s and dot one’s i’s – (fig) be careful and exact.
3. put or place across or over: to cross one’s legs; to cross
one’s arms on one’s chest.
cross sb’s palm with silver – give a coin to him (esp. to a
fortuneteller).
cross swords with sb. – fight or argue with him.
keep one’s fingers crossed – (fig) hope for the best, that nothing
will happen to upset one’s plans, etc.
4. cross oneself – make the sign of the cross on or over oneself
as a religious act, to invoke God’s protection.
5. (of persons travelling, letters in the post) meet and pass.
We crossed each other on the way. Our letters crossed in the
post.
6. oppose or obstruct. He was angry at having his plans
crossed. He crossed me in everything.
7. cross (with) – produce a cross by mixing breeds; (cause
to) interbreed.
cross adj – 1. (colloq) badtempered; easily or quickly showing
anger. Don’t be cross with the child for being late. I’ve never
heard a cross word from her lips.
2. (of winds) contrary; opposed. Strong cross winds made it
difficult for the yachts to leave harbour.
crossly adv
crossness n

5. wear n – 1. wearing or being worn; use as clothing: a suit for


everyday wear; a coat that has been in constant wear.
2. (chiefly in compounds) things to wear: underwear, footwear,
ladies’ / men’s wear; a shop that specializes in children’s wear.
wear v – 1. have on the body; (of looks) have on the face. He
was wearing a hat / spectacles / a beard / a troubled look.

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2. (cause to) become less useful or to be in a certain condition,
by being used. I have worn my shoes into holes. This material
has worn thin.
Phrases:
wear away – become thin, weak as the result of constant use. The
inscription on the stone had worn away.
wear down – become gradually smaller, thinner, weaker. The heels
of these shoes are wearing down.
3. endure continued use; remain in a certain condition. Good
leather will wear for years.
Synonyms: to dress, to put on, to wear.
To dress means to put on clothes.
To put on means to place clothes on any part of our body.
To wear means to have on the body or about the person.
E.g. The man is putting on a necktie. The girl is dressed like a
flower. The Scots wear kilts.

6. pity n – 1. feeling of sorrow for the troubles, sufferings etc. of


another person: be filled with / feel pity for sb.
Phrases:
have / take pity on sb. – help sb. in trouble etc.
for pity’s sake. For pity’s sake try to stop this persecution.
out of pity – because of a feeling of pity: give a beggar a few coins
out of pity.
2. (with indef. article, but not in pl.) cause for regret or sorrow.
What a pity (that) you can’t come with us! It’s a pity (that) he
can’t swim. The pity is that …

7. occasion n – 1. time at which a particular event takes place;


right time (for sth.): on this occasion. I have met Mr. White on
several occasions. This is not an occasion for laughter.
take this / that occasion to say sth. – avail oneself of the opportunity.
2. reason, cause, need. I’ve had no occasion to visit him
recently. You have no occasion to be angry.
occasional adj – happening, coming, seen, etc. from time to
time, but not regularly. He pays me occasional visits. There will
be occasional showers during the day.

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occasionally adv – now and then; at times. He visits me
occasionally.
Synonyms: chance, opportunity, occasion are comparable when
they mean “a convenient or favourable moment”.
Chance and opportunity are very close in meaning and occur
in similar collocations: this is a good (lucky, odd) chance /
opportunity. Both words occur in such phraseological
expressions as: to have (give, take) a chance / an opportunity.
Chance also denotes a happening taking place unexpectedly.
E.g. Chance brought her into his mind (by chance).
Chance also implies probability, or possibility as: a chance of
success, a chance of winning.
Occasion: a) a special moment or time when something takes
place.
E.g. I seldom remember the occasion of my first meeting with
anyone who has subsequently become an associate or friend.
b) a special happening or event.
E.g. “Your wife has left you?” … :She left a note to say that she
was leaving me, but I don’t know where she has gone.” “This is
an occasion.”

8. advantage n – 1. sth. useful or helpful; sth. likely to bring


success esp. in competition: the advantages of a good
education. Living in a big town has many advantages, such
as good schools, libraries and theatres.
Phrases:
have / gain / win an advantage (over), give sb. an advantage (over)
– have (give etc.) a better position or opportunity. Tom’s
university education gave him an advantage over boys who
had not been to the university.
2. benefit; profit. He gained little advantage from his visit to
London.
Phrases:
take advantage of sb. – deceive him, play a trick on him.
take advantage of sth. – use it profitably, for one’s own benefit. He
always takes full advantage of the mistakes made by his rivals.
to advantage – in a way that enables sth. to be seen, used etc. in the
best way. The painting is seen to better advantage from a distance.

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advantage v – give an advantage to; be a benefit or aid to.
advantageous adj – profitable, helpful.

9. lift v – 1. raise to a higher level or position: lift (up) a table; lift


sth. out of a box / a child out of his cot. This box is too heavy for
me to lift (it). This piece of good luck lifted her spirits.
lift up one’s eyes (to …) – look up (at).
not lift a finger
lift up one’s voice – raise it
2. lift off – (of a rocket, spacecraft) rise from the launching
site.
3. (of clouds, fog, etc.) rise; pass away. The mist began to lift.
4. dig up (root crops); remove (plants, shrubs, etc.) from the
ground: lift potatoes.
5. steal: lift articles in a supermarket.
lift n – 1. act of lifting.
give sb. / get a lift – a) offer sb. / be offered a ride in a car or other
vehicle. Can you give me a lift to the station?
b) (of a person’s spirits) become / make more cheerful,
contented. The big increase in her salary gave her a
tremendous lift.
2. (US = elevator) box-like apparatus in a building for taking
people up or down to another floor: take the lift to the tenth
floor.
lift-man n – one who operates a lift.

10. tidy adj – arranged neatly and in order; having the habit of
placing and keeping everything in its right place: a tidy room
/ desk; a tidy boy; tidy habits.
tidy v – (up) make tidy. I must tidy myself. You’d better tidy up
(the room) before the guests arrive.
tidily adv
tidiness n
Synonyms: tidy, neat, trim, spick-and-span adj.
Neat suggests cleanliness, simplicity and a certain orderliness
or precision which sometimes becomes the chief implication
of the word.

18
Tidy implies habitual neatness.
Trim adds the implication of smartness, often of smuggness
or compactness.
Spick-and-span stresses the brightness and freshness of that
which is new (or made to look like new).
E.g. We liked his tidy habits. He always kept his room tidy.
Neat work; a neat worker; a neat desk; a neat dress.
A trim ship / cabin; a trim little garden.
Her mother keeps her spick-and-span every moment of the
day. The kitchen was spick-and-span.
Antonyms: untidy, disorderly, confused, messy.

11. strike v – 1. hit; give a blow or blows to; aim a blow at. He
struck me on the chin. He struck the table with a heavy blow.
He struck his knee with his hand / struck his hand on his knee.
He seized the stick and struck at me. The ship struck a rock.
The tree was struck by lightning.
2. (cause to) sound: strike a chord on the piano. This clock
strikes the hours.
3. (for, against) of workers etc.; stop working for an employer;
strike for higher pay / against bad working conditions.
4. impress; have an effect upon the mind. How does the idea
/ suggestion strike you? The plan strikes me as ridiculous.
strike n – act of striking: the numerous strikes in the coalmines;
strike of bus-drivers.
be / go on strike; be / come / go out on strike – be engaged in,
start a strike
a general strike n
strike-breaker n
striker n – worker who strikes
striking adj – 1. attracting attention; arousing great interest.
2. that strikes: a striking clock.
strikingly adv – in a striking manner: a strikingly beautiful
woman.
Synonyms: to strike, to hit, to beat.
To strike – the general term for delivering one or several single
blows. More literary or poetic than the other terms. Used in
more educated speech.

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To hit – usually to deal a single, strong blow, definitely directed.
To hit is often interchangable with to strike; if, however, the
idea of impact is implied, to hit is to be preferred.
To beat – to strike repeatedly, to give repeated blows. Also
used figuratively.
E.g. Why did you strike (hit) him in the face? She hit (struck)
him on the nose. He hit (struck) his head against the door.
Some parents beat their children when they are not good. His
heart is still beating.
Phrases:
strike a match; strike a blow
hit the target; hit the nail on the head; a hit – big success
beat sb. black and blue; beat a record; beat a carpet; beat one’s
breast; beat the drum

VOCABULARY EXERCISES
I. Consult a dictionary and practise the pronunciation of the
following words:
universe, idealistic, queer, knotted, primeval, unfathomed, oyster,
hotch-potch, squeamish, chivalry, to twiddle, thorn tree, frieze skirt,
battered, peacock, tam-o’-shanter, forehead, catechism, casement,
fowl, mare, oblique, shepherd.

II. Explain the polysemy of the words and phrases in italics and
then translate them.
A. 1. My remark made him blush. 2. It was John’s upbringing that
made him a coward. 3. The statue is made of bronze. 4. The bronze
bas-reliefs at the foot of the Nelson Column are made from captured
French guns. 5. Irish stew is made from meat, onions and potatoes.
6. What is the box made of? 7. I’m sure she’ll make an excellent
teacher. 8. We’ll have to make him take the medicine. 9. What makes
you think he knows the truth? – Everything. His look. The way he
talked at dinner. 10. The dean made a speech at the meeting.
11. The students made a drawing of the model who posed for
them. 12. She makes all her own clothes. Recently she made herself
a pretty hat. 13. During the trip on the Daugava he made many
sketches and drawings.

20
B. 1. During the flood the river overflowed its banks. 2. The boy sat
on the bank fishing in the pond. 3. We went boating on the Daugava
River and admired the beauty of its banks. 4. He opened an account
in the bank. 5. The left bank of the river was covered with a thick
forest.
C. 1. The way we took lay through the forest. 2. I can show you the
way to the nearest village. 3. It’s a long way from here. 4. Let me
show you the right way of doing it. 5. This way, please. 6. They
made their way through the silent streets of the sleeping city.
7. The guide led the way through the forest till we reached a narrow
path. 8. Let’s discuss it on the way home. 9. The children lost their
way in the forest. 10. By the way, what was it she told you? 11. They
couldn’t even talk in private: there was always someone in the way.
12. What was it that stood in the way of her happiness? 13. Get out
of my way! 14. I shall get her out of the way for ten minutes so that
you can have an opportunity to settle the matter. 15. The music
was unusual but quite beautiful in its own way. 16. She likes to
have her own way in everything. 17. That seems to me a very good
way out.
D. 1. I crossed the road and came to the beach. 2. He used always
to sit in a peculiar attitude with his arms crossed on his crossed
legs, looking slantingly, through his glasses. 3. The moment we
begin to read, we at once cross the writer’s interests with our own.
4. No one likes to be crossed. 5. The bridge crosses the river.
6. Evidently your letter crossed mine. 7. He plans to cross the
mountains on foot. 8. I’ve broken the window. Do you think Dad’ll
be cross? 9. It never crossed my mind that Pete might be jealous.
10. She made the sign of the cross. 11. This dog is a cross between
a sheepdog and a boxer. 12. I was cross with her for losing her
gloves. 13. He crosses me in everything. 14. We had a rough
crossing from Dover to Ostend.
E. 1. At the party she wore her wedding dress and he said she
looked like a lily-of-the-valley. 2. You should always wear blue: it
matches your eyes. 3. I have worn my shoes into holes. 4. The
carpet was worn by the many feet that had trodden on it. 5. The
waves have worn the stone. 6. She wears her hair short. 7. This

21
cloth wears badly. 8. I don’t know what to wear. 9. This coat doesn’t
look too bad considering how much wear it’s had. 10. Every spring
new beach wear comes into the shops. 11. Continued use is
gradually wearing the stone steps away. 12. Wearing the
preoccupied look of a man with a lot on his mind, he sipped from
a glass of milk and frowned thoughtfully.
F. 1. He promised to come out of pity for the girl. 2. I’d like to have
this book. It’s a pity it costs so much. 3. It seems a pity to waste my
time on that boy. He does not want to study. 4. What a pity you
didn’t see the play! 5. He always thought that it was a great pity
that his friend could not finish the book about his childhood. 6. He
felt pity for the small girl but couldn’t help her.
G. 1. The opening ceremony of the Olympic Games was a
memorable occasion. 2. Mother was saving several bottles of wine
for some special occasion. 3. On one occasion I made the mistake
of confinding in her and I regret it now. 4. There was a moment’s
silence, then mother, rising to the occasion, said: “Please, come
in, Pete.” 5. The family met on two occasions: Christmas and
mother’s birthday. 6. This is not the occasion to remind her of this.
7. This was the occasion for another dispute. 8. He did what the
occasion demanded. 9. The young composer was asked to
compose the music for the occasion. 10. There will be occasional
rains next week. 11. When she is not busy she pays us an occasional
visit.
H. 1. The new house has one advantage over the old: it is larger.
2. The new method of teaching vocabulary has many advantages.
3. If you buy a car now it will be to your advantage. 4. Whatever he
does he turns everything to his own advantage. 5. It’s not fair that
you took advantage of her mistake. 6. The young man took
advantage of her good nature. 7. The young woman showed to
advantage on that occasion. 8. He has an advantage over other
students, he is well-read. 9. The advantages of good education
are great. 10. He has the advantage of being young. 11. He took
advantage of an opportunity to speak to the girl. 12. The uniform
set off his figure to advantage. 13. There was no doubt that in
some fashion Clark had a moral advantage over him.

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I. 1. The fog lifted gradually. 2. The box is too heavy for me to lift.
3. He lifted his hand to give the signal. 4. I’ll give you a lift to the
station. 5. The news gave us a great lift. 6. The man is a lift attendant.
7. The sick man was lifted on to the bed. 8. She lifted the child to
look at the lion. 9. She lifted the baby from its cot. 10. The beetroot
crop has been lifted. 11. He never lifts a finger to help me.
J. 1. Is your room tidy? 2. We liked his tidy habits. 3. The letter was
written in his nice, tidy handwriting. 4. Could you tidy your books
away? 5. He has the tidiest office you ever saw. 6. She put her
things tidily in the closet. 7. The garden looked much better when
he had tidied it up. 8. She was constantly running around tidying
up after the boys.
K. 1. He was afraid to strike. 2. The man struck at him with an open
hand. 3. She had struck the foot against a stone and it hurt her.
4. He struck upon a happy thought. 5. The boy struck the nail with
a hammer. 6. It’s dark here, strike a match. 7. The clock struck
twelve times. 8. The tree was struck by lightning. 9. The workers
went on strike. 10. The woman was struck dumb with horror. 11. I
was struck with her wonderful voice. 12. The man was struck with
paralysis. 13. It suddenly struck me that the idea was brilliant.
14. I was struck by her patience.
III. Give your own sentences or situations with the following
word combinations and translate the combinations into Latvian.
Is it always possible to give a word for word translation?
1. a) to make money; to make one’s name; to make one’s living; to
make one’s blood boil; to make one’s hair stand on end; to make a
good teacher; to make some / no difference; to make an excuse;
to make faces at; to make fun of; to make friends; to make head or
tail of; to make a good job of; to make a mess; to make a point of;
to make room for; to make one’s way.
b) to do sb. a service; to do sb. credit; to do sb. justice; to do
one’s duty; to do science; to do one’s hair; to do one’s best; to do
sb. favour; to do good / harm.
2. the left bank of the river; a house on the river bank; to have
money in the bank; a bank-bill; a bank-book; a bank draft; bank
holiday; bank-note; blood bank; to bank one’s salary.

23
3. to pave the way for; to lose one’s way; to go out of one’s way to
do sth.; to lead the way; to make one’s way in life; out of the way;
by the way; on one’s way; to do sth. in one’s own way; to have
one’s own way; to go one’s own way.
4. to make one’s cross; to bear one’s cross; to take up one’s cross;
to cut on the cross; a cross between a horse and an ass; to cross
a person’s path; to cross one’s mind; to cross out; to cross off; to
cross sb’s palm with silver; to cross swords with sb.; to keep one’s
fingers crossed; to cross oneself; a crossed line; to be cross with
the child; cross winds.
5. to look worse for wear; constant wear; hard wear; underwear;
footwear; ladies’ / men’s wear; to wear spectacles; to wear a beard;
to wear a troubled look; to wear away; to wear down.
6. to be filled with pity; to feel pity; to have / take pity on sb.; for
pity’s sake; out of pity; what a pity.
7. on this occasion; to take this occasion to say sth.; occasional
visits; occasional rains.
8. advantages of good education; to have an advantage over; to
give sb. an advantage over; to take advantage of sb.; to take
advantage of sth.; to advantage.
9. to lift a box; to lift one’s spirits; to lift up one’s eyes; not lift a
finger; to lift potatoes; to give sb. / get a lift; to take the lift to the
tenth floor.
10. a tidy room; tidy habits; to tidy oneself; to tidy up the room.
11. to strike sth. with sth.; the clock strikes; the idea struck me; to
be / go on strike; strike-breaker; a striking film.

IV. Paraphrase the italisized words and phrases by using suitable


active vocabulary.
1. to make
1. Cloth is produced of cotton, wool and silk. 2. In this book you
can find out how to construct a bookcase. 3. The company is well-
known for producing high quality toys. 4. Do you know how to
prepare this sauce? 5. He will be a good teacher. 6. His jokes

24
always cause me to laugh. 7. Let’s give a house a new coat of
paint to have it more attractive. 8. He earns a lot of money. 9. I
can’t force my daughter to wear this uniform. 10. Including wine,
the bill came to Ls 25,–. 11. I can’t understand your friend.
12. They went to the gate as soon as the lights in the house went
down. 13. The two reconciled only after a lapse of ten years.
14. He invented a dozen excuses for being absent from the lecture.
15. When are you going to settle that dispute.
2. way
1. They knew they had gone the wrong direction when they looked
at the map. 2. I just love how she laughs! 3. He did it in a very nice
manner. 4. There is more than one method to build a house.
5. What’s the best method to remove wine stains? 6. The road was
blocked, so we came back a different route. 7. I don’t recognize
this part of town – I think we’ve come the wrong direction. 8. Will
you come with me? I don’t know how to get there. 9. Which direction
is it to the church? 10. If you ask my brother he’ll tell you how to get
to the zoo. 11. Can you tell me how to get to the railway station?
3. to wear
1. I don’t know what to put on. 2. This stuff will last long. 3. He has
a beard and a moustache. 4. I saw her at the party yesterday, and
she had a new dress on.
4. pity
1. She was full of sympathy for the little boy who had lived with his
stepmother. 2. They don’t want our compassion, they need our
help. 3. The horses were in a poor condition, thin and covered with
sores. 4. She missed the concert because her bus was late. –
What a shame! 5. It seems a shame to waste all that food. 6. It’s
unfortunate that you have to travel so far to work.
5. occasion
1. The opening ceremony of the 1992 Olympiad was a memorable
event. 2. Once I saw this man play the guitar and he did it very
well. 3. We’ve met twice. 4. This is not the time to tell her about it.
5. This is not the reason to get offended. 6. He wrote a poem for
the event.

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6. to strike
1. They knew the killer would probably attack again but could not
say when. 2. The police attacked at dawn and caught the thieves
while they were still asleep. 3. She was on the point of hitting the
child again when her husband stopped her. 4. He hit him in the
stomach. 5. A snowball hit him on the back of the head. 6. That she
was able to deceive surprised me greatly. 7. He saw her sitting
there alone and it suddenly occurred to him that she might like
some company. 8. Has it ever occurred to you, Pete, that you could
lose everything? 9. The boy raised his hand to hit back.

V. Paraphrase the following sentences. Pay attention to the


combinations with the verb make.
1. Tears blurred her eyes and she couldn’t make out her brother’s
scrawl. 2. Seeing their master coming from behind the school
building the youngsters made off as fast as they could. 3. Will you
make up a prescription for me? 4. She’s all made up. I prefer natural
beauty. 5. I must have my brown suit made over. 6. Let’s make
away with that beastly money. 7. The public makes much of this
new star. 8. I don’t believe you. The story is all made up. 9. Make
sure there is a train tomorrow. 10. As it was still early we made for
the station on foot. 11. Let’s make up our quarrel and be friends
again. 12. Have you made up your mind about going abroad?
13. Is it still possible to make up for the time lost? 14. Will you make
up fire in the drawing-room? 15. He can make up stories like a
professional writer. 16. Don’t try to make up to this girl. It’s all in
vain. She’s in love with your elder brother. 17. We must make out
this document by tomorrow.

VI. Insert the appropriate particle.


1. Suddenly a cat walked in front of us, and the dog made … it.
2. How much does Jim make … his job? 3. That boy over there is
making eyes … me. 4. That nasty boy has been making faces …
me in the street again! 5. Make yourself completely … home.
6. After the concert the crowd made … the nearest door. 7. When
the thieves saw the big dog making … them, they ran away. 8. Did
you make a bid … the painting? Yes, but somebody else offered
more. 9. Can you make room … another guest at the dinner table?

26
10. Mother can make a wonderful meal … bits of food left over
from the day before. 11. Are these shoes made … leather?
12. You’ll never make a musician … that boy. 13. Never make fun
… a child. 14. The house was made … … stone in the last century.
15. Wait a minute while I make … my face. 16. The coat and trousers
make … a suit. 17. My grandmother used to make … her own
medicine. 18. Has Jim made it … … Mary yet?

VII. Choose the right word: make, do.


1. When Dickens learnt shorthand he began to … some reporting
in the House of Commons for the newspapers. 2. Will you … me a
favour and take this telegram to the telegraph office? 3. Thank you
ever so much for asking me. I’ll … every effort to come. 4. This
medicine won’t … you any harm. It’s good for headache. 5. The
flag was … of different pieces of cloth. 6. The accident did not …
much damage to the car. 7. Yesterday we had to … a very difficult
translation. 8. Little Dorrit … some sewing outside the prison.
9. Everybody … fun of this man. 10. The young scientist … a brilliant
speech at the conference. 11. King Lear’s sister … him a good
service. 12. Every morning my mother … the beds in our flat.
13. Mr. Smith has just returned from his trip. His holiday has … him
a lot of good. 14. Ann is an excellent student, she … hardly any
mistakes. 15. That has nothing to … with me. 16. This is all I have,
will it …? 17. This factory … agricultural machines. 18. Would you
please … the stove while I … cleaning? 19. You … everything you
can to … me angry. 20. The traffic was so heavy that we only …
twenty miles an hour.

VIII. Answer the following questions.


a) 1. When do you do your homework? 2. How do we make a fire?
3. Did you make many mistakes in your last test? 4. Did you make
spelling or grammar mistakes? 5. Do you do the housework or
does you mother do it? 6. Can you make friends easily? 7. What
harm may a storm do to the crop? 8. Do you make up with your
friends after a quarrel? 9. What must you do first when you make
tea? 10. Do you keep all the promises you make? 11. Do these
exercises help you to make progress in your English? 12. What
must you do if you want a thing well done?

27
b) 1. What are books made of? 2. What is paper made of? 3. What
is bread made from? 4. What are pencils made of? 5. What can be
made out of glass? 6. What can be made out of wood? 7. What
can be made out of silver? 8. How much does four plus five make?
9. Do we make dishes out of wood? 10. How much does twice six
make? 11. Can we make bread without flour? 12. Do we make
butter out of milk? 13. Can we make soup without water? 14. What
is wine made from? 15. What is flour made from?

IX. Here are some don’ts and do’s. Compose 10 of your own
don’ts and do’s.
a) 1. Don’t make this mistake again. 2. Don’t go to bed till you have
done all your homework. 3. Don’t make a fuss over nothing.
4. Don’t make mountains out of mole-hills. 5. Don’t do sums for
your brother. 6. Don’t do anything till I come back.
b) 1. Always do your best. 2. Do as you like. 3. Do your work first
and then play. 4. Do your exercises carefully.

X. The following sentences are not true to fact. Correct them.


1. Tables are made of glass. 2. It is easy to make a house. 3. Animals
make nests. 4. Twice six makes ten. 5. The rain does not make the
flowers grow. 6. The story was so funny that it made me cry. 7. If
you want a thing well done ask someone to do it. 8. Smoking will
do you no harm. 9. The caterpillars did the harvest a lot of good.
10. It will do you much good if you go to bed late every night.
11. Butter is made from flour.

XI. Answer the following questions using to make in your


answers.
1. What does the baker do? 2. What does the dressmaker do?
3. What does the tailor do? 4. What does the shoemaker do?
5. What does the builder do? 6. What does the farmer do?

XII. Translate into English.


1. Kad Kitija atvçra durvis, viòa ieraudzîja brâli, kurð sçdçja pie
galda un taisîja lidmodeli. 2. Saka, ka viòai jau ir labi panâkumi
darbâ. 3. Skat, ðis sols darinâts no koka. 4. Mazuïi cçla mâjiòas no
smiltîm. 5. Viòam bija kaut kas jâdara, lai neaizmigtu. 6. Vçlreiz

28
izlasîjis savu sacerçjumu, viòð izdarîja daþus labojumus. 7. Tagad
viòai vajadzçja saklât gultas un aiziet uz veikalu. 8. Izdarît to nebija
grûti, grûtâk bija izlemt, ko darît pçc tam. 9. Viòa izskatîjâs ïoti
jauka savâ gaiði zilajâ kleitiòâ, kas bija paðûta no vienkârða kokvilnas
auduma. 10. Jûsu augstsirdîba dara jums godu. 11. Es tûdaï
uzklâðu gultu, un jûs varçsiet atpûsties. 12. Te ir tortes recepte,
kuru var izcept bez miltiem. 13. No kâ jûs cepât ðos cepumus? Tie
ir ïoti gardi. 14. Ðis vîns izgatavots no îpaðas vînogu ðíirnes.
15. Viss tas ir nieki. Nevajag no muðas izpûst ziloni. 16. Tiklîdz tu
paveiksi savu darbu, piezvani. 17. Vai no rîtiem jûs vingrojat?
18. Ðo darbu jâpabeidz (jâpadara) ðodien, lai ko tas arî nemaksâtu.
19. Neatliec uz rîtu to, ko vari padarît ðodien. 20. Jânim nebija ne
santîma. Vajadzçja iztikt bez pusdienâm.

XIII. Fill in the appropriate synonyms:


a) shore, bank, beach
1. We undressed on the … and went for a swim. 2. After the great
rains, the river overflowed its … 3. The … was so crowded we
could hardly find a place for our deckchair. 4. I walked along the
silent …, meditating. 5. The … of the river were lined with on-lookers.
6. Weeping willow grew on the … 7. The ship drew up on the …
8. They stepped on … for the first time in many months. 9. It’s
amazing what can be found on the … at the end of the season.
10. We must build up the … of the river to prevent flooding.
11. The … of the lake were distant now. 12. We sailed to distant …
13. … combers sometimes make valuable finds. 14. Oil is ruining
Britain’s … 15. Some water birds nest on river … 16. Canvas wind-
breakers are sometimes used on the …
b) road, path, way
1. Then he went along the … through the wood until he came to
the … where all the traces were lost. 2. Will you show me the … to
Yarmouth? he asked. – I walked a little … down the … and showed
him the … 3. James picked his … among the heaps of gravel – the
drive was being laid – till he came opposite the porch. 4. Mrs.
Bramwell led the …, followed by her fine guests and her husband,
into supper.

29
c) to wear, to dress, to put on
1. Come on, Nancy, … your best dress! 2. When Henry Higgins
came to Ascot he was … in tweeds. 3. Mary always … blue. I
suppose she knows she looks nice in it. 4. I think you must … your
new evening dress tonight. 5. Look, the boy is trembling with cold.
Tell him to … properly. 6. It’s popular with young men now to …
beards and long hair. 7. The man we met was … a cotton shirt and
trousers. 8. It was pleasant to see her … in a national costume.
9. Why don’t you … a hat? The sun is very strong. 10. When spring
comes she always … a flower in the button-hole of her costume.
11. “What are you going to … at our fancy-dress party?” – “I think,
I’ll … like a cosmonaut.” 12. They asked me how he was … but I
could not recollect what he was … that day. 13. Why aren’t you …
your rubber boots? The country road is very muddy. 14. Please
help me to … the children. 15. The mother … the child and told
him to wait for her in the yard. 16. She is so beautiful and she …
well. 17. Don’t … your overcoat, it’s very warm outside. 18. “Is she
always … in white” – “Yes, she enjoys … white.” 19. He was still …
when I came in. 20. She doesn’t … glasses on the stage.
d) chance, opportunity, occasion
1. She was afraid she would not get a … to spend a single penny
of it herself. 2. It wasn’t a formal … There was a court case, to
come yet, which would be properly conducted. 3. Though he did
not expect Christine until the morning, there was just the … that
she might already have arrived. 4. It was as though she still had
something to say to me, and could not decide upon the words, yet
waited there for me to give her … 5. What is more formal than a
family dinner? An official … of uncomfortable people, who meet
very seldom, making conversation. 6. It was as if they were only
just in time for a train, they hadn’t a … of saying good-bye. 7. Her
method of attack was so downright and sudden that there was
seldom … to escape. 8. He was a temperate man who touched
alcohol only rarely, but this … demanded to be marked in the true
family tradition.
e) to strike, to hit, to beat
1. Don’t you dare … me! 2. He … his head against the table as he
fell. 3. … a drum gives one great satisfaction. 4. Wife, dramatically:

30
“You coward! You … me! I shall go back to mother!” 5. Doesn’t his
behaviour … you as strange? 6. … up the eggs with a whisk, it’s
better than a fork for the purpose. 7. The British housewife
traditionally … her husband with a rolling-pin, not a carpet-… when
he comes home drunk. 8. I … the target with my first shot. 9. That
song was a big … in the 60’s. 10. Who will … the first blow? 11. The
conductor … time with his baton. 12. Yes, that … the nail right in
the head. That’s what we’ll do. 13. It’s dark in here; let’s … a match.
14. My father was badly … in the financial crash. 15. … the gong
to bring them in for dinner. 16. The Hollywood star had a …
personality. 17. The rain was … against the window. 18. He … the
ball with all his might. 19. On the … of midnight Cinderella had to
return.

XIV. Answer the questions.


1. What properties do you think will make you a good teacher?
2. What makes you study English? 3. What situations make your
blood boil? 4. Do horror films make your hair stand on end? 5. Why
do women like to make up their face? 6. Do you yourself do your
hair? 7. How do you intend to make your way in life? 8. What is the
best way to study foreign languages? 9. Is it always good to take
one’s own way? 10. Under what conditions would you say: “Your
work is still a long way off perfection”? 11. What could you do out
of pity? 12. In what situations would you like somebody take pity
on you? 13. On what occasions do women wear evening dresses?
14. Do you think university education will give you an advantage?
Why? 15. How long does it take you to dress? 16. What do you put
on when you go on a hike? 17. Who wears a uniform? 18. Much
depends not only on what we wear, but on how we wear clothes,
doesn’t it? Prove it. 19. Who sometimes wears clothes of protective
colouring? When do they wear them? 20. When do you wear
galoshes (a woollen dress, a sports suit, an apron, pyjamas)?
21. When do you tidy your room up? 22. What are the things that
strike you in our life (in students life)? 23. Which bank of the
Daugava is the city of Daugavpils situated on? 24. Do you have
money in the bank? 25. When do British people have bank-holidays?
26. What happens if a person goes bankrupt? 27. When do we say
“Cross your t’s and dot your i’s”? 28. In what situation would you

31
say “Keep your fingers crossed”? 29. What do you do when your
plans are crossed? 30. Why do you think shop-lifting occurs quite
often in this city? 31. If you are offered a lift on your way home,
would you accept it?

XV. In what circumstances would you say:


1. I’ll make tea for all of us. 2. I’d like to make myself useful. 3. He’ll
make an excellent husband. 4. One must always do one’s duty.
5. It does you credit. 6. His father paved the way for his success.
7. Things are in a bad way. 8. For pity’s sake, try to stop the girl!
9. You were given a chance but you didn’t take it. 10. This is not the
occasion to laugh at him. 11. You should lay out your money to the
best advantage. 12. My dress looks bad for wear. 13. Look, she is
wearing a wedding ring on her finger. 14. The boy has very tidy
habits. 15. Your kitchen is spick-and-span! 16. Her appearance is
striking. 17. What do you bank with? 18. This political party is
bankrupt in ideas. 19. I hope I’ll never cross your path again.
20. I’ve never heard a cross word from his lips. 21. Good luck will
lift your spirits.

XVI. Translate into English.


1. Mçs nolçmâm nosvinçt ðo notikumu un aiziet visi uz koncertu.
2. Viòð nogaidîja izdevîgu brîdi un piegâja pie jaunâs, skaistâs
meitenes. 3. Laiku pa laikam viòam uznâk sâpju lçkmes. 4. Manam
brâlim ir daudz nejauðu paziòu. 5. Televîzijas laika ziòâs teica, ka
tuvâkajâs dienâs laiks bûs nepastâvîgs un pa laikam lîs. 6. Situâcija
ïoti sareþìîjusies, un viòiem bûs grûti atrast kâdu izeju no tâs.
7. Pa ceïam uz Cçsîm mçs iegriezâmies E. Dârziòa muzejâ. 8. Ceïð
bija gluds un plats, un mçs varçjâm braukt âtri. 9. Smagais fiziskais
darbs bija padarîjis viòas rokas raupjas. 10. Jûra bija vçtraina, un
kuìim bija bîstami atstât ostu. 11. Viòð bija pie samaòas lîdz
pçdçjam brîdim. 12. Skolçni apzinâjâs nepiecieðamîbu izmâcîties
visas stundas, taèu tas nebija viegli. 13. Visâ pasaulç cilvçki jût
lielu lîdzcietîbu pret bçgïiem, kam sava valsts jâatstâj bada un
vajâðanas dçï. 14. Istaba, kurâ viòa strâdâja, bija vienmçr kârtîga,
un tajâ bija patîkami uzturçties. 15. Dzîvoklis bija tâdâ nekârtîbâ,
ka to nekavçjoties vajadzçja uzpost. 16. Skolotâju pârsteidza ziòa,
ka viens no viòas skolçniem bija arestçts par zâdzîbâm veikalâ.

32
17. Strâdnieki uzsâka streiku par labâkiem dzîves apstâkïiem.
18. Pulkstenis tikko nosita astoòi. 19. Vîrietis uzbruka meitenei un
iesita tai ar dûri pa galvu. 20. Ðîs divas meitenes ir pârsteidzoði
lîdzîgas. Vai viòas nav dvîòu mâsas? 21. Daudzâs valstîs precçti
cilvçki valkâ laulîbu gredzenus. 22. Kurpju zoles izvalkâjuðâs gluþi
plânas. Jânes pie kurpnieka salabot. 23. Ðie zâbaki ir no îstas âdas
un ïoti labi. Tie valkâsies gadiem ilgi. 24. Sveðajâ pilsçtâ mums bija
grûti atrast bçrnu preèu veikalu, un mçs pajautâjâm ceïu kâdai
vecâkai dâmai, kura to laipni mums arî parâdîja. 25. Viòu attiecîbâs
bija ieviesuðâs nelielas nesaskaòas un tikai vçstule no Anglijas
nolika visas lietas savâ vietâ. 26. Direktors beidzot parakstîja ðo
svarîgo dokumentu. 27. Jauno mâkslinieci ïoti sâpinâja neobjektîvâ
kritika vienâ no mâkslas þurnâliem. 28. Nekas jau liels nenotiks, ja
atliksi ceïojumu uz Parîzi uz vçlâku laiku. Gan jau viss nokârtosies.
29. Zçns savainoja kâju, krizdams no koka. 30. Nesot kâdu
smagumu, man sâp roka.

TEXT EXERCISES
I. Answer the following questions.
1. Where did Frank Ashurst and Robert Garton intend to travel to?
2. Why were they sitting on the bank beside the road? 3. What did
they look like? 4. What were they talking about? 5. What was Garton’s
opinion of human emotion? 6. What did Ashurst think of it? 7. Whom
did they see coming down from the common just above them?
8. What did the girl look like? 9. What did the friends want her to
do? 10. How did the girl speak to them. 11. Where did she live?
12. What did she tell the friends about her origin and her relatives?
13. What did they see when they came on the farm suddenly?

II. Pick out from the text words and phrases bearing on:
1) men’s appearance;
2) women’s appearance;
3) parts of the body;
4) articles of clothing.
Use them in your own descriptions of your friends, relatives
etc.

33
III. Find Latvian for:
a football knee; self-consciousness; hotch-potch; thorn tree;
peacock; tam-o-shanter; catechism; stone-built house; casement
windows; Scotish firs; round-the-corner; unfathomed.
Find sentences with these words in the text and explain them.

IV. What nouns can you add to the following adjectives?


thin, pale, queer, curly, smooth, wavy, modern, battered, broad,
lame, soft, crisp, oblique.

V. Find English equivalents in the text for the following Latvian


words and word combinations:
pagût nokïût, vadoties pçc kartes, lîdzâs ceïam, cieði blakus
meþam, sarunâties par visumu, garâki nekâ seðas pçdas, sava
veida, pçdçjo piecu tûkstoðu gadu slimîba, saðaurinât lîdz,
atgriezties pie, nejauði (negaidîti) sastapt(-ies) ar, baidîties, turpinât
(iet uz priekðu), runât bez kautrçðanâs, iejaukties (runâ), tuvoties
(uznâkt, parâdîties), stiepties (sniegties) lejup lîdz.
Pay attention to the prepositions these word combinations are
used with and give your own examples with them.

VI. Change each sentence so that it has an opposite meaning


by substituting antonyms or antonymous phrases for the
underlined words.
1. They were sitting on the bank away from the road. 2. They had
covered 7 miles. 3. Ashurst’s hair was curly and dark. 4. They often
faced regular misfortunes. 5. We cannot stay at this farm. 6. He
was unconscious of having done wrong. 7. It is a disadvantage to
be small when you are standing in a crowd to look at a football
game. 8. The sea is smooth today.

VII. Learn the phrases listed right after the text and interpret
their meaning in the sentences from the text.

VIII. Look through the text and then discuss the following:
1. What did Garton mean by using the words “our modern
unhappiness”? What could we call “our modern unhappiness”
nowadays? 2. What do you think of Garton’s words: “Let’s get back

34
to feeling for nobody, and have a better time”? Was he right? Why
do you think he said that? 3. Do you agree that “to starve oneself
emotionally is a mistake”? Why? 4. Describe Robert and Ashurst.
5. What do you know about Red Indians?

IX. Make up dialogues discussing the following situations:


1. You want to put up at some place for a night.
2. You are in the country and see a wonderful scenary.
3. You see a very charming woman (a handsome man).

X. Retell the text and then give its summary.

DISCUSSION EXERCISES
I. Read texts A, B, C.
A. TO CROSS THE RUBICON
To cross the Rubicon means to take a final, irrevocable step
which may have dangerous consequences. It arises from the
phrase said to have been used by Julius Caesar, a famous Roman
general, statesman and writer of the 1st century B.C.
The Rubicon was a small stream in northern Italy which
separated Cisalpine Gaul, the province of which Caesar was the
governor, from Italy proper. His political rivals at Rome had passed
a law ordering him to disband his army. Caesar marched to the
river and stood at the bank undecided whether to cross it and
thereby precipitate civil war. Then, drawing his sword and
exclaiming, “The die is cast” he dashed across the river and was
followed by his whole army. Since then the expression has become
a proverb. When anyone has actually begun a hazardous enterprise
from which he cannot draw back, they say, “He has crossed the
Rubicon.”
Having crossed the Rubicon, Caesar started the civil war
against the Roman Senate; six months later he made himself master
of the whole of Italy.

