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Look at the picture of sounds that things make and complete the sentences with an appropriate sound word.

Читайте также:
  1. A Complete the questions with one word only.
  2. A Graphical User Interface (GUI) makes computers easier to use. A GUI uses icons. Icons are pictures which represent programs, folders, and files.
  3. A phrase or sentence built by (tiresome) repetition of the same words or sounds.
  4. A Read the text again quickly and complete sentences 1-6.
  5. A) Complete each gap with missing phrase from the box below
  6. A) Complete each gap with missing phrase from the box below.
  7. A) Complete the conversation with a phrase from the box

 

 

 

1 Bees …… buzz… ……………………………

2 Glasses ……………………………………..

3 A whip ……………………………………….

4 A fire …………………………………………

5 Cymbals …………………………………….

6 An apple …………………………………….

7 A drink ………………………………………

8 A punctured tyre ……………………………

9 A car …………………………………………

10 Sausages …………………………………..

11 A small stick ……………….. when broken

12 A person diving i9nto the sea …………….

13 Boots in mud ……………………………….

14 A clock ………………………………………

15 An alarm clock …………………………….

16 A champagne cork coming out …………..

17 A fan ………………………………………...

18 Thin metal tubes ……………………………

 

Complete the sentences with the appropriate form of the verbs in the box.

click whirr sizzle clink groan crash splash trickle

1 She heard his key …………….. as it turned in the lock.

2 The blades of the helicopter ………………………..noisily.

3 I love to hear sausages …………………….. in the pan!

4 They ……………………………. the glasses and drank to each other’s health.

5 There was a terrible car …………………………. on the motorway today.

6 Everyone ………………………….. with disappointment at the news.

7 The baby loves ……………………… in its bath.

8 I can feel raindrops ………………………. down the back of my neck.

 

 

Match the words on the left with the sounds on the right.

- Schoolchildren - A bad-tempered person or dog - The bell on a cat’s collar - A bored child - A fire - A churchbell - A steam train - A prisoner’s chain - Someone with asthma · crackles · tinkles · clanks · whistles · giggle · growls · clangs · wheezes · wriggles

There are more examples of sounds things can make. Read them carefully and

Write in the gaps their Russian equivalents. If uncertain, consult a dictionary. Pay attention to the connotations, if any. Most of them are onomotopaeic words.

1 sack of potatoes falling from a great height thuds  
2 leaves in the breeze rustle  
3 a bomb bangs  
4 wind through the trees whistles  
5 a well-tuned Rolls Royce engine purrs  
6 tyres when one brakes suddenly screech  
7 kettle boiling hisses  
8 a sugar lump dropped into the tea plops  
9 the quiet background sound of a fridge hum  
10 a light being switched on clicks  
13 knives being scraped together grate  
14 rain on the roof    
15 a tap that can’t be turned right off drips  
16 lions or a power engine roar  
17 little pigs squeal  
18 mice or the chair leg moving on the floor squeaks  
19 a car going into the wall crashes  
20 the high-pitched sound of a factory machine whine  

People also make different noises both with and without producing words. Read the

Texts below and make sure you understand the words in bold. Consult a dictionary for their Russian equivalents.

A.

I’m awake, lying here moaning, and nothing’s happening at all. Oh, well better start crying properly. Still no reaction. Right, they’ve asked for it. Here we go with a real scream. Ah, now I hear something next door. Must go on sobbing, so they realise it’s serious. Here she comes, muttering to herself. Why is it always her? Never him? Ah, a bottle. Excuse me, it’s difficult to suck a bottle without making sucking noises, you know. Oh, no, I’ve got hiccupsagain. Sometimes I seem to spend half my day hiccupping. Over the shoulder I go again. Oh dear, a burp. Pardon. Pardon. Back to bed. Ah, I like it when she hums that song to me. Oh dear, we’re both yawning. Time to sleep again. I can hear him snoringnext door.”Not a murmur now,” she says to me, the same as always. There’s no need to sigh like that, you know. You were a baby once.

B.

I’ve never know a boss like him; you hardly ever hear him talking normally. He starts as soon as he comes into the office in the morning. If I’m two minutes late, he starts shoutingat me. And you should hear him on the phone yelling at some poor junior. When he asks you to do something, he just barks – like a fierce dog. And when he finds a mistake in your work, he roars like a lion. When someone asks him a question, he nearly always just grunts, like that. He’ll sit for hours grumbling about the weather, the business, his colleagues, the market. And he will mutter! Half the time you can’t understand a word he’s saying. The worst thing is his dictation. He just mumblesall the way through the letter; I have to guess every other word. Then he bites my head off when I’ve written something he didn’t want. I just start stammering and stuttering, and get out of the room as soon as possible.

C.

You can hear the audience whisperingexcitedly. Some of them are clearing their throats. Could they be nervous? Something’s happening. The audience are clapping; polite applause at the moment. Two of the audience are being invited onto the stage. The rest of them are cheering and calling out things. Now something is happening on stage; you could hear a pin drop. The two members of the audience are doing exactly what they are told and the chairs they are sitting on are beginning to rise into the air. The audience are gasping. Oh dear, what’s happened? They’ve suddenly fallen to the ground and look most upset. The audience are booing loudly. It hasn’t worked. Now they’re whistling. The whistling has changed to hissing,but there’s nobody on stage except the two members of the audience. Now they are chanting that they want their money back. The manager’s coming out on stage. Listen to them groaning.

D.

It started on Momday. I really wasn’t well at all. I was sniffingall day. On Tuesday I hardly stopped blowing my nose and sneezing. By Wednesday I had a pretty bad cough. I tried gargling with salt water but it didn’t seem to do much good. If I had to go upstairs, I’d reach the top stair panting like a thirsty dog, and I’d still be wheezing five or ten minutes later. Bu Friday I’d lost my voice almost completely. I was croaking like a frog all day at the office.

E.


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Читайте в этой же книге: GETTING PROFESSIONAL | Now complete the flowchart with English equivalents from the previous exercise. | Write them under the correct picture. Make sure you know their | Them. Suggest their Russian equivalents. | Write a summary of the text. | Equivalents in the blanks. | Now that you know the history of books and publishing, make sure that you remember | Answer the questions that follow. | Notes on the right. There are some expressive means there too. | Look for stylistic devices and expresstive means in the text. |
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