English For Starters 8 Student 39 S Book
English For Starters 8 Student 39 S Book
English For Starters 8 Student 39 S Book
Starters 8
Eighth Grade
Students’ Book
1 Grammar present simple or present Reading Links – start doing athletics; Keeping life / thing
Sporting continuous; the -ing form of nouns; fit; The Olympic Games
life the infinitive Listening favourite sport; radio programme
Functions talking about sports, about the Olympics
page 6 talking about activities Speaking sport; the Olympics
Vocabulary sport; parts of the Writing a paragraph about a sports event
body; numbers and dates
Focus on the Olympics
2 Grammar past simple revision; past Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 1: The what, visit
In the past continuous; when, while discovery; Hassan’s Diary; The Phoenicians
Functions talking about the past; Listening activities in the past; summer school
page 12 talking about what was happening
Speaking activities in the past; the Phoenicians
in the past
Vocabulary verbs; products Writing what you and your family were doing
Focus on an ancient culture yesterday
3 Grammar comparatives; (not) as ... as Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 2: The desert, oasis
Amazing Functions comparing things boy’s story; Strange but true; Fact or fiction?;
world Vocabulary university subjects; Deserts Saying sentences
animals Listening Andrew’s trip
page 20 Focus on dry environments Speaking comparing things; comparing deserts
Writing sentences comparing deserts
4 Grammar superlatives; the most ... ; Reading The most incredible places; Links – large / old
World adjective order explore; Wonderful things
records Functions talking about the best; Listening quiz; guessing objects; Amazing
describing things; describing objects; records
page 26 talking about records Speaking talking about objects; talking about
Vocabulary shapes and materials records
Focus on treasures Writing a report about your classmates
Module 3 Experiences
5 Grammar present perfect + ever; Reading Have you ever ... ?; The Amberson house, road
Life events past participles; present perfect or family website; Jamel the runner
past simple Listening Maher and Leen’s experiences; Saying sentences
page 34 Functions talking about interview with a long distance walker
experiences; talking about people Speaking talking about experiences; talking
Vocabulary experiences; about people’s lives; talking about Jamel the
measurements runner
Focus on amazing journeys Writing a paragraph about your life
6 Grammar present perfect + for / Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 3: The rubbish, food,
How we live since; How long ...? mysterious collector; Ruba’s life; Life in space visible
Functions talking about how long Listening Mazen’s life; interview with an
page 40 Vocabulary museum objects; time astronaut Reading aloud
expressions Speaking role-playing a journalist and an
Focus on space astronaut
Writing interview questions to ask an
astronaut
7 Grammar present continuous as Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 4: The good, can
Ideas and future; adverbs; so, neither thin man; Making plans; Let’s talk!
thoughts Functions talking about future Listening Faisal’s plans; Tom’s phone Saying sentences
plans; agreeing and disagreeing; messages
page 48 making arrangements Speaking talking about communication
Vocabulary describing people Writing an e-mail to a friend about plans
Focus on communication
8 Grammar present passive; past Reading How the Internet works; How an brain, can
Messages passive e-mail is sent; Getting your message across;
Functions talking about the past Brain power
page 54 Vocabulary communication verbs; Listening checking answers; radio programme
mind and body about eating well
Focus on the brain Speaking talking about the Internet; talking
about intelligence
Writing a paragraph about your friend’s
interests and abilities
Project Processes
9 Grammar that / which, who, where; Reading Island life; Journey north, journey year, jet
The either … or … ; although; both ... and ... ; south; Our study of ecology
environment after Listening Jason, Anna and Peter on holiday
Functions talking about likes and Speaking talking about ecosystems in your
page 62 dislikes country; saying sentences
Vocabulary places; animals Writing a paragraph about your likes and
Focus on ecosystems dislikes; a paragraph about an ecosystem
10 Grammar somebody, something, Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 5: Laila’s ship, which
Explorations somewhere; could, must, can’t; had to, investigation; The Sindbad voyage; Links –
didn’t have to reduce, reuse, recycle Reading aloud
page 68 Functions making guesses; talking Listening guessing sounds; interview with Janet
about things you had to do and Simon about recycling
Vocabulary parts of a ship; Speaking talking about helping the environment
recycling Writing a paragraph of advice about recycling
Focus on helping the world
Project Tropical rainforests
11 Grammar will for decisions; going to Reading The Boy from the Past Episode 6: The repair, engineer
Inventions for plans; I’ll ... , Shall I ... ? buried treasure; Electricity; Inventors who lit
Functions talking about decisions; the world
page 76 talking about future plans; making Listening dialogues in the science lab;
and accepting offers important inventions
Vocabulary everyday objects Speaking discussing experiments; the most
Focus on inventors important inventions in history
Writing a summary of the life of Tesla and
Edison
12 Grammar If he creates ... , he builds ... ; Reading Be creative; Links – science quiz; work
Creativity If you wear ... you will be ... Seeing the possibilities
Functions talking about conditions Listening explanations for quiz answers; an
page 82 Vocabulary nouns and verbs; verbs; expert in creative thinking
experiments Speaking a group story
Focus on accidental discoveries Writing a story
Read Episode 1 of
The Boy from the Past.
Who plays
You will be able to:
Two players compete in singles and two
pairs of players compete in doubles .
http://www.links.com/athletics.html
Athletics is an ancient sporting activity. It was part of the original Greek Olympics,
as well as the modern Olympic Games.
Links went to a school in Damascus to
FACTFILE ATHLETICS
meet some students on the sports field.
6
Sporting life 1
Vocabulary sport
1 Put these activities into the five groups below.
javelin high jump snowboarding cycling discus sprinting shot-put
skiing marathon ice-skating roller skating jogging long jump
1 throwing things javelin 4 jumping
2 moving on ice or snow 5 moving on wheels
3 running
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ Look at the pictures on page 6. What sports can you see?
3 Read the Factfile on page 6 and answer the questions.
1 What are you doing 2 What do these 3 What sport is this
if you: numbers refer to? advice for?
a jump very high? a 98.48 a Use soft equipment.
b throw things a long way? b 2.5 b Bend your knees.
c run very fast? c 9 c Move your arms.
5 N 1.2 Draw a new table in your notebook for Maher, Reem and Noura. Listen
and make notes.