35
B. CROSS YOUR FINGERS
The cross is an ancient symbol in many cultures and religions.
It is closely linked, of course, with the Christian church.
Scandinavians also used crosses to mark the edges of their territory.
And the cross was a sacred symbol to the Egyptians and to the
Aztecs in Mexico. Today, the word cross is used in many
expressions that seem to have little direct connection to religious
beliefs.
For example, one way of wishing good luck to someone is to
tell him that you will “keep your fingers crossed” for him.
Sometimes you may even cross two of your fingers when you
wish him luck. But, more often, just saying the expression is believed
to be enough to help bring success.
Crossing the fingers when making a wish may be a tradition
many hundreds of years old. But most experts think the expression
is an American one that began about ninety years ago. It probably
has its roots in the ancient Christian belief that making the sign of
the cross would keep away evil spirits and bad luck.
Children often cross their fingers when they tell a small lie. It is
an old belief that lies will not be punished if told while the fingers
are crossed. Many children have unhappily discovered that
crossing their fingers offers no such protection.
Children often use another expression, “cross my heart”, when
they say they are telling the truth. A child usually will make an X
over his heart with his finger while saying it.
Language expert Charles Earle Funk says “cross my heart,”
and crossing the heart with the finger, probably come from the
Roman Catholic Church tradition of making the sign of the cross.
Mr. Funk also says that earlier in this century, children in the United
States often expanded the simple saying. They said, “Cross my
heart and hope to die, And hope the cat will spit in your eye.”
Cross is used in many other ways. If you deceive someone or
confuse them you are “crossing them up.”
And you might become “cross as two sticks” at someone. This
old expression means you are very angry. What do two sticks have
to do with the situation? If you put one stick across the middle of
the other stick, you have a cross. And the word cross is another

36
way to say angry. So if you are as cross as two sticks, you are very
angry.
Another expression, “to cross swords,” sounds like something
from the past. It recalls the period when knights in armor seemed
to spend most of their time fighting. You can imagine two angry
knights whose swords cross during a battle. But the expression no
longer means a noisy fight with swords. It describes a less violent
fight with words instead of swords. You “cross swords” with
someone when you argue or debate an issue with him.
From “Words and their stories”, VOA Special English

C.
It is probable that when men first painted their faces, many
thousands of years ago, it was for the purpose of frightening their
enemies in war. But there are records of women in Egypt using
cosmetics more than four thousand years ago. These women not
only painted their eyebrows, they also added a thick dark line under
each eye, and had different kinds of paint for different seasons of
the year.
Women in ancient Rome used cosmetics. They used Egyptian
kohl for darkening the eyelids, powdered chalk for whitening the
skin, and a red colouring matter for the cheeks. A rich Roman lady
spent many hours over her toilet, helped by a crowd of young
slaves of many nationalities. The Roman poet Ovid wrote a book
on cosmetics, and gives a recipe for what we now call a face-
pack, made from flour, eggs and other materials. The use of this
he says, will make the face smoother and brighter than a mirror.
In England it was the custom, during the seventeenth and
eighteenth century, for all ladies of fashion to paint their faces and
to blacken their eyebrows. In the nineteenth century there was a
change of taste, however, and until about the end of the century,
ladies who used make-up were not accepted in high society. Girls
were advised, just before entering the ball-room, to bite and lick
their lips and slap their cheeks hard, and so bring some colour to
the face.
Today the use of cosmetics is accepted everywhere, and it is
common to see women and girls making up in public. The cosmetics

37
industry is one of the largest in the country, and large sums of
money go to the owners of beauty salons.

II. Make up your own situations or short stories using the phrase
“to cross the Rubicon”.

III. Interpret and translate into Latvian the phrases discussed in


text B.

IV. Discuss the problems in text C.

V. Interpret the proverbs, give their Latvian equivalents and then


make up situations with them.
1. As neat as a new pin.
2. By doing nothing we learn to do ill.
3. Dot your I’s and cross your t’s.
4. Empty vessels make the greatest sound.
5. Faint heart never won fair lady.
6. Many words hurt more than swords.
7. Strike while the iron is hot.
8. To beat about the bush.
9. To make both ends meet.
10. To put a spoke into somebody’s wheel.
11. To wear one’s heart upon one’s sleeve.
12. Where there’s a will, there’s a way.

VI. Read the following funny story. Ask questions about the
parts of the sentences which have the words to dress, to put
on, to wear. Make your friends answer them.
There was a fire in the middle of the night at a country house
where there were a number of guests. They all ran outside very
quickly – they did not even wait to put on their clothes. Dressed
in blankets and overcoats they were standing watching the flames
when another guest joined them. “Why did you people get so
excited?” he asked. “Now look at me. When I heard the alarm, I got
out of bed, lit a cigarette and quietly dressed myself. In fact I was
putting on my tie when I thought it was not the best tie to wear
with the shirt I had on. So I took it off and put on another tie. So I

38
didn’t lose my head at all. I never get excited in a difficult or
dangerous situation.”
“That’s good,” said one of his friends, “but why didn’t you put
on your trousers?”

VII. Read and discuss the following puns:


1. One day a painter, looking out of the window, saw an old
countryman going by and thought the man would make a good
subject for a picture. So he sent out his servant to tell the old
man that his master would like to paint him. The old man
hesitated and asked what the painter would pay him. The
painter said he would give him a pound. The man still hesitated.
“Come on,” said the painter, “it’s an easy way to earn a pound.”
“Oh, I know that,” he answered. “I was only wondering how I
should get the paint off afterwards.”
to paint: 1) krâsot, 2) gleznot.
2. Mamma: Where have you been, Johnny?
Johnny: Playing ball.
Mamma (severely): But I told you to beat the rug, didn’t I?
Johnny: No ma’am. You told me to hang the rug on the line
and beat it.
1) to beat the rug – izdauzît paklâju
2) to beat it – aizbçgt, aizskriet (òemt kâjas pâr pleciem).
3. If your wife wants to learn to drive, don’t stand in her way.
to be (stand) in one’s way: 1) traucçt, stâvçt ceïâ, 2) stâvçt uz
ceïa.
4. – What’s the matter with your finger?
– I hit the wrong nail.
nail: 1) nags, 2) nagla.
5. Haberdasher: These shirts wear like iron. They just laugh at
the laundry.
Customer: Yes, I know. I have some just like these. They come
back with their sides split.
to wear like iron – ilgi valkâties, bût ïoti izturîgam
to split one’s sides with laughter – plîst aiz smiekliem

39
6. “Your hat is becoming …”
“Oh, thank you.”
“… becoming a little worn out.”
7. Whiskers versus razor.
With whiskers thick upon my face
I went my fair to see;
She told me she could never love
A bear-faced chap like me.
I shaved then clean, and called again,
and thought my troubles over;
She laughed outright, and said I was
More bare-faced than before.
8. “I can’t tell you how long I have laboured on this manuscript,”
the aspiring writer told the producer, “polishing a scene here,
adding a line there, eliminating scenes, and adding new
characters.”
“What a pity,” said the producer, handing it back to him. “All
work and no play.”

VIII. Read the jokes and then tell them to your groupmates.
1. “I hear your son is getting on?”
“Rather! Two years ago he wore my old suits. Now I wear his.”
2. “Are you Donald Vance?” he asked the young man beside the
cloak-room.
“No,” said the young man in suprise.
“Well, I am,” was the reply, “and that is my overcoat you are
putting on.”
3. “Why are you wearing my new raincoat?” Bill Thompson, a
student, asked his room-mate.
“I thought you’d want me to wear it,” said the other,” to protect
your new suit.”
4. A lawyer, when driving along a narrow lane, had difficulty in
avoiding running over an old woman who was picking up some
beets which had fallen from a passing cart.
“Women and donkeys are always in the way,” he said.

40
“Sure, sir,” was the old lady’s reply. “I’m glad you have the
manners to put yourself last.”
5. Teacher: If your brother has five apples and you take two from
him. What will be the result?
Johnny: He will beat me.
6. Teacher: Could you forgive a boy who had struck you?
Pupil: I think I could if he was bigger than me.
7. “Why did you strike this dentist?”
“Because he got on my nerves.”
8. At a party a lady approached a general.
“What do you think of the latest developments in the war,
general?” she asked, “Where is the Army going to strike next?”
“Madam,” replied the general, “If I didn’t know I would be happy
to tell you.”

IX. Read the poem and discuss the ideas in it. Learn it by heart.
SHE WALKS IN BEAUTY
By G.G. Byron
I
She walks in beauty, like the night
Of cloudless climes and starry skies:
And all that’s best of dark and bright
Meet in her aspect and her eyes:
Thus mellowed to that tender light
Which heaven to gaudy day denies.
II
One shade the more, one ray the less,
Had half impaired the nameless grace,
Which waves in every raven tress,
Or softly lightens o’er her face;
Where thoughts serenely sweet express
How pure, how dear their dwelling-place.

41
III
And on that cheek, and o’er that brow,
So soft, so calm, yet eloquent,
The smiles that win, the tints that glow,
But tell of days in goodness spent.
A mind at peace with all below,
A heart whose love is innocent!

42
UNIT 2

AGATHA CHRISTIE
(1891–1976)
Agatha Christie known throughout the world as the Queen of
Crime was born at Torquay, Devonshire. She was educated at home
and took singing lessons in Paris. At the end of World War I she
began writing. Her first novel, the Mysterious Affair at Styles,
appeared in 1920. Here she created Hercule Poirot, the little
Belgian detective with the egg-shaped head and the passion for
order – the most popular sleuth in fiction, since Sherlock Holmes.
General recognition came with the publication of “The Murder of
Roger Ackroyd” (1926). With “Murder at the Vicarage” (1930)
Agatha Christie began a series of novels featuring Miss Marple,
this time a lady detective who soon won a universal appeal for her
wise but unimposing methods of unravelling a crime.
Beginning with 1952 A. Christie enjoyed another run of success
with theatre adaptations of her fiction and plays (“The Mousetrap”
is still staged). Many of her stories have been filmed including The
Secret Adversary, The Murder of Roger Ackroyd (cinema title
“Alibi”), Ten Little Niggers, Murder on the Orient Express etc.
Agatha Christie also wrote six romantic novels under the pen-
name Mary Westmacott.
She is the author of seventy-seven detective novels and books
of stories that have been translated into every major language.
Agatha Christie’s success with millions of readers cannot be
accounted for by the mere fact that her simple prose provided
good entertainment; the explanation lies in her ability to combine
clever plots with excellent character drawing, and a keen sense of
humour with great power of observation that result in social scenary
of a wide range. Besides, her books seem to proclaim that justice
will prevail and evil will be conquered even by one man’s effort;
they defend rationality and never go beyond those aspects of
human nature that are our common stock.

43
Answer the following questions:
1. Find Torquay, Devonshire, on the map. What can you tell about
this place? 2. Where was Agatha Christie educated? 3. Who are
the main detectives in her works? What can you tell about them? 4.
Which of her works have you read? Do you like them? Why? 5. Why
are her works so popular and well-read? 6. Which other English
detective-story writers do you know?

THE CASE OF THE RICH WOMAN


(an extract)

The name of Mrs. Abner Rymer was brought to Mr. Parker


Pyne. He knew the name and he raised his eyebrows.
Presently his client was shown into the room.
Mrs. Rymer was a tall woman, big-boned. Her figure was
ungainly and the velvet dress and the heavy fur coat she wore did
not disguise the fact. The knuckles of her large hands were
pronounced. Her face was big and broad and highly coloured.
Her black hair was fashionably dressed; and there were many tips
of curled ostrich in her hat.
She plumped herself down on a chair with a nod. “Good
morning,” she said. Her voice had a rough accent. “If you’re any
good at all you’ll tell me how to spend my money!”
“Most original,” murmured Mr. Parker Pyne. “Few ask that in
these days. So you really find it difficult, Mrs. Rymer?”
“Yes, I do,” said the lady bluntly. “I’ve got three fur coats, a lot
of Paris dresses and such like. I’ve got a car and a house in Park
Lane. I’ve had a yacht, but I don’t like the sea. I’ve got a lot of
those high-class servants that look down their nose at you. I’ve
travelled a bit and seen foreign parts. And I’m blessed if I can
think of anything more to buy or do.” She looked hopefully at Mr.
Pyne.
“There are hospitals,” he said.
“What? Give it away, you mean? No, I won’t do! That money
was worked for, let me tell you, worked for hard. If you think I’m
going to hand it out like so much dirt – well, you’re mistaken. I want
to spend it; spend it and get some good out of it. Now, if you’ve got

44
any ideas that are worth while in that line, you can depend on a
good fee.”
“Your proposition interests me,” said Mr. Pyne. “You do not
mention a country house.”
“I forgot it, but I’ve got one. Bores me to death.”
“You must tell me more about yourself. Your problem is not
easy to solve.”
“I’ll tell you and willing. I’m not ashamed of what I’ve come
from. Worked in a farmhouse, I did, when I was a girl. Hard work it
was too. Then I took up with Abner – he was a workman in the mills
near by. He courted me for eight years, and then we got married.”
“And you were happy?” asked Mr. Pyne.
“I was. He was a good man to me, Abner. We had a hard
struggle of it, though; he was out of job twice, and children coming
along. Four we had, three boys and a girl. And none of them lived
to grow up. I dare say it would have been different if they had.”
Her face softened; looked suddenly younger.
“His chest was weak – Abner’s was. They wouldn’t take him for
the war. He did well at home. He was made foreman. He was a
clever fellow, Abner. He worked out a process. They treated him
fair, I will say; gave him a good sum for it. He used that money for
another idea of his. That brought in money hand over fist. He was
a master now, employing his own workmen. He bought two concerns
that were bankrupt and made them pay. The rest was easy. Money
came in hand over fist. It’s still coming in.
Mind you, it was rare fun at first. Having a house and a tip-top
bathroom and servants of one’s own. No more cooking and
scrubbing and washing to do. Just sit back on your silk cushions
in the drawing-room and ring the bell for tea – like a countess
might! Grand fun it was, and we enjoyed it. And then we came up
to London. I went to swell dressmakers for my clothes. We went to
Paris and the Riviera. Rare fun it was.”
“And then?” said Mr. Parker Pyne.
“We got used to it, I suppose,” said Mrs. Rymer. “After a bit it
didn’t seem so much fun. Why, there were days when we didn’t
even fancy our meals properly – us, with any dish we fancied to
choose from! As for baths – well, in the end, one bath a day’s

45
enough for anyone. And Abner’s health began to worry him. Paid
good money to doctors, we did, but they couldn’t do anything.
They tried this and they tried that. But it was no use. He died.” She
paused. “He was a young man, only forty-three.”
Mr. Pyne nodded sympathetically.
“That was five years ago. Money’s still rolling in. It seems
wasteful not to be able to do anything with it. But as I tell you,
I can’t think of anything else to buy that I haven’t got already.”
“In other words,” said Mr. Pyne, “your life is dull. You are not
enjoying it.”
“I’m sick of it,” said Rymer gloomily. “I’ve no friends. The new
lot only want subscribtions, and they laugh at me behind my back.
The old lot won’t have anything to do with me. My rolling up in a
car makes them shy. Can you do anything, or suggest anything?”
“It is possible that I can,” said Mr. Pyne slowly. “It will be difficult,
but I believe there is a chance of success. I think it’s possible I can
give you back what you have lost – your interest in life.”
“How?” demanded Mrs. Rymer curtly.
“That,” said Mr. Parker Pyne,” is my professional secret. I never
disclose my methods beforehand. The question is, will you take
a chance? I do not guarantee success, but I do think there is a
reasonable possibility of it.”
“And how much will it cost?”
“I shall have to adopt unusual methods, and therefore it will be
expensive. My charges will be one thousand pounds, payable in
advance.”
“You can open your mouth all right, can’t you?” said Mrs. Rymer
appreciatively. “Well, I’ll risk it. I’m used to paying top price. Only
when I pay for a thing, I take good care that I get it.”
“You shall get it,” said Mr. Parker Pyne. “Never fear.”

PHRASES
1. to raise one’s eyebrows
2. to show sb. in / into
3. to look down one’s nose at sb.
4. to bore one to death
5. to be ashamed of

46
6. to take up with sb.
7. to be out of a job
8. to bring in money
9. hand over fist
10. to be sick of sth.
11. to laugh at sb. behind one’s back
12. to take a chance
13. to be good / bad at sth.
14. to hand sth. out
15. to be fun
16. to get used to sth. / doing sth.

VOCABULARY ITEMS
1. proposal n – 1. proposing.
2. sth. proposed; plan or scheme: a proposal for peace;
proposals for increasing trade between two countries.
3. offer (esp. of marriage): a girl who had five proposals in
one week.
propose v – 1. offer or put forward for consideration, as a
suggestion, plan or purpose. I propose starting early. We
propose leaving at noon.
Phrase:
to propose toast / sb’s health – ask persons to drink sb’s health or
happiness.
2. propose marriage (to sb.), offer marriage.
3. sb. (for sth.), put forward (sb’s name) for an office / for
membership of a club, etc. I propose Mr. Smith for chairman.
Will you please propose me for your club?
proposer n
proposition n – 1. statement; assertion: a proposition so clear
that it needs no explanation.
2. question or problem (with or without the answer or solution).
Tunnelling under the English Channel is a big proposition.
3. proposal; suggestion.
Synonyms: propose, suggest, offer.
Offer means to hold out or present for acceptance or refusal.

47
We offer some objects or assistance. He offered me some cake.
He offered to help me with a difficult problem.
Suggest may mean “to bring to the mind the idea of, to show
in an indirect way, to hint, to imply”. Her face suggested bad
health.
Propose may mean the same as suggest and is used in the
same types of construction. However, propose is less widely
used, being confined mainly to formal style (in the context of
meetings, debates, elections etc.).
Grammatical constructions:
The object after suggest and propose may be expressed by:
1. a noun: I suggested a walk in the wood. I propose an early
start.
2. a gerund: I suggest going there at once. I propose starting
early.
3. an object clause with the verb in the subjunctive mood:
Mary suggested that he should come at 6. (he come at 6). I
propose that we should start early.
Bear in mind that suggest is never followed by an infinitive. If
the person to whom the suggestion is made is mentioned the
preposition “to” is always used before it. Propose can be
followed by the infinitive in the meaning “to intend, have as
one’s aim”: He suggested to the librarian that the books should
be arranged differently on the shelves. He proposed to sell
the house and go abroad.

2. solve v – 1. find the answer to (a problem etc.): solve a


crossword puzzle / an equation
2. find a way out of a difficulty. Help me to solve my financial
trouble.
solvable adj – that can be solved or explained.
solution n – 1. (to, for, of) answer (to a question etc.); way of
dealing with a difficulty. Might economy be the solution to / for
/ of your financial troubles.
2. process of finding an answer or explanation: problems that
defy solution – cannot be solved.

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3. shame n – 1. distressed feeling, loss of self-respect, caused
by wrong, dishonourable or foolish behaviour, failure, etc.: feel
shame at having told a lie / at failing in an examination; hang
one’s head in / for shame. To my shame I must confess that …
2. capacity of experiencing shame. He has no shame (is quite
without shame) is lost to shame.
3. dishonour: bring shame on sb. / oneself – dishonour sb. /
oneself. Shame on you! – You should be ashamed of you.
4. a shame – sth. unworthy; sth. that causes shame. What a
shame to deceive a girl! It’s a shame to take the money for
doing such easy work. He is a shame to his family.
shame v – cause shame to; cause sb. to feel shame; bring
disgrace on: to shame one’s family.
shameful adj – causing or bringing shame.
shamefully adv
shameless adj – without shame; immodest.
shamelessly adv

4. enjoy v – 1. get pleasure from; take delight in: enjoy one’s


dinner. I’ve enjoyed talking to you about old times.
2. have as an advantage or benefit: enjoy good health / a
good income.
3. (oneself) experience pleasure; be happy.
enjoyment n – 1. pleasure, joy, satisfaction: to think only of /
live for enjoyment.
2. something that gives joy and pleasure.

5. choose v – 1. from / out of / between / pick out from a greater


number; show what or which one wants by taking. She took a
long time to choose her new hat.
2. decide; be pleased or determined. I do not choose to be a
candidate. He chose to stay where he was.
Synonyms: to choose, to select, to elect, to pick.
Choose is the general term of this group. It may be used in all
the cases where choice is meant, and is applied to people,
things, words, places, action, etc.
Which apple may I take? – Choose which you like. She took a

49
long time to choose a present for her mother. He was clever
enough to choose another theme for their discussion.
Select means “to choose sth. or sb. carefully, as best or more
suitable, out of a great number.” It implies “a wide range of
choice” as to select people (places, words, species,
specimens etc.)
On Sunday we were selecting the best athletes for the coming
contest. The aunt took him to the larder, selected a big apple
and gave it to him. To select a candidate for a post. I select
books I want.
Elect generally means to choose a person for an office by
vote, by mutual agreement, as, to elect a candidate (a deputy,
a representative).
To elect a chairman. To elect member to Parliament. To elect a
person to be president.
Pick (sometimes pick out, up) like select, implies careful choice.
This word is more colloquial than the other members of the
synonymic group. It may be applied to people, things, words.
To pick what you like. To pick the best. To pick a winner. To pick
books from the library.
Phrases:
to pick one’s way (steps) – to walk carefully choosing the places
where to step.
to pick and choose – to choose with too much care.
choice n – 1. act of choosing: make a careful choice; be
careful in your choice.
2. right or possibility of choosing. I have no choice in the matter.
3. variety from which to choose. This shop has a large choice
of clothes.
4. person or thing chosen. This is my choice.

6. try v – 1. make an attempt. I don’t think I can do it, but I’ll try.
2. try for sth. – make an attempt to get or win (esp. a position):
try for a scholarship / a position in a Civil Service.
3. use sth., do sth. as an experiment or test, to see whether it
is satisfactory. Have you tried sleeping on your back as a cure
for snoring?

50
Phrases:
try sth. on – put on (a garment, show etc.) to see whether it fits,
looks well etc. I want to try the shoes on before I buy them.
try one’s hand at sth. – see whether you have the skill needed.
Why don’t you try your hand at editing the staff magazine?
4. inquire into a case in a court of law. He was tried and found
guilty. He will be tried for murder. Which judge will try the case?
5. put a strain on. Small print tries the eyes. Don’t try his patience
too much.
tried adj – that has been tested; reliable: a tried friend / remedy
trying adj – distressing; putting a strain on: a trying person to
deal with; have a trying day.
try n – attempt. Let me have a try at it. He had three tries and
failed each time.
trial n – 1. testing, trying, proving: give a new worker a trial –
give him a chance to show his skill. We shall put the machine
to further trial.
2. examination in a law court before a judge. The judge
conducted four trials in one day. The trial lasted a week.
Phrases:
be / go on trial (for sth.) – be tried in a court of law (for an offence).
bring sb. to trial; bring sb. up for trial; put sb. on trial – cause him
to be tried in a court of law.
stand one’s trial – be tried.
3. sth. or sb. troublesome or annoying. That child is a trial to
his parents. Life is full of little trials.
Note:
In colloquial style, “try + inf.” is often replaced by “try and +
inf.”, esp. in the imperative, and “don’t try and didn’t try” are
often replaced by “don’t try and” and “didn’t try and”: Try and
behave better. Don’t try and swim across the river.
Synonyms: try, attempt, endeavour.
Try, attempt, endeavour mean “to make an effort to do sth.”
Try is the general term and may be used in place of any other
member of the synonymic group. It occurs both in everyday
speech and in literary language.
Attempt is to set about a thing with a view to effecting it and it
is preferably used as a literary word.

51
Try is to set about a thing with a view to seeing the result. We
attempt by trying but we may try without attempting. We always
act when we attempt, we use senses and the understanding
when we try. However, since try and attempt are close to each
other they may be applied indiscriminately.
Endeavour implies intensity of an effort made to achieve sth.,
to try hard, to do one’s best.
To attempt / try / to solve a problem. I shall attempt to prove
my point of view. You are at liberty to try once more. I endeavour
to do my duty. I’ll endeavour to help you.

7. lose v – 1. no longer have: to lose one’s money; to lose a leg


/ in a road accident. He lost two sons in the war. You are losing
your hair (= getting bald). She has lost her good looks (= is no
longer good looking).
Phrases:
lose one’s ground – retreat; fail to keep one’s position or advantage.
lose one’s head – become confused or overexcited.
lose heart – be discouraged.
lose one’s heart to sb. – become very fond of; fall in love with.
lose interest (in sth. / sb.) – cease to be interested in, attracted by.
lose one’s reason / senses – become insane or wildly excited.
lose one’s temper – become angry.
2. (passive) be lost, disappeared; die; be dead. The ship and
all its crew were lost.
be lost in sth. – be deeply occupied or filled with, e.g. thought,
wonder, admiration etc.
3. be unable to find. I’ve lost the keys of my car. The books
seem to be lost.
Phrases:
lose one’s way / oneself – get lost, be unable to find the right way.
The children lost their way in the forest. We lost our way in the
dark.
lose sight of sth. – a) overlook; fail to take account of. We mustn’t
lose sight of the fact that …
b) no longer be able to see. The early navigators disliked losing
sight of land. We lost sight of him in the crowd.

52
lose one’s tongue – be too shy to speak.
lose track of sth. – lose touch with; fail to follow the course or
development of.
4. fail to win, be defeated: to lose a game / a match / a battle
/ a war / a lawsuit / a prize.
lose by / in / on sth. – be or become worse. You will lose nothing by
waiting.The story does not lose in the telling (= is not made
less interesting).
5. (of a watch or clock) go too slowly. Does your watch gain or
lose? My watch loses two minutes a day.
6. spend time, opportunity, efforts to no purpose; waste. There’s
not a moment to lose.
loser n – person who loses or is defeated. He is a good / bad
loser.
loss n – 1. act or fact of losing: loss of blood; loss of prestige.
Loss of health is more serious than loss of money.
2. failure to keep, maintain or use: a heavy loss; loss of
opportunities; without (any) loss of time.
3. failure to win or obtain. The loss of contract.
4. that which is lost: sell sth. at a loss; suffer heavy losses in
war.
5. (be) at a loss for sth. / to do sth., be perplexed, uncertain.
He was at a loss for words.

8. cost v – 1. be obtainable at the price of; require the payment


of. The house cost him 15000 pounds! Compiling a dictionary
costs much time and patience.
2. result in the loss of. Careless driving may cost you your life.
3. bring (injury or disadvantage). The boy’s bad behaviour
cost his mother many sleepless nights.
cost n – 1. price (to be) paid for the thing: the cost of living.
He built his house without regard to cost.
living costs – the general level of prices.
2. that which is used, needed or given to obtain with. The battle
was won at (a) great cost in human lives.
Phrases:
at all costs – whatever the cost may be.

53
at the cost of – at the loss or expense of. He saved his son from
drowning, but only at the cost of his own life.
count the cost – consider the risks, possible losses etc. before
doing sth.
to one’s cost – to one’s loss or disadvantage. Wasps’ stings are
serious, as I know to my cost.
Synonyms: price, cost, value, worth.
Price means “the amount of money for which something is
offered, sold or bought.”
E.g. What is the price of this dress? The price of petrol has
gone up.
Cost as a verb and occasionaly the noun cost express the
same idea as the noun price.
E.g. How much does this dress cost (= What is the price of this
dress?) If you buy more than 10 books we will reduce the cost
of each book by 10%.
However, more often cost has a different meaning, namely the
amount of money needed to produce something or carry out
some process, or provide some service.
E.g. 10,– Ls will hardly cover the cost of materials.
Value means “the amount of money for which sth. could be
sold, although it is not for sale at the moment of speaking.”
E.g. The value of pictures by the impressionists increased
dramatically after the First World War.
Value also has uses not connected with money. It means “the
usefulness of sth.”, especially in comparison with other things.
E.g. His advice was of great value to me.
Worth is used mainly as a predicative adjective with the verb
“to be”, meaning “to have a certain value.”
E.g. He offered me the tape-recorder for 25,– Ls but I don’t
think it’s worth it.

9. top n (usu. the top of) – 1. highest part of point: at the top of
the hill; at the top of the page.
Phrases:
on top – above. The green book is at the bottom of the pile and the
red one is on top.

54
on (the) top of – over, resting on. Put the book on (the) top of the
others.
from top to bottom – completely.
from top to toe – from head to foot.
2. upper surface. Polish the top of a table.
3. highest rank, foremost (or most important) place. He came
out at the top of the list.
Phrase:
come to the top – win fame, success.
4. utmost height or degree.
Phrase:
to shout at the top of one’s voice.
5. (attrib. and in compounds) highest in position or degree:
on the top shelf; at top speed; charge top prices.
top-hat n – tall silk hat.

VOCABULARY EXERCISES
I. Consult a dictionary and practise the pronunciation of the
following words:
client, ungainly, to disguise, knuckles, ostrich, to murmur, yacht, to
court, to soften, bankrupt, cushions, countess, to pause,
sympathetically, wasteful, subscriptions, curtly, to guarantee,
payable, appreciatively.

II. Explain the polysemy of the words and phrases in italics and
then translate the sentences into Latvian.
A. 1. It was clever of you to propose that they should take the
responsibility for what had happened. 2. I propose we put off the
meeting till tomorrow. 3. What do you propose to do? 4. His
colleagues proposed him for the job. 5. I would like to propose Mr.
Parker for the position of the manager. 6. Our proposal will be
considered next time. 7. The proposal to close the school was
defeated. 8. The proposition should be considered very carefully.
9. The proposition was put before the Parliament. 10. Don’t you
think it’s time you proposed to that girl? You’ve been going out
together for 2 years. 11. I hope, Tom will make you an official
proposal soon.

55
B. 1. It was not difficult to solve this problem. 2. The mystery of the
missing book was never solved. 3. I had to go and meet these
people. No other solution seemed possible. 4. It took the police
several years to solve the crime. 5. The question is solvable.
C. 1. He remembered his words with a deep sense of shame.
2. The boy blushed with shame. 3. I’m ashamed to admit that I did
not help my mother. 4. Everyone was shocked by his shameless
behaviour. 5. Her appearance put me to shame. 6. What a shame
to cheat a small child! 7. He seems to have lost all sense of shame.
8. What a shame that your husband can’t be with you. 9. I’m
shamefully ignorant about that.
D. 1. We enjoyed listening to his music. 2. How did you enjoy your
holiday? 3. The elderly women enjoyed seeing who came in and
out. 4. We all enjoyed the film immensely. 5. The trip was wonderful.
We enjoyed every minute of it. 6. The park was full of people,
enjoying themselves in the sunshine. 7. The parents found the party
pretty boring but the children seemed to be enjoying themselves.
8. You seem to enjoy a good income. 9. I enjoy my children’s
confidence.
E. 1. They chose my brother as their leader. 2. You may say what
you choose, but I shall never go back on my word. 3. We left our
hotels when we pleased and we walked through the streets
whenever we chose to do so. 4. Why did you choose this colour?
5. You can choose whether to be paid by cheque or in cash. 6. I
can’t decide which of these hats to buy, help me to choose!
7. Don’t you think the producer may be criticized for choosing this
play? 8. Why did you choose Helen as your secretary? She is
useless. 9. The shop had a very wide choice of cheeses on display.
F. 1. If you can’t do it the first time, try again. 2. I don’t think I can do
it but I’ll try. 3. I’ll try for this job. 4. It seems easy until you try it.
5. You had better try the brakes before you start. 6. I can’t find it, I’ll
try the other drawer. 7. I’ll try the door to see whether it’s locked.
8. I want to try my luck. 9. Who is going to try your case? 10. Don’t
you want to try your hand at knitting? 11. Don’t try your tricks on
me. 12. Try knocking at the back door.

56
G. 1. A few days ago I lost my bag. 2. We mustn’t lose a moment.
We have very little time. 3. He lost his parents many years ago.
4. The poor man had lost a leg in a battle. 5. The girl was gazing at
the picture, lost in admiration. 6. My hints were lost upon my friend,
he failed to notice them. 7. The soldier died from loss of blood.
8. Loss of health is worse than loss of wealth. 9. The student was at
a loss for a word. 10. Does your watch gain or lose? 11. Their army
lost heavily. 12. There is not a moment to loose. 13. He stood lost in
wonder.
H. 1. How much does it cost you to keep a car? 2. The cost of
electricity has risen in the last six months. 3. The cost of living in
this country is high. 4. How could you afford it? It must have cost a
fortune! 5. His fame has been achieved only at a cost to his family
and his health. 6. The shop is closed on Saturday, as I have just
found out to my cost. 7. Another mistake like that could cost you
your job. 8. She saved her family at the cost of her own life. 9. She
wanted her child back as soon as possible, whatever the cost.
I. 1. He is one of the world’s top footballers. 2. There is a wonderful
view from the top of the hill. 3. The tops of the trees swayed in the
wind. 4. She wore a hat with a blue pom-pom on top. 5. Write your
name at the top of the page. 6. My books are on top shelf. 7. Our
football team are on the top form now. 8. I can’t discuss it with you
at the moment. It’s top secret.

III. Give your own sentences or situations with the following


word combinations and translate the combinations into Latvian.
Is it always possible to give a word for word translation?
1. a proposal for peace; to propose toast; to propose sb’s health;
to propose to sb.; to propose sb. for chairman; a clear proposition.
2. to solve a crossword puzzle; to solve an equation; to solve
financial trouble; the best solution; problems that defy solution.
3. to hang one’s head in / for shame; to my shame …; to have no
shame; shame on you!; to be lost to shame; to bring shame on
sb.; to be ashamed of; what a shame …; to shame one’s family; to
feel shame.

57
4. to enjoy a performance; to enjoy one’s dinner; to enjoy good
health; to enjoy a good income; to enjoy oneself.
5. nothing to choose between; do just as you choose; to make a
careful choice; to have no choice; a large choice of wines.
6. to try for sth.; to try one’s hardest; to try to do sth.; to try sb. for
a job; to try sth. on; to try one’s hand at; to be tried for a murder; to
try sb’s patience; to try one’s courage; a trying day; a tried remedy;
to put a machine to a trial; to give sb. a new trial; to conduct several
trials in one day; to be on trial for sth.; to bring sb. to trial; to put sb.
on trial; to stand one’s trial; to be a trial to one’s parents.
7. to lose one’s balance; to lose a job; to lose one’s hair; to lose
one’s good looks; to lose one’s ground; to lose one’s head; to lose
heart; to lose one’s heart to sb.; to lose interest in; to lose one’s
reason; to lose one’s temper; to be lost in sth.; to lose one’s way; to
lose sight of sth.; to lose one’s tongue; to lose track of sth.; to lose
a game; my watch loses; to lose opportunity.
8. to cost much time and money; to cost one’s life; living cost; the
cost price of an article; without regard to cost; at all costs; at the
cost of; count the cost; to one’s cost.
9. the top of the page; from top to bottom; on top; from top to toe;
the top of the table; the top of the list; to come to the top; to shout
at the top of one’s voice; at top speed; to charge top prices; top-
hat.

IV. Paraphrase the italisized words and phrases by using suitable


active vocabulary.
1. What do you suggest? I suggest a short rest before we continue
our work. 2. He offered to drink to the health of the Queen. 3. It’s a
pity you can’t come to the party. 4. What a pity you have to leave
so early. 5. He has an advantage of having good health. 6. I’ve
really got pleasure from talking to you. 7. You think only of pleasure.
8. The teacher selected the cleverest child as the leader of the
class. 9. Come and help me select a good place for our camp.
10. Will Jim attempt to win the first prize? 11. I always fail to win at
cards, with my bad luck. 12. Put your money into our savings plan,

58
and you can’t suffer a disadvantage from it. 13. I can always busy
myself with a good book. 14. The chairman’s remarks were drowned
by the public’s shouts of disapproval. 15. The child stood on the
sand, filled with wonder at her first sight of the sea. 16. He was no
longer able to see the car he was chasing. 17. I’m sorry, I’ve failed
to follow the events. Would you start your story again? 18. The
escaping prisoner was able to disappear in the crowd.

V. Insert the appropriate particle.


1. He felt no shame … what he had done. 2. She blushed … shame
when the lie was discovered. 3. His behaviour brought shame …
the whole family. 4. He should be ashamed … himself. 5. Do you
think he’ll propose marriage … you tonight? 6. Shall we propose a
toast … the future of the company? 7. It is difficult to choose one
house … so many nice ones. 8. Jim chose Mary … his wife. 9. It is
difficult to choose … two such nice books. 10. She was chosen …
the whole class to go on the trip. 11. I’m always willing to try my
hand … learning something new. 12. The prisoner is being tried …
robbery with violence. 13. Never buy shoes without trying them …
first. 14. How much money did you lose … races? 15. What have
you got to lose … trying? 16. I’ve lost my ring … the garden. 17. I
can always lose myself … a good book. 18. The song loses a great
deal … repetition. 19. I didn’t hear you, I was lost … thought.
20. As they grow older, many children lose faith … their parents.
21. I seem to have lost interest … my work recently. 22. This teacher
has lost control … the class; he will have to be replaced. 23. Never
lose sight … your main purpose in life. 24. The police soon lose
track … criminals if they don’t catch them soon after the crime.
25. Jim’s father lost a fortune … one game of cards. 26. As soon
as she saw the house, mother lost her heart … it.

VI. Fill in the appropriate synonyms:


a) propose, suggest, offer
1. The plan which you … is very interesting and we shall try it.
2. Who has … him the job? 3. Mother … that I took along an umbrella
because it looked as if it was going to rain. 4. The host … that we
should sing a song, or play some merry games. 5. No one … him
help. 6. Peter … that we should go skiing after dinner. 7. The man

59
nodded to his visitors and … him a seat. 8. The coach … that we
should rest. 9. They … him money for the picture but he refused to
sell it. 10. My friends … that we should play a game of tennis.
11. The boy … the old woman to carry her basket. 12. The school
doctor … that I should see the dentist. 13. Do you know who … the
idea of going to the seaside? 14. The builder … a new and more
effective method of laying bricks. 15. I refuse to take anything he
… me. 16. My friend … to go to the station to find out when our
train would start and … that I should take care of the things.
b) offer, suggest, suggestion
1. Your … is very tempting, but I cannot accept it. 2. My friend …
to pay the fare as I had no change. 3. Why doesn’t somebody …
that we should all do something to help her? 4. The plan which you
… is very interesting and I am ready to try it. 5. I refuse to take any
thing he … me. 6. He … that the question be discussed at the next
meeting. 7. The teacher … a very good way of memorizing new
words. 8. Mr. White was … the post of director. 9. Mother … that I
should put on the blue dress when I go to the theatre.

VII. Answer the questions using the verbs “suggest” and “offer”.
1. Michael was going your way, didn’t he? Why didn’t you offer him
a lift? 2. When people lose something they often offer a reward to
the finder, don’t they? Why? 3. If you were offered a free trip abroad
where would you go? Why (would you go) to that particular country?
4. I hear you want to buy a car from Mr. Drake. What price did he
set on it and how much did you offer him? 5. I take it you agree
with what Mr. Brown said. What did he suggest? 6. What do you
suggest should be done to make teaching English here more
effective?

VIII. Ask questions using the verbs “suggest” and “offer” and
have the questions answered.
E.g.T: “Let’s cast lots,” said Harris. (Harris said it was necessary to
cast lots.)
A: Why did Harris suggest that they should cast lots?
B: He suggested it as he realised that it was the only way to
avoid arguing.

60
1. James said he would do the job. 2. Douglas volunteered to mend
the puncture. 3. Donald said that it wouldn’t be bad if he went
down to Folkstone for the week end. 4. Let John apply to the
manager, that’s what Helen says. 5. “How about having a set of
tennis?” asked Donald. 6. “Shall I buy tickets for you?” asked
Michael. 7. “Why call in a radio man? I’ll fix the radio set,” said
John. 8. She wrote she would give a reward to a finder. 9. Mr.
Barker told him to consult Dr. Ford. 10. He said that they should
appoint Mr. Carter head of the department. 11. Robert said he
would make inquiries himself.

