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MY FAVOURITE ROOM


Date: 2015-10-07; view: 790.


& — READING&SPEAKING

Task 1.Read the text and decidewhich of these is Simon Peters's room?

This article is adapted from Women's World magazine. Actor and playwright Simon Peters tells us about his favourite room.

My favourite room is my study, at the end of the house. I call it a study but sometimes it's a kitchen and sometimes it's a bedroom, too. Well, it hasn't got a bed but I fall asleep in the armchairs all the time.

My mother, bless her, was very houseproud. We always had to take our shoes off when we came in the room, in case we made the carpet dirty. We couldn't sit back in the armchairs, in case our hair made them dirty. So I have old rugs on the floor. I bought this blue one at Dubai Airport when I was flying back from the Middle East, after doing a play out there. And the armchairs are old leather ones I bought second-hand in junk shops. Comfort comes first, you see.

I have a small microwave oven in the corner and a kettle. I make simple meals and coffee late at night. I'm a bit of a night owl and I do most of my writing in the early hours of the morning. I play music then, too. I live alone, so there's nobody to disturb.

On the table there's my computer.

I'm a bit of a computer fan so I have lots of toys like a scanner, that I don't really need. I don't play computer games, though! Next to the computer there's my CD player, which really is important to me. I play everything from Vivaldi to the Beatles but I do like rock music, played loudly.

All around the walls you can see my past. I'm a hoarder – I never throw anything away. You can see certificates I got when I was at school on the walls. And there are photos from a lot of my plays. There are no pictures of me, though. I don't want to see my ugly face when I'm learning my lines or writing.

And now I'll tell you what isn't in my room. Because I think you can learn as much about a person from what is not in his room as from what is there. There is no television. There isn't a television in the house. Enough said! And there are no photographs of other people, except actresses and actors who have been in my plays. There's an old saying, you know: 'He walks farthest who walks alone.'

Simon Peters was talking to Fiona Gage.

a night owl = someone who is more awake at night

Task 2.Choose the correct answer, a) or b)?

1. Simon Peters calls his room a study because

a) it is comfortable b) he works in it

2. He has made the room comfortable because his mother's home

a) was comfortable b) was not comfortable

3. Everything in the room is

a) old and cheap b) new and expensive

4. At night Simon Peters

a) sleeps b) works

5. Simon Peters

a) wants people with him all the time b) doesn't want people with him very much

Task 3. Read and listen to the description of a favourite room. Use your dictionary to look up any new words.

My favourite room is our kitchen. Perhaps the kitchen is the most important room in many houses, but it is particularly so in our house because it's not only where we cook and eat but it's also the main meeting place for family and friends.I have so many happy memories of times spent there: special occasions such as homecomings or cooking Christmas dinner; troubled times, which lead to comforting cups of tea in the middle of the night; ordinary daily events such as making breakfast on dark, cold winter mornings for cross, sleepy children before sending them off to school, then sitting down to read the newspaper with a steaming hot mug of coffee. Whenever we have a party, people gravitate with their drinks to the kitchen. It always ends up the fullest and noisiest room in the house.

So what does this special room look like? It's quite big, but not huge. It's big enough to have a good-sized rectangular table in the centre, which is the focal point of the room. There is a large window above the sink, which looks out onto two apple trees in the garden. The cooker is at one end, and above it is a wooden pulley, which is old-fashioned but very useful for drying clothes in wet weather. At the other end is a wall with a large notice-board, which tells the story of our lives, past, present, and future, in words and pictures: a school photo of Megan and Kate, a postcard from Auntie Nancy in Australia, the menu from a takeawayChinese restaurant, a wedding invitation for next Saturday. All our world is there for everyone to read!

The front door is seldom used in our house, only by strangers. All our friends use the back door, which means they come straight into the kitchen and join in whatever is happening there. The kettle goes on immediately and then we all sit round the table, drinking tea and putting the world to rights! Without doubt some of the happiest times of my life have been spent in our kitchen.

Task 4. Think of your favourite room. Draw a plan of it on a piece of paper. Show a partner your plan and talk about why you like the room.

 

8. HOME IDIOMS & PROVERBS

? VOCABULARY PRACTICE

Task 1. Idiomatic expressions.

1. What do the following expressions mean? When would you use them?


· Home, sweet home.

· An Englishman's home is his castle.

· Make yourself at home.

· It's home from home.


How would you express the same ideas in your own language?

2. Complete the following sentences with a suitable idiomatic expression.

a. Come in and have a seat. I want you to feel you can behave as if you were in your house. So _____ while I make a cup of tea.

b. They made me feel very welcome. It was like being in my own house. It was _____.

c. He had enjoyed travelling round the world and seeing different places, but at last he had returned. He walked towards his house and thought ‘_____'.

d. I can do what I want in my own house. You know what they say. _____.

Task 2.Match the idioms in the left column with their Russian equivalents in the right column. Think of the situations where you can use these idioms.

1. to build one's castle upon the sand 2. to build castles in the air 3. room at the top 4. to do something under the table 5. to be in the chair 6. to take the floor 7. a window on the world 8. to camp on somebody's doorstep 9. to shut the door in somebody's face 10. to show somebody the door 11. to force an open door 12. to call somebody on the carpet 13. a magic carpet 14. walls have ears/good walls make good neighbours 15. to drive somebody to the wall a) выступать (перед аудиторией) b) указать кому-либо на дверь c) припереть кого-либо к стенке d) создавать что-либо непрочное e) ковёр-самолёт f) захлопнуть дверь перед носом g) председательствовать h) верхняя ступенька социальной лестницы i) ломиться в открытую дверь j) строить воздушные замки k) окно в мир l) у стен есть уши m) дать кому-либо нагоняй n) делать что-либо секретно o) обивать пороги

Task 3*.Highlight the meanings of the proverbs, making up short situations. Tell them in class.

1. People who live in glass houses should not throw stones.

2. Do not burn your house to get rid of the mice.

3. As you make your bed, so you must lie on it.

4. A rolling stone gathers no moss.

5. Charity begins at home.

6. Home is where the heart is.

7. East or West – home is best.

Task 4*.Translate the following quotations and comment upon them.

'A man travels the world over in search of what he needs and returns home to find it.' George Moore

 

'A house is not a home.' Polly Adler

 

'Mid pleasures and palaces though we may roam,

Be it ever so humble, there's no place like home.'

John Howard Payne



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