7
Healthy exercise
Keeping fit
When you are fit, you are healthier. You can study exercise. Try to keep a diary and aim to train two
better and do daily tasks better. It doesn’t have to or three times a week. A good exercise session has
be difficult to keep fit. Walking is easy and doesn’t a warm-up of about 5–10 minutes. This could be
need any special equipment. Even playing a walking or jogging. Exercises such as press-ups
friendly game of football helps you to keep fit. Try help to build up your muscles. Include aerobic
to take the stairs rather than the lift, too! exercise, such as cycling and basketball. Finally,
There are three main types of exercise – stretching exercises are good for cooling down.
aerobic, resistance and stretching. Aerobic Of course, it’s easier to sit down in front of the
exercise is when you make your heart and lungs TV or computer but it isn’t necessarily healthy!
work hard. Examples of this are swimming and Safura Abdel Karim, a thirteen-year-old schoolgirl
roller skating. Resistance training, such as from South Africa, wrote a report on her
press-ups and weight-lifting, is for building up your classmates. It was so well written that it was
muscles. Stretching activities, such as yoga, published in a medical journal. She found out that
make you more flexible. It is important to have an students who play a lot of computer games get
exercise regime which contains all three types of pains in their thumbs, hands, arms, back and neck.
1 muscles
4
10
1 2
11
3 5 12
6
7 8
8
Sporting life 1
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Ask and answer the questions.
How often do you walk / run / swim / take the stairs / play a team game / do athletics /
stretch your muscles / play computer games / watch TV?
How much physical training should you do each week?
3 Read the article on page 8 quickly. Are these sports aerobic, resistance or stretching?
roller skating press-ups yoga cycling
basketball jogging swimming weight-lifting
4 Read the article again and decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F). Copy and
correct the false sentences in your notebook.
1 It is always difficult to get fit. F
2 Daily activities such as walking and going upstairs help you get fit.
3 A good exercise session takes 5–10 minutes.
4 Stretching exercises are especially good for your heart and lungs.
5 It is useful to have a weekly schedule for your exercise regime.
6 Playing computer games is a good form of exercise.
9
Skills: Focus on the Olympics
THE OLYMPIC
GAMES
ORIGINS
The first Olympic Games began in 776 BC, THE FIRST MODERN OLYMPICS
over 2,700 years ago. The games took place In the 19th century a Frenchman, Pierre de
every four years at Olympia in ancient Coubertin, started the Olympic Games again.
Greece. The first games had only one event, The first modern-day Olympics took place in
but later there were more, and the games 1896. About 300 athletes took part, representing
took five days. Events included the thirteen countries. Events included cycling,
pentathlon (running, jumping, discus, javelin target shooting, sprinting, shot put, weight
and wrestling). Chariot races were a popular lifting, swimming, gymnastics and the
event. The games stopped in 393 AD. marathon.
THE OFFICIAL
OLYMPIC FLAG
The Olympic flag has five
rings on a white background.
The five rings represent the
five continents of the world
and Olympic friendship. At
least one of the colours
appears on the flag of every
country in the world.
Listening
4 N 1.4 Listen to a radio programme about the 2004 Olympic Games. Decide if
the sentences are true (T) or false (F). Copy and correct the false sentences in your
notebook.
1 The 2004 Olympic Games lasted seventeen days. T
2 Four billion people went to Athens to watch the Olympic Games.
3 China won 32 gold medals.
4 The journey of the Olympic torch took 78 weeks.
5 In the opening ceremony athletes walked round the stadium in national groups.
6 At the closing ceremony the athletes represented their countries.
Writing
5
Write about a sports event you saw. Use these questions as a plan:
12
In the past 2
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Look at the pictures on page 12 and find:
13
Hassan’s diary
Saturday Sunday
We’re in Lattakia! We drove here from Today was
Tartous along the coast. On the way fantastic! In the
we saw Banias and Jebleh. My sister morning, Mum and
Deema didn’t see a lot because she Deema went for a walk
was very tired. When we arrived at the in the town. Dad and I went to
hotel, she was sleeping.. I’m writing my the Blue Beach. We were snorkelling
diary in a nice room. From my window I when I saw an incredible seahorse. We
can see the beautiful blue waters of saw amazing coral, too. While we were
the Mediterranean Sea between the swimming, Mum and Deema were taking a
trees. walk along the beach.
In the afternoon, they went to the
museum. They were walking round when
my sister met some friends from
school. They were sightseeing with their
parents. They all went shopping together
and Deema bought a skirt. While they
were shopping, Dad and I were playing
football on the beach. Dad scored more
goals than me!
I was writing postcards to my friends
when Mum and Deema came back to
the hotel. Then we had dinner in a
traditional restaurant. While we were
eating, Deema took a photo of us. We
had a lovely evening..
It’s getting late now and I’m tired.
Goodnight!
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Make a list of things you can see and do at a
tourist resort on the Mediterranean Sea.
See Do
trees go swimming
sea visit a museum
14
In the past 2
2 N 2.2 Listen and read Hassan’s diary on page 14. What things are on your list?
3 Read Hassan’s diary again. Answer the questions.
1 What did Hassan and his family see on the way to Lattakia?
2 Why didn’t Deema see a lot?
3 What did Hassan and Dad do on Sunday morning?
4 Who saw coral?
5 Where did Deema and Mum go on Sunday afternoon?
6 What did Hassan and Dad play on Sunday afternoon?
7 Where did the family go in the evening?
1 2 3
4 5 6
5 N 2.3 Talking about what was happening in the past Listen to the sounds.
Write sentences about Ali.
1 Ali was talking on his mobile when a car drove past.
15
Skills: Focus on an ancient culture
THE PHOENICIANS
1 From about 1200 to 500 BC the
Phoenicians built an advanced
civilisation on the Mediterranean
coast, in what today are parts of
Lebanon, Syria and Palestine.
16
In the past 2
Vocabulary products
1 BEFORE YOU READ Match the words with the pictures.
pottery wheat honey copper wood textiles ivory
1 2 3 4 5 6 7
Reading
2 Read the article on page 16. Match the headings with the paragraphs.
a Things they made and sold d Urban life and agriculture
b Education and the alphabet e Colonies in the Mediterranean
c Sailors and shipbuilders f An advanced people 1
5 N 2.5 Copy the table in exercise 4. Then listen and put the words in the correct
column.