IX. Complete the sentences with “offered” or “suggested” as


shown in the model.
Model: I … / going to the cinema. – I suggested going to the
cinema.
/ to go and buy tickets. – I offered to go and buy
tickets.
1. He … / we should choose another play to stage.
/ us his assistance.
2. Mike … / we make a stop and have lunch.
/ us some cake.
3. Mother … / I should go to bed as I looked pale.
/ me some medicine.
4. The teacher … / to help me with a difficult problem.
/ that the books should be arranged differently
on the shelf.
5. She … / us a cup of tea.
/ that everyone should be ready by 5 o’clock.
6. My brother … / a walk in the wood.
/ changing the subject of their conversation.
7. One of us … / sending for a doctor.
/ to fetch some water.
8. My friend … / playing an amusing game.
/ to go there instead of me.
9. Do you … / buying the book?
/ me this book?
10. Did he … / you his car?
/ our joining them at once?

61
11. He … / going to the country for the week-end.
/ to give me a lift in his car.
12. The guide … / walking along the central street of the capital.
/ picture booklets telling the history of the city.
13. Maria … / that we should hold the meeting without
delay.
/ to pay the fare as I had no change.
14. The librarian … / me a lot of interesting books on different
subjects.
/ we should go on an excursion to the History
Museum.

X. Change the gerunds into subordinate clauses as shown in


the model.
Model: George suggested our walking back to the railway station.
George suggested that we (should) walk back to the
railway station.
1. He suggested our going to the seaside during the summer
holiday. 2. The teacher suggested our showing trust in Nick.
3. Helen suggested their ringing George up and asking him to
come at once and settle the question. 4. Who suggested their
taking a walk in the woods? 5. What do you suggest doing now?
6. Peter suggests our waiting for Nick till 7 o’clock. 7. Our form
mistress suggested making a change in our plans. 8. I’d like to
suggest our putting these desks in a row. 9. Nina suggested our
taking a porter to help us with our luggage.

XI. Make up short dialogues according to the model. Use the


words in the columns below.
Model 1. “As it is late, (a); I suggest taking a taxi (b). And what do
you suggest?
“But I suggest walking c); It’s a short way from here.
a b c
A. is fond of flowers to buy flowers to present A. with a
book
It’s raining to stay at home to put on raincoats and
go to see V.; she is ill

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We have some time to go for a walk to read newspapers
to spare
K. is very tired to have a rest to help K. carry the
rucksack
It’s very difficult to to go home and to try to get tickets
get tickets for the watch TV
evening show
The exams are to discuss how to to prepare instead of
coming prepare for them discussing

Model 2. “I see you are very cold, (a). May I offer you a cup of
tea?” (b)
“Oh, that’s very kind of you. Thanks.”
a b
to have difficulty in opening the door my help
to feel uncomfortable there my seat
your suitcase is heavy my help
your pencil is broken my pencil
you cannot solve the problem my assistance

XII. Translate into English.


1. Es ierosinu izlasît visiem grâmatu vçlreiz un pçc tam to apspriest.
2. “Ko vçl tu ierosini?” – “Es ierosinu aiziet visiem kopâ paslçpot.”
3. Laipnâ saimniece piedâvâja mums labas pusdienas un, kad
mçs gâjâm projâm, viòa piedâvâja lietussargu, jo ârâ lija. 4. Es
piedâvâjos aiziet pçc ârsta, bet man paskaidroja, ka pçc ârsta jau
aizgâjis Pçteris. 5. Kas gan varçtu piedâvât braukt ar laivu vçtras
laikâ? 6. Viòai piedâvâja grûtu, bet interesantu darbu. 7. Kad vîrietis
ieraudzîja, ka sievietei grûti pâriet ielu, viòð nekavçjoties piedâvâja
savu palîdzîbu. 8. Mums piedâvâja biïetes uz teâtra izrâdi, bet mçs
atteicâmies, jo tovakar bijâm aizòemti. 9. Tçvs ieteica nosûtît tele-
grammu nekavçjoties, citâdi meiteni neviens stacijâ nesatiks.
10. Gids piedâvâja tûristiem savus pakalpojumus. 11. Viòð piedâvâja
draugam kopâ pavadît brîvdienas viòa vecâku mâjâs. 12. Sjûzena
piedâvâja Irçnai kopâ izbraukt ârpus pilsçtas.

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XIII. It is interesting to know that
… it was the English scientist Rutherford who in 1921 suggested
giving the name “neutron” to the neutral particle of the atomic
nucleus. “Neutron” was coined from the Latin word “neutron”, which
means “neither this nor that”, because it had neither a positive
charge nor a negative.
… that Vasili Bazhenov, a great Russian architect, after passing
brilliantly the public examination at the Paris Academy (where he
had been sent to perfect his skill), was offered a position in Paris
as a court architect, but he refused, wishing to return to his
homeland.

XIV. Account for the difference in the shades of meaning of the


synonyms. Translate the sentences into Latvian.
1. It was as though someone from outside were directing him how
to choose his words in order to rob me of any possible excuse.
2. His (Hemingway’s) temperament was selecting the instances
he should narrate, his mind selecting the words to employ. 3. They
are, he thought, the hardest in the world; the hardest, the cruelest
… Or is it that they pick men they can handle? 4. If you will select a
spot where the unit confronting your troops has had losses, the
combination of loudspeaker and leaflet ought to work. 5. He had
picked from a drawer a little tarnished cylinder … 6. Mrs. Bramwell’s
evening began at nine o’clock, the late hour being chosen out of
consideration for the medical gentlemen who might be detained
at their surgeries. 7. Why can’t one choose one’s death? 8. He was
telling her how he had learned to shoe horses and select cattle fit
for killing. 9. He took out a tin and selected a tiny red pellet from it;
then gulped it down.

XV. Insert the appropriate synonyms: to choose, to elect or to


select.
1. I demand nothing. You are free to … between us two, the one
who is most dear to you. 2. Let him do it. He is big enough to … for
himself. 3. Thirty-three plays were … for presentation at the spring
festival. 4. The officer … a good position for his regiment. 5. Who
was … to play on the school team? 6. Poetry has always … soldiers

64
as heroes. 7. Let him … what kind of dress he likes. 8. For the
second season our gardens have been … as a nesting place by
two families of wild duck. 9. It was difficult to … the best picture
but we finally … the most colourful. 10. Then she sang again, and
danced again and had been … among twenty from the fifty girls.
11. George Washington was … president of the USA in 1789. 12.
Try to … the most appropriate words when you speak. 13. I wonder
whom they will … as chairman. 14. “Which apple may I take?” – “…
which you like.” 15. You must do what I tell you. Remember, you’ve
… me as your captain. 16. The British Peace Committee reported
that 60 members had been … to the congress. 17. The aunt took
him to the larder, … a big apple and gave it to him.

XVI. Replace the italicized parts of the sentences with to choose,


to select, or to elect in the proper form.
1. “May I have a piece of cake?” – “Certainly. Take anyone you
like.” 2. All present at the meeting cast their votes for Mr. Smith.
3. In order to express your thoughts one must choose very carefully
the right words. 4. The gardener was carefully choosing the best
kinds of pears. 5. “Which of the two to take?” – “Take any you like.”
6. The architects spent much time choosing with care a place for
the monument. 7. Having looked through the catalogue the scientist
carefully chose the books which he needed for his research work.

XVII. Translate the following word combinations into English.


Mind that in some cases more than one synonym is applicable.
Ievçlçt konferences delegâtus; izvçlçties vârdus; izvçlçties profe-
siju; izvçlçties paraugus; izvçlçties mçteli; izvçlçties partneri tenisa
spçlei; ievçlçt priekðsçdçtâju; izvçlçties marðrutu; laipot, lai neie-
spertu dubïos.

XVIII. Account for the use of the synonyms in the following


sentences.
1. I will not attempt to play the part that Paris played on another
occasion. 2. All he had tried to forget came back, rushed at him,
overthrew him. The dull pain and the life slowly dripping out of him.
3. Nature and he attempted no other concealment than the ordinary
mask men wear. 4. He determined to try his hand at negotiation.

65
5. But, however that may be, I can only ask you, tonight to lend me
your attention for a few moments while I endeavour to express to
you in words what my feelings are on this occasion.

XIX. Fill in the blanks with the necessary form of “try” or


“attempt”.
1. She … to stop him but he was going too fast. 2. Paul … to ask a
question but the others shouted him down. 3. The scientists … to
prove that the disease was caused by radiation but the evidence
was inconclusive. 4. In “Oliver Twist” Dickens … to show the appalling
conditions in which many people lived at that time. 5. John … to
grow tomatoes in the garden but the plants hardly produced any
fruit. 6. We must … to find a better method. 7. The Gadfly … to
escape from prison, but failed, as he was ill. 8. Once I … to swim
across a lake but soon gave it up. 9. No matter how hard I … I
couldn’t convince him of the truth. 10. Do … to come. We’ll wait for
you. 11. The boys … to climb the mountain, but as they had no
special equipment or preliminary training, they soon gave it up.

XX. Read each sentence as it stands and then reword it using


“try”, either with the gerund or the infinitive.
Model: A. Cook the mushrooms in butter and see if you like them
that way. Try cooking the mushrooms in butter.
B. I did my best to explain it to her but I don’t know whether
she understood. I tried to explain it to her.
1. Drink your tea with milk. You may prefer it that way. 2. I know
you’re very busy but do your best to come tomorrow. 3. We did our
best to mend the television, but we didn’t succeed. 4. We may not
be able to help you but we’ll do our best. 5. Use this shampoo and
tell me what you think of it. 6. I did my best to persuade Susan not
to go, but it was useless. 7. Study in the morning. You may find it
easier. 8. Make an effort to imitate my pronunciation. 9. Speak
French and see if they understand you. 10. You’ll never learn to
speak French unless you make an attempt to speak it. 11. I’ll change
doctors and see whether I get better treatment. 12. We must do
our best to find a nanny.

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XXI. Fill in the blanks with price, cost, value, worth and reword
the sentences using a verb where this is possible without
changing the sense.
1. What is the … of this suitcase? 2. He bought the table for Ls 2,–
but its real … is much higher. 3. What is the … of running a car?
4. The … of coffee rose sharply on the world market. 5. I refuse to
pay such a high … 6. The … of living continues to rise. 7. These old
books have considerable … 8. The … of taking electricity to the
village was said to be too great. 9. Who will pay the … of transport?
10. She did not know the … of the ring, which had been left to her
by her mother. 11. Please ask the saleslady what this coat … 12. Is
the suit … the money you paid for it? 13. This experiment is very
important, it’s … sacrificing some sleep for it. 14. This looks like a
very expensive dress. It must have … you a fortune. 15. You
sacrificed so much for her, was it …? – Oh, yes, no matter what it
… me to give her an education, I don’t regret it.

XXII. Translate into English.


1. Cik maksâ ðîs kurpes? 2. Viòam nâcâs apmaksât bojâto preèu
vçrtîbu. 3. Pârtikas preèu cenas nepârtraukti kâpj. 4. Viòa samak-
sâja par kleitu Ls 50,–, taèu man ðíiet, ka tâ nav ðîs naudas vçrta.
5. Ðî pulksteòa laboðana maksâs Ls 2,–. 6. Transportçðanas maksa
ir Ls 100,–. 7. Tas viòam neko nemaksâ. 8. Cenâ ietilpst arî aparâta
uzstâdîðana. 9. Ðo filmu ir vçrts noskatîties. 10. Ðîs mçbeles novçr-
tçja par Ls 500,–. 11. Viòa neuzmanîba gandrîz maksâja viòam
dzîvîbu. 12. Tava kleita maksâ vairâk nekâ tu par to samaksâji.
13. Ziemâ âboli dârgâki nekâ vasarâ.

XXIII. Answer the questions.


1. On what occasions are toasts proposed? 2. When do you feel
shame? 3. What behaviour would you call shameful? 4. Is there a
large choice of goods in our shops? 5. How do you choose your
friends? 6. How often do we elect the Saeima? 7. Do you enjoy
going to the theatre, concerts? How often do you do it? 8. Do you
enjoy good health? 9. Would you try for a scholarship if you were
offered to do it? 10. Why is it necessary to try clothes on before
buying them? 11. What would you like to try your hand at?
12. What work can be trying to your eyes? 13. What person would

67
you call trying to deal with? 14. In what circumstances do you lose
your head? 15. What makes you lose your temper? 16. What
situations make you be at a loss? 17. What may a careless driving
cost you and other people? 18. What is it you would do at all costs?
19. When are top prices charged? 20. What are the problems you’d
like to solve?

XXIV. In what circumstances would you say:


1. When do you think he is going to propose to you? 2. I propose
your health! 3. Will you please propose me for your club? 4. Who
could help me to solve my financial troubles? 5. What a shame to
deceive other people! 6. You’ll be a shame to your family if you do
this! 7. I don’t think you’ll be so greedy and choose the biggest
apple. 8. Do just as you choose. 9. This is your own choice. 10. Oh,
he enjoys quite a good income! 11. Try to do your best at the
exam. 12. Please try me for this job. 13. I’d like to try my hand at
drawing. 14. Oh, she is such a trying person! 15. This machine
should be put to trial. 16. No wonder he was put on trial! 17. You
seem to have lost interest in theatre. 18. Oh, dear! You are losing
your hair! 19. I shall buy the book without regard to cost. 20. It cost
me much time and effort. 21. Don’t shout at the top of your voice!

XXV. Translate into English.


1. Vairâkas valstis iesniedza sadarbîbas piedâvâjumus mûsu valstij.
2. Sapulce izteica vairâkus priekðlikumus, un tie tika pieòemti.
3. Es izvirzu Dþonu Smitu priekðsçdçtâja amatam. 4. Ðîs problçmas
nav atrisinâmas. 5. Viòð nevarçja vairs atrast risinâjumu savâm
naudas problçmâm. 6. Sev par kaunu man jâatzîstas, ka jau veselu
nedçïu neesmu rakstîjis vecâkiem. 7. Meitene saprata, ka skolotâja
redz viòas melus, un aiz kauna nokâra galvu. 8. Ðim cilvçkam nav
nemaz kauna. 9. Reizçm ir ïoti grûti izvçlçties, kuru ceïu iet. 10. Ðis
cilvçks ïoti rûpîgi izvçlas savus draugus. 11. Lûdzu, esi uzmanîgs
savâ izvçlç. Ðoreiz tas ir ïoti svarîgi. 12. Notika pilsçtas paðvaldîbas
vçlçðanas, un cilvçki ievçlçja deputâtus pilsçtas Domç. 13. Vakar
es biju draudzenes dzimðanas dienâ, un man tur ïoti patika.
14. Man patîk simfoniskâs mûzikas koncerti. 15. Mçìini to izdarît
labi. 16. Man ðî cepure noteikti jâuzlaiko. 17. Pamçìini, cik âtri tu
vari paskriet. 18. Darbs ar mazo zçnu bija liels pârbaudîjums viòa

68
pacietîbai. 19. Ðodien gan mums bija nogurdinoða diena! 20. Dzîve
pilna pârbaudîjumiem. 21. Tiesa ilga vairâkas dienas. 22. Cik maksâ
ðîs tases? 23. Tava vieglprâtîba var tev dârgi maksât. 24. Dzîves
dârdzîba pieaug. 25. No savas pieredzes zinu, ka komplikâcijas
pçc ðîs slimîbas var bût ïoti nopietnas. 26. Viòð nesen pazaudçjis
darbu. 27. Uzzinâjis, ka zaudçjis derîbas, viòð zaudçja arî
paðsavaldîðanos un izplûda asarâs. 28. Meitene ir ïoti skaista, un
nav brînums, ka tik daudzi viòâ iemîlas. 29. Viòa cîtîgi centâs
nepazaudçt priekðâ braucoðo maðînu no redzesloka, taèu tâ
brauca ar lielâku âtrumu un drîz, strauji attâlinâdamâs, nozuda aiz
lîkuma. 30. Uzrakstiet lapaspuses augðdaïâ datumu. 31. Viòð
parasti bija pirmais skolçns klasç. 32. Meistars vçrîgi noskatîja jauno
cilvçku no galvas lîdz kâjâm un tad piekrîtoði pamâja ar galvu.

TEXT EXERCISES
I. Answer the following questions.
1. Who came to Mr. Parker? 2. What did Mrs. Rymer look like?
3. What was her problem? 4. Why was it so hard for her to spend
her money? 5. How did she get her money? 6. What do we learn
about her husband Abner? 7. Did they enjoy spending money and
being rich? 8. What did Mrs. Rymer complain of? 9. Did Mr. Parker
promise to help her? On what conditions?

II. Pick out from the text words and phrases:


1. describing Mrs. Rymer’s appearance;
2. describing her dress;
3. describing a luxurious house;
4. which do not correspond to the norms of Standard English in
your opinion.

III. Find Latvian for:


a heavy fur coat; a highly coloured face; fashionably dressed hair;
tips of curled ostrich; rough accent; country house; to court sb.; to
have a weak chest; silk cushions; swell dressmakers; to nod
sympathetically; to adopt unusual methods; to pay top price; to
work out a process; to want subscriptions.

69
Find sentences with these combinations in the text and explain
their meaning.

IV. What nouns can you add to the following adjectives:


big-boned, coloured, curled, rough, fair, rare, grand, swell,
wasteful, professional, reasonable.

V. Find English equivalents for the following Latvian words and


word combinations in the text:
ievest istabâ, neveikla (lempîga) figûra, tçrçt (naudu), risinât prob-
lçmu (jautâjumu), apprecçties, seja atmaiga, ienest naudu, atlaisties
zîda spilvenos, pirmklasîga vannas istaba, vçlçties çst maltîtes,
interese par dzîvi.

VI. Change each sentence so that it has an opposite meaning


by substituting antonyms and antonymous phrases for the
underlined words.
1. He couldn’t just sit and watch this unfair competition. 2. He is a
very nice person to deal with. 3. I want to save my money. 4. He
got a very good job. 5. He hated swimming in this pond. 6. They
have found a very interesting book.

VII. Reproduce the parts of the text in which these words and
phrases are used. Use these phrases in short stories of your
own.
to raise one’s eyebrows; to plump oneself down; to have a rough
accent; to find sth. difficult; to travel a bit; to hand sth. out; to be
mistaken; to come from; to get married; to look younger; to work
sth. out; to employ sb.; to be fun; to ring the bell for sth.; to go to
sb. for sth.; to fancy sth.; to seem wasteful; to want subscriptions;
to give back; to open one’s mouth; to risk sth.

VIII. Learn the phrases listed right after the text and interpret
their meaning in the sentences from the text.

XIX. Say whether you agree or disagree with these statements.


Give your reasoning.
1. It is most original to ask how to spend one’s money in these
days. 2. It is important to have children in the family. 3. Having a lot

70
of money is fun only for some time. 4. It seems wasteful not to be
able to do anything with money. 5. It is important to have friends.
6. To have interest in life is very essential. 7. If you pay for a thing
you should take good care that you get it.

X. Make up your dialogues discussing the following situations:


1. You have a lot of money and you don’t know what to do with it.
2. You want to look very smart but you don’t have much money to
spend on your clothes.
3. You are gradually losing your friends because you have become
rich.
4. How large should a family be?

XI. Make up your plan and retell the text.

DISCUSSION EXERCISES
I. Read texts A, B, C.
A. LEG TO STAND ON
Legs are the base of the body. They offer support and balance,
as well as a way to move from one place to another. Legs also
have provided some colourful expressions used in everyday
speech.
One of them is “no leg to stand on”. It means a person has no
proof to support his actions or opinions. It was first used about
500 years ago.
The expression is often used in discussions of court trials. One
lawyer might say that another lawyer had no leg to stand on,
because there was no evidence to prove his case.
“To have a leg up” is a good thing. That expression means you
are ahead of someone else in a situation. It is used when someone
has a special ‘it’, something that helps to lift him above everyone
else. For example, you have “a leg up” on getting a job in a company
if your college studies were directly related to the job. You would
also have a “leg up” on getting the job if your father owned the
company.

71
An expression heard often in expensive stores is that something
costs “an arm and a leg”. When you say that you paid an arm and
a leg for a new coat, you are saying that it costs a lot of money.
Another common expression is to “pull someone’s leg”. When
you “pull someone’s leg” you play a friendly joke on him. Usually, it
is an attempt to make him believe something that is not true. For
example, if you bought a cheap coat, then told a friend you paid
an arm and a leg for it, you would be “pulling his leg”.
The American writer F. Scott Fitzgerald used the expression in
1925 in his book “The Great Gatsby”. “I suspected he was pulling
my leg, but a glance at him made me believe otherwise.”
Some experts say the expression may have come long ago
from a group in England called the “trippers-up”. They were
criminals who robbed their victims after pulling their legs from under
them.
If you find yourself on “your last legs”, you better sit down for
awhile and rest. Being “on your last legs,” can mean that you are
so tired you cannot continue. After walking around an art museum
for several hours, you might tell a friend that you cannot take another
step. You say to him, “I am on my last legs”.
The expression also can be used to describe the condition of
a business. A company is on its last legs when its financial situation
is so bad that it is about to fail.
One final “leg” expression in common use is “shake a leg”.
When someone tells you to “shake a leg,” he is asking you to hurry.
A father, for example, might tell his son, “Shake a leg. If you don’t
hurry, you will be late for school.”
From “Words and Their Stories”. VOA Special English

B. KEEP YOUR SHIRT ON


The shirt has been a common piece of clothing for men and
women for a great many centuries. Some of the expressions made
from the world are as old, and as common, as the shirt itself.
“Keep your shirt on.” That sounds like good advice for anyone,
especially on a cold day. But the expression “keep your shirt on”
gives a very different kind of advice.

72
It means stay calm, do not get excited. Or, it can mean slow
down, do not be in such a hurry. The meaning depends on the
situation.
Americans began using the expression about one hundred
fifty years ago. Back then, men often fought with their fists over a
woman, or money owed from playing cards, or almost anything.
Before the men would fight, they almost always would remove their
shirts. The expression, “keep your shirt on,” was advice to stay
calm. It was a way of trying to stop the fight.
You may say “keep your shirt on” to someone who is getting
angry with you. Or, you may say it to someone who is in a terrible
hurry. For example, a wife might tell her husband not to worry, to
“keep his shirt on,” that they have lots of time to get to the airport.
If you “lose your shirt” you are in big trouble. It means you
have lost everything you own, even your shirt. You can “lose your
shirt” if you make poor investments. Or if your business suddenly
fails. Or if you bet too much money on a losing horse race. “Losing
your shirt” is a terrible thing to happen.
If you have lost all your money you may be forced to “roll up
your shirtsleeves” and get to work. When you “roll up your
shirtsleeves” you are showing that you are ready to work hard, that
you are really serious about your work.
Sometimes, “rolling up your shirtsleeves” does not help. In that
case, you need a very kind friend, a friend who is willing to give
you the “shirt off his back”. When someone offers you “the shirt off
his back,” he is offering whatever help you need. This is the kind of
friend to have if you have “lost your shirt”.
You do not need a friend who is a “stuffed shirt”. A stuffed shirt
is a person who takes himself too seriously. He is no fun to be with.
All he talks about are his family connections, his money, his
important job and the famous people he knows.
So take my advice. “Keep your shirt on” and stay away from
“stuffed shirts”. If you are unlucky enough to “lose your shirt,” “roll
up your sleeves” and find a friend who will give you the “shirt off his
back.”

73
C. PULL UP YOUR SOCKS
The socks that people wear on their feet are not very exciting.
But several interesting English expressions are made from them.
One such expression is “Pull up your socks.” It means try to do
better. Improve your performance.
Imagine a basketball team near the end of an important game.
The players are losing. They are so tired that even their socks look
tired. The tops of their socks are falling down over their shoes. The
coach calls time out to talk to his team. “Take a deep breath,” he
tells them. “Get organized. If you pull up your socks, you can win
this game.” He is telling them they can win, if they start playing
better.
A newspaper recently reported that a political leader told
members of his party they needed to “pull up their socks and get
back in the game.”
Another expression is to “sock” some money away. It means to
save some money, instead of spending it. A friend might tell you
for example that she is “socking” some money away for a holiday
trip. Word experts say the expression probably came from people
hiding their savings in a sock instead of putting it in a bank.
Another common expression is “to knock your socks off.” The
expression is used to describe something that is so great it will
excite anyone who hears about it. The listener will become so excited
he will jump right out his socks. A salesman, for example, tells a
store owner about a new product. “Wait until you try it,” he says, “It
will knock your socks off.” A teenager might use the expression to
tell a friend about a new rock music album, one that will “knock her
socks off.”
Flyers use another sock expression when they talk about an
airport closed by fog or other bad weather. They say that the airport
is “socked in.”
The expression goes back to the days before pilots had radios
and other electronic instruments to help them land. To land safely,
they needed to know the direction of the wind, and how fast it was
blowing.
In the old days, they got that information from a wind sock.
This was a long, tubelike piece of cloth that looked a little like a

74
sock that a giant might wear. The windsock hung from a pole that
stood on top of the highest airport building. When the wind blew
through the windsock, the sock turned to show the direction of the
wind. And by seeing how far out the sock extended, fliers could
get a good idea of wind speed. But they could get this information
only if they could see the windsock. When fog hid the sock, they
said the landing field was “socked in”. And they landed somewhere
else.

II. Make up your own situations with the idioms used in the
texts.

III. Which other idioms on articles of clothing do you know.


What are their equivalents in Latvian?

IV. Read the jokes and then make up questions on them.


1. A man went into a tailor’s shop to buy a suit, and the owner of
the shop asked his name, address, date of birth, religion,
occupation, politics, school, hobbies and his wife’s maiden
name.
“But all I want is a suit,” protested the customer. “And I’ll pay
you cash for it.”
“Sir,” replied the tailor, “I’m no ordinary tailor. I don’t just sell
you a suit. I sell you a suit that is exactly right for you. I need all
this information because I put it all through a computer and
get an exact picture of your real self. Then I send to Australia
and my representative there chooses sheep that suit your
practical personality. The wool from those sheep is exported
to America where it is combed and sponged according to a
secret formula. Then the wool is sent to Scotland where it is
woven in a climate suited to your temperament. Then it is sent
to me and I measure you carefully. After I have the suit, there
are three more fittings, and then …”
“Just a minute,” interrupted the customer, “I need this suit
tomorrow.”
“Don’t worry,” said the tailor. “You’ll have it.”

75
2. John came into the pawnshop. “How much will you give me for
this overcoat?”
The shop-keeper looked at it critically. “Four dollars,” he said.
“Why,” cried John, “that coat’s worth ten dollars if it’s worth a
penny.”
“I couldn’t give you ten dollars for two like that,” answered the
shop-keeper. “Four dollars or nothing.”
“Are you sure that’s all it’s worth?” asked John.
“Four dollars,” repeated the shop-keeper.
“Well, here’s your four dollars,” said John. “This overcoat was
hanging outside your shop, and I was wondering how much it
was really worth.”
3. She was very well dressed, and, as she walked into the
fashionable milliner’s shop, the manageress herself came
forward to serve her.
“I see by your advertisement,” she said, “that you have just
received two thousand hats from Paris.”
“Yes, madam,” the respectful manageress informed her.
“Good,” said the girl, taking off her hat, “I wish to try them on.”
4. Henry Brown arrived late at the country club dance, and
discovered that in slipping on the icy pavement outside, he
had torn his trousers.
“Come into the ladies’ dressing room, Henry,” said his wife.
“There’s no one there and I’ll pin it up for you.”
Examination showed that the rip was too large to be pinned. A
maid brought needle and thread and was stationed at the door
to keep out intruders, while Mr. Brown took off his trousers. His
wife went busily to work.
Suddenly an excited voice was heard: “We must come in, maid.
Mrs. Jones is ill. Quick, let us in.”
“Here,” said the resourceful Mrs. Brown to her terrified
husband, “get into this closet for a minute.”
She opened the door and pushed her husband through it just
in time. But instantly, from the opposite side of the door came
loud thumps and the agonized voice of Mr. Brown demanding
that his wife open it at once.

76
“But the women are here,” Mrs. Brown objected.
“Oh, damn the women,” cried Mr. Brown, “I’m out in the ball-
room.”
5. Brown: Why do people always select the serpant as the symbol
of evil?
Robinson: Well, the poor thing hasn’t a leg to stand on.
6. Politician: Congratulate me, my dear, I’ve been elected a
senator.
His wife (in surprise): Honestly?
Politician: Now what the devil did you want to bring up that
point for?

V. Read and interpret the proverbs. Try to find Latvian


equivalents.
1. Choose an author as you choose a friend.
2. Of two evils choose the lesser.
3. Nothing attempted nothing gained.
4. Either attempt it not, or succeed.
5. Try to tame a mad horse, but knock him not at head.
6. A joke never gains an enemy but often loses a friend.
7. Beggars cannot be choosers.
8. Grasp all, lose all.
9. He that spares the bad injures the good.
10. If there were no clouds, we should not enjoy the sun.
11. It is the first step that costs.
12. Politeness costs little (nothing), but yields much.
13. Poverty is not a shame, but the being ashamed of it is.
14. The rotten apple injures its neighbours.

VI. Use the proverbs in the situations.

VII. It is interesting to know that:


… the muff as a garment first appeared over 500 years ago in
Venice, and was first worn by men. Women took a fancy to it at the
end of the XVIII century, but at first they wore it only in summer.
… the students of Oxford University wear black gowns.

77
… present-day raincoats come from mackintoshes, coats made
of waterproof material, named after the Englishman Charles
Mackintosh (1766–1843), the inventor.

VIII. Read the statements and discuss them. Which of them seem
old-fashioned and not acceptable for you?
1. One should not follow ever turn of the latest fashions blindly. 2. A
girl should adapt a fashion to her own personality and should not
adapt herself to it, whether the fashion is suited to her or not.
3. Clothes should be neat, well-made, in perfect taste, but not too
conspicuous. 4. Do not wear clothes that need constant arranging.
5. Accessories should always be in harmony with the dress and
the wearer. 6. A woman does not take off her gloves to shake hands,
no matter when and where, and never apologizes for wearing
gloves when shaking hands. A man wearing gloves never shakes
hands with a woman without first taking off his right glove. If in the
street he cannot free his left hand to take his right glove off, he
says “Excuse me glove”. 7. When arranging a party, a hostess
should be less elaborately dressed than her guests.

IX. Can you solve the problem?


CROSSING THE RIVER
One day a farmer had to cross a river, together with his dog, a
sheep, and a bale of hay. The only boat available was so small that
he could only get one animal or the hay into the boat besides
himself. The trouble was, if the dog was left alone with the sheep, it
would attack it; if the sheep was left alone with the hay, it would eat
it.
How did the farmer get himself, the animals and the hay all
safely across the river?

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UNIT 3

O. HENRY
(1862–1910)
O. Henry is one of the best known short-story writers of our
century. The real name of the writer was William Sydney Porter. He
was born in Greenboro, North California in the family of a doctor.
He was brought up by his aunt because his mother died when he
was a small boy. After finishing school at the age of fifteen, Porter
worked as a clerk for five years in his uncle’s chemist shop in
Greenboro. Then he went to Texas because he wanted to see new
places. There he saw cowboys, prairies and mustangs, but it was
not easy for him to find work. For two years he worked on a farm,
then he became a clerk in an office and at last got a job in a small
bank. During this period he studied languages and became
interested in literature.
Soon he married and when a daughter was born to them, Porter
was a happy husband and father, but his happiness did not last
long.
One day a theft of a thousand dollars was discovered at the
bank where he worked. Though it was not he who had taken the
money, Porter left the town and went to Central America where he
stayed for some time. But when he heard that his wife was very ill,
he returned home and was put into prison for three years.
After his wife’s death Porter very often thought about his little
daughter. She was living with her relatives and was told that her
father had gone very far away and would not return soon. The
thought that she would not receive a Christmas present from him
that year was a sad one. To get some money for a present, Porter
decided to write a story and send it to one of the American
magazines. The story “Whistling Dick’s Christmas Present” was
published in 1899, and Porter’s daughter received a Christmas
present. Porter had signed the story “O. Henry” – the pen-name
that came into his head. While he was in prison, he published many
other stories.
In 1901, when he was released from prison, he settled in New
York, and continued writing short stories for different magazines.

79
Very soon he became one of the most popular short-story writers
in America.
O. Henry’s stories won great popularity and have been
translated into many languages. Most of them have unexpected
endings and the reader is always taken by surprise.
During his short literary activity, O. Henry wrote 273 short stories
and one novel “Cabbages and Kings” (1904).
In his stories O. Henry describes amusing incidents of everyday
life in large cities, on the farms, and on the roads of America. The
author’s sympathy is with the common people of America, whose
life he knew very well. His greatest wish was that people should be
happy.

Answer the following questions:


1. What is the real O. Henry’s name? 2. Where was he born? Find
this place on the map and tell what you know about this country.
3. What was his father’s occupation? 4. Why was the writer brought
up by his aunt? 5. At what age did he finish school? What did he
do after that? 6. Why did he go to Texas? What do you know of
Texas? Can you find it on the map? 7. What did he do in Texas?
8. What can you tell about his family life? 9. Why did Porter go to
Central America? 10. When was he put into prison? 11. What was
his daughter doing? 12. Why did he write a story? Was it published?
What pen-name did he use to sign the story? 13. Where did he live
when he was released from prison? 14. What did he describe in
his stories?

THE COP AND THE ANTHEM


(an extract)

On his bench in Madison Square Soapy moved uneasily. When


wild geese honk high of nights, and when women without sealskin
coats grow kind to their husbands, and when Soapy moves uneasily
on his bench in the park, you may know that winter is near at hand.
A dead leaf fell in Soapy’s lap. That was Jack Frost’s card.
Jack is kind to the regular denizens of Madison Square, and gives
fair warning of his annual call. At the corners of four streets he

80
hands his pasteboard to the North Wind, footman of the mansion
of All Outdoors, so that the inhabitants thereof may make ready.
Soapy’s mind became cognizant of the fact that the time had
come for him to resolve himself into a singular Committee of Ways
and Means to provide against the coming rigour. And therefore he
moved uneasily on his bench.
The hibernatorial ambitions of Soapy were not of the highest.
In them there were no considerations of Mediterranean cruises, of
soporific Southern skies or drifting in the Vesuvian Bay. Three
months on the Island was what his soul craved. Three months of
assured board and bed and congenial company, safe from Boreas
and bluecoats, seemed to Soapy the essence of things desirable.
Soapy, having decided to go to the Island, at once set about
accomplishing his desire. There were many easy ways of doing
this. The pleasantest was to dine luxuriously at some expensive
restaurant; and then, after declaring insolvency, be handed over
quietly and without uproar to a policeman. An accommodating
magistrate would do the rest.
Soapy left his bench and strolled out of the square and across
the level sea of asphalt, where Broadway and Fifth Avenue flow
together. Up Broadway he turned, and halted at a glittering café,
where are gathered together nightly the choicest products of the
grape, the silkworm, and the protoplasm.
Soapy had confidence in himself from the lowest button of his
vest upward. He was shaven, and his coat was decent and his
neat black, ready-tied four-in-hand had been presented to him by
a lady missionary on Thanksgiving Day. If he could reach a table in
the restaurant unsuspected success would be his. The portion of
him that would show above the table would raise no doubt in the
waiter’s mind. A roasted mallard duck, thought Soapy, would be
about the thing – with a bottle of Chablis, and then Camembert, a
demi-tasse and a cigar. One dollar for the cigar would be enough.
The total would not be so high as to call forth any supreme
manifestation of revenge from the café management; and yet the
meat would leave him filled and happy for the journey to his winter
refuge.

81
But as Soapy set foot inside the restaurant door the head
waiter’s eye fell upon his frayed trousers and decadent shoes.
Strong and ready hands turned him about and conveyed him in
silence and haste to the sidewalk and averted the ignoble fate of
the menaced mallard.
Soapy turned off Broadway. It seemed that his route to the
coveted Island was not to be an epicurean one. Some other way
of entering limbo must be thought of.
At a corner of Sixth Avenue electric lights and cunningly
displayed wares behind plate-glass made a shop window
conspicuous. Soapy took a cobblestone and dashed it through
the glass. People came running around the corner, a policeman in
the lead. Soapy stood still, with his hands in his pockets, and smiled
at the sight of brass buttons.
“Where’s the man that done that?” inquired the officer excitedly.
“Don’t you figure out that I might have had something to do
with it?” said Soapy, not without sarcasm, but friendly, as one greets
good fortune.
The policeman’s mind refused to accept Soapy even as a clue.
Men who smash windows do not remain to parley with the law’s
minions. They take to their heels. The policeman saw a man half
way down the block running to catch a car. With drawn club he
joined in the pursuit. Soapy, with disgust in his heart, loafed along,
twice unsuccessful.
Would never a policeman lay hands on him? In his fancy the
Island seemed an unattainable Arcadia. He buttoned his thin coat
against the chilling wind.
At length Soapy reached one of the avenues to the east where
the glitter and turmoil was but faint. He set his face down this towards
Madison Square, for the homing instinct survives even when the
home is a park bench.
But on an unusually quiet corner Soapy came to a standstill.
Here was an old church, quaint and rambling and gabled. Through
one violet-stained window a soft light glowed, where, no doubt,
the organist loitered over the keys, making sure of his mastery of
the coming Sabbath anthem. For there drifted out to Soapy’s ears
sweet music that caught and held him transfixed against the
convolutions of the iron fence.

82
The moon was above, lustrous and serene; vehicles and
pedestrians were few; sparrows twittered sleepily in the eaves –
for a little while the scene might have been a country churchyard.
And the anthem that the organist played cemented Soapy to the
iron fence, for he had known it well in the days when his life
contained such things as mothers and roses and ambitions and
friends and immaculate thoughts and collars.
The conjunction of Soapy’s receptive state of mind and the
influences about the old church wrought a sudden and wonderful
change in his soul. He viewed with swift horror the pit into which he
had tumbled, the degraded days, unworthy desires, dead hopes,
wrecked faculties, and base motives that made up his existence.
And also in a moment his heart responded thrillingly to this
novel mood. An instantaneous and strong impulse moved him to
battle with his desperate fate. He would pull himself out of the mire;
he would make a man of himself again; he would conquer the evil
that had taken possession of him. Those solemn but sweet organ
notes had set up a revolution in him. To-morrow he would go into
the roaring downtown district and find work. A fur importer had
once offered him a place as driver. He would find him to-morrow
and ask for the position. He would be somebody in the world. He
would –
Soapy felt a hand laid on his arm. He looked quickly around
into the broad face of a policeman.
“What are you doin’ here?” asked the officer.
“Nothin’,” said Soapy.
“Then come along,” said the policeman.
“Three months on the Island,” said the Magistrate in the Police
Court the next morning.

PHRASES
1. to grow kind to sb.
2. to set about doing sth.
3. to raise doubt in
4. in the lead
5. to take to one’s heels
6. to come to a standstill
7. to pull oneself out of the mire

83
VOCABULARY ITEMS
1. hand n – 1. part of the human arm beyond the wrist: with his
hands in his pockets.
Phrases:
at hand – near. He lives close at hand. The examinations are at
hand.
by hand – a) without the use of machinery. Are your socks knitted
by hand?
b) without the use of the post office. The note was delivered
by hand.
from hand to hand – directly, from one person to another. Buckets
of water were passed from hand to hand to put the fire out.
give / lend sb. a hand (with sth.) – help with. Give me a hand with
washing-up, please.
have one’s hands full – be fully occupied.
have / get the upper hand (of sb.) – have / get the advantage or
control (over).
have a free hand; give / allow sb. a free hand – permission to do
what seems best without consulting others.
hand in hand – holding hands; together. War and misery go hand
in hand.
Hands off! – Don’t touch!
Hands up! – Put your hands up!
in hand – in reserve. I still have some money in hand.
in the hands of – being looked after or managed.
in God hands – being well cared for.
lift / raise a hand against sb. – threaten, attack him.
live from hand to mouth – spending money as soon as it is received.
off one’s hands – taken from one’s responsibility. I’d be glad to get
it off my hands.
out of hand – out of control. The football fans have got quite out of
hand.
shake hands with sb. – grasp his hands as a greeting.
take sth. / sb. in hand – take charge of.
wash one’s hands of – say that one will no longer be responsible
for.

