художественная выставка, высокая цена, театральный спектакль, в
меньшем масштабе, трудно достать, несмотря на, музыкант, частные
организации, источник информации, кабельное телевидение, быть в
наличии, жаловаться (на), низкий интеллектуальный уровень, взрослый,
распространение видеофильмов, осматривать достопримечательности.
III. Find in text B the answers to the following questions:
1. Where are some of the world's greatest museums, orchestras, theatres,
and concert halls located? 2. Are performances and exhibitions well attended?
3. Tickets can be hard to get despite their high prices, can't they? 4. Who usually
supports the arts with money? 5. What are the most popular sources of
entertainment and information? 6. What do many people complain about?
7. What can you say about American movies? 8. People like to travel, don't
they? 9. What are the most common ways of travelling?
Text C. Holidays and Festivals
There are eight holidays a year in Great Britain. On these days people
don't go to work. They are: Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year's Day, Good
Friday, Easter, May Day, Spring Bank Holiday, Late Summer Bank Holiday.
Most of these holidays are of religious origin. But nowadays they have
lost their religious significance and are simply days on which people relax, visit
their friends. All the public holidays (except New Year's Day, Christmas and
Boxing Day) are movable. They don't fall on the same date each year.
Besides public holidays, there are other festivals, anniversaries, on which
certain traditions are observed. But if they don't fall on Sunday, they're ordinary
working days.
Lent
Lent is the period before Easter during which Christians practice various
forms of fasting or abstinence. Easter itself is a movable feast, and Lent covers
the forty weekdays before Easter, starting on a Wednesday. This Wednesday is
known as Ash Wednesday. It is clear that if during Lent people abstained from
eating certain forbidden foods, they did not relish throwing away any they had
left. And hence, on the eve of Ash Wednesday there is a traditional jollification
when eggs and butter are used up; the obvious ingredients for making pancakes.
The eve of Ash Wednesday is known as Shrove Tuesday, the day of pancakes
and gay social gatherings. There are still a number of ritual celebrations
connected with Shrove Tuesday. At Westminster Public School the boys
scramble for pieces of the hot pancake tossed among them, and in certain places,
such as Olney in Buckinghamshire,
there are pancake races to mark the last day
of plenty - Shrove Tuesday - before life once more starts in sober earnest on Ash
Wednesday.
Make Love, Not War
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