Writing
8 Write what you and your family were doing yesterday at: 8 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.
17
Project
Who plays
Two players compete in ‘singles’ and two
pairs of players compete in ‘doubles’.
How to play
Players use the racket to hit the ball over the net. They try to
stop their opponent hitting it back. To win a game, a player must
score four points and lead by at least two points.
Important competitions
The US, French, Australian and Wimbledon Opens
are called ‘The Grand Slam’.
My favourite players
Younis El Aynaoui (Morocco)
Lleyton Hewitt (Australia)
Roger Federer (Swizerland)
Venus Williams (US)
Maria Sharapova (Russia)
Why I like it
I like playing tennis because it is
fun and it keeps you fit. I also
like watching matches on TV.
18
Module 2
Places and records
Read Episode 2 of The Boy from the Past.
What do you think the stone pieces say?
Focus on treasures
Who was this person?
OUTCOMES
You will be able to:
••make comparisons
describe places
Project ••
describe objects
talk about world records
Now you try!
●
WORLD RECORDS QUIZ
Find out from reference books and the Internet
3 Amazing world
Grammar
comparatives; (not) as ... as
2
The Boy from the Past
Episode 2: The boy’s story
1
20
Amazing world 3
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ What can you remember about the last episode?
1 What language does Laila think is on the first stone piece?
2 What does she think is on the other piece?
3 N 3.1 Listen and read the story on page 20. Answer the questions.
1 Which stone piece is larger?
2 Was the professor a good student at school?
3 What language is on the first piece?
4 Who wrote the carvings?
5 What does the professor say is on the second piece?
6 Why does the professor want to take photos of it?
Comparing things Work in pairs. Compare the things below. Use these words:
5 easy difficult enjoyable boring expensive cheap good bad fast slow
• cars / buses
•
Tigers football team / Stars football team
Text messages are more expensive than emails.
21
Fantastic facts
Vocabulary animals
1 BEFORE YOU READ Look at the pictures and find the following:
grizzly bear tiger shark elephant giraffe red kangaroo rhinoceros
Comprehension
2 Read the information above. Does anything surprise you?
22
Amazing world 3
3 Work in pairs. Do the “Fact or Fiction?” quiz in your exercise book. Use the
information on page 22.
5 Find four sentences in the quiz that say two things are different.
The planet Mars isn’t as big as the planet Earth.
6 Comparing things Look at the pictures and compare the people and things.
Use these words and (not) as ... as ... :
wake up early go fast be strong be old
1 2
3 4
23
Skills: Focus on dry environments
DESERTS
Deserts cover more than one third
of the Earth’s land surface.
Deserts are very dry places, but
they aren’t always sandy – they
can be rocky or even frozen.
During the day, temperatures can
go higher than 50°C. The hottest
temperature ever recorded was
82°C in the Sahara. At night,
deserts get very cold: as low as
–21°C. Deserts are also very
windy. Sometimes there are
dangerous sandstorms. The top five deserts in the world are the Sahara, the Australian
deserts, the Arabian deserts, the Gobi desert and the Kalahari.
24
Amazing world 3
Reading
1 BEFORE YOU READ Have you ever been to a desert? What was it like?
2 Read the article on page 24. Complete the sentences with a or b.
1 The changes in temperature from day to night are: a small. b big.
2 Rainfall in the desert can be: a frequent and heavy. b not frequent but heavy.
3 In oases you can find: a gold and oil. b water.
4 In order to survive in the desert, animals and plants have to:
a adapt. b drink lots of water.
5 People who live in the desert are:
a mainly nomadic. b 13% of the world’s population.
Listening
3 N 3.2 Listen to Andrew. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 He went to the Kalahari desert in Africa. 4 It rains about 100 millimetres every year.
2 He travelled by camel. 5 It was hot and sunny every day.
3 He saw lions, elephants and giraffes.
Speaking
4 Work in pairs. Compare the two deserts.
The Arabian desert is larger than the Gobi desert.
Writing
5 Write sentences comparing the two different deserts.
7 N 3.4 Copy these sentences. Then listen and underline the ‘s’ sound and circle
the ‘z’ sound. Work in pairs and practise saying the sentences.
1 Sand from the Sahara can blow as far as the USA.
2 Sometimes underground rivers rise to the surface.
25
4 World records
Grammar
superlatives; the most …; adjective order
26
World records 4
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. What do you know about world geography?
Write down the names of some:
2 Read the article on page 26. Write the world records for these places:
1 The Sahara Desert is the largest desert.
b N 4.1 Listen and check your answers. What was your score?
5 Talking about the best Work in groups. Ask and answer the questions.
What’s the:
••
biggest animal you have seen?
best book you own? •• smallest piece of technology you own?
best tourist site in your country?
••
most interesting TV programme?
most beautiful place in the world? • most exciting film?
27
An ancient city
http://www.links.com/explore.html
3 Read the website again. Match the words from the text with the meanings.
1 flourish a from an old, well known story
2 intact b show to the public
3 legendary c to grow well and in a productive manner
4 mosaic d not changed
5 display e picture made of small coloured pieces of stone or
glass
1 2 3 4 5 6
6
Grammar in context adjective order
Describing objects Work in pairs. Talk about objects you own or can see. Use a
maximum of two adjectives.
I’ve got a small blue phone.
There’s a beautiful new map on the wall.
29
Skills: Focus on treasures
2
1
3
4
C
The Tell el-Ajjul hoard,
Palestine D
The terracotta army and
Tell el-Ajjul is one of the
most important ancient horses, Xi’an, China
cities in Palestine. In the Imagine meeting 7,000
1930s, archaeologists soldiers and horses! But don’t
discovered five large worry – these Chinese ones
hoards. There were are made of terracotta. When
beautiful gold objects and the Emperor of Qin was
jewellery from the second buried in 209 BCE all these
millennium BCE. soldiers and horses were
buried with him. Workers
were digging wells in 1974
when they discovered the
army.