84
2. power; possession; responsibility.
Phrase:
in sb’s hands – The property is no longer in my hands.
3. person from whom news etc. comes: at first / second hand.
I learnt the news at first hand.
4. workman. The factory has taken 200 extra hands.
5. pointer or indicator on the dial of a watch / clock or other
instrument: the hour hand of a watch.
Compounds:
hand-bag, hand-cuff, handful, hand-luggage, hand-made,
hand-work, handwriting.
hand v – give or pass. Please hand me the book.
Phrases:
hand sth. down (to sb.) – pass by tradition; inheritance. We cannot
always observe the traditions handed down to us from the past.
hand sth. out (to sb.) – distribute.
hand sth. in – give sth. to someone in charge.
hand sb. over (to sb.) – deliver a person to authority. He was
handed over to the police.
handicap n – anything likely to lessen one’s chance of success.
Poor eyesight is a handicap.
handicraft n – art or craft needing skill with the hands.
handkerchief n
handy adj. – 1. (of persons) clever with the hands.
2. (of things) convenient, useful. A good toolbox is a handy
thing to have in a house.
3. not far away; available for use. Always keep a first-aid kit
handy.

2. die v – 1. come to the end of life; cease to live: flowers soon


die if they are left without water.
die in one’s bed – of old age or illness.
die in harness – while still at one’s usual occupation, still working.
be dying for sth. / to do sth. – have a strong wish. We’re all dying
for a drink. She’s dying to know where you’ve been.
2. pass from human knowledge; be lost. His fame will never
die.

85
die away – lose strength, become faint or weak. The breeze died
away.
die down – (of a fire in a fireplace, etc.) burn with less heat; (of
excitement, etc.) become less violent; (of noise, etc.) become
less loud.
die out – become extinct; come to a complete end. Many old
customs are gradually dying out.
Antonym: to live.
dead adj – 1. (of plants, animals, persons) no longer living:
dead flowers / leaves. The hunter fired and the tiger fell dead.
wait for a dead man’s shoes – wait for sb. to die in order to step
into his position.
the dead – all those who have died or been killed: to rise from the
dead; the dead and the wounded.
2. without movement or activity: in the dead hours of the night.
be at / come to / reach a dead end – (fig.) the stage from which
further progress appears impossible.
3. (of languages, customs, etc.) no longer used or observed.
dead language
4. (of the hands, etc.) numbed, e.g. by cold; unable to feel
anything: dead fingers.
dead to – unconscious of, hardened against: dead to all feelings
of shame.
dead silence – complete silence.
dead sleep – a deep sleep (as if dead).
5. that can no longer be used: a dead match; a dead wire.
The telephone went dead.
deadline n – fixed limit of time for finishing a piece of work:
meet a deadline.
Antonym: alive, living.
dead adv – completely; absolutely; thoroughly: dead beat /
tired; dead certain / sure; dead drunk.
deaden v – take away, deprive of, force, feeling, brightness:
drugs to deaden the pain; thick walls that deaden street noises.
deadly adj – 1. causing, likely to cause, death: deadly weapons
/ poison. Fog is one of the sailor’s deadliest enemies.
2. filled with hate: deadly enemies.

86
3. that may result in damnation: the seven deadly sins.
4. like that of death: a deadly paleness.
death n – dying; ending of life. There have been several deaths
from drowing here this summer.
at death’s door – dying; in danger of death.
bore sb. to death – bore him extremely.
sick to death of sb. / sth. – extremely tired, bored, etc.
put sb. to death – kill him; execute him.
death-roll – list of persons killed (in war, in an earthquake, etc.).
Antonym: life.
deathless adj – never dying or forgotten; immortal: deathless
fame / glory.
deathlike adj – like that of death: a deathlike silence.

3. fall n – 1. act of falling: a fall from a horse; a fall in price /


temperature.
2. amount of rain that falls; distance by which sth. falls or comes
down. The fall of the river here is six feet.
3. (often pl) place where a river falls over cliffs, etc. Niagara
Falls.
4. (US) autumn: in the fall of 1970.
fall v – 1. fall (down / over) – come or go down freely. The
book fell from the table to the floor. He fell over into the water.
fall on one’s feet – (fig.) be fortunate; get out of a difficulty
successfully. Some people always seem to fall on their feet.
2. fall (down / over) – no longer stand. Many trees fell in the
storm. Babies often fall down when they are learning to walk.
fall flat on one’s face – fall face down to the ground.
3. fall (down) – hang down. His beard fell to his chest. Her hair
/ cloak fell over her shoulders.
4. come or go to a lower level or point. The temperature fell
rapidly. His voice fell to a whisper.
5. fall (into) – become; pass into. His horse fell lame. He fell
silent. The old man fell asleep. He fell into a doze.
fall in love (with) – become filled with love (for). He fell in love with
an actress.
fall out of love (with) – cease to feel love (for).

87
6. fall upon – descend upon. Darkness fell upon the scene. A
great stillness had fallen upon everything.
7. (of a city, fort, etc.) be captured. Rome has fallen!
8. fall on – take the direction or position. A shadow fell on the
wall. His eye fell on a curious object.
9. fall on / upon / to – come by chance, design, or right. All the
expenses fell on me. The responsibility / blame, etc. fell upon
me.
10. occur, have as date. Easter falls early next year. Christmas
Day falls on a Monday this year.
fall back – retreat; move or turn back. Our attack was so vigorous
that the enemy had to fall back.
fall behind (with sth.) – fail to keep level; lag. He always falls behind
when we’re going uphill. I’ve fallen behind with my
correspondence.
fall down (on sth.): fall down on one’s promises / obligations (to
sb.).
fall for sth. / sb. – (colloq.) yield to the charms, attractions or merits
of. He falls for every pretty face he sees. Did he fall for your
suggestion.
fall in – collapse; give way. The roof fell in.
fall in with sb. / sth. – a) happen to meet.
b) agree to. He fell in with my views at once.
fall into sth. – be naturally divisible into. The subject falls into four
divisions.

4. consider v – 1. think about. Please consider my suggestion.


We are considering going to Canada.
2. take into account. We must consider the feelings of other
people.
all things considered – taking into account, all the events,
possibilities.
3. be of the opinion; regard as. They considered themselves
very important. Do you consider it wise to interfere?
considerable adj – great; much; important: a considerable
income / distance; a considerable man in local affairs.
considerably adv – much; a great deal. It’s considerably
colder this morning.

88
considerate adj – considerate (of) – thoughtful. It was
considerate of you not to play the piano while I was having a
sleep.
considerately adv
consideration n – 1. act of considering, thinking about. Please
give the matter your careful consideration. The proposals are
still under consideration.
leave sth. out of consideration – neglect or fail to consider it. There
is one important fact that has been left out of consideration.
take sth. into consideration – (esp.) make allowances for. When
marking Tom’s examination papers, the teacher took Tom’s long
illness into consideration.
2. consideration (for) – quality of being considerate. He has
never shown much consideration for his wife’s feelings.
in consideration of; out of consideration for – considering.
3. sth. which must be thought about; fact, thing, etc. thought
of as a reason. Time is an important consideration in this case.
Several considerations have influenced me in coming to a
decision.
on no consideration – in no circumstances; in no case.
considering prep – in view of; having regard to. She’s very
active, considering her age.

5. reach v – 1. reach (out) (for) – stretch out. He reached out his


hand for the knife, but it was too far away. He reached (out) for
the dictionary.
2. stretch out the hand for and take (sth.); get and give (sth.)
to. Can you reach that book for your brother? Please reach
me that book. He reached down the atlas from the top shelf.
3. (lit. or fig.) get to, go as far as: reach London; reach the
end of the chapter.
4. extend; go; pass. My land reaches as far as the river. The
speaker’s voice did not reach to the back of the hall.
as far as the eye can reach – to the horizon.
Synonyms: to reach, to achieve.
These two words are frequently confused because they both
may be translated into Latvian by “sasniegt”. However, they
cannot be used interchangeably.

89
To achieve – to carry sth. out successfully in spite of difficulties,
to accomplish a difficult, especially a high, aim or purpose.
Synonyms: to fulfill, to accomplish, to realize, to obtain, to attain.
E.g. One must work regularly on phonetic exercises if one wants
to achieve good results in the pronunciation of a foreign
language.
To reach – to stretch out, to extend, to arrive at a certain place,
to arrive at a certain period of time.
To reach is used only in the physical sense, when something
quite tangible is concerned.
E.g. He is so tall he almost reaches the ceiling.
To achieve is used when the goal or aim is not directly
perceptible; we achieve an aim or goal.
Phrases:
to reach old age; as far as the eye can reach; the memory
reaches back over many years; to reach someone by
telephone.
reach n – 1. (sing only) act of reaching or stretching out (a
hand, etc.): get sth. by a long reach.
2. extent to which a hand, etc. can be reached out. This boxer
has a long reach.
within / out of/ beyond reach: I like to have my reference books
within my reach / within easy reach. Put that bottle of weed-
killer out of the children’s reach / out of reach of the children.
3. continuous extent, esp. of a river or canal, that can be seen
between two bends or locks: one of the most beautiful reaches
of the Thames.

6. manage v – 1. control: manage a horse; manage a sailing-


boat; manage a business / household; manage a naughty child
/ one’s wife; the managing director.
2. manage (to do sth.); manage (with / without sth. / sb.) –
succeed; contrive. I shan’t be able to manage without help.
We can’t manage with these poor tools.
manageable adj – that can be managed; easily controlled.
manageability n

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management n – 1. managing or being managed. The failure
was caused by bad management. The business is under new
management.
2. skilful treatment. It needed a good deal of management to
persuade them to give me the job.
3. all those concerned in managing an industry, enterprise,
etc.: joint consultation between workers and management.
What this department store needs is a stronger management.
manager n – 1. person who controls a business, a hotel, etc.
2. one who conducts business, manages household affairs,
etc. in a certain way. My wife is an excellent manager.

7. leave v – 1. go away from. When did you leave London?


leave for – go away to. We’re leaving for Rome next week.
2. go away finally or permanently. When did you leave school?
He left medicine for the law.
3. neglect or fail to take. I’ve left my umbrella in the train. He
left half his work until the next day.
leave sb. / sth. behind – neglect or forget to bring or take. The
luggage has been left behind!
4. allow or cause to remain in a certain place or condition.
Leave your hat and coat in the hall. Don’t leave her waiting
outside in the rain.
leave sb. / sth. alone – not touch, spoil or interfere with. Leave the
cat alone.
leave sth. / sb. out – omit; fail to consider: leave out a possibility;
leave out a letter.
leave sth. over – postpone. That matter can be left over until the
committee meets next week.
leave it at that – do or say nothing more. There’s nothing we can
do; we must leave it at that.
leave sth. unsaid – not say it. Some things are better left unsaid.
leave much / a lot / sth. / nothing to be desired – be (un)satisfactory.
His behaviour leaves a lot / nothing to be desired.
5. (cause to) remain; allow to remain. Three from seven leaves
four (7 - 3 = 4). When I’ve paid all my debts, there’ll be nothing
left / I’ll have nothing left.

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Synonyms: to leave, to quit, to abandon, to forsake, to desert.
To leave to go away from a place or person. The general term.
No reason is implied.
E.g. to leave school / work / the house / the theatre /
neighbourhood etc.
To quit – to leave suddenly or to leave for good. To quit is more
formal than to leave except in a few phrases such as “to give
notice to quit” or “to quit office or service”. It is more in use in
America than England.
E.g. The population wanted the occupying forces to quit the
country. The house owner gave the tenants notice to quit.
To abandon – to give up (control or responsibility) completely;
to throw or cast away; to withdraw from persons or things.
Abandon can imply a dereliction of duty.
E.g. He abandoned all hope. Rats always abandon a sinking
ship.
To forsake – to withdraw one’s help from; to leave entirely.
Forsake is a literary term.
E.g. A doctor may not forsake his patients when they need
treatment.
To desert – to leave intentionally in violation of duty; to fall (of
courage, hope etc.).
E.g. to desert an army / one’s post. A man who deserts his
wife has to pay her an allowance.
leave n – 1. period of absence; occasion of being absent from
duty, etc.: have only two leaves in six years; a six months’ leave.
2. departure.
take (one’s) leave (of sb.) – say goodbye.
leave-taking n

8. rough adj – 1. (of surface) not level, smooth or polished; (of


roads) of irregular surface, not easy to walk or ride on: rough
paper; a fruit with a rough skin; cloth that is rough to the touch.
2. not calm or gentle: rough children; rough behaviour; a rough
sea. Keep away from the rough quarter of the town. He has a
rough tongue.
be rough on sb. – be unpleasant or unlucky for. It’s rather rough
on her, having to live in a caravan.

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give sb. / have a rough time – (cause sb. to) experience hardship.
3. made or done without attention to detail, esp. as a first
attempt: a rough sketch / translation; lead a rough life away
from civilization.
Synonyms:
I. rough, harsh, uneven, rugged come into comparison when
they mean “having not a smooth surface”. These words differ
in the shades of meaning and in usage.
Rough and harsh mean “coarse to the touch” as rough (harsh
fabric, texture, skin) but: rough paper (hair, grass, clothes).
Rough applies to surfaces having ridges and projections, as
rough surface, (road, stone etc.) e.g. Automobiles roared and
rattled over the rough country roads all night long.
Rugged as applied to edges means “jagged” as a rugged
coast (cliff).
Uneven means “not level”, “not flat”, an uneven ground (floor,
country), e.g. The words of this synonymic group are widely
used in the figurative sense.
Rough and harsh mean “disagreeable” and apply to things
which impress one’s feelings as being devoid of graciousness:
a rough / harsh voice (sound, tone, etc.).
Harsh, apart from rough, is applied to a person that is unfeeling,
cruel, indifferent to the pain he inflicts: a harsh critic / man. It
also means “severe”, “hard to bear”: a harsh judgement
(rebuke, sentence; climate; struggle), harsh punishment
(words).
Rough and rugged in reference to faces mean “heavy
featured”, “irregular”.
Rugged implies greater irregularity than rough.
Uneven means “not uniform”: uneven performance / playing,
acting.
II. rough, rude, crude, raw come into comparison when they
mean “unmanufactured”, “uncultivated”, “unfinished”,
“incomplete”, “not perfect”. In their literal meaning these words
differ in usage, as it is shown in the following collocations:
1) rough steel; a rough diamond; a rough copy (sketch); rough
chairs (tables);

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2) rude ore; rude implements;
3) crude oil (petroleum, rubber, sugar);
4) raw cotton (silk, hides, material);
5) raw fish (meat, vegetables, eggs etc. = uncooked).
These words are widely used figuratively. In their figurative
sense they are applicable to men, their minds and their
manners.
Rough, rude, crude are close in meaning suggesting low state
of culture, ignorance, impoliteness. However, these words
differ in nuances.
Rough, in reference to people, their conduct and speech
means “not refined or polished”, “uncivil”, as, a rough man;
rough language; a rough reply; a rough way (= course of
actions).
Rough, besides, means “uncultured but good-natured”, as, a
plain, rough, honest man.
Rude may mean “barbarous”, “insolent”, “uncivil”, as, a rude
man (reply, question); rude language.
Crude suggests lacking grace or taste.
E.g. He began to cheer her up with crude jokes and slap-stick
actions.
Crude, besides is used in the sense of “not properly worked
out”; “badly formed or done”, as, crude ideas (methods, acts).
Raw, when applied to man or man’s activities, means
“inexperienced”, “untrained”, “unskilled”, as, a raw recruit (lad,
youth, judgement).
roughly adv – 1. in a roughly manner: treat sb. roughly; a
roughly made table.
2. approximately: at a cost of roughly £5; roughly speaking.
rough adv – in a rough manner: play rough; treat sb. rough.
live rough – live in the open (as a vagrant may do).
sleep rough – (of homeless persons) sleep out of doors or wherever
there is some shelter.

9. run n – 1. act of running on foot: go for a short run across the


fields.
at a run – running. He started off at a run but soon tired and began
to walk.

94
2. excursion or visit: a run to Paris. Can we have a trial run in
the new car?
3. series of performances. The play had a long run / a run of
six months.
4. period; succession: a run of bad luck.
in the long run – ultimately. It pays in the long run to buy goods of
high quality.
5. way in which things tend to move. The run of events is rather
puzzling.
run v – 1. (of men and animals) move with quick steps. She
ran to meet us.
2. practise running for exercise or as a sport; compete in races
on foot. Is he running in the 100 metres?
3. run for – (esp. US) compete for (an elected office). Cf stand
for, the more usu. GB usage: run for President / for mayor.
run its course – develop in the usual or normal way. The disease
ran its course.
4. go forward with a sliding, smooth or continuous motion;
advance on. Trams run on rails; buses don’t run on rails.
5. be in action; work, be in working order. Don’t leave the engine
of your car running. The works have ceased running.
6. organize; manage; cause to be in operation: run a business /
a theatre / a bus company; run extra trains during the rush hours.
7. (of liquids, grain, sand, etc.) flow, drip; (of surfaces) be wet
(with); (of colours, e.g. dyes) flow and spread. Rivers run into
the sea. The tears ran down my cheeks. The floor was running
with water. Will the colours run if the dress is washed?
run a temperature – (colloq.) be feverish.
8. extend; have a certain course or order; be continued or
continuous: a road that runs across the plain. It happened
several days running. He hit the target seven times running.
The play ran (for) six months.
9. be told or written. The story runs that … The agreement
runs in these words.
Phrases:
run across – pay a short informal visit: run across to a neighbour’s
flat to borrow some sugar.

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run across sb. / sth. – meet or find by chance. I ran across my old
friend Jean in Paris last week.
run after sb. / sth. – a) try to catch. The dog was running after a
rabbit.
b) seek the society of; go after in order to get the attention of.
She runs after every good-looking man in the village.
run away – leave rapidly; flee; escape. Don’t run away – I want
your advice.
run back over sth. – review past events, etc.: run back over the
past. I’ll run back over the procedure again.
run sth. back – rewind (film, tape, etc.).
run down – (of a battery) become weak or exhausted. The battery
is / has run down; it needs recharging.
(be / feel / look) run down – (of a person, his health) exhausted or
weak from overwork, mental strain, etc.
run sb. / sth. down – knock down or collide with. The liner ran down
a fishing-boat during the dense fog. The cyclist was run down
by a big lorry.
run into sb. – meet unexpectedly: run into an old friend in a pub.
run into sth. – a) collide with. The bus got out of control and ran
into a wall.
b) fall into: run into debt / danger / difficulties.
c) reach (a level or figure): a book that has run into six editions.
His income runs into five figures, is now ten thousand (pounds,
dollars, etc.) or more.
run off sb. (like water off a duck’s back) – have no effect on him.
Her warning ran off him like water off a duck’s back.
run out – a) go out. The tide is running out.
b) (of a period of time) come to an end. When does the lease
of the house run out?
c) (of stocks, supplies) come to an end, be exhausted; (of
persons) become short of (supplies, etc.). Our provisions are
running out. Her patience is running out.
run over sth. – a) review; recapitulate. Let’s run over our parts
again, e.g. when learning and rehearsing parts in a play.

96
b) read through quickly. He ran over his notes before starting
his lecture.
run over sb.; run sb. over – (of a vehicle) (knock down and) pass
over. The bus ran over his legs. He was run over and had to be
taken to hospital.
runner n – person, animal, etc. that runs. How many runners
were there in the Derby?
running adj – 1. continuous: a running fire of questions.
2. (of water) flowing: hot and cold running water.

10. spend v – 1. spend money (on sth.) – pay out (money) for
goods, services, etc.: spend all one’s money; spend too much
money on clothes.
2. spend sth. (on sth. / (in) doing sth.) – use up; consume:
spend a lot of time on a project / (in) explaining a plan.
3. pass: spend a weekend in London / one’s spare time
gardening.
spender n – person who spends money: an extravagant
spender.
spent (pp as adj) – exhausted; used up: a spent runner /
swimmer / horse; a spent cartridge / bullet.
11. change v – 1. change (from / out of) (to / into); change (for) –
leave one place and go to, enter, another; take off sth. and put
sth. else on. I must change these trousers – they’ve got oil on
them. It won’t take me five minutes to change, to put on different
clothes. He changed out of his overalls (and into a suit).
2. change sth. (for / into sth. else) – give and receive in return.
Can you change this five-pound note? Shall we change seats?
3. change (from) (into / to) – make or become different. My
plans have changed. Caterpillars change into butterflies or
moths. The traffic lights changed from red to green.
change one’s mind – decide on a new plan, have a new opinion,
etc.
change one’s note / tune – become more humble, sad.
changeable adj – likely to alter; often altering; able to be
changed: changeable weather; a changeable sort of person.

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Antonym: unchangeable.
change n – 1. changed or different condition(s): a welcome
change from town to country life. We have a new house – it’s a
great change for the better. Take a change of clothes with you.
He had to make a quick change at Crewe.
a change of air / climate – e.g. a holiday away from home.
2. money in small(er) units; money that is the difference
between the price or cost of sth. and the sum offered in
payment. Can you give me change for a one-pound note? I
have no small change.
3. alteration; changing. We shall have to make a change in
the programme. Let’s hope there will be a change in the
weather.
for a change – for the sake of variety. I usually have breakfast at
7.30, but during the holidays I’m having it at 8.30 for a change.
changeful adj – continually changing; likely to change.
changeless adj – unchanging.
Synonyms: to change, to alter, to modify, to vary.
To change suggests making or becoming different in an
essential way. The idea of substitution of one thing for another
may also be implied.
E.g. His face has changed beyond recognition.
To alter denotes a partial change.
E.g. Could you alter my trousers (so that they fit better)?
To modify often indicates a minor difference or the idea of
making less strong or severe whilst retaining the fundamentals.
But it can also indicate an improvement from what had been
unsatisfactory.
E.g. By and large I approve of the contract. There are just
some minor modifications I would like to suggest.
To vary is used if the idea is to shift from one to the other and
back again if necessary, or to display a certain range of
difference.
E.g. The resourceful teacher knows how to vary his methods.

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VOCABULARY EXERCISES
I. Consult a dictionary and practise the pronunciation of the
following words:
denizen, mansion, cognizant, rigour, hibernatorial ambitions, cruise,
soporific, to crave, congenial, luxuriously, silkworm, protoplasm,
missionary, mallard duck, Chablis, Camembert, demi-tasse,
manifistation, revenge, refuge, frayed, decadent, ignoble,
menaced, coveted, epicurean, limbo, to parley, minion, Arcadia,
turmoil, lustrous, immaculate, instantaneous.

II. Explain the polysemy of the words and phrases in italics and
then translate the sentences.
A. 1. He was holding a book in his hands. 2. She saw him drinking
from cupped hands. 3. She felt that winter was at hand. 4. The
class is quite out of hand and something should be done
immediately. 5. Don’t worry, I’ll put it in the hands of my lawyer.
6. These rugs are made by hand. 7. I have sent a letter by hand.
8. The waiter handed me a telegram. 9. Could you hand me down
that book from the shelf. 10. The picture was handed down to me
from my grandfather. 11. You must hand in your application in
March. 12. Hand over that knife immediately!
B. 1. Shakespeare died in 1616. 2. Flowers soon die if they don’t
get water. 3. Do tell me what he said, I’m dying to know. 4. I’m
dying for a drink. 5. His secret died with him. 6. The colours of the
sunset died away. 7. The fire had died down and the room was
getting cold. 8. Throw those flowers out: they are dead. 9. The
train came to a dead stop. 10. I was dead tired. 11. His foolish
boldness will be his death.
C. 1. He fell out of the window. 2. There was a big hole and she fell
in. 3. He fell on his knees and begged mercy. 4. The temperature
fell rapidly. 5. The woman tempted him and he fell. 6. A shadow fell
on the screen. 7. We drew lots and the lot fell on me. 8. The cloak
fell from his shoulders. 9. A mist fell over the valley. 10. I had a
nasty fall from the tree. 11. There is a considerable fall in the water
level of the lake. 12. You can’t expect a big fall in prices. 13. Take
the magazine and have a look at new fall fashions.

99
D. 1. Please consider the possible consequences of this behaviour.
2. We hadn’t considered what might happen if we refused to help
them. 3. Before buying a new computer, I think we should consider
the cost. 4. “Dad! Will you lend me the car this weekend?” – “I’ll
consider it.” 5. Ask Jack if he’s considering applying for the Senior
Manager’s post. 6. For any skin problem, it’s worth considering a
change of diet.
E. 1. This ladder won’t reach the window. 2. Look at her skirt – it
hardly reaches her knees! 3. He hardly reached my shoulders.
4. The stick doesn’t reach the bottom. 5. When we reached the
bridge it was already dark. 6. The train reached Riga at 6 o’clock.
7. His voice doesn’t reach to the back of the hall. 8. Can you reach
down my case? 9. Where can I reach you? 10. Put those bottles
out of reach of the children. 11. He reached for the salt and knocked
over a bottle of wine. 12. These cars are within reach of many
people.
F. 1. I’ll be away for a week, do you think you can manage on your
own? 2. Her brother manages her affairs. 3. I can’t manage the
boat alone. 4. Can you manage dinner on Wednesday? 5. I got a
taxi and managed to catch the train. 6. I’ll not be able to manage
without your help. 7. If you can’t afford to buy a new coat, you’ll
have to manage without. 8. The manager of a shop is a young
man.
G. 1. The directors did not want David to leave, but they knew he
could do much more somewhere else. 2. The police wanted to
know what time he had left the office. 3. I want to see you before I
leave. 4. He promised he would never leave her. 5. Bob has left
me for his secretary, after fifteen years of marriage. I can’t believe
it! 6. My eldest son upon leaving college, fell in love and got
married. 7. It is vital that young people leave full-time education
with appropriate skills and qualifications. 8. This has been such a
lovely home I’ll be sorry to leave. 9. The gang had left town before
the police discovered the robbery. 10. Jim had left home at 18 to
find a job in New York. 11. Oh, I’ve left my gloves home. 12. Leave
that bag alone, it’s not yours. 13. Could you tell me the time? I’ve
left my watch behind. 14. I think he’s just left for Riga. 15. Don’t you
see you’ve left two words out? 16. He feels left out.

100
H. 1. A new kitchen would cost roughly Ls 500. 2. The man was
roughly my own age. 3. It was a rough crossing and most of the
passengers were seasick. 4. We have drawn up a rough plan but
we haven’t worked out all the costs. 5. Here are some rough
calculations of the costs. 6. I can only give a rough indication where
the problems lie. 7. The farm can only be reached by means of a
rough track. 8. “What are you doing here?” shouted the man in a
rough voice. 9. She was surprised at how rough his hands felt.
10. The police have been criticized for their rough handling of the
demonstrators.
I. 1. You’d better run or you’ll miss the train. 2. This dog ran right
out in front of my car. 3. Every morning before breakfast I run or
play tennis. 4. The race is run over a 3 mile course. 5. He is running
a high temperature. 6. The illness must run its course. 7. When he
starts speaking of his hobby I run a mile. 8. The Liberals are not
running a candidate this year. 9. I’ll run you to the station. 10. She
runs a small business. 11. The school is run by a committee.
12. The magazine is running a series of articles on animals.
13. You have to run the water for a few minutes till it gets hot. 14. A
shiver ran down his spine. 15. Red hair runs in their family. 16. The
lawnmower runs on petrol. 17. There are no buses running today.
18. The river runs for 200 miles and then flows into the sea. 19. The
melted wax ran down the candle. 20. Wash this towel separately –
the dye runs. 21. The play ran for 40 performances. 22. The road
runs beside the river. 23. My stocking has run.
J. 1. I bought two dresses and a pair of shoes and spent all my
spare money. 2. More should be spent on health and education
services. 3. In recent years the company has spent a lot of money
on new technology. 4. He spends money like there’s no tomorrow!
5. Peter and I spend a lot of time together. 6. You’ve spent the
whole afternoon in digging one small flower garden! 7. You may
have to spend more than a year on your book. 8. I spent a lot of
energy in getting the spare parts. 9. I spent a week in Paris.
10. Our ammunition is spent.
K. 1. It won’t take me five minutes to change. 2. He changed his
money before leaving France. 3. He’s changed his position. 4. The

101
appearance of the town is quite changed. 5. The wind has changed
from north to east. 6. There has been a great change in his
appearance since his last illness. 7. We have a new house now: it’s
a change for the better. 8. I have no small change. 9. Don’t leave
your change on the shop counter. 10. He is a changeable sort of
person.
III. Give your own sentences or situations with the following
word combinations and translate the combinations into Latvian.
Is it always possible to give a word for word translation?
1. to bring up a calf by hand; to eat out of one’s hand; from hand
to hand; to give a hand; to have one’s hands full; to have a free
hand; in good hands; not lift a hand; to live from hand to mouth; off
one’s hands; shake hands with sb.; at first / second hand; to wash
one’s hands of; on the one hand … on the other; to hand sth.
down; to hand sth. out; to come in handy.
2. to be dying for sth. / to do sth.; to wait for a dead man’s shoes;
to come to a dead end; dead silence; to meet a deadline; deadly
paleness; at the death’s door; to bore sb. to death; dead fingers.
3. to fall on one’s feet; temperature / voice / spirits fell; to fall in
love; to fall out of love; to fall for sb. / sth.
4. to consider oneself lucky; to consider it one’s duty; to consider
other people’s feelings; a considerable difficulty; a considerable
income.
5. to reach for a dictionary; to reach the branch; as far as the eye
can reach; out of the children’s reach; beautiful reaches of the
Thames.
6. to manage a horse; to manage a sailing-boat; to manage a
business; to manage a naughty child; a managing person; to
manage to do sth.; to manage with / without sth. / sb.; bad
management.
7. to leave school; to leave sth. / sb. alone; to leave sth. inside; to
leave much to be desired; to take (one’s) leave of sb.
8. the rough quarters of the city; rough crossing; to lead a rough
life; a rough tongue; to treat sb. roughly; roughly speaking; sleep
rough; live rough.

102
9. a trial run; in the long run; the run of events; to run for President;
to run its course; to run a business; to run extra trains; to run a car;
to run errands for sb.; to run a temperature; to run off sb.; hot and
cold running water; to run a risk.
10. to spend money; to spend time; ammunition was spent; to spend
one’s leisure; a spent runner; a spent horse; a spent bullet.
11. to change one’s address; to change places; to change one’s
mind; a changeable sort of person; changeable weather; change
for the better; a change of clothes; a change of air; small change;
a change in programme.

IV. What nouns can you add to the following adjectives:


dead; dying; deathless; deathlike; changeable; changeful;
changeless; falling; fallen; manageable; rough; running; spent;
considerable; considerate.

V. Paraphrase the italicized words and phrases by using suitable


active vocabulary.
1. hand
1. When I’ve finished this part of the wall, I’ll pass the brushes and
paint pots down to you before I come down the ladder. 2. This ring
has been passed down in my family. 3. Your new papers must be
given in by Monday. 4. Give out the question papers as the students
enter the examination room. 5. I had some good news to pass
along, don’t you want to hear it? 6. The firm paid a man to stand on
the street corner giving out advertisements. 7. I should like to get
rid of the responsibility for this job, but there doesn’t seem to be
anyone fit to give over to.
2. fall
1. Whenever impressionism was brought up to academicians they
came down on it in disapproval. 2. My plans to go to the USA for
holidays failed for lack of time. 3. Though the picture was not a
genuine Rembrandt, we liked it at once. 4. You are wrong from
start to finish, and nobody is likely to share your views. 5. Could
you use your influence to persuade him to agree to the scheme
suggested by us? 6. It cut him to the quick when I told him that
their newspaper had had lower sales lately. 7. Last month road

103
accidents in this area sharply went down. 8. His injured leg was
much of the handicap during the event and he got behind the
other contestants. 9. “You haven’t given me your homework yet,”
said the teacher. 10. He used to be an ardent champion for the
rights of women. Now he is married and his enthusiasm seems to
become much smaller.
3. reach
1. Can you pass down the big dish for me from the top shelf.
2. There was no time for me to stretch my hand for the gun. 3. The
tax bill runs into thousands of dollars. 4. My voice doesn’t go to
those very high notes. 5. None of the kids can get to the top button
in the elevator. 6. By the end of the first day we had got to a small
town 500 km south of Paris.
4. manage
1. If I can’t afford a new car, we shall have to do without. 2. The
director should not have to do without a secretary. 3. Helen was
always a difficult child. None of her teachers knew how to deal with
her. 4. The seminar discusses typical work-related problems and
strategies to deal with them. 5. He has finally succeeded in getting
a new flat. 6. She didn’t think she could jump that far, but somehow
she succeeded. 7. My husband runs a mill, 200 miles north of
Bombay. 8. Running four pizza outlets is extremely hard work.
5. run
1. Repeat your story again while the incident is fresh in your mind.
2. The ships came into collision with each other. 3. The clock has
stopped. 4. My money is exhausted. 5. His passport expires next
month. Will you see to it that he renews it in time or he may get into
trouble. 6. At Hyde Park Corner Soames met by chance George
Forsyte, very sunburnt from racing. 7. “Jack makes me tired.” “It’s
your own fault, dear. You should stop seeking his society.” 8. Irene
watched the little boy playing about. 9. We have no sugar left.
10. At the rehearsal I shall go through my part again. 11. The motorist
knocked down a man on a bicycle.
6. spend
1. How much did you pay for that book? 2. You have passed the
whole afternoon in digging one small flower garden! 3. The city

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council has been charged with paying out too much of the
taxpayers’ money on sports buildings.

VI. Supply the appropriate particles.


1. hand
1. Please hand … the large dish from the top shelf, I can’t reach it.
2. This custom has been handed … since the 18th century. 3. Your
text papers must be handed … by Monday. 4. As the lady tried to
step down from the carriage, the gentleman politely handed her
… 5. I hand more money … to the children every week. 6. Hand
your cases … to the doorman, he will see that they are delivered to
your room. 7. The command of the ship was handed … to her new
captain at a small ceremony this morning. 8. I’ll stand by the car
and hand the boxes … to you, so that you can carry them into the
house.
2. fall
1. Her book enjoyed but a moment’s popularity. The interest
aroused fell … rapidly. 2. The young mother enjoying the endless
why-questions’ talk of her five-year old son, fell … the company.
3. They fell … … their work and had to stay up till late at night.
4. The attack was so sudden that the enemy had to fall … leaving
their prisoners and transport. 5. Don’t fall … him so heavily. He
admits that he has acted recklessly, but what’s done cannot be
undone. 6. When the hikers came back to the camp they were as
hungry as hunters and fell … food placed before them. 7. The
business talks fell … as neither side would give in. 8. I admit that
the outing fell … because it had not been planned well. 9. The
demand for fabrics has fallen … recently. 10. What kind of person
would you fall … at first sight?
3. considerate / consideration
1. She is considerate … others. 2. A new pension plan for employers
is now … consideration. 3. We must do it … … consideration …
her age. 4. Before we decide what to do we must take all facts …
consideration. 5. When I gave my consent I left many factors … …
consideration.

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4. run
1. His condition is grave. He was run … by a lorry yesterday but
the doctors still hope that he will pull through. 2. I forgot to wind up
my watch yesterday and it has run … now. 3. Engines need running
… before they are put in full operation. 4. This time Martin ran … …
money sooner than he had expected and no letters from publishers
arrived. 5. We’ve got a few minutes, before the train starts, so I’ll
just run … your instructions again. 6. The lease ran … on the 30th of
October and the landowner insisted on the eviction of the poor
family. 7. The mother laid in a good stock of provisions before she
left but he ran … it all in a couple of weeks. 8. The woman realized
that her life was a failure but tried to run … from reality. 9. It was a
lucky chance that I ran … Smith. But for him I’d have had nowhere
to put up for the night in that town.

VII. Choose the right word: die, dead, death.


1. Walter Scott, the great poet and novelist, … in 1832. 2. Throw
those flowers out, they are … 3. The ground was covered with …
leaves. 4. The young soldier was wounded to … and was carried
away from the battlefield. 5. … came instantly, and she had been
… for some time but then she was reanimated. 6. Where did Byron
…?

VIII. Fill in the appropriate synonyms:


a) to reach, to achieve
1. I hope we can … the house before the storm breaks out. 2. At
the end of an hour we … the top of the mountain. 3. Good
pronunciation can be … by daily repetition of phonetic drills.
4. The sea was so rough and we were so far out, that the shore
seemed out of … 5. The sportsmen of our country … outstanding
results in many fields of sport. 6. If we hurry we can … the theatre
in time. 7. He … the opposite bank of the river with great difficulty
because he had to swim against the current. 8. Don’t … across
the table for bread, ask someone to pass it to you. 9. The lecturer
spoke so distinctly that every word … the audience.

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b) leave, quit, abandon, forsake, desert
1. He … the army after one day. 2. He can’t sack me. I …! 3. My
husband … home early this morning (i.e. to go to work). 4. It takes
good judgement to know when to stay and when to … 5. Have you
… your intention of going on the stage? 6. A captain must never …
his ship. 7. What sort of impression do you think I … (on them)?
8. As soon as she … one idea, she started snatching at another.
9. I advise you to … before it’s too late. 10. When the bomb
exploded, the whole audience rose and … the theatre! 11. “I’m …
school next summer.” – “What is the school-… age now?” 12. A
monk … all wordly pleasures. 13. … my sight – and never return.
14. An … wife is to be pitied. 15. Not one soldier … through the
whole campaign. 16. I cannot and will not … those who have placed
their trust in me. 17. He … the army as he disliked the discipline.
18. The crew … the captain, and left him to his fate. 19. She felt so
… and alone. 20. Never … a job before you have finished it.
21. I’m glad that family has … this neighbourhood. 22. Only
politeness prevented me from … the room earlier. 23. The beach
was … as it was lunchtime. 24. He … the room in anger.
25. Wretched parents sometimes … their babies in church
doorways. 26. Never … a friend in need. 27. I’m …; I’ve had enough.
28. You must … all thoughts of escape. 29. They … the hotel without
paying a bill. 30. Courage …them when they saw that the odds
were against them.
c) to change, to alter, to modify, to vary
1. I want you to … these trousers. Take them in two inches at the
waist. 2. Will you please … this dress? It’s too tight. 3. The treaty
was … to suit all signatories. 4. … is the spice of life. (Old saying)
5. I like to … my reading. 6. I think we should … the design of the
house. 7. It is no good trying to … the weather. Only nature can do
it. 8. You’ll have to … the expression before it is printed. 9. Kindly
… you language when there’s a lady present. 10. It is not easy to
… people’s habits. 11. “What History syllabus is used in England?”
– “It … from school to school.” 12. If things don’t …, they’ll stay as
they are. (Old saying) 13. They want to … the whole school system.
14. A girl … her name when she gets married. 15. Our plan will
have to be … a little. 16. He always … his tone when he talks to me.

