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IMOMOV JAHONGIR



IMOMOV JAHONGIR

Group 106

ID:jaxongir.imomov@univ-silkroad.uz

Page:1.

Ex3.(Page:11) Read the questions about Erika’s home.Underline the correct answer.



1 What’s your apartment like?

I like it a lot./ It’s modern and very comfortable.

2 How big is it?

Yes,it’s pretty big./ About 90 square metres.

3 How many bedrooms are there?

Two doubles and a single./ One has an ensuite shower.

4 What size is the kitchen?

It’s a kitchen-diner./ Four metres by two.

5 Which flour is it on?

Wooden./ The fourth floor.

6 Which part of town is it in?

It’s north of the river./ It’s near a bus stop.

7 How far is it to your work?



Just a five- minute cycle ride./ I always go by bus.

Ex5(Page12) How do these words end in the adverts?

Interest-ing tire-d thrill-ing charm-ing

Complete the sentences with one of these adjectives in the correct form.

1 I find having a massage is really thrilling.

2 Our holiday was disappointing .It rained a lot.

3 The journey was so tiring. I was exhausted when we finally arrived.

4 The interview went really badly so I was shocket to hear that I’d got the job.

5 The lesson was so relaxing that some students fell asleep.

6 I was really astonished at the price of a ticket for the match. It was so expensive.

7 The game was absolutely exciting from start to finish –my team scored the

winning goal in the final seconds.

Ex2(Page 14) Read and listen to the first part of the article.Answer the questions.

1 Who are the other members of family? What do you learn

About them? –ANSWER:Oscar,Susanne,six boys and their elder sister are members of family.I read about one family’s life.I realized that the way Oscar had chosen was a wrong.

2 Explane this sentence .’Watching films wasn’t just escape from the outside world,it was their world.’-ANSWER: ’The films taught us that people are complex and….flawed’ says Narayana.So they didn’t understand clearly a real world.

3 Which film tells the story of their lives?-ANSWER:”THE WOLFPACK”

4 What or who do these adjectives refer to?-ANSWER:1. Dark glasses.2 a thrilling movie.3 an astonishing reason.4 an overcrowded,messy flat.5an eccentric and tyrannical father. 5 the family was so reclusive

Ex3(Page 14) Read the rest of the article.Are these statements about the family’s story true or false ?

1 The parents,Oscar and Susanne, are American. –FALSE:Oscar is a Peruvian tour guide.

2 They met in New York,where Oscar worked as a musican.-FALE:Susanne met Oscar on a trail to the majestic Machu Picchu ruins.

3 Oscar didn’t have a job.He just looked after family.-FALSE: Oscar is a Peruvian tour guide.

4 The boys learned only negative things about life from the films.-TRUE:’The films taught us that people are complex and….flawed’ says Narayana.

5 From a very young age,they worried about being differend from other people.FALSE:When they got their teens…

6 Mukunda escaped from the apartment in a frightening disguse. TRUE:Wearing a scary home-made mask….

7 Crstal Moselle heard about the boys so she wanted to make a film about them.-TRUE:The film’s name is “The Wolfpack”.

8 Their lives are much more normal now.-TRUE: Nowadeys,the boys are living much more in the real world.

Questions:

1.What is a person’s usual environment?

2.What is the difference between an excursionist (day tripper) and a tourist?

3.What is the difference between a traveller and a tourist?

4.Can a businessman who attends a conference in another country be defined as a business tourist?

Business tourism or business travel is a more limited and focused subset of regular tourism.[1][2] During business tourism (traveling), individuals are still working and being paid, but are doing so away from both their workplace and home.[2]

Some definitions of tourism exclude business travel.[3] However, the United Nation World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) defines tourists as people “traveling to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes”.[4]

Primary business tourism activities include meetings, and attending conferences and exhibitions.[2] Despite the term business in business tourism, when individuals from government or non-profit organizations engage in similar activities, this is still categorized as business tourism (travel).[2

1

Definition:



The usual environment required to distinguish a visitor from all other travellers within a location is difficult to define in precise terms. Generally speaking, it corresponds to the geographical boundaries within which an individual displaces himself/herself within his/her regular routine of life.

As stated in the Recommendations on Tourism Statistics, the usual environment of a person consists of the direct vicinity of his/her home and place of work or study and other places frequently visited

11The usual environment of a person consists of the direct vicinity of his/her home and place of work or study, and other places frequently visited.

The concept of usual environment has two dimensions, vicinity and frequency. Places located close to the place of residence of a person are part of the usual environment even though they may be rarely visited. Places that are frequently (= on average once a week or more often), on a routine basis, visited are part of the usual environment of a person, even though they may be located at a considerable distance (or in another country) from the place of residence. There is only one usual environment for a person and the concept is applicable in domestic as well as in international tourism. Persons who work in means of transport (lorry drivers, rail crew, airline pilots and hostesses, etc.), travelling sales representatives or agents are included in tourism as business travellers, unless their trips, especially domestic trips, consist of frequent routine travel, in which case they can be excluded by the usual environment criterion.

Source:

European Union, Commission Decision No 1999/34/EC of 9 December 1998 on the procedures for implementing Council Directive No 95/57/EC on the collection of statistical information in the field of tourism



2As nouns the difference between tourist and excursionist is that tourist is someone who travels for pleasure rather than for business while excursionist is a person who goes on excursions; a traveller or tourist.

2Are you a tourist or a traveller? Find out more with our handy guide!

A tourist doesn’t mind being called a tourist.

A traveller does, very much.

A tourist wants to see all the sights.

A traveller wants to see some, but also to find something interesting that isn’t in the guidebook.

A tourist tries foreign food but acts like they’re putting a grenade in their mouth.

A traveller eats the local food with abandon and spends the next 3 days on the toilet.

A tourist takes photos of all the famous stuff.

A traveller takes pictures of ordinary people and things and is rewarded likeby the locals with gratitude or puzzlement.

A tourist will go to McDonalds in a foreign country, with no shame.

A traveller will go there too but not tell anyone.

Tourists tend to travel in large groups or with their families.

Travellers tend to travel solo, or with one other person, thus NOT BLOCKING THE PAVEMENT THANK YOU.

A tourist will learn a few words of the local language.

A traveller will too, but act like they know more.

A tourist gets ripped off.

A traveller haggles. And still gets ripped off.

Tourists (the British ones at least) get drunk.

Travellers also get drunk but ensure their drinking money is going directly to the local community.

Tourists go on holiday.

Travellers go travelling.

4Business tourism or business travel is a more limited and focused subset of regular tourism.[1][2] During business tourism (traveling), individuals are still working and being paid, but are doing so away from both their workplace and home.[2]

Some definitions of tourism exclude business travel.[3] However, the United Nation World Tourism Organization (UNWTO) defines tourists as people “traveling to and staying in places outside their usual environment for not more than one consecutive year for leisure, business and other purposes”.[4]



Primary business tourism activities include meetings, and attending conferences and exhibitions.[2] Despite the term business in business tourism, when individuals from government or non-profit organizations engage in similar activities, this is still categorized as business tourism (travel).
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