30
World records 4
Reading
1 BEFORE YOU READ Match the words with the definitions.
1 mask a large hidden collection of treasure
2 hoard b hard material made of baked earth
3 terracotta c covering for the face
1 large 2 old
Listening Speaking
5 N 4.5 Listen and write the missing 6 Talking about records
words in your exercise book. Work in groups. Find out who:
(4) .
hotel in the world is in
Japan, dating back to the year •
draws the best pictures
Writing
B The (5) carpet in the world is
Persian and was sold for $2, 487,178. 7 Write a report about your group.
C The (6) taxi ride was (7) In my group, Rasha sends the
kilometres. It was a return trip from most emails.
(8) to Cape Town, South Africa!
31
Project
● Then write out your quiz so you can ask your classmates to do it.
● Don’t forget to write an answer sheet (including your extra information).
32
Module 3
Experiences Have you ever flown in an aeroplane?
Focus on space
What is this place? Where is it?
Wha s p
e?
What can you learn from studying spac
C
from?
So far, where have the crew come
the qualifications for being an
What are
astronaut?
••
short paragraphs about the ISS.
talk about experiences
A Facts about the ISS describe your life
B What is the ISS for?
C About the astronauts
Project ••
give your opinions
interview someone
THE INTERNATIONAL SPACE STATION
5 Life events
Grammar
present perfect + ever; past participles;
present perfect or past simple
A B C
J D
1 eaten Italian food?
2 visited a museum?
3 been to another country?
4 acted in a play?
5 made your own website?
I 6 lost something important? E
7 flown in an aeroplane?
8 met a famous person?
9 won a prize?
10 baked a cake?
H G F
34
Life events 5
Comprehension
1 Read the questionnaire on page 34. Match the pictures with the questions.
1 eaten Italian food H
2 N 5.1 Listen to Maher and Leen. Copy and complete the table.
Question Maher Leen
1 No Yes
eat eaten
35
Experiences
2 Write questions in your notebook. Use these ideas or think of different ones.
…
sleep in a tent, a hotel,
someone, …
buy a computer game, a present for
hinese food, …
eat Indian food, C
write a diary, poem, …
ride a horse, …
see a hot air balloon, sh
ooting star, …
3 Talking about experiences Work in pairs. Have conversations. Start with a present
perfect question. Then use the past simple to talk about the detail.
A: Have you ever eaten Indian food?
B: Yes, I have.
A: When did you eat it?
B: I ate it in an Indian restaurant at the shopping mall.
A: Did you enjoy it?
B: Yes, I did. I love spicy food.
Comprehension
5 BEFORE YOU READ Work in groups. What do you know about Abu Dhabi?
What is it like? What can you do there?
36
Life events 5
6 Read the webpage and answer the questions.
1 Where is the family from? 4 What does her mother do?
2 Where do they live? 5 What has Alison seen in Abu Dhabi?
3 What does Alison’s father do? 6 What is she going to see?
7 Look at these sentences. Do they speak about a specific time in the past (S) or
general experience in the past (G)?
1 We moved to the UAE a year ago.
2 My father has worked in six countries.
3 The best place I’ve visited is the Wild Wadi Waterpark.
4 We went there last week.
www.ambersonfamily.com
8 Talking about people Work in pairs. What can you remember? Cover the webpage and
talk about Alison and her family.
Alison was born in Sydney. Her father has worked in six countries.
37
Skills: Focus on amazing journeys
Vocabulary measurements
1 BEFORE YOU READ Copy and complete the list.
1 distance: metre k
2 time: s minute h
3 weight: g k
38
Life events 5
Reading
2 Read the article on page 38. What do these numbers refer to?
1 60 2 24,000 3 170 4 280,000 5 6 or 7 6 15 7 2,000 to 2,500
1 60 kilometres – Jamel’s first race
Speaking
4 OVER TO YOU Work in pairs. Answer the questions.
What do you think are the best things about Jamel’s life? What are the worst?
Listening
5 N 5.2 Listen to the interview with Peter Delaney. Complete the sentences with a or b.
1 Peter started his journey in … a 1999. b 2003.
2 He has walked … miles. a 19,000 b 36,000
3 He … across China. a has walked b hasn’t walked
4 He … a sweater with him. a carries b doesn’t carry
5 He has learned more than … a 300 songs. b 300 poems.
6 In the Australian desert, a plane … him to safety. a flew b didn’t fly
b N 5.4 Copy the table. Then listen and put the words in the correct column.
Writing
8 Write a paragraph about your life. Include: Did you know?
Specific details: where and when you were born,
where and when you went to primary school The human foot is very
General information: subjects you have studied, complicated. It contains
26 bones!
projects you have done
39
6 How we live
Grammar
present perfect + for / since;
How long ... ?
2
The Boy from the Past
Episode 3: The mysterious collector
1
40
How we live 6
Vocabulary museum objects
1 Describe the things in the museum display.
1 2 3 4
5 6 7
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ What can you remember about the last episode?
1 Who is Professor Hussam?
2 Who is Amer?
3 What did Omar and Laila receive?
3 N 6.1 Listen and read the story on page 40. Answer the questions.
1 What does Harry Dark want to do?
2 What is exciting about the photos of the two pieces of stone?
3 What does Harry Dark want to do with the family’s pieces of stone?
4 What does the family want to do with them?
5 Why do you think the man is watching their house?
4 OVER TO YOU What do you think the family should do with the stone pieces?
41
People’s lives
for since
two years last Saturday
Comprehension
2 Read the interview with Ruba on page 43. Write sentences about her.
1 She’ s lived in her house for two years.
3 N 6.2 An interviewer asks Mazen the same questions. Copy the table. Listen and
make notes.
studied English?
5 Work in pairs. Ask and answer the questions in exercise 3. Add information.
A: How long have you lived in your house?
B: I’ve lived there all my life. My parents moved there before I was born.
42
How we live 6
43
Skills: Focus on space
Food in space
Almost all our food is in cans or dried. We even have
to add water to drinks. We drink through a straw,
otherwise liquids float around the cabin. There is
no fridge, so we can’t have cold drinks either. But
there is a wide choice of food – soup, meat,
Clothes
When we go into space in the shuttle or re-enter
vegetables, fruit, nuts, bread. We can also bring
the Earth’s atmosphere we wear special suits
some favourites – mine is Chinese food.
called LES (Launch Entry Suits). They have
We get three meals a day and a snack. We have to parachutes, oxygen, an inflatable boat, water
warm up our meals before we open the packages. and a gun flare kit.