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17. I refuse to … the portrait to suit your vanity. 18. To … conditions
is not always to improve them. 19. Always try to … a child’s diet.
20. Notice outside a tailor’s shop: We do … 21. I hope you aren’t
going to … your mind. 22. Here is the … version of the script you
asked for. 23. I’ve decided to … the arrangements. 24. I don’t
want you to … I love you as you are. 25. His performances … from
night to night. He’s most erratic. 26. They have … the length of
coats this year, by introducing the “maxi”. 27. His sermons never
… 28. After I told him off, he … his behaviour considerably. 29. I
haven’t changed my fundamental beliefs. I’ve only … them a little
in the light of experience.
d) rough, rude, crude, raw
1. “Mr. Smith,” he said, “I don’t want to be …, but as a matter of
fact I’m very tired and it’s not much good your sitting here.” 2. The
book answered in a … way the question which had been annoying
him for a long time: “What is true love?” 3. “… soldierly manners,”
she said. 4. I was young and inexperienced, too sensitive, too …
5. I did not mind if they thought me … and ungracious. 6. He was
a …, brutal, yet kind-hearted man, in his own way. 7. He sat down
on one of the … wooden chairs in the living room.
e) rough, harsh, uneven, rugged
1. The travellers walked wearily up the … mountainous road; it was
covered with heaps of stones and crossed by deep clefts. 2. The
child made a few steps. The … grass hurt his bare feet. 3. It was
difficult to adjust the tripod straight on the … surface of the rock.
4. The passengers aboard the plane watched the … coastline.
5. In many of his novels Dickens described … treatment of children
in English private schools. 6. The … sounds of the jazz grated on
the musician’s ear. 7. It had rained, and the … stones were slippery,
so that the mountaineers had to tie themselves to one another.

IX. Complete the following sentences.


1. Fluency of speech in a foreign language can be achieved by …
2. If you cannot reach me by phone, please … 3. Our sportsmen
achieved splendid results thanks to … 4. If you cannot reach the
top shelf you must … 5. Just as I reached home I remembered
that … 6. Martin Eden achieved fame and recognition only after …

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7. Tom was so small, he could hardly reach … 8. The telegram
reached me when … 9. The book is on the shelf. Can you …?

X. Translate into English.


Rupjð, neaudzinâts cilvçks; raupja âda; rupja atbilde; rupjð audums;
rupjas manieres; sastrâdâtas, raupjas rokas; rupja balss; rupji sejas
panti; jçlnafta; nerafinçts cukurs; neapstrâdâts tçrauds; jçlâda;
bargs sods; bargs klimats; jçla gaïa; nevârîti dârzeòi; cieti, rupji
mati; raupjð papîrs; jçlas olas; nelîdzens ceïð; neslîpçts dimants;
jçlviela; grumbuïains ceïð; stingrs kritiíis; neveikls puisis; jçlkokvilna;
neveikla situâcija; jçlspirts; jçlzîds.

XI. Answer the questions.


1. When do people say “It’s a small world.” 2. What do you think of
people who run away from difficulties? 3. Why do teenagers run
after celebrities? 4. Would a doctor let a person resume his work if
he feels run down? 5. What’s to be done if the battery of the electric
torch has run down? 6. Why is the sign “Running in” put on the
front and back windows of a new bus? 7. Whom did you run into
during your last holiday? 8. Do you think running over a book can
help a student before an exam if he does not know his subject
well? 9. Would you let a child run across a busy street alone? Why?
10. What would you do if you ran out of sugar at home? 11. Do you
usually fall in with the arrangements of the friends you stay with?
Why? 12. Do theatre attendances fall off in summer? Why? 13. What
do you do to avoid your arrangements falling through? 14. Suppose
that a student has fallen behind the group. What would you advise
him to catch up? 15. Will the electricity supply be cut off if you fall
behind with the payment of your bill? 16. What do you do if you
haven’t got a dictionary at hand when you need it? 17. Do you like
things made by hand? Why? 18. What could a teacher do if the
class is quite out of hand? 19. Do you want to try your hand at
teaching English now? Why? 20. Do you have anything handed
down to you from your grandparents? What is it? 21. What do
people do when they leave school? 22. Do you often leave your
things behind? 23. Do you think you could be a good manager?
24. Do you always manage to keep your temper? What can be
done to keep it? 25. Should medicine be always kept out of the

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children’s reach? 26. Do you like people who have a rough tongue?
27. What do we call a rough translation? 28. Do you spend much
money on your clothes? 29. How do you spend your leisure?

XII. In what circumstances would you say:


1. No wonder he fell for her at once. 2. This is just the kind of idea
he would fall in with. 3. Just see, how your friends will start falling
off now. 4. Of course, he fell behind from the very start. 5. Well, the
plan has fallen through finally. 6. Her tongue ran away with her.
7. He looks run down. 8. The car couldn’t have run into the bus.
9. He is sure to run through all the money within a week. 10. His
behaviour leaves a lot of to be desired. 11. Don’t leave me out,
please! 12. I shan’t be able to manage without help. 13. Can you
reach the branch with those red apples? 14. My suitcase has had
some rough handling. 15. Keep away from the rough quarters of
the town. 16. I can see this is a spent horse.

XIII. Translate into English.


1. Lûdzu pârskatiet kontroldarbu vçlreiz, pirms to nododat. 2. Miglâ
tvaikonis sadûrâs ar mazu zvejas laiviòu. 3. Es nevaru atïauties
patreiz tâdus izdevumus. 4. Ðî doma caurvij visu lugas darbîbu.
5. Brîdî, kad krustmâte Pollija parâdîjâs uz mâjas sliekðòa, Toms
pazuda aiz sçtas. 6. Man nepatîk tie autogrâfu kolekcionçtâji, kas
skrien pakaï (pçc) slavenîbâm tikai tâpçc, lai pçc tam varçtu ar
ðiem autogrâfiem palielîties. 7. Lai izvairîtos no tikðanâs ar
bijuðajiem paziòâm un draugiem, Anna reti gâja iepirkties pilsçtas
centrâ. 8. Laikraksti ziòoja, ka biezâs miglas un slikto laika apstâkïu
dçï bija sadûruðies divi vilcieni. 9. Tagad grûti pat noticçt, ka vçl
pirms pâris gadiem viòi visi vienoti uzbruka ðai teorijai.
10. Ieraudzîjusi Dþona dusmîgo seju, viòa saprata, ka viòa projekts
ir cietis neveiksmi. 11. Viòð ðo-mçnes nokavçja apmaksât
îresnaudu. 12. Tiklîdz paziòoja par ceïojuma marðruta izmaiòâm,
ceïotgribçtâju skaits saruka. 13. Pçkðòi ieradâs policija, un
streikotâjiem nâcâs atkâpties. 14. Maz ticams, ka viòi piekritîs jûsu
argumentiem, jo tie ir samçrâ nepârliecinoði. 15. Ar gripu saslimuðo
skaits pçdçjâ laikâ ir strauji samazinâjies. 16. Es apzinos, ka ârçjais
izskats bieþi ir maldinoðs, taèu viòð man patika no pirmâ acu
uzmetiena. 17. Koku galotnes sniedzâs lîdz mâju jumtiem.

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18. Sakiet, lûdzu, kâ es varu nokïût stacijâ? 19. Sasnieguði kalna
galotni, mçs apsçdâmies atpûsties. 20. Pastâstiet, lûdzu, kâ jûs
sasniedzât tik labus rezultâtus? 21. Skat, kâ zçns izaudzis. Viòð
jau sniedzas tçvam lîdz pleciem. 22. Kad mçs sasniedzâm
krustceles, mçs nezinâjâm, pa kuru ceïu nogriezties. 23. Viòu
sasniegumi ðajâ zinâtnes nozarç ir ievçrojami. 24. Nedrîkst apstâties
pie sasniegtâ, jâiet tâlâk. 25. No kâ mira Napoleons? – Runâ, ka
viòu noindçjuði. 26. Mans draugs mira no plauðu karsoòa. 27. Kas
uzrauga jûsu bçrnus – tava mâte? – Nç, mana mâte nomira.
28. Zçns paòçma meiteni pie rokas un ieveda klasç. 29. Uz atvadâm
paspiedis savu bijuðo kolçìu rokas, Tomass atstâja vietu, kur bija
nostrâdâjis desmit gadus. 30. Es ðos jaunumus dzirdçju no pirm-
avotiem. 31. Ziema jau bija pie durvîm. 32. Abi bçrni gâja pa ielu,
sadevuðies rokâs. 33. Var sacît, ka mâju viòð uzcçla pats savâm
rokâm. 34. Ðo lietu es òçmu savâs rokâs. 35. Viòð ir atvaïinâjumâ.
36. Zçns atvadîjâs no draugiem un devâs uz mâjâm. 37. Atstâj to
manâ ziòâ. 38. Mâte aizmirsa rokassomiòu maðînâ. 39. Viòi uzveï
visu darbu ðai trauslajai sievietei. 40. Mums ir atlikusi stunda lîdz
vilciena atieðanai. 41. Pçc sevis viòð atstâja vienu dçlu un divas
meitas. 42. Vakar mana draudzene aizbrauca uz Londonu. 43. Ðis
vecais vîrs vada veselu pçtniecîbas institûtu. 44. Viòas brâlis kârto
visas viòas lietas. 45. Viòð nevarçja tikt galâ ar darbu. 46. Vai tu
vari panest ðo èemodânu? 47. Viòa ìimene gluþi labi iztiek ar 200
latiem mçnesî. 48. Bez naudas nevar iztikt. 49. Man izdevâs dabût
biïetes uz ðo koncertu. 50. Esmu pamanîjies pazaudçt garâþas
atslçgas. 51. Îpaðuma pârvaldnieks bija jauns cilvçks. 52. Sâkumâ
viòð uzzîmçja mâjas projektu uzmetuma variantâ. 53. No smagâ
darba viòas rokas bija kïuvuðas raupjas. 54. Jaunais vîrietis bija
ïoti ass pret mani. 55. Mums klâjâs smagi pagâjuðâ gadâ. 56. Pçc
pâris dienâm, kad bijâm atstâjuði dzimto krastu, jûra kïuva nemierîga.
57. Tulkojums ir tikai uzmetuma variantâ. 58. Viòi izmantoja rupjas
metodes, lai panâktu to, ko vçlçjâs. 59. Savu brîvo laiku viòð pava-
da, lasot grâmatas par augiem un augu dzîvi. 60. Par savu jauno
kaþoku viòa iztçrçja veselu kaudzi naudas. 61. Jaunlaulâtie pavadîja
divas nedçïas Parîzç. 62. Ienaidnieka munîcija izbeidzâs. 63. Es
uzskatu, ka tu neesi vainîgs. 64. Uzskatu, ka mans pienâkums ir
pateikt jums, ka jums draud briesmas. 65. Viòu uzskata par izcilu
pianistu. 66. Vai tu nedomâ, ka mums bûtu jâbrauc ar vilcienu?

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67. Pirms ej uz sarunu ar direktoru, apdomâ rûpîgi savu atbildi.
68. Tu nevari nerçíinâties ar vecâku domâm. 69. Diezgan
ievçrojamas grûtîbas radâs ar jauna dzîvokïa meklçðanu. 70. Laiks
ir svarîgs faktors.

TEXT EXERCISES
I. Answer the questions.
1. Where was Soapy? 2. What showed that winter was near at hand?
3. What warning did Soapy receive? 4. Where did Soapy want to
spend winter? 5. What did he decide to do to accomplish his desire?
6. What did he halt at? 7. Why did Soapy have confidence in
himself? 8. What would he order if he could reach a table in the
restaurant unsuspected? 9. Why did his plan fail? 10. How else did
Soapy try to attract the policeman’s attention? Did he succeed in
it? Why? 11. Where did he go now? 12. What did he stop at?
13. What was drifting out of the church windows? 14. What effect
did the music make on Soapy? 15. What did he decide to do?
16. Did he get to the Island?

II. Pick out from the text words and phrases bearing on:
1) clothing;
2) food;
3) description of nature.
Use them in your own situations and descriptions.

III. Find Latvian for:


geese honk; sealskin coats; regular denizens; annual call; footman
of the mansion; to become cognizant; coming rigour; hibernatorial
ambitions; Mediterranean cruises; soporific Southern skies; assured
board and bed; congenial company; bluecoats; the essence of
things desirable; to declare insolvency; the choicest products of
the grape, the silkworm, and the protoplasm; manifestation of
revenge; to avert the ignoble fate of the menaced mallard;
cunningly displayed wares; law’s minions; to loiter over the keys;
immaculate thoughts and collars; degraded days; unworthy
desires; wrecked faculties; base motives; novel mood; desperate
fate.
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Which of these phrases are used in the text in a figurative sense?
Can you explain their meaning?

IV. Retell the text and then give its summary.

V. Make up and act out the dialogues between:


1) Soapy and a waiter at the restaurant;
2) Soapy and the policeman at the shopwindow;
3) Soapy and the policeman at the church.

VI. Speak on the main character of the story. Do you think the
author is fond of his character? Why?

VII. Speak on the mood of the story. Is it sad, full of humour,


tragic or ironic?

VIII. Speak on the plot of the story. Do you find it interesting,


amusing, instructive?

IX. Was the end of the story unexpected to you? What did you
suppose it could be?

X. Say what impression the story has produced on you. Try to


motivate your answer.

DISCUSSION EXERCISES
I. Read texts A, B, C.
A. ISAAC NEWTON, 1643–1727,
ENGLISH SCIENTIST AND PHILOSOPHER
1. When Newton was busy working out difficult problems, he
stayed in his study, forgot about everything else, and allowed
nobody to disturb him.
One morning he was so busy working out a difficult problem,
that he forgot all about his breakfast. His wife was afraid of disturbing
him but, on the other hand, she did not want him to be hungry. She
knew it was no use calling him to breakfast. She was also sure that
if she took some food to his study, he would let it get cold. Suddenly

113
she remembered that her husband was very fond of soft boiled
eggs, and that he liked to boil one for himself on the small stove in
his study. So she went there with a saucepan of water and a fresh
egg, put the saucepan on the stove and gave the egg to her
husband, reminding him to look at his watch and let the egg boil
for three minutes. Then she left the study. When she came back a
little later to fetch the saucepan, she saw Newton holding the egg
in his hand, while his watch was boiling in the saucepan.
2. Philosophers are often absent-minded. Isaac Newton was
a great scientist but he was also a philosopher and, as such, he
was often as absent-minded as his colleagues all over the world.
One day a man came to see Newton, but was told by his wife
that her husband was busy in his study and that nobody was
allowed to disturb him. As it was dinner-time, the visitor sat down in
the dining-room to wait for the philosopher. A little later Newton’s
wife came in and placed a covered dish on the table, telling the
visitor that it was her husband’s dinner. When she had left, the
visitor lifted the cover and saw a boiled chicken in the dish. The
chicken looked so good and he was so hungry that before he
knew what he was doing, he had eaten the whole bird. Now nothing
was left of the chicken in the dish but a lot of small bones. He
placed the cover over them and was just going to look for Newton’s
wife, when she came in again. He apologized for what he had
done, but she told him not to worry as she had another boiled
chicken ready in the kitchen. While she was fetching it, Newton
came into the dining-room, apologized for having kept his visitor
waiting, and lifted the cover of the dish. Seeing the bones, he turned
to the visitor and said with a smile, “See how absent-minded we
philosophers are! I quite forgot I had already had my dinner.” Just
then his wife came in with another dish, the matter was explained,
and everybody had a good laugh.

B. JOSEPH CHAMBERLAIN, 1836–1914,


ENGLISH STATESMAN AND TALENTED SPEAKER
Joseph Chamberlain was the guest of honour at a dinner in an
important English city. A guest of honour is generally placed
between his host and hostess. Chamberlain’s host that night was

114
the Mayor of the important English city. The food was excellent,
the conversation lively, so everybody was having a very good time.
Towards the end of the dinner, when coffee was being served,
the Mayor thought it was almost time for Mr. Chamberlain’s speech.
He turned to his guest of honour and said, “Shall we let these
people enjoy themselves a little longer, or had we better have your
speech now?”

C. CALVIN COOLIDGE, 1872–1933,


30TH PRESIDENT OF THE UNITED STATES
People who are not quite sure of their table manners are wise
to imitate the table manners of their hosts during a meal. However
it may sometimes lead to an amusing situation, as we shall presently
see.
President Coolidge once invited some friends to have a meal
with him at the White House. They were not sure of their table
manners, so they decided to imitate their host in everything he did
during the meal.
All went well until coffee was served. President Coolidge poured
a little coffee into his saucer. The guests poured a little coffee into
their saucers. Then Coolidge added a lot of cream and sugar to
the coffee in his saucer. The guests added a lot of cream and
sugar to the coffee in their saucers. Coolidge took his saucer and
put it on the floor in front of his cat.

II. Make up questions on the texts and ask your fellow students
to answer them.

III. Discuss the problems and situations in the texts.

IV. Read the following fables and answer the questions after
them.

1. THE GOOSE WITH THE GOLDEN EGGS


Once upon a time, a greedy man had a goose. This goose
laid a golden egg every day. The man was not content with this.
He grew greedier than ever. He said to himself: “If I kill the goose,

115
I shall be able to have all the golden eggs at once. I shall not have
to wait for them day by day.”
He killed the goose. When he looked inside the body, he found
nothing at all.
Through greediness and discontent he lost the goose and her
golden eggs for ever.
Questions:
1. What kind of man is described in this fable? 2. What did he
possess? 3. How many eggs did the goose lay every day? 4. What
kind of eggs were they? 5. Was the man content with having one
egg every day? 6. What did he decide to do? 7. What did he find
inside the goose? 8. What was the result of his greediness? 9. Do
similar things often happen in everyday life?

2. THE FOX AND THE GRAPES


One wet morning a fox left his house and went out hunting.
The weather was very bad – the wind was cold, and heavy clouds
covered the sun. All the birds and beasts in the forest hid from the
rain and the fox could not find anything to eat. At last he went to
the village, but the dogs met him with loud barking. Now the fox
was very hungry indeed, and when he saw a grape-vine growing
on a wall, he stopped. He looked at the ripe grapes and his mouth
watered. “Now I shall have something to eat at last,” he thought.
But he began to jump. He jumped and jumped, but he couldn’t
get any. At last, tired and very, very hungry, he turned his back on
the grape-vine and walked away.
“Oh, well, the grapes are green and sour anyway,” he said to
himself.
Questions:
1. Who was hungry? 2. How long had he been looking for food?
3. Where did he come to at last? 4. What did he see high above his
head? 5. Could the fox reach the grapes? 6. How many times did
he leap? 7. What did he see at last? 8. What did he say when going
away?

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3. OYSTERS FOR A HORSE
A traveller, drenched and shivering with cold, arrived at a
country inn, which he found so full of people that he could not get
near the fire. He called the landlord and said to him: “Take a feed
of oysters to my horse.” The landlord was very surprised and did
not know what to do. The traveller repeated his order, and the
landlord went to execute it. On hearing this, all the present rushed
out to the stable to see the stranger’s horse. The traveller however,
having now the whole room to himself, sat down comfortably by
the fire and warmed himself. When the landlord returned, he said
to the traveller: “Your horse does not eat the oysters.” – “Never
mind,” replied the traveller, “put them on the table and I will eat
them myself later, but take a feed of oats to my horse.”
Questions:
1. Where did a drenched traveller arrive? 2. Why could he not
warm himself by the fire? 3. What did he ask the landlord to do?
4. Did the landlord execute his order at once? 5. What did the
traveller repeat? 6. Did the landlord fulfil his request this time?
7. What did the people who were in room do? 8. What did the
traveller do when he was left alone? 9. What did the landlord say
when he returned from the stable? 10. What did the traveller
answer?

4. THE EXPENSIVE BREAKFAST


It happened many years ago, when there were still kings in
some countries of Europe.
Once a king of a small country was travelling through Holland.
He stopped at an inn in a little village to have breakfast. He ordered
some boiled eggs, coffee, bread and butter for breakfast.
The king ate two eggs with bread and butter, took a cup of
coffee and asked the innkeeper: “How much must I pay for my
breakfast?”
The innkeeper answered: “A hundred florins.”
The king was very much surprised and said: “What? A hundred
florins for a little bread and butter, a cup of coffee and two eggs?
It is very expensive! Eggs must be very scarce in your village.”

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“Oh, no, sir,” answered the innkeeper, “there are many eggs in
our village, but kings are very scarce nowadays.”
Questions:
1. Who was travelling through Holland many years ago? 2. Where
did the king stop? 3. What for did he stop there? 4. What did he
order for breakfast? 5. How much did his breakfast cost? 6. Was
the breakfast expensive? 7. Who was very much surprised? 8. What
did the king say to the innkeeper? 9. Did the innkeeper agree with
him? 10. What did the innkeeper answer the king?

V. What moral can you draw from the fables? Discuss them.

VI. Read the anecdotes and then tell them to your groupmates.
1. Once Mark Twain invited a friend of his to spend the weekend
at his place. On Sunday morning they were having soft boiled
eggs for breakfast when Twain’s friend said that it was a pleasure
to eat such fresh eggs.
“Yes, I get them from the country,” the writer replied, “but
speaking of eggs, reminds me of my first lecture tour. One
afternoon I came to a small town where I was to lecture in the
evening. I wanted to learn whether people knew of my lecture,
so I went into a grocer’s, bought something or other, and said
to the shop assistant, “I’ve just come to your town. Is there
anything interesting going on tonight?” “Well,” the shop
assistant replied, “I suppose there will be a lecture because
I’ve been selling eggs the whole day.”
2. Samuel Johnson, 1709–1784, English writer and author of
the famous Dictionary of the English Language
One evening Dr. Johnson was having a friend of his to dinner.
The food was excellent and Johnson’s friend, who was very
fond of eating well, and thought that good food was the most
important thing in life, said when dinner was over, “Don’t you
think that an excellent cook is more important in this world
than a talented writer?”
Dr. Johnson smiled and answered, “No doubt every dog in the
world thinks the same.”

118
3. What’s for supper?
Mother: It is nine o’clock and you are not in bed yet. What will
father say when he comes home?
Henry: He’ll say: “Supper! Supper! What’s for supper?”
4. Once a young Englishman invited his girl to a French restaurant.
The menu was written in French, and he did not know that
language. As he did not want to look ignorant before the girl,
he pointed to some lines in the menu and said to the waiter: “I
think, we shall have some of that.”
The waiter looked where the man was pointing and said: “I’m
sorry, sir, but that’s what the band is playing.”

VII. Read the dialogues and act them out.


1. At a Restaurant
Tom: Where shall we sit?
Ann: I want to sit near the dance-floor.
Tom: Here is a nice place. And now let’s see what they have.
What about an omelette and then a nice piece of beefsteak?
Ann: I don’t want meat, I’m not hungry. I would rather have
some fish.
Tom: Waiter, omelette for two, fish for one and beefsteak for
one, please. Shall we have anything to drink?
Ann: Oh, wine is very expensive here, let’s have some beer.
Tom: And what shall we have for dessert?
Ann: I’ll have a cup of black coffee.
Tom: Make it two, waiter, please. That’ll be all, I think.
2. Olga: What have we got for dinner today, Mother?
Mother: Fish soup, cutlets and mashed potatoes, then coffee
and sweets.
Olga: I’d like only coffee and sweets. I don’t want fish soup, I
am not hungry today.
Mother: I know that you are terribly fond of sweets, but you
must eat some soup and a cutlet. You are tired and you only
think you are not hungry.
Olga (eating): You are right, Mother. I am as hungry as a hunter
now. May I have some more soup? Appetite comes with eating.
Mother: Yes, certainly, hunger is the best sauce.

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VIII. Make up your own dialogues on the topic.

IX. Read and discuss the following puns.


1. Diner: Have you any wild duck?
Waiter: No, sir, but we can take a tame one and irritate it for
you.
wild – savvaïas (par putniem, dzîvniekiem); dusmîgs, nikns
duck – pîle
tame – pieradinâts
irritate – kaitinât
2. “Always remember that one swallow does not make a spring.”
“No, but the swallows the size that you take would make one
fall all right.”
swallow – bezdelîga; malks
spring – pavasaris
fall – rudens
fall – krist, iznîkt
3. Diner: Waiter, this soup is spoiled.
Waiter: Who told you?
Diner: A little swallow.
4. Waiter: Those are the best eggs we have had for years.
Diner: Well, bring me some eggs you haven’t had so long.
5. Wife: I’m going to give you a piece of my mind.
Hubby: Just a small helping, please.
piece – gabals
helping – porcija (çdiena)
to give sb. a piece of one’s mind – atklâti pateikt
6. Customer: Is there any soup on the bill of fare?
Waiter: No, sir, there was, but I wiped it off.
to be on the bill of fare – bût çdienkartç
wipe – noslaucît
7. When a woman complained to her butcher that his sausages
tasted like meat at one end, but like bread crumbs at the other,
he replied: “Madam, in times like these no butcher can make
both ends meat.”

120
meat – gaïa
bread crumbs – maizes drupaèas
to make both ends meet – savilkt galus kopâ
8. Diner: There’s something wrong with these hot dogs.
Waiter: Well, don’t tell it to me, I’m only a waiter, not a
veterinarian.
dog – suns
hot dogs – (Amer.) cîsiòi
9. Little Marvin found a button in his salad. He remarked: “I
suppose it fell off while the salad was dressing.”
dress – ìçrbties; garnçjums
10. “Waiter!”
“Yes, sir.”
“What’s this?”
“It’s bean soup, sir.”
“No matter what it’s been. What is it now?”
bean – pupa

X. Sayings and proverbs. Read them. Make up dialogues


discussing these sayings and proverbs.
1. One meal a day is enough for a lion, and it ought to be for a
man. (Anonymous)
2. One should eat to live, not live to eat. (Franklin)
3. The way to a man’s heart is through his stomach. (French
proverb)
4. If you really want to lose weight, there are only three things you
must give up: breakfast, lunch and dinner. (Wright)
5. Glutton: one who digs his grave with his teeth. (French proverb)
6. Appetite comes with eating.
7. Hunger is the best sauce.
8. The rotten apple injures its neighbours.

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JUST FOR FUN
I. Read very carefully, some two or three times, these recipes.
SALAD
Cut cubes of boiled meat or ham. Mix with sliced apples and
cheese. Add tinned green peas. For dressing take a tea-spoon of
mustard mixed with the yellow of one egg and ¾ of a tea glass of
good oil. Add some salt and sugar. In the bowl dress the salad
with parsley and paprikas.
PUDDING
1 tea glass of boiled rice, cubes of boiled meat, 4 tomatoes, 1
onion, 4 paprikas, salt, a glass of sour cream, 150 grams of cheese.
Mix rice, meat, cut onion, tomatoes, cheese and paprikas. Add
sour cream and salt. Bake in hot oven 25 minutes.
Now that you have read the recipes, shut the book and answer
these questions:
1. What do you need cheese for?
a) for the salad? b) for the pudding? c) for both the
dishes?
2. How much oil do you need for the salad?
a) ¼ of a tea glass? b) a glassful? c) ¾ of a glass?
3. What do you need tomatoes for?
a) for the salad? b) for the pudding? c) for both the
dishes?
4. How many paprikas do you need for the pudding?
a) 500 grams? b) one paprika? c) four paprikas?
5. How long do you bake the pudding?
a) 15 minutes? b) half an hour? c) 25 minutes?
6. What do you cut cubes of meat for?
a) for the pudding? b) for the salad? c) for both the
dishes?

II. This English poem is easy to remember. Read it and try to


tell it to your fellow students.
1. I know an old lady who swallowed a fly,
I don’t know why she swallowed a fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.

122
2. I know an old lady who swallowed a spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her.
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
3. I know an old lady who swallowed a bird.
How absurd to swallow a bird!
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her.
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
4. I know an old lady who swallowed a cat.
Fancy that – to swallow a cat!
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird,
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her,
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
5. I know an old lady who swallowed a dog.
What a hog – to swallow a dog!
She swallowed the dog to catch the cat,
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird,
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her,
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
6. I know an old lady who swallowed a goat.
She just opened her throat and swallowed the goat.
She swallowed the goat to catch the dog,
She swallowed the dog to catch the cat,
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird,
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her,

123
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
7. I know an old lady who swallowed a cow.
I don’t know how she swallowed the cow.
She swallowed the cow to catch the goat,
She swallowed the goat to catch the dog,
She swallowed the dog to catch the cat,
She swallowed the cat to catch the bird,
She swallowed the bird to catch the spider
That wriggled and jiggled and tickled inside her,
She swallowed the spider to catch the fly,
But I don’t know why she swallowed the fly.
Perhaps she’ll die.
8. I know an old lady who swallowed a horse …
“Is she dead?”
“Of course.”

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UNIT 4

CHARLES DICKENS
(1812–1870)
Dickens was born in Portsmouth, a town on the south coast of
England. The little boy was very capable. He learned to read at an
early age and read many books in his childhood.
When Charles was nine years old, his family moved to London.
Charles’ father was a poor clerk who could never make both ends
meet. So the life of the family was very hard.
The future writer could not even go to school because at that
time his father was put into the Marshalsea prison for debt, and his
wife with all the children except Charles went into the prison too.
The family lived in the prison until Mr. Dickens could pay his debts.
Therefore those were the most unhappy days in all Charles’
life. He lived alone, among strangers, struggling with poverty. At
the age of ten he had to start working. The boy worked from early
morning till late at night to help his family. He began to work at a
blacking factory where he stuck lables on pots of boot-blacking.
When his father left the prison, young Charles was sent to school
where he remained three years. When he was fifteen, he had to
leave school and start earning his own living again, this time as
clerk in a lawyer’s office in London. He spent most of his spare
time reading in the British Museum, and in this way he educated
himself.
In a few years he became a newspaper reporter. In 1836, when
he was only twenty-four years old, Dickens published his first book,
a collection of sketches of London life. In the same year he began
publishing his “Pickwick Papers” which appeared in monthly
instalments till November 1837. When the novel was finished, he
became the most popular writer of the time.
After “The Pickwick Papers”, he wrote the story of a workhouse
boy in his novels “Oliver Twist” and “Nicholas Nickleby”, in which
he showed an English school where the boys were starved, beaten
and terrified by their school-master. Then his novels “Dombey and
Son”, “David Copperfield”, “Hard Times”, “Little Dorrit” and many
others appeared one after another.

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Many of Dickens’ characters are taken from life. For instance,
it is said that Mr. Micawber from “David Copperfield” and Mrs.
Nickleby from “Nicholas Nickleby” represent Dickens’ own mother
and father.
When Dickens was about 50 years old, he began giving
readings of his books in public. At these readings he acted all the
parts in turn speaking in a high voice for the women. The readings
were a great success. People said that if Dickens had chosen, he
might have been a fine actor.
In spite of tremendous success of his books, Dickens was not
completely happy. Money worries and overwork exhausted the
great writer and in 1870 at the age of fifty-eight he died.
The rare combination of a vivid imagination, a keen dramatic
sense, and splendid language has placed Dickens among the
greatest English writers.

Answer the following questions:


1. When and where was Ch. Dickens born? 2. What do you know of
Portsmouth? Can you find it on the map of Britain? 3. What can you
tell about his family? 4. What did you learn about Charles’ career?
5. How did he start his literary career? 6. Which of his novels have
you read? Share your knowledge with your fellowstudents. 7. Why
do you think he started giving readings in public? 8. Why is Dickens
placed among the greatest English writers?

NICHOLAS NICKLEBY
(an extract)

The school-room Nicholas entered was such a crowded scene,


and there were so many objects to attract attention, that at first
Nicholas stared about him, without really seeing anything at all.
Very soon, however, he saw that the place was a bare and dirty
room with two windows, a tenth part of which might be of glass,
while the remainder was stopped up with old copy-books and
paper. There were several long, old, shaky desks, cut and inked,
and damaged in every possible way; a special desk for Squeers,
the school-master, and another for his assistant. The walls were so

126
stained and dirty, that it was impossible to tell whether they had
ever been painted or whitewashed.
But the pupils – the young gentlemen! Nicholas saw pale faces,
bony figures, children who looked like old men. He could not help
seeing how silent and sad the boys seemed to be. Their little faces
were darkened with suffering; their beauty was gone; there was
no light in their eyes and they seemed to lack the spirit to move
about. All the boys were dressed in dirty rags which fully
harmonized with the dirt and disorder that surrounded the children.
And yet this scene, painful as it was, had its grotesque features.
Mrs. Squeers stood at one of the desks on which a basin of
brimstone and treacle was placed. She gave a large portion of
this delicious mixture to each boy in turn, using for the purpose a
very large wooden spoon which widened every young gentleman’s
mouth considerably. The boys were all obliged, under heavy
corporal punishment, to take in the whole of the spoon at a gasp.
“Nickleby,” said Mrs. Squeers sharply, noticing the surprised
expression on Nicholas’s face, “if you want to be a teacher here,
you must understand at once that we don’t want any foolery about
the boys. They have the brimstone and the treacle, partly because
if they hadn’t something or other in the way of medicine they’d
always be ill and giving us a world of trouble, and partly because
it spoils their appetites and makes their breakfast and dinner
cheaper. So it does them good and us at the same time, and that’s
fair enough, I’m sure.”
When Mrs. Squeers was finishing the procedure, choking the
last boy in her hurry, Mr. Squeers came in and the boys took their
places and their books. Mr. Squeers looked very profound, as if
he had a perfect understanding of what was inside all the books,
and could say every word of their contents by heart if he only chose
to take the trouble.
The school-master called up the first class. Obedient to this
command a number of boys lined up in front of Mr. Squeers’ desk,
half a dozen scarecrows, out at knees and elbows, one of whom
placed a torn and filthy book beneath his learned eye.
“This is the first class in English spelling and philosophy,
Nickleby,” said Squeers, motioning to Nicholas to stand beside

127
him. “We’ll make up a Latin one, and hand that over to you. Now
then, where’s the first boy?”
“Please, Sir, he’s cleaning the back parlour window,” said the
head of the philosophical class.
“So he is, to be sure,” rejoined Squeers. “We go upon the
practical way of teaching, Nickleby; the regular education system.
C-l-e-a-n, clean, verb active, to make bright. W-i-n, win, d-e-r, der,
winder, an opening in the wall. When the boy knows this out of the
book, he goes and does it. It’s just the same principle as the use of
the globes. Where’s the second boy?”
“Please, Sir, he’s weeding the garden,” replied a small voice.
“To be sure,” said Squeers. “So he is. B-o-t, bot, t-i-n, bottin, n-
e-y, bottinney, noun substantive, a knowledge of plants. When he
has learned that bottinney means a knowledge of plants, he goes
and knows them. That’s our system Nickleby; what do you think of
it?”
“It’s a very useful one, at any rate,” answered Nicholas.
“I believe you,” rejoined Squeers. “Third boy, what’s a horse?”
“A beast, Sir,” replied the boy.
“So it is,” said Squeers. “Ain’t it, Nickleby?”
“I believe there is no doubt of that, Sir,” answered Nicholas.
“Of course there isn’t,” said Squeers. “A horse is a quadruped,
and quadruped’s Latin for beast, as everybody that’s gone through
the grammar knows, or else where’s the use of having grammars
at all?”
“Where, indeed!” said Nicholas.
“As you’re perfect in that,” continued Squeers, turning to the
boy, “go and look after my horse, and rub him down well, or I’ll rub
you down. The rest of the class go and draw water up, till somebody
tells you to leave off, for it’s washing day tomorrow.”
So saying, he dismissed the first class to their experiments in
practical philosophy, and eyed Nicholas with a look half cunning
and half doubtful, as if he were not altogether certain what he might
think of him by this time.
“That’s the way we do it, Nickleby,” he said after a pause.
Nicholas shrugged his shoulders and said he saw it was.
“And a very good way it is, too,” said Squeers. “Now, just take
these fourteen little boys of the second class and hear some

128
reading, because, you know, you must begin to be useful and
idling about here won’t do.”
Mr. Squeers said this, as if it had suddenly occurred to him,
either that he must not say too much to his assistant, or that his
assistant did not say enough to him in praise of the school. The
children were arranged in a semi-circle round the new master,
and he was soon listening to their dull, hesitating reading of those
stories which are to be found in old spelling books.
In this exciting occupation, the morning dragged heavily on.
At one o’clock, the boys sat down in the kitchen to have some salt
beef. After this there was another hour of shivering with cold in the
school-room and then lessons began again.

PHRASES
1. to attract attention
2. he couldn’t help seeing
3. in turn
4. to take in
5. the whole of the spoon
6. at a gasp
7. a world of trouble
8. to do good (harm)
9. to line up
10. at any rate
11. to go through
12. there is no doubt of that
13. to rub down
14. to shrug one’s shoulders
15. it occurred to me
16. to hand something over to somebody
17. to call up
18. to look after
19. to take the trouble to do sth.
20. to say sth. in praise of sth.

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VOCABULARY ITEMS
1. paint n – 1. colouring matter used to give colour to a surface.
Give the doors two coats of paint.
2. material used to colour the face.
3. (pl) collection of tubes or cakes of colouring materials.
paint-box n
paint-brush n
paint v – 1. coat with paint: paint a door; paint the gate green.
2. make a picture (of) with paint: paint flowers / a landscape;
paint in oils / in water-colours.
3. describe vividly in words.
not so balck as one is painted – not so bad as one is represented
to be.
painter n – 1. person who paints pictures; artist.
2. workman who paints woodwork, walls, buildings, ships, etc.
painting n – 1. using paint; occupation of a painter.
2. painted picture.

2. to go v – 1. (from/to) move, pass, from one point to another


and away from the speaker. Shall we go there by train or by
plane? He has gone to China.
2. be placed. Where do you want your piano go? My clothes
won’t go into this small suitcase.
3. become: go blind / mad.
4. be moving, working; operate. The clock doesn’t go. This
machine goes by electricity.
5. (on, in) be spent on (of money). How much of your money
goes on food and clothes / in rent?
Phrases:
go too far – go beyond acceptable limits. You must apologize at
once – you’ve gone too far.
go to great lengths / trouble / pains (to do sth.) – to take care to do
sth. well. He went to great trouble to make his guests
comfortable.
go on a journey / trip / outing – make a journey / take a trip / have
an outing.

130
go out of fashion / out of use
go to sea – become a sailor.
go to sb. – pass into sb’s possession. Who did the property go to
when the old man died?
go about – move from place to place; pass from person to person.
I don’t go about much anymore. A story is going about that …
go after sb. / sth. – try to win or obtain. He’s gone after a job in the
city.
go against sb. / sth. – oppose; be contrary to. Don’t go against
your father. It goes against my principles.
go at sb. / sth. – rush at; attack. They went at each other furiously.
go back on / upon – fail to keep. He is not the sort of man who
would go back on his word.
go before sth. – precede. Pride goes before a fall.
go beyond sth. – exceed. You’ve gone beyond your instructions.
go by – pass. Time went by slowly.
go down – (of ship) sink; (of sun) set; (of food) be swallowed; (of
sea, wind) become calm; (of prices) go lower.
go for sb. – a) go to fetch. Shall I go for a doctor?
b) attack. The dog went for a postman as soon as he opened
the garden gate.
go in (of the sun; moon) – be obscured by clouds. The sun went in
and it grew rather cold.
go in for sth. – take, enter; have an interest in. He goes in for golf.
go into details – investigate carefully.
go off – a) explode. The gun went off by accident.
b) lose good quality. Meat and fish go off quickly in hot weather.
c) become unconscious. She went off into a faint.
go on the dole / social security – obtain payment under various
government schemes.
go on with sth. / doing sth. – continue. Go on trying!
go out – a) attend social functions. She still goes out a great deal,
even at seventy-five.
b) be extinguished. The fire has gone out.
c) become unfashionable. Has the fashion for boots gone out?
go through sth. – a) discuss in details. Let’s go through the
arguments again.

