this morning, this afternoon, this evening, tonight; yesterday morning,
yesterday afternoon, yesterday evening, last night;
tomorrow morning, tomorrow afternoon, tomorrow evening, tomorrow
night.
THE PRESENT INDEFINITE TENSE
attwo o'clock, half past three, night, noononSunday, Monday, May the
first, the second of JuneinJanuary, February, March spring, summer,
autumn 1949
the morning, the evening, the afternoon
Примечание. Суффикс -(e)s глагола в 3-м лице единственного числа
произносится [ г ] после гласных и звонких согласных — sees [si z], builds |bilz) [s|
после глухих согласных — wants [wonts], [iz] после ширящих и свистящих согласных
— teaches ftfctfiz]
Table No. 2
122
b
Do
I
like
English?
)
we
Moscow?
you
winter?
they
our University? this poem?
Mary and Tom
to skate?
Does
he (she) Mary
to read English books?
c
I
do not (don't)
like
)
We
You
They
German, our study,
Mary and Tome
winter, this poem, to
He (She) Mary
does not
skate, to go out in the
(doesn't)
evening.
CONTRACTED FORMS
Do you study English? — No, I don't. Does he study
English? — No, he doesn 't.
T a b l e No. 3 GENERAL QUESTIONS IN INDIRECT
SPEECH
I
WeYouaskthe weather is fine.theyMary speaks English.Mary and Tomiffather is free on
Sunday.(whether)Tom likes to play chess.
He (She)the children can skate well.MaryasksThe boy
Глаголы, оканчивающиеся на -s, -ss, -sh, -ch, -xr -z,принимают в третьем
лице единственного числа окончание -es[iz]: I pass — he passes; 1 teach —
he teaches.
Окончание -es в глаголе groes читается как [ z ] : I go — he goes [g3uz].
123
Глаголы, оканчивающиеся на букву -у, которой предшествует согласная,
меняют букву у на iи принимают окончание -es:to study — he studies.
Если букве -у предшествует гласная, буква у не меняется: to stay — he
stays.
Memory $0or$-
Solomon Grundy
Solomon Grundy Born on Monday, Christened on Tuesday,
Married on Wednesday, J31 on Thursday, Worse on Friday, Died
on Saturday, Buried on Sunday, That was the end of Solomon
Grundy.
* * *
Thirty days have September, April, June and November, All the rest have
thirty-one; February has twenty-eight alone, Excepting leap-year, that's the time
When February's days are twenty-nine.
EXERCISES
I. Study Substitution Table2 and compose as many sentences as you can.
II. Read and transcribe the following words. Explain the reading rules:
did — deed, had — hard, lick — leak, hip — heap, dear — ieer, lad — lard,
Mary — marry, hail — hear, sill — seal, bear —
beer, lip — leap, pit — pat, hill — heal, chair — cheer, bad — ,l bard, fill —
feel, marry — merry, ship — sheep, taught — tap — tape, pen — pain — pale, fit
— foot — fate, dive — dove — dame, daisy — lazy — darling.
III. Copy the following words and arrange them in columns according '
to the corresponding type of syllable:
stamp, write, stir, bench, tulip, Arthur, button, mule, lace, typist, fare, dark,
cure, burn, here, muff, fine, mere, lace, cube, purse, tires, fade, prepare, mass,
system.
IV.
Spell and transcribe the3rd person singular of the following
verbs:
come, go, play, write, wash, stress, begin, catch, cut, eat, hang, get, relax, hold,
know, lead, meet, ring, think, understand, work, change, open, push, kiss, study,
stay, copy, say, carry, watch.
124
V. The material below is to be prepared for reading. Mark the stress-
es and tunes. Concentrate your attention on the sound [з:]. Let your fel-
low-student read the exercise aloud for you to detect his errors:
[з:] 1. A little girl with a pretty curl.
2. Learn thirteen words of Lesson Thirty.
2. The first word is a verb and the third word is ari adverb. \
3. First come first served.
4. One good turn deserves another.
5. As the workman so is the work.
VI.
Before you start working at the text practise the sounds in the
following words and word combinations:
1.
— see, receive, read, needn't, please, tea;
[ae]— Saturday, Sandford, glad, can, family, thank, have; [e] — enter, present,
let, anything, pleasure, well; [u] — knock, what, doctor, clock. Nasal plosion:
needn't, certainly.
2. a) No devoicing before voiceless consonants: his ^study,
havewtea;
b) No voicing before voic&d consonants: let's^go, this_way;
c) Loss of plosion: glad_to see you, sit_down, whatwcan I do, likewto have it;
d) No glottal stop: Saturdaywafternoon, Sandfordwiswin, comewinf whatwis^it,
show him^in, Mr. White^enters.
VII.
a) Listen to the recording of the dialogue "Mr. White Comes Again". Mark the
stresses and tunes, b) Practise the dialogue for test reading. Listen to the recording very
carefully until you can say it in exactly the same way. c) Memorize the dialogue and
dramatize it.
VIII. Read the following exclamations:
1. You are right! 2. It's excellent! 3. How nice! 4. She is here! 5. They are
ready! 6. We can ask him!
IX.
Pronounce the following phrases with the low-rising tone and
then with the falling-rising tone:
1. Satisfactory?
2. On Saturday?
3. Mr. Robertson?
4. In Moscow?
5. In London?
125
6. Next year?
7. To the North?
8. Again
9. At night
10.
Today?
11.Now?
12.
X. Transcribe the following sentences, mark the stresses and tunes, picture them on
the staves:
1. Good afternoon, Doctor? 2. What can I do for you? 3. Come in, please. 4.
Show him in, Betty. 5. Have tea with us. — Thank you. I'd be glad to.
XI. Answer the following questions:
A. 1. Where is Mr. Sandford on a Saturday afternoon?
2. Who comes to see Doctor Sandford on a Saturday afternoon?
3. What does Mr. White ask Doctor Sandford about? 4. Why does Mr. White
call on Doctor Sandford? 5. Doctor Sandford signs the paper, doesn't he? 6. What
do they do in England at 5 o'clock in the afternoon?
B. 1. Do you like English? 2. You speak English well, don't you? 3. Where do
you study English? 4. Does your brother go to the Institute every day? 5. Your
classes begin in the morning, don't they? 6. Where do you prepare your lessons? 7.
What does your brother do in the evening? 8. What foreign language does your
mother speak? 9. What do you write on the blackboard with?
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