Food moves around in zero gravity so we can’t eat
Inside the station, we wear casual clothes. They
off plates. We eat from the packages. We use
also have lots of pockets and Velcro to stop
straps to keep our food on the table. We don’t use
things floating away. However, sometimes we
knives or forks – and we don’t use chairs. We
have to walk outside in space. It’s very dangerous,
simply float around the table!
so we have specialised spacesuits. They are
My taste has changed in space – I like spicier food always white so that we are visible against the
now. We all love chocolate and sweets. And we all blackness of space. Our hands get cold, so we
look forward to the Progress Space Freighter even have finger heaters in our gloves!
which brings us fresh food.
Reading
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. What is life like on a space station?
Make notes about:
moving around food drinks clothes
44
How we live 6
2 Read the article on page 44. Answer the questions.
1 How far is the International Space Station from Earth?
2 Give three reasons why being in space is like camping.
3 Why don’t they use knives, forks and plates?
4 Why are space suits white?
Listening
4 N 6.3 Listen to the interview with Bill Ross. Decide if the sentences are true (T)
or false (F).
1 He enjoys looking at the Earth and into space.
2 He watches films, reads books and calls home.
3 Every crew member has his own cabin.
4 You can see the sun rise every hour and a half.
5 It is always easy to sleep in space.
Writing
6 Imagine you are a journalist. Write six questions
to ask an astronaut.
How long have you been on the space station? Did you know?
The record for the longest
Speaking continuous stay in space is
held by Dr Valeri Polyakov.
7 Work in pairs. Be a journalist and an astronaut. He stayed there for 14
Use your questions from exercise 6. months!
45
Project
A
n (ISS)?
What is the International Space Statio
long does
Ho w do you get to the ISS, and ho w
it take?
Ho w often does it orbit the Earth?
B
auts do?
What sort of experiments do astron
ce?
What can you learn from studying spa
C
from?
So far, where have the crew come
ng an
What are the qualifications for bei
astronaut?
46
Module 4
Keeping in touch
Read Episode 4 of The Boy from the Past.
Who are the men outside the house? Read about how the Internet works.
What is a server?
Focus on communication
Where do we get our information from?
OUTCOMES
You will be able to:
Project
● Choose one of these subjects:
How …
a newspaper is made
the pyramids were built
••
agree and disagree
make arrangements
PROCESSES
●
a letter arrives at its destination
paper is recycled
a weather forecast is made
Do some research in books or on
• talk about the past
7 Ideas and thoughts
Grammar
present continuous as future;
adverbs; so, neither
2
The Boy from the Past
Episode 4: The thin man
1 A man was standing
in the shadows
opposite the house.
He was tall and thin
with a scar on his
left cheek. He took
out his mobile and
thoughtfully tapped
the keys. Then the
man spoke quietly.
Ray: Hi, Roger. It’s me, Ray. Are you doing
anything tonight?
Roger: No, I’m not. I’m not going out because I
haven’t got any money! Why?
Ray: Well, how would you like to make some
money? Inside the house, Omar walked into the
sitting room and found Laila working on the
computer.
3
Laila: I just got an email from Mum and
Dad. They send their love.
Omar: How are they?
Laila: They’re very busy. Dad’s getting a
plane to Beirut this afternoon on
business and Mum’s visiting friends.
Omar: Well, Uncle Firass has planned a
nice day for us on Saturday.
Laila: Really? What are we doing?
Omar: Well, in the morning we’re going to
the museum. We’re seeing the
curator of the museum at ten
That night, Omar heard a noise downstairs. There was o’clock and we’re giving him the
someone in the house! He listened carefully. Then he carvings. Then we’re having lunch
heard footsteps outside. Omar jumped up and looked out at a really nice restaurant.
of the window. There were three men walking quickly Laila: That sounds great!
across the garden – the thin man, a bald man and a Omar: Look, it’s that man again! He’s in
short man. They got into a car, banging the doors loudly, our garden!
and drove away. They ran out into the garden, but they
Omar woke everyone up and explained about the men. couldn’t see the man anywhere. Laila looked
Uncle Firass called the police and then they looked into the well.
around the house. But then Omar saw the cabinet. Omar: Don’t be silly, Laila. He isn’t in the
Omar: Oh no! well!
Firass: What is it, Omar? Laila: No, of course, he isn’t ... I just had an
Omar: The Phoenician stones! They aren’t there! idea, that’s all.
48
Ideas and thoughts 7
A: What does your dad look like? B: He’s tall with short dark hair.
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Look at the pictures on page 48. Answer the
questions.
1 Who do you think the man in the street is in picture 1?
2 Where are the stone pieces in picture 2?
3 Who do you think the people are in picture 3?
3 N 7.1 Listen and read the story. Answer the questions.
1 What does the thin man do at the beginning of the story?
2 Who does Omar see in the garden?
3 Why do you think the well gives Laila an idea?
4 What does Omar see from his bedroom window?
5 What does Omar find out at the end of the story?
5 Talking about future plans Work in pairs. Tell each other about things you have
arranged for next week.
I’m having a piano lesson on Tuesday.
We’re going to the cinema on Saturday.
49
Making plans
It’s the first week of the school holidays and Samer and his friends are making plans.
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Look at the first picture and answer the questions.
1 Where are the boys?
2 What do you think they are talking about?
50
Ideas and thoughts 7
2 N 7.3 Listen and read the dialogue on page 50. Copy and complete the diaries.
3 Read the dialogue again. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 Ali and Muhanad are going swimming on Sunday.
2 They are going to the same place.
3 Ali and Muhanad are visiting their grandparents on Monday afternoon.
4 Ali and Muhanad are both busy on Tuesday.
5 Ali is busy on Wednesday.
7 Imagine you are a very busy person. Write a diary for your week. Leave two
mornings and afternoons free. Use these ideas or invent other activities.
study play football have a music lesson go swimming help your parents
watch a DVD do a project write emails
8 Making arrangements Work in pairs. Arrange a meeting for next week. Use your
notes in exercise 7.
A: Are you doing anything on Saturday morning?