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b) undergo, suffer: go through hardships.
go together – a) be a normal accompaniment. Crime and poverty
often go together.
b) match. Do my green shirt and my blue jeans go together?
go up – rise. Temperature is going up.
go with sb. / sth.
Synonyms:
I. to go, to walk, to step, to stride.
To go. To go is the general term for to move or to be in motion,
and may be used for travelling by any means.
E.g. It’s getting on for 11 o’clock. I must go now. This road
goes to High Town. This book does not go into my bag.
To walk. To go on foot. (n walk; walker)
E.g. Shall we walk or go by bus? My feet have got sore from all
that walking.
Collocations: to go for a walk; to have / take a walk; to walk in
one’s sleep; a sleep walker; a road walk; to go on foot; a going
concern.
To step. To move one foot, or one foot after the other. To walk,
esp. for a few steps = paces. (n step)
E.g. He stepped out into the road and was knocked down by
a car. Step this way, please. Step in and make yourself at home.
Collocations: to keep / change step; to make a false step (fig.);
a step in the right direction (fig.); to be in / out of step (fig.); to
step out; footsteps.
To stride. To walk with big steps.
E.g. With one stride he was across the brook.
Collocations: to take sth. in one stride (colloq.); with giant
strides; making giant strides (fig.).
II. to go, to drive, to travel, to ride.
To go. The general term. It is used either without or with
indication of the means of conveyance.
E.g. Will you go by steamer or by plane? Where are you going?
We were going fast when we noticed a road block in front of
us.
To drive. To act as the driver of a car (or train). (n a drive)
E.g. She drove her Jaguar into the garage. If you do not drive
carefully, you may get into trouble.

132
Collocations: to drive a car / lorry / van / coach / train / horse /
tram; to go for a drive, to have / take a drive; to drive carelessly
/ carefully; a driving-licence; a driving-instructor.
To ride. To be carried along in any kind of (public) conveyance
(without being the driver); to travel on a bike. (n a ride)
E.g. When I saw him, he was riding his bicycle. Do you wish to
walk or to ride? Did you enjoy your ride in his new car?
Collocations: to ride a bicycle / motorcycle; to ride in a car /
train / bus / tram etc.
To travel. To move from one place to another; to move or go in
some specified manner, at some specified speed etc.
E.g. We shall travel from Edinburg to Bair Athole by coach or
by train. His car was travelling at 70 miles per hour when he
lost control of it.
Collocations: to travel by boat / rail etc.; to travel slowly / fast /
first class; to travel in great style.
Antonyms: to come, to approach, to arrive.

3. eye n – 1. organ of sight. We see with our eyes. He opened /


closed his eyes. He is blind in one eye.
Phrases:
in the eyes of sb.; in my / his, etc. eyes – in the judgement of.
You’re only a child in his eyes.
under / before one’s very eyes – a) in one’s presence, in front of one.
b) with no attempt at concealment.
up to the eyes in (work, etc.) – deeply engaged in.
close one’s eyes to – refuse to see or take notice of.
give sb. a black eye; black sb’s eye – give him a blow so that there
is a discoloured bruise round the eye.
have an eye for – be a good judge of, have a proper sense of. He
has a good eye for beauty / the picturesque.
keep an eye on – (lit, fig) keep a watch on.
make eyes at – look amorously at.
set / clap eyes on – see. I hope I shall never set eyes on her again.
never take one’s eyes off – never stop watching.
2. thing like an eye: the eye of a needle; a hook and eye; the
eye of a potato.

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3. (compounds, etc.).
eye-ball n – the eye within the lids and socket.
eye-brow n – arch of hair above the eye.
raise one’s eyebrows – express surprise, doubt, etc.
eye-glasses n – pair of lenses in a frame.
eye-lash n – hair, row of hairs, on the edge of the eyelid.
eye-lid n – upper or lower covering of the eye.
eye-piece n – lens at the end of a telescope or microscope, to
which the eye is applied.
eye-shadow n – cosmetic applied to the eyelids.
eye-sight n – power, faculty, of seeing: to have good / poor
eyesight.
eye-witness n – person who can bear witness from what he
has himself seen: an eye-witness account of a crime.
-eyed suff (in compounds): a blue-eyed girl; a one-eyed man.
to eye v – observe, watch. He eyed me with suspicion. They
were ey(e)ing us jealously.
Synonyms: to gaze, to look, to stare, to eye.
To look (at sth., sb.) is the general word in this group of
synonyms and may be used instead of any of the verbs of the
group.
E.g. The teacher looked at the child with interest.
To gaze (at, on, upon sth., sb.) is to look long and steadily
usually with wonder, curiosity or admiration.
E.g. Andrew Manson sat gazing with fixed intensity through
the window upon the mountains which rose on either side of
the single railway track.
To stare (at sth., sb.) is to look long and steadily at sth. or sb.
E.g. The children stared at the new pupil who stood in front of
the class.
To eye (sth., sb.) is to watch carefully with suspicion or curiosity.
E.g. The policeman eyed George with suspicion when the latter
hid in the doorway of the house.

4. to lack v – 1. lack (in) – be without; not have; have less than


enough of: lack wisdom. I lack words with which to express
my thanks. What I lack in experience I make up in curiosity.

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be lacking in sth. – not have enough of it. He’s lacking in courage.
2. be lacking – be in short supply, not be available. Money
was lacking for the plan.
3. lack for – (formal) need. They lacked for nothing.
lack n – want, need, shortage. The plants died for lack of water.
Synonyms: to want, to lack, to be absent, to be missing.
To want. To be short of something or to be without something.
(n want)
E.g. She wants three years for her pension.
Collocations: to be in want of; to want for.
To lack. Similar to want it suggests “to be in short supply of
something or not to have”. (n lack)
E.g. The only thing he lacks is patience. They are lacking in
practice. The house lacks central heating.
Collocations: to be lacking in sth.; to lack sth.; a lack of sth.; for
lack of sth.; no lack of.
To be absent. Chiefly used of persons, not to be present.
(n absence)
E.g. She was absent from school because she was ill. How
long has the manager been absent?
To be missing. Used of persons and things; what is lacking to
make something complete, what one does not find in its place.
E.g. After the catastrophy fifty miners were missing. There are
some pages missing in the dictionary.

5. feature n – 1. one of the named parts of the face. Her eyes


are her best feature.
2. (pl) the face as a whole: a man of handsome features.
3. characteristic or striking part: the geographical features of
a district; unusual features in a political programme.
4. (often attrib) prominent article or subject in a newspaper;
full-length film in a cinema programme, etc.: a newspaper that
makes a feature of sport; a two-feature programme.
to feature v – be a feature, a feature of; have a prominent part
for: a film that features a new French actress.
featureless adj – uninteresting; with no obvious features.

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6. to trouble v – 1. cause worry, discomfort, anxiety or
inconvenience to: be troubled by bad news; troubled with a
nasty cough.
2. trouble sb. to do sth.; trouble sb. for sth. – put sb. to the
inconvenience of doing sth. May I trouble you to pass the salt,
please. I must trouble you to remember your manners.
3. bother or inconvenience oneself. Don’t trouble to meet me
at the station. Why should I trouble to explain?
4. agitate; disturb: a troubled expression; troubled looks.
trouble n – 1. worry; anxiety, discomfort; unhappiness; difficulty.
Her heart was full of trouble. She’s always making trouble for
her friends. He has been through much trouble / has had many
troubles.
Phrases:
in trouble – suffering, misfortune, anxiety because one has done
wrong.
ask / look for trouble – behave in such a way that trouble is likely.
It’s asking for trouble to experiment with drugs.
get into trouble – do sth. that will bring unhappiness, punishment.
get sb. into trouble – cause sb. to be in trouble.
2. sb. or sth. that causes trouble. I don’t want to be any trouble
to you. I find it a great trouble to get up at 6 a.m.
3. care; attention; (extra) work; inconvenience. Did the work
give you much trouble? I don’t like putting you to so much
trouble.
4. illness: liver trouble; mental trouble; children’s troubles.
troublesome adj – causing trouble: a troublesome child /
headache / problem.
Synonyms: to trouble, to worry, to bother.
To trouble most commonly denotes that a person is put to some
inconvenience or that the normal state of things is disturbed.
E.g. We mustn’t trouble him about it.
To worry denotes the fact that a person is in uneasy state of
mind about something.
Cf. My wound troubles me (= causes pain). My wound worries
me (= gives no peace of mind).
E.g. Don’t worry about it. Everything will be all right.

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To bother refers to the act of interrupting or disturbing
someone, or preventing him from continuing to do what he is
doing. Bother sometimes implies bewilderment or worry and
anxiety.
E.g. Tell children to stop bothering their father.

7. heart n – 1. that part of the body which pumps blood through


the system. When a man’s heart stops beating, he dies. He
had a heart attack.
2. centre of the emotions, esp. love: a man with a kind heart; a
kind- hearted man.
Phrases:
sb. after one’s own heart – of the sort one very much likes or
approves of.
at heart – deep down; basically.
have sth. at heart – be deeply interested in it.
from (the bottom of) one’s heart – sincerely.
in one’s heart of hearts – in one’s inmost feelings.
to one’s heart’s content – as much as, for as long as, etc. one
wishes.
with all one’s heart – completely and willingly. I love you with all my
heart.
heart and soul – completely. I’m yours heart and soul.
break a person’s heart – make him very sad.
cry one’s heart out – pine or brood over sth., esp. in secret.
(get / learn / know sth.) by heart – from memory.
have the heart to – be hard-hearted or unsympathetic enough to.
How can you have the heart to drown the kittens?
have one’s heart in sth. – be interested in it and fond of it.
have one’s heart in one’s boots – be greatly discouraged, feel
hopeless.
have one’s heart in one’s mouth – be badly frightened.
have one’s heart in the right place – have true or kind feelings.
have one’s heart set on sth. – desire greatly.
lose heart – be discouraged.
lose one’s heart to sb. / sth. – become very fond of; fall in love with.
take sth. to heart – be much affected by it; grieve over it.

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wear one’s heart on / upon one’s sleeve – show one’s feelings
quite openly.
3. central part: in the heart of the forest; the heart of the matter;
a cabage with a good solid heart.
heartache n
heartbeat n
heart-break n
heartbreaking adj
heartbroken adj
heart-disease n – disease of the heart.
heart-failure n – failure of the heart to function.
heart-rending adj – causing deep grief.
heartstrings n pl – deepest feelings of love: play upon sb’s
heartstrings, touch his feelings.
hearted adj – (in compounds): hard-hearted; sad-hearted;
faint-hearted, lacking in courage.
heartless adj – unkind; without pity.
heartlessly adv
heartlessness n
to hearten v – give courage to; cheer: heartening news.
heartily adv – 1. with goodwill, courage or appetite: set to
work heartily; eat heartily.
2. very: heartily glad that …
hearty adj – 1. (of feelings) sincere: give sb. a hearty welcome.
2. strong; in good health: still hale and hearty at eighty-five.
3. big: a hearty meal / appetite.

8. tear n – drop of salty water coming from the eye. Her eyes
filled with tears. The sad story moved us to tears.
tear-drop n
tear-gas n – tear-gas bombs.
tearful adj – crying; wet with tears: a tearful face; tearful looks.
tearfully adv
tearless adj – without tears, not weeping. The mother stared
at her dead baby in tearless grief.
to tear v – 1. pull sharply apart or to pieces; damage, by
pulling sharply: tear a sheet of paper in two / tear it to pieces /
to bits; tear sth. up.

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2. cause (sth.) to be out of place (down, off, away, etc.) by
pulling sharply: tear a page out of a book / a notice down from
a notice-board / a leaf from a calendar.
tear oneself away (from) – leave; stop doing sth. She could scarcely
tear herself away from the scene. He could not tear himself
away from his book.
3. destroy the peace of: a country torn by civil war; a heart
torn by grief.
torn between – painfully distracted by having to choose between.
4. become torn. This material tears easily.
5. go in excitement or at great speed. The children tore out of
the school gates / were tearing about in the playground. He
tore down the hill.
tear n – torn place in sth., e.g. cloth, paper.

9. to educate v – 1. give intellectual and moral training to; train.


The boy had to educate himself in the evening after finishing
his work. I was educated for the law. You should educate your
children to behave well.
educator n – person who educates.
education n – 1. systematic training and instruction. No country
can afford to neglect education. Is education free and
compulsory in your country?
2. knowledge and abilities, development of character and
mental powers, resulting from such training.
educational adj – of, connected with, education: educational
work; an educational magazine.
educationist, educationalist n – expert in education.
Synonyms: to bring up, to rear, to educate, to breed, to train.
To bring up. To care for children during their childhood. The
general term for what parents do to their children.
(n upbringing)
E.g. They have brought their children up very well.
Collocations: well / badly brought up; a strict upbringing.
To rear is used in the sense of “to bring up children”, but a
literary rather than a colloquial term. In the sense of “to breed
or raise animals (or crops)”, however, it is a term of everyday
language.

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E.g. He was reared amidst squalor and poverty. They rear
chicken for a living.
To educate is develop, bring out the intellectual and moral
powers of a person by instructions, teaching or experience.
(n education)
E.g. It is the task of teachers to educate children.
Collocations: to be educated at school / university etc. an
educated person.
To breed. 1) to raise livestock. Breed indicates the process of
reproduction and usually improvement thereby. Whereas rear
is simply to look after animals and to bring to satisfactory
maturity. Breeding is done by a skilled breeder, whereas a
mere cattleman rears the cattle.
2) to cultivate someone’s manners in accordance with tradition;
sometimes in the sense of to prepare for some career by
education and instruction. Well-bred, however, is not
necessarily well-educated, it need have little to do with intellect.
The opposite of well-bred would be crude. (n breed)
E.g. Some farmers specialize in cattle breeding. England still
breeds men to fight for her. He’s a man of fine breeding.
Collocations: to breed sheep / dogs etc.; selective breeding
(of cattle); a well-bred / ill-bred man; bad breeding (bad
manners); a man of (good) breeding.
To train. To bring a person or animal to some desired level of
efficiency, to further develop powers that already exist. (n
training)
E.g. He is a trained teacher of languages.
Collocations: to train soldiers / a child to do sth. / an athlete or
sportsman; to train a dog ( for certain performances, but also
in general, i.e. to behave as you want it to); to train for some
competition; fully / well-trained; a training college / school /
ship; a trained teacher / athlete / boxer / nurse.

10. draw n – 1. the act of drawing: the draw for the fourth round of
the tennis tournament. When does the draw take place. The
game ended in a draw, neither side won.
2. sb. or sth. that attracts attention. The new play is a great draw.

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to draw v – 1. move by pulling: to draw a boat (up) out of the
water / on to the beach; to draw one’s chair up to the table; to
draw sb. aside; to draw on / off one’s socks / gloves / tights; to
draw a curtain across a window; to draw down the blinds.
2. move by pulling after or behind: a train drawn by two
locomotives; tractor-drawn ploughs.
3. draw (out); draw (from / out of) – take or get out by pulling;
extract: to draw a cork; to draw nails from a plank; to have a
tooth drawn.
4. draw (from / out of) – obtain from a source: to draw water
from a well; to draw money from the bank / from one’s account;
to draw inspiration from nature.
draw tears / applause, etc. – be the cause of. Her singing drew
long applause.
5. draw (to) – attract. Street accidents always draw crowds.
The film drew large audiences.
6. take in: to draw a deep breath.
7. move; come. Christmas is drawing near. The day drew to its
close.
8. make with a pen, pencil, chalk, etc.: to draw a straight line
/ a circle; to draw a picture / plan / diagram.
describe in words. The characters in Jane Austen’s novels are
well drawn.
draw a parallel / comparison / analogy (between)
9. end (a game, etc.) without either winning or losing: to draw
a football or cricket match.
Phrases:
draw in – (of a day) 1. reach its end.
2. become shorter. The days begin to draw in after midsummer.
draw on – (of a period of time) approach. Night drew on.
draw on sth. / sb. – take or use as a source. We mustn’t draw on
our savings. You may draw on me for any sum up to £ 500.
draw out – (of a day) become longer. Christmas passed and the
days began to draw out.
draw sth. out – stretch; cause to become longer. He heated the
metal and drew it out into a long wire. He has drawn out the
subject into three volumes.

141
draw sb. out – cause, persuade (a person) to talk, show his feelings
etc.
draw (sth. / sb.) up – 1. (of a vehicle) (cause to) come to a stop.
The taxi drew up in front of the station.
2. prepare; compose: to draw up a contract.
drawback n – sth. which lessens one’s satisfaction, or makes
progress less easy, disadvantage (to).
drawer n – box-like container (with a handle or handles) which
slides in and out of piece of furniture, etc.
chest of drawers – piece of furniture consisting of a set of drawers.
drawing n – the art of representing objects, scenes, etc. by
lines, with a pencil.
Synonyms:
I. to paint, to draw.
To draw means to make lines, pictures, etc. with pencil or pen.
E.g. The boy drew geometrical figures. The plan was drawn
by an experienced architect.
To paint means to portray with paints.
E.g. Young Jolyon painted pictures. He painted beautiful
landscapes.
II. to draw, to pull, to drag.
To draw, to pull, to drag come into comparison when they mean
“to cause a person or thing to move from one place or position
to another”.
To draw means to cause an object to move from one position
to another by the exertion of force, it is opposed to push; to
draw is also to pull towards oneself by a movement of hand or
arm.
E.g. To draw a wagon, a train, a load, to draw water from a
well.
To drag is to draw or pull roughly, or along, usually over the
ground or a surface, especially something heavy, for which
effort is required; to pull with force; it also means to draw slowly
and with difficulty. Drag may be used figuratively. The difference
between draw and drag is that to draw is the general word for
traction of any sort, but to drag is to draw with toil, difficulty, or
violence, especially against active or passive resistance; with

142
force to overcome friction between the object drawn and the
surface on which it rests.
E.g. To drag one’s feet; to drag a net in fishing; to drag a heavy
piece of furniture across a room.
To pull is to cause to move towards one, to cause to come
nearer to the object from the direction from which force is
exerted, to remove, extract by pulling; to cause to move from
the position occupied. Pull is often accompanied by an adverb
or adverbial phrase to indicate the direction.
E.g. To pull out a cork; to pull a cart; to pull out a tooth; to pull
a person out of bed; to pull by the sleeve. He complains that
another boy pulled his ear. Horses pull very long sometimes
before they can draw a heavily laden cart uphill.

VOCABULARY EXERCISES
I. Consult a dictionary and practise the pronunciation of the
following words:
shaby, inked, rags, harmonize, grotesque, brimstone, treacle,
delicious, corporal punishment, gasp, foolery, appetite, procedure,
choke, profound, philosophy, parlour, philosophical, principle,
weeding, substantive, botany, quadruped, cunning, idling, semi-
circle.

II. Explain the polysemy of the words and phrases in italics and
then translate the sentences.
A. 1. I offered you a draw. 2. His appearance will be the draw of
the evening. 3. The tug was drawing six barges after it. 4. The train
was drawn by two engines. 5. He drew the screen back into its
former place in front of the picture. 6. The girl drew him aside and
whispered: “I want to have a word with you.” 7. The carriage was
drawn by a pair of greys. 8. She drew the curtains down carefully
lest she should wake the patient. 9. Though he sat there, blushing
and humble, she felt drawn to him. 10. He drew out his purse:
there was not much money in it. 11. Stephen always liked to draw.
12. They drew near the fire which their father had made up as well
as he could. 13. An oil painting caught and held him. There was

143
beauty, and it drew him irresistably. 14. The day was drawing to an
end. 15. The runner stopped to draw breath. 16. They talked non-
stop, without even drawing breath. 17. This chimney draws well.
18. Grief drew them closer. 19. His words drew applause from the
audience.
B. 1. It happened under his very eyes. 2. I never set eyes on him
before. 3. He could measure everything by eye. 4. The steppe
stretched as far as the eye could see. 5. When he saw Helen enter
the hall he rubbed his eyes in disbelief. 6. I ran my eye quickly
over your article. 7. In the eyes of the law he was not guilty. 8. In his
eyes she is still a child. 9. I’ve got my eye on that violin. 10. He’s
got a good eye for a horse. 11. I’ll keep my eye on the children for
you. 12. One can see with half an eye he’s a foreigner. 13. I’m up
to my eyes in work. 14. I opened his eyes to the truth. 15. I tried to
catch the eye of the auctioneer. 16. He caught my eye and gave
me a wink. 17. He is very much in the public eye these days.
18. The girl eyed him with curiosity.
C. 1. He tore the paper into pieces. 2. The page is slightly torn.
3. She tore herself from his arms. 4. The girl tore her dress on the
nail that was sticking out of the chair. 5. He was torn by conflicting
emotions. 6. The child was torn between them. 7. This paper tears
easily. 8. Mrs. Smith opened the present carefully, trying not to
tear the wrapping paper. 9. I’ve torn a hole in my trousers climbing
over that fence. 10. How did you get that tear in your jacket.
11. I’ve noticed a small tear near the corner of the painting. 12. His
dog came tearing across the field towards me.
D. 1. Most of us were in tears by the time he’d finished his story.
2. My little girl came home in tears. “What’s wrong darling?” I asked.
3. The family had a tearful reunion at the airport. 4. He stood silently,
tears rolling down his cheeks, while the music played. 5. Kate tried
to console the tearful child. 6. She showed us the letter with tears
running down her cheeks. 7. He managed to get back inside the
house before bursting into tears. 8. Her hands were shaking. She
was on the verge of tears but Paul didn’t realise it. 9. The lesson
was going very badly and the teacher was close to tears. 10. Laura
burst into tears and ran out of the room. 11. I banged my hand

144
down on the table, fighting back tears of rage and frustration.
12. His quiet words brought tears to my eyes. 13. He nagged and
complained, and reduced Helen to tears. 14. She was often
reduced to tears by the sight of children begging. 15. The old
song always brought tears to Nick’s eyes.
E. 1. My wound troubles me very much. 2. May I trouble you for a
glass of water? 3. I’ll trouble you to mind your own business. 4. He
told me all his troubles. 5. What a trouble you are! 6. Their son is a
great trouble to them. 7. He has money troubles. 8. I am putting
you to a lot of trouble. 9. Every time there’s trouble I have to go
along and sort it out. 10. We have had a lot of trouble with the car
this year. 11. The trouble with this dish is that it takes so long to
make. 12. Because I’m a priest, people often come to me with
their troubles, looking for advice. 13. It’s clear from these figures
that the company is in trouble. 14. I took out a loan but got into
trouble when I lost my job. 15. The infection can be particularly
troublesome if it affects the lungs and throat. 16. Don’t give him
another drink, or he’ll start causing trouble. 17. The troublesome
issue of the border dispute is sure to remain a problem. 18. The
trouble is that no one seems to know what is happening.
F. 1. The public need to be educated about healthy eating. 2. What
we are trying to do is to educate young people to be responsible
citizens. 3. Jobs in education are not usually highly paid. 4. People
working in education are becoming angry with government’s refusal
to consult them about changes. 5. Most educators agree that
intimidating kids is not the best way to encourage them to learn.
6. Liz makes educational programmes for children’s television.
G. 1. I’ve been on the go all day. 2. I think we can make a go of it.
3. Long shirts are all the go now. 4. I often go to the theatre. 5. The
bus goes to that village twice a day. 6. We went round the shops
for a while till it was time for the train. 7. The road goes South.
8. We usually go to the country on Sunday. 9. Last year we went
around in France quite a lot. 10. He was going at 60 m.p.h.
11. They’ve just gone five minutes ago. 12. They went to England
by sea. 13. They’ve gone South for their holiday. 14. The train goes
from platform three. 15. Let’s go for a walk. 16. She’s gone to visit

145
her aunt. 17. I’m going to change my job. 18. It’s going to rain.
19. She’s gone shopping. 20. How did the exam go? 21. I hope all
is going well with you. 22. If I’m not there, everything goes wrong.
23. It will go hard with him. 24. The estate went to his brother.
25. The house went for 40000 lats. 26. When I turned round, he
was gone. 27. The money is all gone. 28. Is your watch going?
29. The battery has gone. 30. Are there any tickets going for tonight’s
concert? 31. We missed supper so we had to go hungry. 32. I
can’t remember how this argument went. 33. What he says goes.
34. Where do you want the piano to go?
H. 1. I could feel my heart beating. 2. He had a heart attack a week
ago. 3. He tried to get to the heart of the matter. 4. He is a man
after my own heart. 5. The colour came up in her cheeks, released
from a heart beating too fast now. 6. His generous heart warmed
to her at the prospect of misfortune. 7. Drink this, Nicky: it will give
you the heart you lack, for an hour or so.
I. 1. He lacks a sense of humour. 2. The plants died for lack of
water. 3. There’s no lack of money in their family. 4. I’m getting fat
from lack of exercise. 5. He is bored for lack of company. 6. He
lacked will power to give up smoking. 7. We lacked time to finish
the book.
J. 1. The school’s most notable feature was its air of calm. 2. A
feature common to all these buildings is a spacious entrance hall.
3. Patriotism was a prominent feature in his election campaign.
4. Information on employment is a central feature of this training
course. 5. The paper features two promising young actresses.
6. The paper made a special feature of the Queen’s visit. 7. The
landing of the cosmonauts was featured on the front page. 8. The
report of the match was featured in all the papers.
K. 1. Constable sometimes used a palette knife to apply the paint
instead of a brush. 2. They painted the door white. 3. Martin stared
at what seemed to be a careless daub of paint, then stepped away.
4. Turner excelled in painting marine subjects. 5. It was a strange
situation, and very different from any romantic picture which his
fancy might have painted.

146
III. Give your own sentences or situations with the following
word combinations and translate the combinations into Latvian.
Is it always possible to give a word for word translation?
1. to have a tooth drawn; to draw money from the bank; to draw
one’s salary; to draw inspiration from nature; to draw a deep breath;
to draw a character in a novel; to draw a parallel; to draw a
comparison; to draw analogy.
2. to be up to the eyes in work; to close one’s eyes to; to give sb. a
black eye; to have an eye for; to keep an eye on; to make eyes at;
to set eyes on; never take one’s eyes off; to raise one’s eyebrows;
to measure sth. by eye; to rub one’s eyes in disbelief; to run one’s
eyes over sth.; to have a good eye for; to see with half an eye; to
catch the eye of sb.; to have good / poor eyesight.
3. to be moved to tears; to burst into tears.
4. to tear sth. to pieces / bits; to tear one’s hair; to tear sth. open; to
tear a page out of a book; to tear a notice down from a notice-
board; to tear a leaf from a calendar; to tear down the hill.
5. to trouble sb. to do sth.; to trouble sb. for sth.; heart full of trouble;
to make trouble for sb.; to ask for trouble; to look for trouble; to get
into trouble; to get sb. into trouble; to be a great trouble; to put sb.
to trouble; to have mental trouble; a troublesome child; a
troublesome affair; in these troubled times; a troublesome problem.
6. to educate oneself; to be educated for law; to educate the
children; free education; compulsory education; educational work;
educational magazine.
7. to go by train / plane / bus; to go too far; to go to great lengths
to do sth.; to go to great trouble to do sth.; to go on a trip; to go for
a walk; to go for a swim; to go out of fashion; to go out of use; to go
to war; to go to church; to go to hospital; to go to market; to go to
school / college / university; to go to sea; to go on the stage; to go
to sb.; to go broke; to go badly / well; to go easy on sb. / sth.
8. to have a generous heart; to have a heart attack; a kindhearted
man; sb. after one’s own heart; to have sth. at heart; from the bottom
of one’s heart; in one’s heart of hearts; to talk to one’s heart’s content;

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with all one’s heart; heart and soul; to break a person’s heart; to
cry one’s heart out; to learn sth. by heart; to have the heart to; to
have one’s heart in sth.; to have one’s heart in one’s boots; to have
one’s heart in one’s mouth; to have one’s heart in the right place;
to have one’s heart set on sth.; to lose heart; to lose one’s heart to
sb. / sth.; to take sth. to heart; to wear one’s heart on one’s sleeve;
the heart of the matter.
9. to lack wisdom; to lack sense of humour; to be lacking in sth.;
lack of company; lack of water; lack of money.
10. a prominent feature; a specific feature; a common feature; the
geographical features of the district; a man of handsome features;
a feature film.
11. to paint a landscape; to paint a seascape; to paint in oils; to
paint in watercolours; not so black as one is painted.

IV. Paraphrase the italisized words and phrases by using suitable


active vocabulary.
1. draw
1. The days were becoming shorter and my daily walk through the
park and weekly visit to the cinema had to be abandoned. 2. He
put his hand in his pocket and took out a ring. 3. He took the gun
from his pocket and pointed it at me. 4. I would like to take 20 lats
from my account. 5. He took off his gloves. 6. The politician
lengthened his speech to almost two hours. 7. Mary is very quiet;
try to encourage her at the party. 8. The taxi came to a stop before
a house in Green Street. 9. The general has written a plan to defeat
the enemy. 10. Has your lawyer prepared the contract yet?
2. tear
1. I was very afraid as I watched the child moving quickly across
that busy road. 2. Removing the cover, the child reached into the
box to see what his birthday present was. 3. I find it difficult to
choose between buying a new car and having a good holiday.
4. The photograph of the unpopular leader was roughly removed
in the night by the enemy. 5. It’s dangerous the way cars move
along these narrow winding streets.

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3. trouble
1. May I ask you for a match? 2. She can look after herself, and
she’s not worth worrying about. 3. Please don’t worry about that
one little mistake, you’re forgiven. 4. I don’t want to bother you with
all my little difficulties, but I wonder if you could help me first once
more? 5. He was deeply worried by what he heard. 6. His
conscience worried him. 7. I won’t bother you if you are busy.
4. go
1. Which station does the train start from? 2. Let’s start from the
top of the page. 3. My son attends university. 4. How long do
children have to attend school in this country? 5. The plane has
already departed. 6. I intend to change my job. 7. The engine is
functioning well. 8. His sight is giving way. 9. Summer has already
passed. 10. She is losing her eyesight. 11. It’s easy in this city to
travel by bus. 12. Mother is much better, thank you, she is able to
move a bit more. 13. There are a lot of colds spreading just now.
14. Half the guards chased the escaped prisoners, but they got
away free. 15. I wouldn’t advise you to oppose the director. 16. It is
opposite my nature to get up early in the morning. 17. Is your work
making progress now that the materials have arrived? 18. Can I
accompany you? 19. Our dog attacked the postman again this
morning, he’ll get us into trouble. 20. There was no answer to my
knock, so I left. 21. When do the children return to school? 22. My
family can be traced since the 15th century. 23. The money that I
won exceeded my fondest hopes. 24. He exceeded his authority.
25. I shall complain to the bus company, my bus just passed the
stop empty! 26. The children coughed and coughed because a
piece of bread had been swallowed the wrong way. 27. The whole
house fell in flames. 28. The standard of performance has become
lower since last year. 29. Three ships sank in last night’s storm off
the coast. 30. Our holiday was fine until Jim fell ill with a bad cold.
31. Would you fetch some milk for me? 32. The piano is too big, it
won’t fit in that space. 33. The police examined the man’s story to
see if he was telling the truth. 34. I hear their son has joined the
army. 35. The grenade exploded by mistake. 36. The wedding
took place as planned. 37. Don’t drink the milk, it’s turned sour.

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38. I can’t live like this, I’ve got to get help. 39. As the weeks passed,
still no letter arrived. 40. The telephone rang just as I was leaving
the house. 41. Formal methods of teaching stop being popular,
and new ones are coming in all the time. 42. The proposal was
approved by the ministry. 43. Has the sale of the house been
completed yet? 44. Strength and sensitivity do not often happen
together. 45. I like the way the blue carpet and the gold curtains
suit each other. 46. Smoke was rising in a straight line, showing
that there was no wind. 47. How many new houses have been built
this year? 48. A chemical factory was destroyed by explosion in
the North of England, killing many people. 49. We enjoyed our
holiday, although we travelled with our neighbours. 50. It’s unhealthy
and dangerous to live without sleep.

V. Insert the appropriate particle.


1. draw
1. The days begin to draw … when November comes. 2. Hastily
John drew … his boots and rushed out into the street. 3. She drew
… her gloves and put them on the little table. 4. The crowd drew …
to let the prisoner pass. 5. She put her hand on his shoulder and
then drew it … 6. The girl drew him … and whispered: “I want to
have a word with you.” 7. And though he sat there, blushing and
humble, again she felt drawn … him. 8. The woman was drawing
water … a well, when he arrived home. 9. The car drew … from the
kerb. 10. He drew … his remarks to a great length. 11. Flattery will
constantly draw her … 12. The days draw …, the weather gets
warmer. 13. The Barons drew … the Magna Charta setting forth
their claims. 14. There are some chairs against the wall, Robert,
won’t you draw them … and sit down. 15. This tooth really hurts. I
may have to have it drawn … 16. She went to the bank and drew
some money …
2. tear
1. Across the river were the broken walls of old houses that were
being torn … 2. He took his spare shirt and tore … several strips.
3. I used to feel it was like killing someone to tear … a photograph.
4. I can’t tear myself … from this book. 5. Look at this picture which
I tore … … the newspaper. 6. He was torn … his wife and his

150
mother. 7. I just saw Jim tearing … the street: what was all the
hurry about?
3. go
1. The story is going … the town. 2. They went … each other with
their fists. 3. The railway goes … the whole country. 4. Go … your
father and give him his gloves. 5. I can’t accept this, it goes … my
principles. 6. I’ll be late for supper, so just go … without me. 7. I’ll
go … with you as far as the theatre building. 8. She is not the
person to go … … her word. 9. It goes … the bounds of common
politeness. 10. I think I shall go … to the country for the week-end.
11. He goes … next term. 12. The ship went … with all hands.
13. The moon went … behind the pasture. 14. But the water would
not go … Harriet could not drink the water. 15. Prices of all farm
products are expected to go … 16. The inflammation should go …
in a few days. 17. The fire slowly went … 18. History book that goes
… to the 18th century. 19. The speaker went … the profiteers.
20. Are you going … … the Civil Service Examination? 21. She
said flatly she was not going … … teaching. 22. He has gone …
the Navy. 23. “I’ll go … the matter,” he said, “and let you know.”
24. Perhaps the sound of those rockets alarmed you, they went …
so very sudden. 25. He is unconscious. He just half comes to
himself from time to time and moans and then goes … again.
26. That beer had gone … and was stale. 27. How time goes …!
28. I’ve seen such things going … in the world. 29. You are too
kind to me, I don’t deserve it after the way I’ve gone … 30. Go …
… what you were saying. 31. She goes … a great deal. 32. Long
skirts are gradually going … 33. Suddenly his lamp went … as if
extinguished by a soft breath. 34. The class have gone … this
book twice. 35. Let’s go … the sonata once more. 36. Poor Eliza
had to go … that ordeal for months. 37. My book went … ten
impressions. 38. Do you think that Bill will go …? 39. I’m going … to
town this afternoon. 40. I was awarded a University open scholarship
in mathematics and naturally expected to go … to the University.
41. The infant death-rate went … something frightful. 42. The value
of the land is certain to go … 43. The whole building went … in
smoke. 44. Can a singular verb go … a plural noun? 45. I am
looking for a jumper to go … my new suit. 46. When I am very busy
I go … my lunch.

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VI. Give your reasons for the choice of the verbs to pull, to drag
or to draw in the following pairs of sentences.
1. The girl is pulling the sledge. An old woman was slowly
dragging a sledge with a bag
of potatoes on it.
2. A man drew the chair to the The small boy was dragging a
table as he spoke. chair behind him.
3. The woman pulled off her Then she drew a handkerchief
gloves and threw them on out of her pocket.
the table.
4. Seized with fear, she pulled The mother drew the child aside
the child to her. and whispered: “You must say
‘Thank you!’”
5. The horse is pulling a cart. The man moved forward slowly
as he was dragging a cart full of
wood.
6. The workers were drawing She pulled a piece of wire over
a telephone wire across the the door and a soft bell was
yard. heard behind it.
7. He took her by the arm and Somebody was pulling me by
gently drew her aside. the arm.
8. The dogs were dragging a Don’t pull the sledge, push it
sled to the top of the hill. slightly and it will go easily down
the hill.

VII. State the difference between (a) “draw” and “drag”, (b) “pull”
and “drag” in the following sentences arranged in pairs.
A. 1. … he drew a chair up to my companion and seated himself
with his bony knees almost touching him. 2. “Come and sit down,”
she cried, dragging her big chair up to the fire, “in this comfy
chair.”
B. 1. He pulled on his cap, lurched desperately through the
doorway, and was gone. 2. Still keeping on her nightdress she
began to drag on her clothes. 3. He pulled the curtains back.
4. He stayed there until a lieutenant jumped down from the ridge
and picked him up and dragged him back.

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VIII. Find out the meanings in which “draw” and “drag” are used
in the sentences below. State where the meanings are figurative
and where literal.
1. Fielding found himself drawn more and more into Miss Quested’s
affairs. 2. Your absence, I may remark, drew commentaries. 3. The
sound of a popping cork dragged him from reverie. 4. He drew
his fingers over his eyes, trying to find out where he was. 5. Now
she was so tired she could not drag herself to dress. 6. He is the
first man that ever drew passing notice from Ruth. 7. He felt the oil
dragging him like a net. 8. Ted King went over into the space before
the marble fireplace. He coughed to draw the others’ attention.

IX. Fill in the appropriate synonyms


a) to pull, to drag, to draw
1. The woman … the curtains down carefully lest she should wake
the baby. 2. The girl … off her gloves. 3. The porter … the heavy
trunks with much effort. 4. Hearing the wolves’ howl, the woman …
the child to her. 5. The man … out his handkerchief and wiped his
face. 6. The ant was trying to … a big piece of grass to the anthill.
7. When the boy came to himself he … the pilot out of the broken
cabin and helped the other five passengers. 8. The crying child
was … his mother by the sleeve but the woman did not move.
9. They … nearer the fire and began to sing. 10. The boy ran toward
the train … his sister with him. 11. As the well was not deep it was
not difficult to … water. 12. The child did not want to walk, the
mother had to make every effort to … him with her. 13. “Don’t …
my hair, you hurt me.” 14. The dentist … my tooth out so quickly
that I had no time to cry. 15. “Mike, get up, or I’ll … you out of bed.”
16. “Do you see this string? If you … it, you can shut the window.”
b) to look, to gaze, to stare, to eye
1. Montanelly found Arthur sitting on the bench in the same attitude
as an hour before … with wide open eyes at the glittering mountains
around him. 2. Julia snatched the paper from her husband, … at it
and held it out to Arthur. 3. James pushed his chair away from the
table, and sat … at Arthur too much astonished for anger. 4. Arthur
found himself in brightly lighted room … in confused wonder at
the table and the papers and the officers sitting in their accustomed

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places. 5. The man with the wooden leg … David all over and
locked the gate behind him. 6. Kate stood … at the wonderful toys
in the bright window. She could not tear herself away. 7. She sat
there as if stunned, … into nothingness. 8. They all … at him in
horror.
c) to trouble, to worry, to bother
1. Don’t … about your son. He’ll be all right soon. 2. May I help you
with your suit-case? Don’t … I’ll manage. 3. “What … you?” “Oh, I
have an awful headache, doctor.” 4. Excuse me for … you. Is Mr.
Brown in? 5. Mothers always … about their children. 6. Don’t …
trouble until trouble … you.
d) to bring up, to rear, to educate, to breed, to train
1. My little daughter took over the … of the puppy. 2. I run a mile a
day, when I am in … 3. … is more than mere learning by rote.
4. She … her three children under difficult circumstances. 5. The
wealthy send their sons to public schools to be … 6. You can always
tell a well-… man by his manners. 7. She is … to be a nurse. 8. …
sheep develops the leg muscules. 9. But … cattle requires much
less walking. 10. He … the finest cattle in the country. 11. A …
footballer has to be fit. 12. To watch him act is an … in itself.
13. The herd has been improved by selective … 14. You have …
your children to be a credit to you, Mrs. Jones. 15. They … their
brood with gentle care and affection. 16. He was … in the country.
17. “Where were you …?” – “At a teachers’ … college.” 18. He is
remarkably arrogant for an … man. 19. You weren’t … to do that.
20. He was … under heartbreaking conditions. 21. In the 19th century
women were denied an … 22. The soldiers had six hours of hard
… per day. 23. She’s a well-… woman and speaks beautifully.
24. They were responsible for my … 25. She was … by her
grandparents. 26. It takes three years to … a teacher. 27. I’m trying
to … my dog to jump fences. 28. I … the bird from a chick.
e) to go or to walk
1. At what age did you begin to …? 2. Did you see which way he
…? 3. Dan likes to … in the woods. 4. … is a very good kind of
recreation. 5. Where were you … when I met you in the street? 6. I
was so tired I could hardly … 7. I had such a bad headache I

154
decided to … it off. 8. When you … to the institute tomorrow don’t
forget to call on me. 9. Jack is so fond of … Yesterday he took me
for a … and nearly … me off my legs. 10. The snow was so deep,
it was difficult to … 11. Our park is large and wild and I like to …
there; I … there whenever I have any spare time.
f) to go, to walk, to step, to stride
1. Ten miles! That’s a long way to … 2. I … to school in London.
3. May I … to the picnic, too? 4. … is good exercise for the figure.
5. We shall have to take … to prevent it happening again.
6. Sergeant: “Keep in … there! Jones! You’re out of …” 7. The
economy is advancing with great … 8. He bought the shop as a …
concern. 9. He reached her in three … 10. They organize an annual
road … from London to Brighton. 11. One false … and you’ll be
over the cliff. 12. Our daughter could … when she was a year old.
13. “This watch has stopped.” – “That’s funny, it was … five minutes
ago.” 14. I could hear foot … following me in the darkness.
15. You’ll have to take bigger … if we’re to reach home by nightfall.
16. Are we … the right way? 17. She … into the room and sat down
blushing furiously. 18. He … onto the stage and faced the audience.
19. “How is the new apprentice doing?” – “Making great …” 20. He
… forward and took charge of the situation. 21. Fiest … aside and
let the others have a chance. 22. Sleep … can be very dangerous.
g) to drive, to ride, to travel or to go
1. We … along on the crest of the wave. 2. Where did you … for
your holiday. 3. … broadens the mind. 4. If you … too fast, you’ll
be fined. 5. The train … saw the signal just in time. 6. What speed
were you … at? 7. I like to … in front, beside the driver. 8. I … to
Italy last year. 9. … should be considerate to pedestrians. 10. We
shall … by boat and train. 11. I was sick when we … to London.
12. I’ll … I’m sure you’re tired after your journey. 13. We … from the
station to the airport in 20 minutes. 14. I took her for … along the
front. 15. Please … into town and buy me a packet of cigarettes.
16. You’ll have to … far to find a better view than this. 17. Can you
… a bicycle? 18. My wife went for a … test yesterday. 19. She
passed and obtained her … licence. 20. The taxi driver … slowly
so that I could see the sight.

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h) to lack or to want
1. Martin did not know where to begin his studies and continually
suffered from … of preparation. 2. It was not that his brain was
weak or incapable, it could think these thoughts were it not for …
of training in thinking. 3. He was physically exhausted with hunger,
foul weather, and … of sleep, every bone in his body seemed to
ache separately. 4. For a long time Manson did not speak to
Christine about his love for … of an opportunity. 5. He … the courage
to tell her the truth. 6. He had always … a sense of humour. So we
never joked with him. 7. Though he did not like Kate and was
secretly a little afraid of her, he realized that without her his drawing-
room would … a great attraction.
i) to want, to lack, to be absent, to be missing
1. I think your behaviour is … in courtsey. 2. All that he … is a little
education. 3. All her jewels were … 4. He is … in a little tact. 5. How
many children are … this morning? 6. There was an … of warmth
in his character. 7. The … man turned up unexpectedly. 8. There is
no … of rain in the tropics. 9. They were tried in the balance and
found … 10. If you are in … of anything, just let me know. 11. He
certainly did not … courage. 12. If John weren’t …, the whole family
would have been there. 13. Where have you been? You’ve been …
for a long time. 14. There’s a book … from this shelf. 15. She is
pretty, but she … charm. 16. She will see to it that we do not … for
anything. 17. There was a complete … of inhibitions among the
children. 18. She was … from home when the burglary occurred.
19. Where’s the dog? He’s been … for days. 20. The plant died
through … of moisture. 21. We couldn’t start the match, as four of
the players were … 22. They died in thousands through … of
nourishment. 23. I … an interesting companion with whom I could
chatter.

X. Insert “to come” or “to go” in the required form.


1. At what time do you … home from the institute? 2. It will be very
convenient if you … over after six. I’ll surely be at home by then.
3. My dog always … when I whistle to him. 4. … on Friday. I’ll be
expecting friends whom I want you to meet. 5. How happy I was
when at last my dream … true. 6. You must … to the shop. He

156
needs some bread. 7. When you … to the library, get me some
interesting book. 8. I don’t understand what you mean. Please …
to the point. 9. We are going to the woods tomorrow. Won’t you …
with us? 10. At our house-warming we had very many guests; people
kept … all evening. 11. I must see you very urgently; … over as
soon as you can. 12. I was standing at the top of the stairs, and he
was … up. 13. We are … to the cinema. Will you … with us.
14. Where are you … from? 15. She is … towards us.

XI. Answer the questions.


1. Do you know any person who is a great draw? 2. What do you
use when you want to draw a cork out of a bottle, nails from a
plank, water from a well? 3. Why do street accidents always draw
crowds? 4. What do you usually do or say if you want to draw
somebody’s attention to the problem you are interested in? 5. Can
you draw any comparison between the educational systems in
Britain and in this country? 6. Can you draw well and are you fond
of drawing? 7. Why do you think even grown-up people remain
only children in their parents’ eyes? 8. What does a girl do if she
makes eyes at a man? 9. What do you think the reasons for giving
somebody a black eye might be? 10. What books interest you so
much that you can’t tear yourself away from them? 11. What would
you do if you saw a masked man tearing out of the bank and jumping
into a waiting car? 12. What can we do if our friends are in trouble?
13. Do you always trouble to explain things if you are asked to?
14. What kind of a person should an educator be? 15. Is education
free and compulsory in our country? 16. Do you prefer going by
plane or by train? 17. What should a person do if he / she has
gone too far? 18. Shall we go to great trouble to make our guests
comfortable? Why? 19. What do you do with the clothes which have
gone out of fashion? 20. How much of your money goes on food
and clothes / in rent? 21. Do you often go against your own
principles? 22. What do you do if you happen to go back on your
word? 23. What sports and hobbies do you go in for? 24. Do you
like to go out? 25. What colours go together? 26. What man / woman
would you call a man / woman after your own heart? 27. Does it
break your heart to see the children starving? 28. Did you ever
happen to have your heart in your mouth? 29. Do students like to

157
learn poems by heart? Why? 30. What do students lack? 31. What
film do we call a feature film? 32. What are the best features of
your personality? 33. What do painters use to make a painting?

XII. Under what circumstances would you say?


1. The game ended in a draw. 2. She didn’t feel drawn towards
him. 3. This happened before my very eyes. 4. I can’t get in touch
with my friend, she is up to the eyes in work. 5. Oh, keep an eye on
that small dark-haired boy! 6. His pictures are always eye-catching.
7. Oh, what a pity, you’ve torn a hole in your jacket! 8. Don’t trouble
trouble until trouble troubles you. 9. May I trouble you for a match?
10. No country can afford to neglect education. 11. He went grey
with worry. 12. Go easy with her, she’s too young to realize her
mistake. 13. I’ve been going hard all day and I’m exhausted.
14. I’m afraid the car must go. 15. If you go on like this you’ll be
thrown out. 16. I say it from the bottom of my heart. 17. Bear in
mind that he is a person who wears his heart on his sleeve.
18. What she lacks in experience she makes up in curiosity. 19. He
is not so black as he is painted.

XIII. Translate into English.


1. Viòð saprata, ka patreiz viòam nâksies savilkt jostu cieðâk un
papûlçties iekrât mazliet naudas. 2. Zvejnieks izvilka laivu krastâ
un devâs mâjup. 3. Lai nopirktu mâju, viòiem nâcâs izmantot savus
iekrâjumus. 4. Savai daiïradei viòð smçlâs iedvesmu no dabas un
apkârtçjiem cilvçkiem. 5. Nevajag vilkt paralçles starp ðiem abiem
notikumiem. 6. Varçja manît, ka notikumi tuvojâs beigâm. 7. Tuvojâs
rudens, un dienas kïuva îsâkas. 8. Sadzirdçjis suòus nikni rejam
pagalmâ, saimnieks steidzîgi uzvilka zâbakus un devâs ârâ. 9. Kad
bûsiet nometnç, turiet visu laiku acis vaïâ, jo ar bçrniem var daudz
kas atgadîties. 10. Tiesâ viòð bija vienîgais aculiecinieks. 11. Viòi
greizsirdîgi vçroja mûs. 12. Izlasîjusi viòa vçstuli, Elizabete saplçsa
to gabalos. 13. Viòa svârstîjâs starp to, vai pirkt jaunu maðînu, jebðu
braukt ceïojumâ uz ârzemçm, un nevarçja nekâdi izlemt. 14. Zçns
uz velosipçda drâzâs pa ielu, neskatîdamies ne pa labi, ne pa
kreisi. 15. Kad skolotâjs ienâca klasç, viòam bija norûpçjies izskats.
16. Matemâtika viòam nesagâdâ grûtîbas. 17. Meitene pat nepapû-
lçjâs atbildçt un pagriezusies izgâja no istabas. 18. Blakus istabâ

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varçja dzirdçt bçrna mokoðo klepu. 19. Vai varu palûgt maizi?
20. Tu allaþ sagâdâ rûpes saviem vecâkiem. 21. Bçrni jâmâca
uzvesties labi sabiedriskâs vietâs. 22. Daudzi cilvçki tiecas iegût
augstâko izglîtîbu. 23. Mâja jâpârdod. 24. Ciematâ nepârtraukti
cirkulçja baumas par viòu precîbâm. 25. Ðie noteikumi ir pretrunâ
ar cilvçktiesîbâm. 26. Nav godîgi lauzt doto vârdu. 27. Ðovakar
saule norietçja jau pçc 9.00. 28. Naktî vçtra norima, un kuìi varçja
doties jûrâ. 29. Pçdçjâ laikâ produktu cenas stipri krituðâs.
30. Visos laikrakstos þurnâlisti uzbruka jaunajam premjeram, asi
kritizçdami viòa ârpolitiku. 31. Viòð kolekcionç gleznas. 32. Es taisos
kârtot ek-sâmenus Latvijas universitâtç. 33. Izrâde izdevâs laba.
34. Jaunâs preces âtri izpârdeva. 35. Viòð saòçma bezdarbnieka
pabalstu. 36. Ðâda mûzika vairs nav modç. 37. Ja tu zinâtu, ko
viòa savâ mûþâ ir izcietusi, tu nebrînîtos par viòas vâjo veselîbu.
38. Komiteja pieòçma projektu. 39. Ðîs gaiðâs mçbeles labi sader
kopâ ar pelçkajâm istabas sienâm. 40. Bija vçrojams, ka cenas
visâm precçm strauji ceïas. 41. Pats par sevi saprotams, ka es tev
palîdzçðu. 42. Viòð izvçlçjâs dâvanu pçc sirds patikas. 43. Sirds
dziïumos viòð zi-nâja, ka nekad nedosies viòai lîdzi. 44. Viòa mîlçja
ðos bçrnus ar visu sirdi un dvçseli. 45. Jaunâ skolotâja bija skaista
un ïoti atklâta. 46. Zçns aizgâja gulçt, dziïi nelaimîgs. 47. Saòemtâs
ziòas iedroðinâja meiteni, un viòa izlçma doties ceïâ viena pati.
48. Man trûkst vârdu, lai izteiktu savu saðutumu. 49. Lakonisks stils
ir ðî rakstnieka darbu svarîgâkâ iezîme. 50. Kâ tu raksturotu ðo
ainavu? 51. Viòð nemaz nav tik slikts, kâ viòu iztçlo.

TEXT EXERCISES
I. Answer the questions.
1. Why did Nicholas stand in the school-room, staring about him?
2. What did he see there? 3. What did the pupils look like? 4. What
made this scene grotesque? 5. Why was brimstone and treacle
given to the boys? 6. What did Mr. Squeers look like when he
entered the classroom and started the lesson? 7. How did he begin
the lesson? 8. Which class was it and what subjects did they study?
9. What methods of teaching were applied at this school? 10. What
was Mr. Squeers’ idea about practical way of teaching? 11. How

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was it applied? 12. What were the boys supposed to do to study
grammar and botany? 13. Why did Mr. Squeers want to know
Nicholas’ opinion of his way of teaching? Was it important for him
to know it? 14. What are your reactions to Squeers’s definitions
and spellings? 15. What do you think the advantages and
disadvantages of Mr. Squeers’s philosophy of education are? 16.
How would you describe Mr. Squeers? 17. Is it difficult to find a
good teacher? Why?

II. Pick out from the text words and phrases bearing on:
1) classroom furniture;
2) classroom activities;
3) teacher’s personality.
Use them in your own situations and descriptions.

III. Pick out the words and phrases you find unusual or
problematic, and see if you can guess their meaning.

IV. Find Latvian for:


a crowded scene; the remainder was stopped up with …; shaky
desks; cut and inked; bony figures; darkened with suffering; to
lack the spirit; dirty rags; grotesque features; basin of brimstone
and treacle; delicious mixture; corporal punishment; at a gasp; to
spoil one’s appetite; that’s fair enough; to finish the procedure; to
choke; very profound; to call sb. up; to line up; an opening in the
wall; to weed the garden; a quadruped; washing day; cunning; to
idle about; exciting occupation; salt beef.

V. Can you find words or phrases in the text which are used in a
figurative sense? What effect do you think the author wanted
to produce by using them?

VI. Retell the text and then give its summary.

VII. Make up and act out dialogues between:


1) Mr. Squeers and Nicholas discussing the procedure in the class-
room.
2) Mr. Squeers and Nicholas discussing the teaching problems.
3) Mr. Squeers and the pupils in the classroom.

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VIII. Speak on the plot of the text. Was it interesting to read?
Why?

IX. What do you think of the life and education system at Mr.
Squeers’s school? What impression did it produce on you?

DISCUSSION EXERCISES
I. Read the text.
DECLINE AND FALL
(an extract)

“That’s your little mob in there,” said Grimes; “you let them out
at eleven.”
“But what am I to teach them?” said Paul in sudden panic.
“Oh, I shouldn’t try to teach them anything, not just yet, anyway.
Just keep them quiet.”
“Now that’s a thing I’ve never learned to do,” sighed Mr.
Prendergast.
Paul watched him amble into his classroom at the end of the
passage, where a burst of applause greeted his arrival. Dumb
with terror he went into his own classroom.
Ten boys sat before him, their hands folded, their eyes bright
with expectation.
“Good morning, sir,” said the one nearest him.
“Good morning,” said Paul.
“Good morning, sir,” said the next.
“Good morning,” said Paul.
“Good morning, sir,” said the next.
“Oh shut up,” said Paul.
At this the boy took out a handkerchief and began to cry quietly.
“Oh, sir,” came a chorus of reproach, “you’ve hurt his feelings.
He’s very sensitive; it’s his Welsh blood, you know; it makes people
very emotional. Say ‘Good morning’ to him sir, or he won’t be happy
all day. After all, it is a good morning, isn’t it, sir?”
“Silence!” shouted Paul above the uproar, and for a few
moments things were quieter.

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“Please, sir,” said a small voice – Paul turned and saw a grave-
looking youth holding up his hand – “please, sir, perhaps he’s been
smoking cigars and doesn’t feel well.”
“Silence!” said Paul again.
The ten boys stopped talking and sat perfectly still staring at
him. He felt himself getting hot and red under their scrutiny.
“I suppose the first thing I ought to do is get your names clear.
What is your name?” he asked, turning to the first boy.
“Tangent, sir.”
“And yours?”
“Tangent, sir,” said the next boy. Paul’s heart sank.
“But you can’t both be called Tangent.”
“No, sir, I’m Tangent. He’s just trying to be funny.”
“I like that. Me trying to be funny! Please, sir, I’m Tangent, sir;
really I am.”
“If it comes to that,” said Clutterbuck from the back of the room,
“there is one Tangent here, and that is me. Anyone else can jolly
well go to blazes.”
Paul felt desperate.
“Well, is there anyone who isn’t Tangent?”
Four of five voices instantly arose.
“I’m not, sir; I’m not Tangent. I wouldn’t be called Tangent, not
on the end of a barge pole.”
In a few seconds the room had become divided into parties:
those who were Tangent and those were not. Blows were already
being exchanged, when the door opened and Grimes came in.
There was a slight hush.
“I thought you might want this,” he said, handing Paul a walking-
stick. “And if you take my advice, you’ll set them something to do.”
He went out; and Paul, firmly grasping the walking-stick, faced
his form.
“Listen,” he said. “I don’t care a damn what any of you are
called, but if there’s another word from anyone I shall keep you all
in this afternoon.”
“You can’t keep me in,” said Clutterbuck; “I’m going for a walk
with Captain Grimes.”

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“Then I shall very nearly kill you with this stick. Meanwhile you
will all write an essay on ‘Self-indulgence’. There will be a prize of
half a crown for the longest essay, irrespective of any possible
merit.”
From then onwards all was silence until break. Paul, still holding
his stick, gazed despondently out of the window. Now and then
there rose from below the shrill voices of the servants scolding
each other in Welsh. By the time the bell rang Clutterbuck had
covered sixteen pages, and was awarded the half-crown.
“Did you find those boys difficult to manage?” asked Mr.
Prendergast, filling his pipe.
“Not at all,” said Paul.
Evelyn Waugh

II. Decide which of the following best describes the pupils’


attitude to Paul:
1. They want to make fun of him.
2. They want to humiliate him.
3. They are studying him.
4. They want to be dominated by him.

III. Read texts A, B, C.


A. BOTH SIDES OF THE QUESTION
A scholar came to a broad and deep river and wanted to cross
it. He hired a boat to take him across. The river was stormy.
“Have you studied history, boatman?” inquired the scholar.
“No, I have never studied it,” was the reply.
“Then you have lost a fourth of your life. Have you studied the
dead languages?”
“I haven’t and neither do I care.”
“Then you’ve wasted half of your life. And what about
literature?”
“I haven’t studied it either.”
“Then three-fourths of your life are lost.”
They had reached the middle of the river. A big wave hit the
side of the boat and upset it.
“Have you learned to swim, scholar?” cried the boatman.

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“No,” answered the scholar.
“Well, then all four quarters of your life are lost, unless you hold
on to my shoulders.”

B. A FORTUNATE REPLY
A law student had repeatedly failed in his examination. He was
allowed to take it for the last time. The student was very anxious to
pass it, for in case of failure he would have to leave the university.
The professor’s first question was: “What do you understand
in the law by the term ‘malice’?”
“Malice,” said the student at once, “would be if you failed me
in this examination, for the law qualifies as malice any action of ill
will committed by a person to harm another person by taking
advantage of the latter’s ignorance.”

C.
Teacher (questioning the terrified class): “And now I want you,
boys, to tell me who wrote ‘Hamlet’.”
Frightened Boy: “P-p-please, sir, it-it wasn’t me.”
That same evening the teacher was talking to his host, the
squire of the village. The teacher said:
“Most amusing thing happened today. I was questioning the
class over at school, and I asked a boy who wrote ‘Hamlet’. He
answered tearfully, ‘P-p-please, sir, it wasn’t me’.”
After loud and prolonged laughter, the squire said: “That’s
pretty good, and I suppose the little rascal had done it all the same!”

IV. Make up questions on the texts and ask your fellow students
to answer them.

V. Retell the texts on the part of:


A. 1. the scholar;
2. the boatman.
B. 1. the law student;
2. the professor.

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C. 1. the superintendent;
2. the squire;
3. the frightened boy.

VI. Read and interpret the following maxims:


1. Education then, beyond all other devices of human origin, is
the great equalizer of the conditions of men – the balance
wheel of the social machinery. Horace Mann
2. Training is everything. The peach was once a bitter almond;
cauliflower is nothing but a cabbage with a college education.
Mark Twain
3. A teacher affects eternity; he can never tell where his influence
stops. Henry Adam
4. There are two ways of spreading light; to be the candle or to
be the mirror that reflects it. Edith Wharton
5. To know that we know what we know, and that we do not know
what we do not know, that is true knowledge. Henry David
Thoreau
6. Happiness lies not in knowledge, but in achievement of
knowledge. Edgar Allan Poe
7. The things taught in schools and colleges are not education,
but the means of education. Ralph Waldo Emerson
8. Nothing in education is so astonishing as the amount of
ignorance it accumulates in the form of inert fact. Henry Adams
9. Education breeds a dislike of violance. Seymour L. Halleck
10. There is nothing so stupid as an educated man, if you get him
off the thing he was educated in. Will Rogers
11. An expert is one who knows more and more about less and
less. Nicholas M. Butler

VII. Make up dialogues and discuss these maxims.

VIII. Read the proverbs and use them in your own situations
illustrating the ideas expressed in them.
1. To teach one’s grandmother to suck eggs.
2. To tell tales out of school.
3. Too much knowledge makes the head bald.
4. Zeal without knowledge is a runaway horse.
5. Live and learn.

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IX. Read the story and say which of the proverbs mentioned
above makes the best ending to it.
THE PROFESSOR COULD NOT ANSWER IT
Old Mr. Brompton is a very clever man. Yet the other day he
could not answer his granddaughter’s question. “Grandpa,” she
said, “I saw something so funny running across the kitchen floor
without any legs. What do you think it was?” Grandpa thought and
thought, but at last he had to give up.
“What was it?” he asked.
“Water,” replied the little girl triumphantly.

X. Read the anecdotes and tell them to your groupmates.


1. Prof.: “Can you tell me anything about the great chemists of
the 17th century?”
Stud.: “They are all dead, sir.”
2. At a college examination a professor said: “Does the question
embarrass you?”
“Not at all, sir,” replied the student, “not at all. It is the answer
that bothers me.”
3. The professor rapped on his desk and shouted: “Gentlemen,
order!”
The entire class yelled: “Beer!”
4. The bright student looked long and thoughtfully at the second
examination question, which read: “State the number of tons
of coal shipped out of the United States in any given year.”
Then his brow cleared and he wrote: “1492 – none.”
5. The professor was delivering the final lecture of the term. He
dwelt with much emphasis on the fact that each student should
devote all the intervening time preparing for the final
examinations.
“The examination papers are now in the hands of the printer.
Are there any questions to be asked?”
Silence prevailed. Suddenly a voice from the rear inquired:
“Who is the printer?”

166
6. During a Christmas exam, one of the questions was: “What
causes a depression?” One of the students wrote: “God knows!
I don’t. Merry Christmas!”
The exam paper came back with the prof’s notation: “God gets
100, you get zero. Happy New Year!”
7. Prof.: “A fool can ask more questions than a wise man can
answer.”
Stud.: “No wonder so many of us flunk in our exams!”
8. Prof.: “You missed my class yesterday, didn’t you?”
Stud.: “Not in the least, sir, not in the least.”
9. Prof.: “Tell me one or two things about John Milton.”
Stud.: “Well, he got married and he wrote “Paradise Lost”. Then
his wife died and he wrote “Paradise Regained”.”
10. Prof.: “You can’t sleep in my class.”
Stud.: “If you didn’t talk so loud I could.”
11. Prof.: “Wake up that fellow next to you.”
Stud.: “You do it, prof, you put him to sleep.”
12. “I shall now illustrate what I have in mind,” said the professor
as he erased the board.
13. In one of college classes the professor was unable to stay for
the class, so he placed a sign on the door which read as follows:
“Professor Blank will be unable to meet his classes to-day.”
Some college lad, seeing his chance to display his sense of
humour after reading the notice, walked up and erased the
“c” in the word “classes”. The professor noticing the laughter
wheeled around, walked back, looked at the student, then at
the sign with the “c” erased – calmly walked up and erased
the “l” in “lasses”, looked at the flabbergasted student and
proceeded on his way.
14. Pam: “Hasn’t Harvey ever married?”
Beryl: “No, and I don’t think he intends to, because he’s
studying for a bachelor’s degree.”

167
15. Rupert: “What did you do with the cuffs I left on the table last
night?”
Roland: “They were so soiled I sent them to the laundry.”
Rupert: “Ye gods, the entire history of England was on them.”

XI. Try to remember some funny episode from the students’ life
at your university and tell it to your groupmates.

JUST FOR FUN


I. Read this and learn it by heart.
1. The more we study, the more we know. The more we know, the
more we forget. The more we forget, the less we know. The
less we know, the less we forget. The less we forget, the more
we know. So why study?
2. A son at college wrote his father: “No mon, no fun, your son.”
The father answered: “How sad, too bad, your dad.”

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UNIT 5

ARCHIBALD JOSEPH CRONIN


(1896–1981)
A.J. Cronin was born on July 19, 1896 at Cardross,
Dumbartonshire, Scotland, into an Irish family. He was educated
at Dumbarton Academy and in 1914 he went to Glasgow University
where he began to study medicine. However, his studies were soon
interrupted by World War I and he went to serve in the Navy as a
surgeon. In 1919 Cronin graduated from Glasgow University and
embarked as ship’s surgeon on a liner bound for India. After that
he held various hospital appointments in different towns of
Scotland. In 1921 he got married and began his practice in South
Wales. There he got acquainted with the miners’ life and came to
sympathize with them. At this time Cronin also studied hard to
receive higher medical degrees. In 1924 he was appointed
Medical Inspector of Mines in Wales. A year later Cronin was
awarded his M.D. by the University of Glasgow, with honours.
Subsequently he started practice in the West End of London. Later
on a lot of what he experienced in South Wales appeared in his
books, in The Citadel in particular. However, overwork made his
health break down and in 1930 he had to give medicine up. Cronin
decided to try his hand at literature. In 1931 he published his first
novel “Hatter’s Castle” which was a tremendous success. A.J. Cronin
now made his choice and determined to devote himself entirely to
literature. In fact, to become a writer had been his cherished desire
since boyhood and now his dream was a reality.
His first novel “Hatter’s Castle” is an extremely gloomy and
tragic history of a family ruled by a high-handed proprietor, Mr. Brodie.
In 1935 his next novel “The Stars Look Down” was published,
and it marked the beginning of Cronin’s most mature period. The
book expresses the author’s deep sympathy with the struggle of
the miners for a better future and it deals with burning problems of
life.
His novel “The Citadel” appeared in 1937. It is usually
considered to be Cronin’s masterpiece. In this book Cronin deals

169
with the life and work of an intellectual in the capitalist world. He
shows that the profession of a doctor, honourable and important
as it is, is often regarded only as a means of making money. Thus
a physician faces an alternative, either to prosper at the expense
of others or to do his best to help poor suffering humanity and so
be doomed to poverty. Andrew Manson, the main character of
“The Citadel”, has to face this alternative. The book describes
different aspects of life in the first half of the 20th century, which the
author knew well from his own experience.
Among his other works are: The Keys of the Kingdom (1941),
The Green Years (1944), Shannon’s Way (1948), Adventures in
Two Worlds (1952), The Northern Light (1958), A Song of Sixpence
(1964) and others.

Answer the questions:


1. What did A. Cronin study? 2. Why did he interrupt his studies?
3. What can you tell about his career? 4. Why did he give medicine
up? 5. Why did he decide to devote himself to literature? 6. What
does he write about in his novels?

THE CITADEL
(an extract)

And now he was in Blaenelly, rising, shaving, dressing, all in a


haze of worry over his first patient. He ate his breakfast quickly,
then ran up to his room again. There he opened his bag and took
out a small blue leather case. He opened the case and gazed
earnestly at the medal inside – the Hunter Gold Medal, awarded
annually at St. Andrews to the best student in clinical medicine.
He, Andrew Manson, had won it. He prized it beyond everything,
had come to regard it as his talisman, his inspiration for the future.
But this morning he viewed it less with pride than with a queer,
secret entreaty, as though trying to restore his confidence in himself.
Then he hurried out for the morning surgery.
Fortunately there were few people at the morning surgery,
which was over at half-past ten, and Andrew, presented with a list
of visits by Jenkins, set out at once with Thomas in the gig. With an

170
almost painful expectancy he told the old groom to drive direct to
7 Glydar Place.
Twenty minutes later he came out of Number 7, pale, with his
lips tightly compressed and an odd expression on his face. He
went two doors down, into Number 11, which was also on his list.
From Number 11 he crossed the street to Number 18. From
Number 18 he went round the corner to Radnor Place, where two
further cases were marked by Jenkins as having been seen the
day before. Altogether, within the space of an hour, he made seven
such calls in the immediate vicinity. Five of them, including Number
7 Glydar Place, which was now showing a typical rash, were clear
cases of enteric. For the last ten days Jenkins had been treating
them with chalk and opium. Now, whatever his own bungling efforts
of the previous night had been, Andrew realized with a shiver of
apprehension that he had an outbreak of typhoid fever on his
hands.
When he got back it was time for evening surgery. For an hour
and a half he sat in the little back-shop cubicle which was the
consulting-room, wrestling with a packed surgery until the walls
sweated and the place was choked with the steam of damp bodies.
Miners with beat knee, cut fingers, nystagmus, chronic arthritis.
Their wives, too, and their children with coughs, colds, sprains –
all the minor ailments of humanity. Normally he would have enjoyed
it, welcomed the quiet appraising scrutiny of these dark, sallow-
skinned people with whom he felt he was on probation. But now,
obsessed by the major issue, his head reeled with the impact of
these trifling complaints. Yet all the time he was reaching his
decision, thinking, as he wrote prescriptions, sounded chests and
offered words of advice, “It was he who put me on to the thing. I
hate him. Yes, I loathe him – superior devil – like hell. But I can’t
help that; I’ll have to go to him.”
At half-past nine, when the last patient had left the surgery, he
came out of his den with resolution in his eyes.
“Jenkins, where does Doctor Denny live?”
The little dispenser, hastily bolting the outer door for fear
another straggler might come in, turned with a look of horror on
his face that was almost comic.

171
“You aren’t goin’ to have anything to do with that feller, Doctor.
Mrs. Page – she don’t like him.”
Andrew asked grimly: “Why doesn’t Mrs. Page like him?”
“For the same reason everybody don’t. ‘E’s been so damn
rude to her.” Jenkins paused then; reading Manson’s look he
added, reluctantly, “Oh, well, if you ’ave to know, it’s with Mrs. Seager
he stops, Number 49 Chapel Street.”
Out again. He had been going the whole day long, yet any
tiredness he might have felt was lost in a sense of responsibility,
the burden of those cases pressing, pressing urgently upon his
shoulders. His main feeling was one of relief when, on reaching
Chapel Street, he found that Denny was at his lodging. The landlady
showed him in.
If Denny was surprised to see him he concealed it. He merely
asked, after a prolonged and aggravating stare, “Well! Killed
anybody yet?”
Still standing in the doorway of the warm untidy sitting-room,
Andrew reddened. But, making a great effort, he conquered his
temper and his pride.
He said abruptly: “You were right. It was enteric. I ought to be
shot for not recognizing it. I’ve got five cases. I’m not exactly
overjoyed at having to come here. But I don’t know the ropes. I
rang the M.O., and couldn’t get a word out of him. I’ve come to ask
your advice.”
Denny, half-slewed round in his chair by the fire, listening, pipe
in mouth, at last made a grudging gesture. “You’d better come in.”
With sudden irritation: “Oh! and for God’s sake take a chair. Don’t
stand there like a Presbyterian parson about to forbid the banns.
Have a drink? No! I thought you wouldn’t.”
Though Andrew stiffly complied with the request, seating himself
and even, defensively, lighting a cigarette, Denny seemed in no
hurry. He sat prodding the dog Hawkins with the toe of his burst
slipper.
But at length, when Manson had finished his cigarette, Denny
said with a jerk of his head: “Take a look at that, if you like!”
On the table indicated a microscope stood, – a fine Zeiss, –
and some slides. Andrew focussed a slide, then slid round the oil-

172
immersion and immediately picked up the rodshaped clusters of
the bacteria.
“It’s very clumsily done, of course,” Denny said quickly and
cynically, as though forestalling criticism. “Practically botched, in
fact. I’m no lab. merchant, thank God! If anything, I’m a surgeon.
But you’ve got to be jack-of-all-trades under our bloody system.
There’s no mistake, though even to the naked eye. I cooked them
on agar in my oven.”
“You’ve got cases too?” Andrew asked with tense interest.
“Four! All in the same area as yours.” He paused. “And these
bugs come from the well in Glydar Place.”
Andrew gazed at him, alert, burning to ask a dozen questions,
realizing something of the genuineness of the other man’s work,
and, beyond everything, overjoyed that he had been shown the
focus of the epidemic.
“You see,” Denny resumed with that same cold and bitter irony,
“paratyphoid is more or less endemic here. But one day soon,
very soon, we’re going to have a pretty little blaze-up. It’s the main
sewer that’s to blame. It leaks like the devil, and seeps into half the
low wells at the bottom of the town. I’ve hammered at Griffiths about
it till I’m tired. He’s a lazy, evasive incompetent, pious swine. Last
time I rang him I said I’d knock his block off next time I met him.
Probably that’s why he welshed on you to-day.”
“It’s a damned shame,” Andrew burst out, forgetting himself in
a sudden rush of indignation.
Denny shrugged his shoulders. “He’s afraid to ask the Council
for anything in case they dock his wretched salary to pay for it.”
There was a silence. Andrew had a warm desire that the
conversation might continue. Despite his hostility towards Denny,
he found a strange stimulus in the other’s pessimism, in his
scepticism, his cold and measured cynicism. Yet now he had no
pretext on which to ptolong his stay. He got up from his seat at the
table and moved towards the door, concealing his feelings, striving
to express a formal gratitude, to give some indications of his relief.
“I’m much obliged for the information. You’ve let me see how I
stand. I was worried about the origin, thought I might be dealing
with a carrier; but since you’ve localized it to the well it’s a lot simpler.

173
From now on every drop of water in Glydar Place is going to be
boiled.”
Denny rose also. He growled: “It’s Griffiths who ought to be
boiled.” Then, with a return of his satiric humour. “Now, no touching
thanks, Doctor, if you please. We shall probably have to endure a
little more of each other before this thing is finished. Come and
see me any time you can bear it. We don’t have much social life in
this neighbourhood.” He glanced at the dog and concluded rudely:
“Even a Scots doctor would be welcome. Isn’t that so, Sir John?”
Sir John Hawkins flogged the rug with his tail, his pink tongue
lolling derisively at Manson.
Yet, going home via Glydar Place, where he left strict
instructions regarding the water supply Andrew realized that he
did not detest Denny so much as he had thought.

PHRASES AND WORD COMBINATIONS


1. in a haze of worry
2. immediate vicinity
3. trifling complaints
4. to conquer one’s temper
5. jack-of-all-trades
6. to have no pretext

VOCABULARY ITEMS
1. case n – 1. instance or example of the occurrence of sth.;
actual state of affairs; (med.) person suffering from a disease;
instance of a diseased condition. If that’s the case, you’ll have
to work much harder. I can’t make an exception in your case.
There were five cases of influenza. The worst cases were sent
to hospital.
(just) in case – if it should happen that; because of a possibility. It
may rain – you’d better take an umbrella (just) in case. In case
I forget, please remind me of my promise.
in case of – in the event of. In case of fire, ring the alarm bell.
in any case – whatever happens or may have happened.
in no case – in no circumstances.

174
in this / that case – if this happens.
case-history n – record of the history of sb. suffering from a
disease.
2. (legal) question to be decided in a law court. When will the
case come before the Court?
3. (gram.) (change in the) form of a noun or pronoun that
shows its relation to another word. The first person singular
personal pronoun in English has two case forms.

2. list n – number of names (of persons, items, things, etc.) written


or printed: a shopping list; make a list of things one must do;
put sb’s name on / take his name off the list.
the active list – list of officers in the armed forces who may be
called upon for service.
the free list – a) those goods admitted into a country free of duty.
b) those persons who are admitted to a cinema, theatre,
concert hall, etc. without payment.
list v – make a list of; put on a list: list all one’s engagements;
list sb’s name.

3. realize v – 1. be fully conscious of; understand. Does he realize


his error yet / realize that you must have help?
2. convert into a fact: realize one’s hopes / ambitions.
3. exchange (property, business shares, etc.) for money. Can
these shares / bonds, etc. be realized at short notice?
4. realize (on) – (of property, etc.) obtain as a price for or as a
profit. The furniture realized a high price at the sale. How much
did you realize on the paintings you sent to the sale?
Synonyms: to realize, to understand.
Realize is usually preferable to “understand” in the sense of
“be or become aware of”, “recognize” (a fact).
E.g. I realize that you’re busy but perhaps you could help me
for a moment. Do you realize that it’s Saturday? I never realized
before how lonely she was.
In some cases realize and understand have quite different
meanings: E.g.
I. I realize that … = I am aware (of the fact) that …

175
Suddenly he realized that he was alone in the house.
I understand that … = I have learnt, I have been told
I understand that you are leaving our department.
II. He didn’t realize his mistake = he was not aware that he
had made a mistake and implies that when someone tells him
about it everything will be clear to him.
He didn’t understand his mistake = even when the mistake
was pointed out to him he did not understand what was wrong.
In a few cases either realize or understand can be used with
no difference in meaning.
E.g. I realize / understand how you feel. They don’t seem to
realize / understand the importance of hard work.
realizable adj – that can be realized.
realization n – realizing (of a plan, one’s ambitions or hopes);
act of exchanging property for money.

4. require v – 1. need; depend on for success, etc. We require


extra help. Does this machine require much attention?
2. require sth. (of sb.); require sb. to do sth.; require that … –
demand; insist upon as a right or by authority. Students are
required to take three papers in English literature. What do
you require of me?
Synonyms: to require, to demand.
To require means to ask for, to need.
To demand means to ask for with authority, to insist on having.
E.g. The matter requires great care. The policeman demanded
his name. The strikers demanded immediate payment.
requirement n – sth. required or needed: fulfil the requirements
of the law; meet sb’s requirements.

5. blame v – blame sb. (for sth.); blame sth. on sb. – fix on sb.
the responsibility for sth. done (badly or wrongly) or not done.
Bad workmen often blame their tools. He blamed his teacher
for his failure.
be to blame – deserve censure. Who is to blame for starting the
fire?
Synonyms: to blame, to accuse, to charge.

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All these terms denote “to declare a person guilty of a fault or
offence”.
To accuse and to charge are interchangeable when we speak
of a serious offence, such as breaking the law. However, to
charge is more official and is the term used at court.
E.g. He was charged with murder.
To charge is used on less official occasions as well.
E.g. He charged me with neglecting my duties.
To accuse may also be used at court but in a somewhat less
formal statement.
E.g. She was accused of taking money.
Note: To accuse is always followed by the preposition “of”.
To charge is always followed by the preposition “with”.
The noun charge is followed by the preposition “of”.
E.g. She didn’t like being accused of cruelty. He was brought
before the court with a charge of theft. He was charged with
theft.
To blame is used when the offence is less serious, when we
say that a person or thing is the cause of something bad or
wrong.
E.g. Don’t blame it on me. Who is to blame for starting the fire?
We shouldn’t blame children for the mistakes of their parents.
blame n – 1. responsibility for sth. done (badly or wrongly) or
not done. Where does the blame lie for our failure.
bear / take the blame (for sth.) – take the responsibility.
put / lay the blame on sb. (for sth.) – make him responsible.
2. finding fault. If you don’t do the work well, you will incur
blame.
Synonyms: blame, fault, guilt.
All three words denote responsibility for a misdeed or
something wrong. Our choice of the particular word largely
depends on the seriousness of the act.
Guilt (n) is the strongest of the three words and should be
used when speaking of a serious offence or crime.
E.g. He killed his son and has already confessed his guilt.
Guilty (adj), as: a guilty look, a guilty conscience, guilty
behaviour etc.