B: Yes, I am. I’m going shopping.
51
Skills: Focus on communication
Reading
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Answer the questions. Each week:
52
Ideas and thoughts 7
2 Read the article on page 52. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 Babies learn to speak by watching other babies.
2 A child knows 200 words by the time he is 24 months old.
3 Before the development of writing, people couldn’t remember facts.
4 People used pictures before the invention of writing.
5 A lot of changes have happened in the last 200 years.
6 Face-to-face communication isn’t important now.
Speaking
4 OVER TO YOU Work in groups. Discuss the questions.
1 How do you communicate with people?
2 How do you learn to communicate better at school?
3 What is the best way to communicate:
•
sports results?
•
scientific discoveries?
•
exam results?
4 What do you think future communication will be like? •
health information?
Listening
N 7.5 Listen and note the phone messages for Tom. Don’t write complete
5 sentences.
Kevin called
can’t see you on Tuesday – having guitar lesson – will call again later
Writing
Write an email to a friend about your plans for next week.
7
53
8 Messages
Grammar
present passive; past passive
Comprehension
2 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Make a list of things you can do on the Internet.
send messages listen to music
3 Read the article below. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 We can share information with people all over the world using the Internet. T
2 We have servers in our homes so we can surf the Internet.
3 The Internet uses telephone systems to send signals.
4 Information exchange on the Internet is very fast.
5 Your computer sends an email directly to another computer by phoning it.
54
Messages 8
4 Read the article above. Match the words with the parts of the picture.
server in Syria server in Canada Fadia’s computer Deema’s computer satellite
1 Deema’s computer
6 Copy and complete the summary of How the Internet works. Use the passive form of
the verbs in brackets.
Computers (1) (link) together in a big network. This network (2) (call) the
Internet. Information (3) (exchange) between computers. Home and office
computers (4) (link) to servers. Information (5) (distribute) by these
servers. The Internet (6) (connect) together by telephone services.
55
Making contact
Fires
Many cultures have used fire to send messages,
especially Native Americans. Fires were lit in
high places to say things like ‘yes’, ‘no’ or ‘danger’.
When the Greeks captured the city of Troy in
1200 BC, they lit bonfires to send the news.
Messengers Post
2.500 years ago, Darius the Great, the King of The first postal service was in China in 900 BC.
Persia, used messengers. Horse riders carried It was used by the government. In 1837 a ‘one
messages. New men and horses were used each price’ post was started in England. It was a great
day. A document took ten days to travel 3,200 success and many other countries copied it.
kilometres. In Baghdad in the 11th century they
started to use birds to carry messages.
Telephone
In 1876 the first telephones were used. People
Flags in different places could speak to each other for
Flags were used by the Greeks 2,400 years ago. the first time. The telephone was invented by
In the 18th century the French Navy gave two people: an Italian, Antonio Meucci, and a
1,000 common messages different numbers. Scots-American, Alexander Graham Bell. Today
The message number was communicated to mobile phones have changed the way the
another ship using flags. phone is used.
56
Messages 8
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Look at the pictures on page 56. Match them with the
headings in the article.
1 Post
2 N 8.1 Read the article and match the years with the events. Then listen and check
your answers.
1 In 1200 BC a the ‘one price’ post was started in England.
2 2,500 years ago b a postal service was started.
3 In 900 BC c the telegraph was introduced.
4 In the 1990s d the telephone was introduced.
5 In 1837 e Tim Berners-Lee invented the World Wide Web.
6 In the 1850s f the Greeks used fires to send news.
7 In 1876 g the King of Persia started to use messengers.
6 Talking about the past Work in groups. Ask and answer questions.
Find someone who was:
57
Skills: Focus on the brain
Control centre
The brain is the most complicated part of
the body. It takes up 2% of our body
weight but uses 20% of our energy supply.
It receives information and sends out
messages to control our behaviour and
movements. It allows us to think, learn and Parts of the brain
remember. The brain floats in liquid and Your brain is divided into three main parts.
the hard skull protects it. The adult brain The smallest part controls breathing and
weighs around 1.4 kilograms – but a six- digestion. The middle part controls
year-old’s brain is already adult sized! movement. The biggest part controls
intelligence, the senses and memory.
Different sections of this part are responsible
for different things. These include smell,
sight, touch, music and language. Scientists
study brains while people are doing
Messengers activities, such as talking. They can see
There are billions of cells inside the brain. which part of the brain is used.
There are two main types:
Nerve cells
There are about 100 billion nerve cells in
the brain. They are responsible for
everything we do by sending electrical and
chemical signals. These signals can travel
as fast as 90 metres a second.
Supporting cells
These cells protect the nerve cells and
keep the brain healthy.
58
Messages 8
Vocabulary mind and body
1 BEFORE YOU READ Match a sense with a verb and a part of the body.
Senses: smell hearing sight touch taste
Verbs: to touch to smell to see to taste to hear
Parts of the body: tongue eye nose skin ear
smell to smell nose
Reading
2 Read the article on page 58. Answer the questions.
1 What do nerve cells do?
2 What does the biggest part of your brain control?
3 What part of the brain controls breathing?
4 What part of the brain controls movement?
5 What is the difference between the left and the right side of the brain?
Listening
3 N 8.2 Listen to the radio programme and complete the notes.
Tip 1: Eat the right (1) _____. Eat (2) _____, meat and (3) _____ vegetables. Avoid
soft drinks, cakes and (4) _____.
Tip 2: Get enough (5) _____. Your brain solves (6) _____ while you sleep.
Tip 3: Get enough (7) _____. This (8) _____ you and prevents stress.
Speaking
4 Work in pairs. Which activities do you prefer?
Creative: music painting drawing acting photography making models
writing poetry
Logical: puzzles maths science remembering facts planning your work
using computers learning languages
Writing
6 Write about yourself and your partner. Use the results of your discussion in
exercise 4.
Mazen likes drawing, photography and making models. He isn’t
so keen on puzzles and technology. He seems to be more creative.
He wants to improve his maths.
59
Project
PROCESSES
How paper is made
You read from it, you write on it, you draw on it
– but do you know how paper is made?
60
Module 5
Around the world
Read about the environment.
Read Episode 5 of The Boy from the Past. What’s special about islands?
What is Laila investigating?
Focus on ecosystems
What is this place?
Read about an incredible journey.
What’s special about this ship?
OUTCOMES
You will be able to:
Project
••
discuss the environment
discuss advantages and disadvantages
TROPICAL RAINFORESTS •
talk about things you had to do
9 The environment
Grammar
that / which, who, where; either … or …,
although, both … and …, after
62
The environment 9
Vocabulary places
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. Try to name one example of each
of these places.
ocean desert mountain river forest plain lake
Atlantic Ocean
Comprehension
2 Read the article on page 62. Choose two correct ways to complete each sentence.
1 Every island in the world has:
a special plants and animals on it. b deserts on it. c water round it.
2 Over millions of years:
a plants and animals on islands change. b plants, birds and animals arrive on islands.
c butterflies on all islands become heavier.
3 Surtsey Island:
a has scientists living on it. b was formed by a volcano.
c has already got plants and living creatures.
4 On one island, people:
a introduced goats. b cut down the forests. c left the island.
5 Nowadays:
a islands have lost all their birds in the last 200 years.
b many island animals are in danger. c the orang-utan is in danger.
4 Talking about likes and dislikes Talk about your family and friends.
Use these ideas:
people sports films music houses food friendly exciting
funny easy difficult frightening serious polite unfriendly
noisy traditional modern old hot cold boring
63
Migration
1 SOME ANIMALS MIGRATE long distances every They probably navigate by following the sun,
year. They travel in search of food, warmth or moon or stars. Birds also use the sun and
a place to have their young. Although the they recognise places, such as mountains.
journeys are often thousands of kilometres,
the animals find their way.
Wildebeest
2 The Serengeti Plain is in East Africa.
When the dry season starts, huge groups
of wildebeest move west to find fresh Wildebeest herds
grass and water. Then they move back
towards the east. Sometimes they travel
more than 1,500 kilometres. About one
million wildebeest do this amazing journey.
They don't damage the grass they walk on -
they make it grow better!
Arctic Tern
These sea birds spend summer (May
3
to August) in the Arctic north. The
days are long and there is a lot of
food for their young. After this, they
fly 16,000 kilometres to spend
another summer in the Antarctic
Arctic tern south. In one year, they experience
summer both in the north and the
south. They travel over one million
kilometres during their lifetime.
Grey Whale
4 Grey whales travel to cold waters for food
and to warmer waters to have their young.
This means they have to travel 20,000
kilometres – 10,000 kilometres there and
10,000 kilometres back. It is the longest
migration for any mammal. The whales spend
winter in the warm seas near Mexico where
they look after their young in the warm
water. Then in February they go north to the
Arctic water where there is a lot of food. It
takes them two months. Grey whale
64
The environment 9
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ Think about the winter and summer in your country.
1 How long are they and which months are they?
2 What are the average temperatures?
3 What happens to plants and animals?
4 Are there any typical winds or weather conditions?
4 OVER TO YOU Work in pairs. What information do you find surprising in the
article?
65
Skills: Focus on ecosystems
1 BEFORE YOU READ Match the sentence halves to complete the definitions.
1 Ecology is the relationship between living things a its community.
2 A habitat is the natural home b and the places they live in.
3 A community consists of the plants and animals c of a group of plants and animals.
4 An ecosystem consists of a habitat and d that live in a habitat.
66
The environment 9
Vocabulary animals
2 N 9.1 Decide which animals live in which habitat. Then listen and check.
rhinoceros giraffe seal lion elephant
Arctic fox polar bear walrus antelope penguin
Reading
Did you know?
3 Read the article on page 66. Answer the questions.
1 What do the Arctic and the Antarctic have in common? The King Penguin is
2 When does the tundra have plants and wildlife? a good father. He
3 Where do you find grasslands? keeps the egg warm
on his feet for two
4 What plants and animals are there in the grasslands?
months. And he
5 Describe the diets of three grasslands animals.
doesn’t eat any food.
Listening
4 N 9.2 Listen to Jason, Anna and Peter calling home. Where are they? Choose from:
Saudi Arabia The Antarctic Australia South Africa Brazil
b N 9.4 Listen and repeat the sentences. Say them as fast as you can.
Speaking
7 Talk about an ecosystem or habitat in your country (desert, forest, river, seaside,
etc.). Make notes and give a talk to the class.
1 What is the climate like? 3 What community lives there?
2 What are the seasons like?
Writing
8 Write a paragraph about the ecosystem you chose.
67
10 Explorations
Grammar
somebody, something, somewhere;
could, must, can’t; had to, didn’t have to
2 The following
The Boy from the Past morning, Laila turned
Episode 5: Laila’s investigation on the computer and
surfed the Net. She
1 was looking for a
map. She was so
involved in her
research, she didn’t
talk to anybody. After
an hour, she called
out to Omar.
Laila: Why do you think those men want our
map?
Omar: It must be because it shows the location
of something important.
Laila: Well, look at this map on the screen. It’s
the same as the one on the stone. It
could be the same place!
Omar stared at the empty cabinet – Omar: Is it anywhere near here?
everything was gone! He turned in despair Laila: It’s only ten kilometres away!
to everybody in the room. But Laila didn’t
look worried. 3
Laila: Omar, the men haven’t taken
the Phoenician stones.
Omar: Yes, they have! Look! The
stones can’t be anywhere else!
Laila: Don’t worry. I was worried
about the thin man. So I put
them back in the well!
Omar: In the well? That was a fantastic
idea!
Policeman: Hello! Is anybody there?
Firass: Yes, come in!
Uncle Firass explained about the break in.
Policeman: Who do you think did it?
Omar: Well, one of them was the thin
man. That evening Omar, the professor, Uncle Firass and
Policeman: Who’s that? Mazen drove to the location on the Phoenician map.
Laila: He’s the man who was watching Omar: I think we’re in the right place. Here’s the
our house. cave and the hill, and the sea’s over there …
Policeman: They didn’t steal anything. So Professor: Listen! The metal detector has found
what did they want? something!
Omar: It must be somebody who’s Firass: Mazen, can you dig here, please?
interested in our Phoenician Mazen: Yes, of course …
carvings. Firass: What’s that noise?