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Fault and blame are synonyms when used in the sense of
responsibility for a bad result or something wrong. Both “to be
to blame” and “to be someone’s fault” are used to denote
responsibility for deeds of a less serious nature than “to be guilty”.
E.g. If we are late for the concert, it’ll be your fault. It’s not your
fault that you were born a Catholic. He is to blame for it. The
whole blame is mine.
Guilty is used in court terminology in the following expressions:
to plead guilty, to plead not guilty, to be found guilty: She had
been found guilty of a great breach of duty.
blameless adj – free from blame or faults; innocent. I am
blameless in this matter.
blamelessly adv

6. bear v – 1. carry: bear a heavy load.


2. have; show: bear the marks / signs / traces of blows / wounds
/ punishment; a document that bears your signature; bear no
/ some / not much / little resemblance to sb. or sth.
3. have; be known by: bear a good character; a family that
bore an ancient and honoured name.
4. bear oneself – a) carry oneself in a specified way. He bears
himself like a soldier.
b) behave; conduct oneself. He bore himself with dignity in
these difficult circumstances.
5. bear (against / towards) – have in the heart or mind: bear a
grudge against sb., bear no malice towards sb.
6. bring; provide.
bear a hand – help.
bear witness (to sth.) – (fig.) provide evidence; speak in support:
actions that bear witness to his courage. Will you bear witness
(for me) that I am innocent?
bear false witness (against sb.) – give false evidence.
7. support; sustain. The ice is too thin to bear your weight.
Who will bear the responsibility / expense?
8. endure; tolerate; put up with. I can’t bear (the sight of) that
old man. The pain was almost more than he could bear.
9. give birth to: bear a child. She has borne him six sons.

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Synonyms:
I. to bear, to carry, to wear.
To carry – to convey from one place to another.
E.g. He carried a parcel under his arm. He usually carries an
umbrella under his arm.
Collocations: to carry germs / responsibility.
To bear – to support the weight of a thing which is at rest; to
suffer, to tolerate, to endure. To bear can be used as a formal
or poetic term of to carry.
E.g. Be careful, the ice may not bear your weight. The roof
was borne by a number of stone pillars. This tree does not
bear any fruit. He bore his pain patiently.
Collocations: to bear arms; to bear a title / name; to bear
witness; (a document may) bear a signature; to bear the cost
/ expense; to bear great sorrow; to bear interest / an inscription;
to be more than one can bear.
To wear – to have on the body (with reference to clothing,
adornment etc.); to exhibit; to show on the face) in one’s
manners.
E.g. She wore a pair of white gloves.
Collocations: to wear a hat / shoes / spectacles; to wear a
beard; to wear a smile / sour look etc.
II. to bear, to endure, to suffer, to stand, to tolerate.
To bear, to endure, to suffer, to stand, to tolerate agree in
meaning when they denote “to sustain or undergo something
painful or trying”. They imply “patience in sustaining some
hardship, misfortune, some difficulty, some unpleasant state,
or condition”.
E.g. 1. I’ve so many misfortunes, I suppose I can bear this
too. 2. The colonel tells you that the enemy has suffered severe
losses. 3. For the remainder of the meal he endured the anguish
of talking to one person when he longed to talk to another.
4. I can’t stand the thought of leaving. 5. I won’t tolerate your
leaving the room in such a mess.
These verbs, besides, have some other shade of meaning. To
bear, to endure, to stand may be used in the meaning of “an
unwillingness to put up with something disagreeable”.

179
E.g. 1. He stood there laughing, I could not bear it, it made
me frightened, ill. I could not stand it.
2. She could not endure seeing animals treated cruelly.
To endure, besides, means “to suffer without complaining”; it
suggests a great firmness of mind and spirit.
E.g. If help does not come, we must endure to the end.
To stand implies “the ability to resist, to withstand”, as, to stand
the attack (ill-treatment etc.).
E.g. She stood the shock well.
To suffer, to tolerate suggests patience with unpleasant people,
as, “to suffer (tolerate) fools”.
E.g. He suffered this girl in patience. We still tolerate among
us numbers of aliens who take the bread out of the mouths of
our own people.
To tolerate, besides, implies “overcoming one’s own
antagonism to something or somebody that is unpleasant or
distasteful to one.”
E.g. He can’t tolerate fat.
bearable adj – that can be borne or endured.
bearer n – person employed to carry sth.
bearing n – 1. way of behaving; way of standing, walking,
etc.: a man of noble / soldierly bearing. His kindly bearing
caused all the children to like him.
2. possibility of being endured; endurance. His conduct was
beyond (all) bearing.
3. (pl) relative position; direction.
get / take one’s bearings – find the direction of a ship’s course;
find one’s position by looking round for landmarks, etc.
lose / be out of one’s bearings – be lost; (fig.) be puzzled.

VOCABULARY EXERCISES
I. Consult a dictionary and practise the pronunciation of the
following words:
haze, to award, talisman, entreaty, surgery, expectancy, tightly,
vicinity, enteric, apprehension, typhoid, nystagmus, chronic,
arthritis, ailments, scrutinity, probation, to obsess, to reel, to loathe,

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dispenser, straggler, reluctuntly, urgently, to conceal, aggravating,
half-slewed, grudging, Presbyterian, to comply, microscope, oil-
immersion, cluster, bacterium – bacteria, naked, agar, alert,
genuineness, paratyphoid, endemic, sewer, to welsh, scepticism,
cynicism, pretext, derisively, detest.

II. Explain the polysemy of the words and phrases in italics and
then translate the sentences.
A. 1. This is the case for the director to decide. 2. It’s a clear case
of carelessness. 3. I saw at least three similar cases of children
dying due to the lack of water when I was working in India.
4. Cases of human error are being reported all the time.
5. Sometimes earthquakes cause tidal waves and, as in Japan’s
case, these can be deadly. 6. Recent government spending on
the schools is a classical case of too little, too late. 7. Some women
have managed to achieve success in football. A case in point is
Anne Spencer. 8. In John’s case, the first he knew of any problems
in the company was when a redundancy notice arrived on his desk.
9. The worst cases were sent to hospital. 10. The case will be tried
tomorrow. 11. He made a good case for his project. 12. Let’s hear
the case for and against.
B. 1. Sadly, the men bore the dead child to his mother. 2. The rise
in the cost of living bears hard on old people living on fixed incomes.
3. What a remarkable resemblance she bears to the famous
actress! 4. A line of servants entered, bearing food to the guests.
5. The finished book bears no resemblance to the material I sent.
6. The letter that arrived in the morning bore the signature of his
father. 7. He must bear responsibility for the whole affair. 8. In this
crucial situation he bore himself courageously. 9. She bore him a
son. 10. Our plans have borne fruit. 11. I am born Latvian. 12. The
ice is bearing sledges now. 13. These beams can bear a heavy
load. 14. The child bore the operation well.
C. 1. You always blame someone else when things go wrong. 2. I
think your plan is crazy, so don’t blame me if it doesn’t work! 3. The
investigators blamed the driver for the train crash. 4. Whenever
children behave badly, people always try and blame it on the
teacher. 5. Hurry up! It’s me who’ll get the blame if we’re late.

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6. The airline usually gets blamed if there is a major disaster. 7. The
other boys all ran away, and Billy got the blame for the accident. 8. After
their separation he laid the blame on his wife. 9. Farmers have laid
the blame for their problems entirely on government policies.
10. You can’t always shift the blame onto your secretary. 11. You
can’t blame her for getting a divorce, her husband always treated
her badly. 12. I can see you’re annoyed with me for being late and
I don’t blame you. 13. There will be an enquiry to find out who is to
blame for the train crash. 14. She was as much to blame for the
break up of their marriage as he was. 15. I didn’t train hard enough
so I know I’ve only got myself to blame for not winning the race.
D. 1. Andrew realized that the work would be difficult but he
undertook to do it. 2. Do you realize the importance of this decision?
3. He saw Harris quickly frown, as though realizing he’d been talking
too much. 4. In a very short time I realized that the London I had
come back to was a different place from the London I had left in
1915. 5. I at once realized what I had said. 6. He doesn’t realize
the problems. 7. Finally our hopes have been realized. 8. I suddenly
realized that the thumping noise was the sound of my own heart.
9. It wasn’t until she was fifty miles along the road that Helen realized
she’d lost her way. 10. “Is there a problem between you two?” said
Beatrice, not realizing how right she was. 11. Only the doctor
realized the seriousness of Tom’s illness. 12. The realization that he
would soon be leaving home for the last time filled him with a
confusing mixture of emotions. 13. I hope you realize you have
done a great deal of harm. 14. He never realized just how lucky he
was. 15. He must realize that I have serious personal problems
just now. 16. “It’s my birthday today.” “Oh, I didn’t realize. I should
have bought you a card.”
E. 1. Do you require anything else? 2. This plant requires frequent
watering. 3. You are required to be there by 9 o’clock. 4. Does he
have the required qualifications? 5. This project meets all our
requirements. 6. The amount of time that is required to finish the
test varies from student to student. 7. We regret to inform you that
we do not feel you have the level of experience required for this
post. 8. Add more salt to the soup as required. 9. The average
daily food requirement for an adult is between 2000 and 3000

182
calories. 10. The main requirements for the job are good eyesight
and a high level of physical fitness. 11. The purity of the water in
the town did not come up to the minimum requirements. 12. Driving
requires a great deal of concentration. 13. The toys have to meet
tough safety requirements before they can be sold to children.
14. People do not realize that they are requested to declare their
earnings because they are legally required to.
F. 1. Could I have a list of the hotels in this town? 2. The other list
shows you which car is safest. 3. If it is not on the list we don’t sell
it. 4. I only bought what was on my shopping list. 5. After the accident
the airline issued a list of the crew members and passengers. 6.
The English course is very popular so there might be a waiting list.
7. Peter will be away on the day of the wedding so we can cross
him off the guest list. 8. She made a list of all the things she had to
take on holiday. 9. As I get older I have to keep making lists in case
I forget something. 10. A list has been made of all those students
who didn’t come. 11. The guidebook lists over 1000 hotels and
restaurants. 12. He proceeded to list all her faults one by one. 13.
The writers in the article are listed in alphabetical order at the end.

III. Give your own sentences or situations with the following


word combinations and translate the combinations into Latvian.
Is it always possible to give a word for word translation?
1. That’s not the case; a clear case of cheating; six cases of
influenza; just in case; in case of fire; in any case; in no case; in
this case; the case for the defendant; the common case; the
possessive case; the objective case.
2. To bear a heavy load; to bear the traces of wounds; to bear little
resemblance; to bear a good character; to bear oneself; to bear a
grudge against sb.; to bear no malice towards sb.; to bear witness;
to bear the expense; to bear the pain; to bear down the enemy; to
bear a child; the bearer of the litter; a bearer of the flag; a good
bearer; a man of noble bearing; to get one’s bearings; to be out of
one’s bearings.
3. To blame sb.; to blame the teacher; to blame oneself; who is to
blame; to bear the blame; to take the blame; to put the blame on
sb.; to be blameless.

183
4. To realize one’s error; to realize one’s hopes; to realize one’s
ambitions; to realize bonds; to realize the problem; to realize
difficulties; to come to the realization.
5. To require extra help; to require attention; to require one’s
presence; to require to do sth.; required reading; requirements of
the law; to meet the requirements of sb. / sth.; to satisfy a
requirement; legal requirements; minimum requirements;
admission requirements.
6. A shopping list; to put on the list; to take off the list; list price; the
active list; the free list; to make a list of; to list sb’s name; to list all
engagements; to head a list; to read down a list; an alphabetic list;
guest list; waiting list; casualty list; the list on priorities.

IV. What nouns can you add to the following adjectives?


bearable; blameless; blame-worthy; realizable.

V. Paraphrase the italicized words and phrases by using suitable


phrases.
1. case
1. There were several instances of scarlet fever in the district last
month. 2. Leave the key under the mat if it should happen that I
come home before you do. 3. In the event of fire, ring the fire
alarm. 4. I may not have time to help you tomorrow but whatever
happens you may depend on my help on Sunday. 5. I saw at least
three similar instances of children dying due to the lack of water
when I was working in India. 6. The airline received about 500
complaints last year. In most instances these concerned delays
and cancellations.
2. bear
1. A messenger arrived, carrying a letter from the ambassador.
2. At the head of the procession a group of dark-suited men carried
the coffin into the church. 3. My leg really hurts – I’m not sure how
much longer I can stand it. 4. The trial was a great scandal but she
stood it with courage and dignity. 5. The baby’s narrow neck looked
too fragile to support the weight of its head. 6. Don’t cry, I can’t
stand it. 7. He couldn’t stand the thought of his wife leaving him.
8. I can’t stand thinking about the loneliness he must have felt.

184
9. The only things that made her life tolerable were the occasional
visits from her grandchildren. 10. The pressure of all this fame was
scarcely tolerable. 11. His leg hasn’t quite healed yet, but pain-
killers make it tolerable. 12. Turn the radio off. I can’t stand that
noise. 13. I can’t stand to read her old letters. 14. “You’re always
welcome to stay here, you know.” “Thanks, I’ll keep it in mind.”
15. Keeping in mind how much we spent last year, I think we should
start making cuts. 16. The ruins of temples, theatres and villas all
show the past greatness of Roman Empire.
3. blame
1. Patricia never said anything, but secretly she reproached her
sister for the child’s death. 2. Hurry up! It’s me who’ll take the rap
if we’re late. 3. He must realize that he’s done something wrong
and that he’ll have to take responsibility for it. 4. The press will put
all the responsibility on the president for the breakdown of
negotiations. 5. He is going to look for a better job. I don’t criticize
him. 6. If children are disobedient, the fault lies with their parents.
7. If anything had gone wrong, he would have had to take the
responsibility. 8. The entire responsibility for it all will fall on her.
4. realize
1. I soon became aware that I was wasting time. 2. You don’t seem
to recognize how serious the situation is. 3. He was not aware of
his mistake until it was too late. 4. I understand how you feel.
5. They don’t seem to understand the importance of hard work.
6. He was advised to sell the shares as quickly as possible. 7. He
never converted his life long ambition into reality. 8. Do you
understand the importance of this decision?
5. require
1. This meeting will want your presence as it will discuss matters
that are of utmost importance to the department. 2. I don’t mind a
little extra work, but as you know it wants time and therefore you
mustn’t expect a definite answer too soon. 3. All participants are
wanted to be there at 10 a.m. 4. Small children need a lot of care
and attention. 5. Do they want any other documents? 6. I have
done everything that was demanded of me. 7. This is the list of
books of obligatory reading. You must read them for your exam in

185
English literature. 8. These flowers need much light. 9. If you need
anything, just inform us about it. 10. What is needed to enter this
university?

VI. Supply the appropriate particles.


1. He has been able to bear … all the opposition. 2. They saw me
bearing … … them and they called out to me to keep out of their
way. 3. She herself was to blame … the whole thing. 4. The old
woman blamed the boys … the broken window. 5. I don’t want to
bear the blame … your mistakes. 6. He bore a sword … his side.
7. She bears little resemblance … her mother.

VII. Fill in the appropriate synonyms.


a) to realize, to understand
1. Do you … what time it is? 2. Do you … this word? 3. I don’t …
modern art. 4. He suddenly … that it was his mother’s birthday.
5. Do you … that you need help? 6. I can’t … why he behaves like
that. 7. I … that you have a typewriter for sale. 8. I … that it’s rather
late but perhaps it would be better to discuss the matter now.
9. Many years later his plan was … 10. Then she … that he was
serious about resigning. 11. I didn’t … his explanation. 12. You
don’t seem to … how difficult life is for them. 13. I never … before
how old the building is. 14. He … about 200 lats on the sale of
china. 15. Everyone should be made to … the importance of
environment protection. 16. I didn’t … how serious the situation
was. 17. I didn’t feel well I could not … what was wrong with me.
18. Read Poe’s biography and you will … why some of his works
are so pesimistic. 19. Andrew did not … how much Christine meant
to him until after her death. 20. The book helps us to … the part the
Impressionists played in the history of art. 21. Oh, I didn’t … it was
so late. I must be going. 22. I … the problem but I don’t know how
to solve it.
b) to accuse, to charge, to blame
1. He was at a loss; it was the first time that anyone had … him of
cowardice. 2. I hope you don’t … him with having taken the money.
3. I know you had to wait for me a long time. If you married another
man I don’t … you. 4. When anything went wrong in the house the
step-mother always … poor Cinderella … it. 5. The man was ... …

186
murder, but he pleaded not guilty. 6. Don’t … other people when
the fault is your own. 7. I was to … as much as Ivory. 8. You have
been ... … bad conduct in a professional way.
c) to carry, to bear, to wear
1. I can’t … to look at battle scenes on TV. 2. You … an honoured
name. 3. Can you … all those figures in your head? 4. She ran as
fast as her legs would … her. 5. Mini skirts are being … mainly by
young girls. 6. The stone … an inscription of great historical
significance. 7. Oh, Dad! I’m so tired! Can you … me? 8. Don’t …
those black shoes with your new coat. 9. I’ll … the cost if you do
the work. 10. To … coals to Newcastle is an old saying. 11. We …
less in summer than in winter. 12. Women always complain that
they have nothing … 13. Oh, stop talking! It’s more than I can …
14. Her voice … right across the country. 15. You will … witness
that I tried to resist temptation. 16. It is no longer Paris that dictates
what women will … 17. That man … great responsibility. 18. The
girl’s face … an expression of surprise.
d) blame, fault, charge, guilt or guilty of
1. A letter was sent to Peter summoning him to attend the August
meeting of the Committee to answer the … brought … him. 2. He
was arrested on an old … of desertion. 3. After he confessed his
… he was brought to trial. 4. It is my … that he failed to meet us at
the station; I forgot to send him a telegram. 5. Don’t take the …
upon yourself. It was I who pushed you when you were holding the
vase. 6. Though she was strongly suspected of murder her … was
not established. 7. Whose … is it that the book is torn and dirty?
8. He took the … for the failure of the experiment upon himself.
9. To confess one’s crime is to acknowledge one’s … 10. If you
don’t do the work, you get the … 11. Some readers pity Soames
and say that he wasn’t such a bad fellow after all; it wasn’t his … if
he was not lovable; Irene ought to have forgiven him. 12. The jury
found the prisoner … murder. 13. Nina tried to comfort her friend.
But Elisabeth felt it was all Nina’s … 14. We both felt … because of
our part in his trouble. 15. The door was left open and the dog ran
away. Whose … is it? 16. Don’t lay … on me, the wrong is not of my
doing. 17. The young man was conscious of his … and lost his
peace of mind. 18. It is not my … that the letter has not yet been
typed.
187
VIII. Account for the use of the synonyms to bear, to endure, to
suffer, to stand, to tolerate.
1. If you could bear it there’s no reason why others shouldn’t.
2. Well, I’m not exactly a poor man. I can’t bear the thought of your
going to seed in a rotten little hole like this. 3. “Well,” she said, “she
asked for the truth, and I let her have it; … She stood it very well.”
4. You’ve got to have them, I suppose, to help you to endure living
with me. 5. Lady Feverel was jealous of her husband’s friend. By
degrees she tolerated him. 6. When will this wind stop? I can’t
stand much more of it. 7. You don’t understand. There are things
the flesh has to endure, and things the spirit too must endure …
8. Mr. Crerar and most of the officers were suffering the aftereffects
of last night’s party. 9. I don’t want you to bear this alone … I want
to share it with you. 10. The room would bear witness to our
presence. 11. But the only thing they would not stand was back
answers. 12. His mother wrote that she could not bear to be parted
from him any longer.

IX. Translate into English.


1. Es neesmu vainîgs, ka jûs nokavçjât vilcienu. 2. Nevajag uzvelt
savu vainu citiem. 3. Mums nav jâizlemj, kuram no viòiem taisnîba
un kurð vainîgs. 4. Kurð par to vainojams? 5. Ar vainîgu izskatu
viòa ienâca istabâ un atzinâs, ka visu laiku slçpusi no mums
patiesîbu. 6. Viòa domâja, ka nodevîbâ vainojams Artûrs. 7. Es
uzòemos visu vainu par nodarîto. 8. Kas vainojams par to, ka tu
saòçmi sliktu at-zîmi? 9. Vai tad tâ ir ðuvçjas vaina, ka kleita iznâkusi
tik îsa? Tu taèu zini, ka drçbes bija maz. 10. Ðîs zâdzîbas
izmeklçðana vilkâs ilgi, jo grûti bija atrast vainîgo. 11. Viòð jutâs
vainîgs un nevarçja skatîties citiem acîs. 12. No jûsu teiktâ var
secinât, ka vainîga ir viòa. 13. Tiesa atzina apsûdzçto par vainîgu.
14. Viòu ilgi mocîja vainas apziòa, un beidzot viòð pats paziòoja,
ka izdarîjis ðo noziegumu. 15. Nepârmetiet man, ja pîrâgs
neizdosies, es to cepu pirmo reizi. 16. Es jums nepârmetu
nokavçðanos, jums ir nopietni iemesli. 17. Viòu nedrîkst apsûdzçt
par zâdzîbu, iekams nebûs savâkti visi pierâdîjumi. 18. Viòu
apsûdzçja huligânismâ. 19. Nepârmetiet to viòam, tâ nav viòa vaina.
20. Tiesa atzina apsûdzçto par vainîgu dedzinâðanâ.

188
X. Answer the questions.
1. What do doctors say if they have five patients down with flu?
2. When do we usually ring the fire brigade up? 3. Does your family
bear an ancient name? 4. Would you bear a grudge against your
very best friend if there had been some misunderstanding between
you? Why? Why not? 5. What might happen if you walk on the ice
which is too thin to bear your weight? 6. If you are laughed at, can
you bear it? 7. Is the teacher supposed to bear responsibility for
children’s upbringing? Why? Why not? 8. Do you bear pain (heat,
cold) well? 9. What should a person do if he / she gets lost in some
place? 10. Are you always ready to bear the blame for the wrong
you have done? 11. Why do you think students often blame teachers
for their failure? 12. Who is to blame for the growth of the children’s
crime? 13. What would you blame for the low birth rate in the
country? 14. What are your ambitions in life? How do you hope to
realize them? 15. If we realize our errors what should we do?
16. What are the students required to do to enter this university?
17. Do the study courses at the university meet your requirements?
If not – why? 18. If a person is absent-minded would you advise
him / her make a list of things what he / she must do? Why?
19. When is it necessary to make a shopping list? 20. Do you list
your engagements? When? Why?

XI. In what circumstances would you say:


1. You’d better take the umbrella just in case. 2. In case of
emergency, call the police station. 3. The girl bears little
resemblance to her mother. 4. Don’t bear hatred towards people!
5. How could you bear to look at her? 6. I’m to blame for it all! 7. I
blame you for refusing to help your own parents. 8. I soon realized
I was wasting my time. 9. I believe your hopes will be soon realized.
10. It’s past bearing! 11. It doesn’t bear thinking about! 12. Do you
have the required qualifications? 13. I think my paper meets all the
requirements. 14. This meeting requires your presence.

XII. Translate into English.


1. Vajadzîbas gadîjumâ mçs varam aizbraukt pie tevis un palîdzçt
mâjas celtniecîbâ. 2. Vçstulei ir viòa paraksts. 3. Jaunais cilvçks,
kam ir ïoti neliela auto vadîðanas prakse, izraisîja ðo satiksmes

189
negadîjumu, un viòam jâuzòemas pilna atbildîba par to. 4. Meitene
vçl joprojâm nevar apjçgt, ka viòai nav taisnîba un stûrgalvîgi turas
pie sava. 5. Lai apmierinâtu iedzîvotâju prasîbas, pilsçtas valde
pazeminâja îres maksu daudzbçrnu ìimençm. 6. Apstâkïi prasa,
lai mçs visi piedalîtos ðajâ pasâkumâ. 7. Ðíiet, ka tu neizproti situâci-
jas nopietnîbu. 8. Viòam ieteica pârdot akcijas pçc iespçjas âtrâk.
9. Izsolç par mçbelçm ieguva augstu cenu. 10. Skolotâjs ierakstîja
visu skolçnu vârdus sarakstâ. 11. Viòð sastâdîja visu plauktos esoðo
grâmatu sarakstu, lai tâs nepazustu, kad tiks izsniegtas studentiem.
12. Ðiem cilvçkiem atïâva apmeklçt izrâdes par velti. 13. Ja nemâcî-
sies, viòa izkritîs eksâmenâ, un tâdâ gadîjumâ varçs vainot tikai
sevi. 14. Ðajâ palâtâ ievietoti tikai staigâjoðie slimnieki. 15. Pilsçtâ
jau ir vairâki gripas saslimðanas gadîjumi. 16. Par laimi man jâatzîst,
ka ðoreiz viòð ir pilnîgi bez vainas. 17. Komanda sacensîbâs zaudç-
ja, un visu vainu uzvçla trenerim. 18. Ðis bçrns ir tik nerâtns, ka tas
vairs nav izturams. 19. Visur viòð izturçjâs ar cieòu. 20. Lai gan vi-
òai jau bija pâri 60, viòa izskatîjâs jaunâka par saviem gadiem!

TEXT EXERCISES
I. Answer the questions.
1. How was Andrew Manson getting ready for his first patient?
2. Why did he want to look at the Hunter Gold Medal awarded to
him as the best student in clinical medicine? 3. When was the
morning surgery over? 4. What did he do after it? 5. How many
patients did he visit that morning? 6. What were the symptoms of
these cases? 7. What disease did Andrew diagonise? 8. How did
his evening surgery proceed? 9. Why couldn’t he enjoy it? 10. What
decision did he come to finally? 11. Why did he want to see Denny?
12. Was Denny surprised to see Manson? 13. How did Andrew
feel about this visit? 14. What did they discuss? 15. What did Denny
show Manson? 16. What was the origin of the epidemic? 17. Who
was to blame for not preventing the outbreak of typhoid fever?
18. Did Andrew change his attitude to Denny? Why?

190
II. Pick out from the text words and phrases bearing on:
1) diseases, symptoms;
2) treatment;
3) medical equipment and research

III. Find Latvian for:


to prize sth.; to restore one’s confidence; morning / evening surgery;
a list of visits; painful expectancy; an odd expression; immediate
vicinity; cases of enteric; to have an outbreak of typhoid fever on
one’s hands; minor ailments of humanity; to be on probation;
obsessed by the major issue; to reach one’s decision; to write
prescriptions; to sound chests; to loathe; superior devil; a
prolonged and aggravating stare; to conquer one’s temper and
one’s pride; not to know the ropes; to make a grudging gesture; a
burst slipper; a jerk of one’s head; rodshaped clusters of the
bacteria; to forstall criticism; jack-of-all-trades; a naked eye; cold
and bitter irony; rush of indignation; a lazy, evasive incompetent,
pious swine; cold and measured cynicism; to have no pretext;
indications of relief.
Answer the questions:
1. What topic are these phrases mainly concerned with? Why?
2. Which of these phrases are used in the text in a figurative sense?
Can you explain their meaning? 3. Do these phrases characterize
a colloquial or literary speech?

IV. Retell the text and then give its summary.

V. Make up and act out the dialogues between:


1) Andrew and his patients;
2) Andrew and Jenkins;
3) Andrew and Denny.

VI. Speak on the main character of the novel. Do you think he is


a good doctor? Why?

VII. Speak on Denny. Is he a good professional? Why?

VIII. Do you feel the mood of growing tension in the extract?


What events promote it?

191
IX. What turn will the events take and how will the relations
between the two doctors develop further?

DISCUSSION EXERCISES
I. Read texts A, B.
A. A THANKFUL PATIENT
Years ago a dentist came to practise in a country village. But
although he was a clever, honest little man who understood his
work, not a single patient came to him.
The country people preferred to take their aching teeth to the
village blacksmith, who was willing to pull them out, though he
sometimes very nearly pulled their heads off too.
The poor dentist began to despair when, late one dark night,
a loud knock was heard upon his door.
“Are you the dentist?” a big man asked.
“Yes, Sir, I am.”
“Then come along, quick; our Alice is crazy with toothache,
poor girl.”
Wondering why ‘our Alice’ had not come herself, but not wishing
to lose a patient, the dentist got his bag of instruments together
quickly and hurried away with his visitor.
He was surprised when the man led him to a travelling circus.
But much greater was his astonishment when he was taken into a
large tent and found that ‘our Alice’ was the circus elephant, an
animal almost as big as a cottage. Trembling, the little dentist
examined her immense jam, and found a loose, inflamed tooth,
which he took out with so much skill and gentleness that Alice who
had refused food for days, began to chew hay with enjoyment.
“And how much to pay?” asked the thankful master.
“Nothing, I am glad I have put the poor beast out of her pain,”
said the dentist; and he hurried home, happy to get away with his
life.
The next day a free pass for the circus came with ‘Alice’s
compliments’.

192
That night the dentist with his family took their places in the
front row to watch the performance. There were shouts of joy when
big Alice marched into the circus ring, and cries of surprise when
she suddenly stood still before the little dentist, trumpeted joyfully,
then curled her trunk gently round him, and, raising him over the
heads of his frightened family, placed him on her back.
Like all elephants, she never passed a friend, and here was
the kind man who had taken away her toothache.
When the manager came forward and explained why the little
dentist was so honoured, there was a roar of delight from the crowd,
and from that day he had plenty of patients.

B. AMATEUR DOCTORS
Because medical costs are rising so fast in Washington, more
and more people are diagnosing their own illnesses or, worse still,
those of their friends. The government would do well to make a
study of how these nonprofessional diagnoses are affecting the
nation’s health picture.
The other day I had a cold. It was like that. I was sneezing,
coughing and looking mournfully at my wife. I called my secretary
at the office and said I wouldn’t be in because I felt lousy.
“You must have one of those ‘eight-hour things’ that’s going all
around town,” she said. “You’ll feel perfectly well tomorrow.”
Eight hours seemed to be a reasonable time to have a cold,
and I was looking forward to staying in bed, particularly since the
Yankees and Red Sox were playing a crucial game to get into the
American League playoffs.
My sister called, and I told her I had one of those ‘eight-hour
things’ that’s going all around.
“Are you sure it’s only an ‘eight-hour thing’?” she asked. “It
could be the ‘24-hour bug’. Harold had it last week. Do you have
any fever?”
“A little.”
“That’s the ‘24-hour bug’ for sure. Drink lots of fluids and take
aspirin, and you’ll be able to shake it off.”
I really hadn’t counted on staying in bed for 24 hours, but it’s
stupid to fight a bug.

193
My other sister called up 10 minutes later. “Edith says you’ve
got a ‘24-hour bug’.”
“I don’t know if it’s a bug or just a cold.”
“Is your nose red from blowing it?”
“Yah, sure it is. Why do you ask?”
“Then you don’t have a ‘24-hour bug’. You have a ‘48-hour
virus’.”
“My secretary said all I had was an ‘eight-hour thing’. How
come you moved it up to 48 hours?”
“The ‘eight-hour thing’ is entirely different. You feel funny but
your nose doesn’t get red when you blow it. The ‘24-hour bug’ has
all the symptoms of the ‘eight-hour’ one, except that you cough a
lot. The ‘48-hour virus’ makes you sneeze, cough and perspire
while you’re sleeping. You have to stay in bed for two days.”
“But I can’t stay in bed for two days.”
“Look,” my sister said. “If you don’t want medical advice, don’t
ask me.”
I think I might have been all right except that my secretary told
Healy I was home with the flu.
He called, of course. “I feel for you,” he said. “You won’t be
able to shake it off for two weeks. If it were a winter cold I’d say
you’d be better in five, maybe six days. But you have an October
cold. It’s almost impossible to get rid of. You hear my voice? It’s
been like this since August.”
“But suppose my cold goes away in 24 hours?”
“That’s when it can become the most dangerous. You think it’s
gone away and then a week later you wake up and it’s back with a
vengeance. I’d rather have a two-week bout with a chest cold than
a ‘24-hour bugs’ which sneaks up on you like a thief in the night.”
Word travels fast in Washington, and Elfin of Newsweek was
terse and to the point. “Healy tells me you have an incurable form
of pneumonia.”
“Either that,” I said, “or an ‘eight-hour thing’ or a ‘24-hour bug’
or a ‘48-hour virus’ or a two-week bout with the flu or a simple cold.
I’m waiting for another opinion right now.”
“From whom?”
“My druggist. He says there’s a lot of it going around.”

194
“What’s going around?”
“You name it, and he says he’s never seen so much of it going
around.”
Art Buchwald

II. Make up questions on the texts and ask your fellow students
to answer them.

III. Discuss the problems and situations in the texts.

IV. Read the following anecdotes and then tell them to your
fellow students.
1. A high-powered psychiatrist in New York was taking on a new
patient. “I’m a very busy man,” he explained, “and the first
interview is always one-sided because the patient just tells me
everything he wants me to know. Now if I can get that down
and hear it at my own convenience it’s a great help. So I use
this tape recorder here. You sit right beside it, I switch on and
I leave you, and you just go on talking until you’ve finished all
you want to say. Is that clear?” The patient said it was and the
machine was started. Five minutes later the psychiatrist was
surprised to see the patient leaving the building so he went
after him. “You’ve not said much into my tape recorder, have
you?” he asked. “Well,” the man replied, “you see I also am
very, very busy, and you are not the only psychiatrist I’ve
consulted. If you will go back to your surgery you will see,
sitting next to your tape recorder and telling it everything I
want to say, my little dictaphone!”
2. The man was suffering from a bronchial attack, and as a result
of it he was unable to speak above a whisper. The illness was
slight, but painful, and he decided to call at the residence of
the doctor who had just moved to town.
The patient appeared one evening at the doctor’s front door,
rang the bell, and after a short wait stood facing the doctor’s
young and pretty wife.
“Is the doctor at home?” he asked in his bronchial whisper.
“No,” the young wife whispered in reply. “Come right on in.”

195
3. “Doctor,” she said loudly, bouncing into the room, “I want you
to say frankly what’s wrong with me.”
He surveyed her from head to foot. “Madam,” he said at length,
“I’ve just three things to tell you.”
“First, your weight wants reducing by nearly fifty pounds.”
“Second, your beauty would be improved if you used about
one tenth as much rouge and lipstick.”
“And, third, I’m an artist – the doctor lives on the next floor.”
4. Professor: “Now, Mr. Jones, assuming you were called to attend
a patient who had swallowed a coin, what would be your
method of procedure?”
Young medico: “I’d send for a preacher, sir. They’ll get money
out of anyone.”
5. Empty Head
“Mummy, I’ve got a stomach ache,” said Nelly, a little girl of six.
“That’s because you’ve been without lunch. Your stomach is
empty. You would feel better if you had something in it.”
That afternoon the minister came to see Nelly’s mother. While
they talked, the minister remarked that he had been suffering
all day with an awful headache.
“That’s because it’s empty,” said Nelly. “You would feel better
if you had something in it.”
6. A psychiatrist board was testing the mentality of a soldier.
“Private Dean, do you ever hear voices without being able to
tell who is speaking or where the voices come from?”
“Yes, Sir.”
“And when does this occur?”
“When I answer the telephone.”

V. Make up your own dialogues on similar situations and act


them out.

VI. Read and discuss the following puns.


1. “Last week a grain of sand got into my wife’s eye and she had
to go to a doctor. It cost me five dollars.”

196
“That’s nothing. Last week a fur coat got into my wife’s eye
and it cost me five hundred dollars.”
to get into one’s eye: 1. iebirt acî, 2. iekrist acîs
2. “I am sorry,” said the dentist, “but you cannot have an
appointment with me this afternoon. I have eighteen cavities
to fill.” And he picked up his golf-bag and went out.
cavity – 1. (med.) dobums, caurums, 2. (sportâ) bedrîte
fill – 1. piepildît, 2. (med.) plombçt
to fill a cavity – 1. (med.) plombçt zobu, 2. (sportâ) iemest
bumbiòu bedrîtç
3. “What is this kleptomania that I read so much about in the
papers? Is it catching?”
“No, it is taking.”
kleptomania – kleptomânija
catching – lipîgs (par slimîbu)
to catch – íert, noíert
4. “You followed my prescriptions, of course?”
“Indeed I did not, doctor, for I should have broken my neck.”
“Broken your neck!”
“Yes, for I threw your prescriptions out of a third floor window.”
prescription – 1. norâdîjums, rîkojums, 2. recepte
follow – klausît (padomam, rîkojumam), 2. sekot (aiz, pa
pçdâm)
5. “I had a fall last night which rendered me unconscious for
several hours.”
“You don’t mean it! Where did you fall?”
“I fell asleep.”
fall – kritiens
to fall asleep – aizmigt
6. “My grandfather lived to be nearly ninety and never used
glasses.”
“Well, lots of people prefer to drink from a bottle.”
glasses – acenes, brilles
glass – glâze

197
7. “The doctor told my wife she should take exercise.”
“And is she doing it?”
“If jumping at conclusions and running up bills can be called
exercise.”
to take exercise – nodarboties ar vingroðanu
jump – lekt, lçkât
to jump at conclusions – izdarît pârsteidzîgus secinâjumus
to run up bills – taisît parâdus
8. “Why is it easier to be a clergyman than a physician?”
“Because it is easier to preach than to practise.”
clergyman – garîdznieks
physician – ârsts, mediíis
preach – 1. sludinât, 2. teorizçt
practise – 1. pielietot, 2. strâdât par ârstu
9. A boy and his mother stood looking at a dentist’s show-case.
“If I had to have false teeth, mother, I’d take that pair,” said the
small boy pointing.
“Hush, Willie,” interrupted the mother quickly, shaking his arm,
“haven’t I told you it’s bad manners to pick your teeth in public?”
show-case – vitrîna
pick – izvçlçties
to pick one’s teeth – bakstît zobus

VII. Interpret the English proverbs and sayings and try to find
their Latvian equivalents.
1. After death, the doctor.
2. Death pays all debts.
3. Good health is above wealth.
4. Like cures like.
5. Wealth is nothing without health.
6. What can’t be cured, must be endured.
7. An apple a day keeps the doctor away.

VIII. Make up and act out situations using these proverbs.

IX. Give your own examples illustrating the importance of being


healthy.
JUST FOR FUN
I. From a selection of application forms for insurance cited in
the British Medical Journal:
1. Mother died in infancy.
2. Father went to bed feeling well, and the next morning woke up
dead.
3. Grandfather died suddenly at the age of 103. Up to this time
he bade fair to reach a ripe old age.
4. Applicant does not know anything about maternal posterity,
except that they died at an advanced age.
5. Applicant does not know cause of mother’s death, but states
that she fully recovered from her last illness.
6. Applicant has never been fatally sick.
7. Father died suddenly; nothing serious.
8. Applicant’s brother, who was an infant, died when he was a
mere child.
9. Grandfather died from gunshot wound, caused by an arrow
shot by an Indian.
10. Mother’s last illness was caused from chronic rheumatism, but
she was cured before death.

II. Do these quatations make you smile? Why?

III. Read the following episodes. Does their vocabulary indicate


the professional activities of these people?
1. Judge (in dentist chair): “Do you swear that you will pull the
tooth, the whole tooth, and nothing but the tooth.”
2. Doctor (after removing his barber’s appendix): “And now, my
dear sir, how about a little liver or thyroid operation? And your
tonsils need trimming terribly.”

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