Laila: One of them must be Harry Mazen: There’s something hard under the earth.
Dark! Professor: It must be what we’re looking for!
68
Explorations 10
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ What can you remember about the last episode?
1 Who were the thieves? 2 What did they take?
2 N 10.1 Listen and read the story on page 68. Answer the questions.
1 Where did Laila put the stones?
2 Who did Omar and Laila think the thieves were?
3 What did Laila look for on the Internet?
4 Where did Omar, Uncle Firass, Mazen and the professor go?
N 10.2 Listen to the sounds. Say what you think you can hear.
5
1 It must be people playing a game of tennis.
69
An incredible journey
The amazing stories of Sindbad the sailor have entertained generations of readers.
But were they fact or fiction?
1 In November 1981 the historian and 4 With his crew of 25 Omanis and Europeans
explorer Tim Severin started a fantastic he sailed across the Arabian Sea, the Indian
seven-month journey. He wanted to prove Ocean and the China Seas. They made the
something. He knew that over 1,000 years 9,600 kilometre voyage from Oman to
ago Arab merchants sailed from the Arabian Canton in China. They didn’t use modern
Gulf to China. But he believed that the maps. They used a 15 th century navigation
voyage was described in Sindbad’s book by Ibn Majid and navigated by the
adventures. stars.
2 To prove this, Tim had to do research. He
had to study ancient manuscripts and read
academic studies of Arab ships. He had to
read about early sails and how the ships
were steered. He also had to read many
different versions of the Sindbad story.
70
Explorations 10
Vocabulary parts of a ship
1 N 10.3 BEFORE YOU READ Match the words with the parts of the picture.
Then listen and check.
mast deck rope sail anchor life belt
1
4
` 6
Comprehension
2 Read the article on page 70. Find what these numbers refer to:
1981 1,000 640 25 9,600 15
71
Skills: Focus on helping the world
Vocabulary recycling
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in pairs. How many of these things do you throw away
in a typical month?
glass bottles cardboard boxes plastic bottles batteries plastic bags
crisp and sweet packets drinks cans magazines
Welcome to the latest issue of LINKS. This week we’re asking you about how you help the
environment.
In our school we did a
We grow our own fruit and
project called Reduce,
vegetables – they taste great.
Reuse, Recycle. You can
Our little ‘urban garden’ is
reduce energy use by
helping the environment too –
turning off lights. You can
we eat less food that has
save water by turning off
travelled thousands of miles in
water taps. You can reuse
polluting aeroplanes. And we
paper and plastic bags. And Carmen
collect rainwater for our plants. Susan
you can recycle by taking
your bottles and cans to a recycling centre. Susan, USA
Carmen, Mexico I love animals and my aunt
There was a festival in our local and uncle have bought me a
park to raise awareness about the really special present. I have
environment. There were talks ‘adopted’ a rare animal! It’s an
and films about global warming elephant called Kiruba. She
and there were people giving out lives in Africa, but I send
educational flyers about the money to people there, who
environment, and selling food, use it to help look after her. I
Nick
books and posters. It was very received a lovely poster and I
interesting. We had fun and we get information about her. I love helping
Salah
helped the world at the same time. nature directly like this.
Salah, Syria Nick, Canada
Reading
2 N 10.4 Listen and read the Links webpage. Who:
1 went to a festival? 3 grows his or her own food?
2 ‘adopted’ a rare animal? 4 did a school project on helping the environment?
72
Explorations 10
4 Listening
N 10.5 Listen to the interviews with Janet and Simon. Which projects are
they doing?
5 N 10.5 Listen to the interviews again. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 At Janet’s school students planted 100 trees last year.
2 Planting trees costs a lot of money.
3 Trees make the air cleaner.
4 Simon belongs to a charity called the WWF.
5 The charity WWF organises runs. It receives money if people finish the run.
6 Last month Simon raised £1,500 to save the tiger.
Speaking
6 OVER TO YOU What can you do to help the environment? Discuss the advantages and
disadvantages of the different ideas.
8 N 10.7 READING ALOUD Listen and repeat the story. Then work in pairs. Practise
reading aloud.
In ancient times, Ahmed the merchant had many adventures. He studied navigational charts
and always chose the safest routes. But the seas were full of sharks.
At night he watched shooting stars and imagined the flying ships of the future.
Writing
9 Write some advice to help people reduce energy use and recycle.
Turn off the lights when you leave a room.
73
Project
TROPICAL RAINFORESTS
e ra inforests?
• Where in the world arlik
• What are rainforests ae?rainforest? MD
74
Module 6
Science and discovery
Read The Boy from the Past.
Episode 6: The buried treasure
OUTCOMES
You will be able to:
Project
••
make and accept offers
discuss inventions
2
The Boy from the Past
Episode 6: The buried treasure
1
76
Inventions 11
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ This is the last episode of the story. Work in pairs. Look at
the pictures on page 76. How do you think the story ends?
2 N 11.1 Listen and read the story on page 76. Answer the questions.
1 What was in the box?
2 Who arrived while they were opening the box?
3 Why did the detective and the police follow Uncle Firass and Professor Hussam?
4 What happened to the treasure?
5 What did Laila decide to do in the holidays?
5 Talking about decisions Work in pairs. Imagine these situations. Talk about what
you will do.
1 You receive a computer as a gift.
2 You have a lot of homework.
3 It’s a very hot day.
4 You see an accident.
1 I’ll email my best friend.
7 Talking about future plans Work in pairs. Talk about your plans for next week.
Use these ideas:
go swimming do homework visit relatives play football
practise a musical instrument play computer games play tennis do a project
77
An electrical experiment
1 2
What you need
4.5 volt radio or torch battery
a light bulb
three leads
everyday objects
3 4
What to do
1 Connect the light bulb to the
battery.
2 Connect the battery to one
end of the test object. 5 6
3 Connect the other end of the
test object to the light bulb.
4 Watch the light bulb. Does it
light up?
78
Inventions 11
Comprehension
2 N 11.3 Read and listen to the dialogues on page 78. Write the missing words.
1 battery
With the scissors I think the light bulb will light up. Metal is a good conductor.
With the glass I think it won’t light up. Glass is a bad conductor.
79
Skills: Focus on inventors
THOMAS EDISON is most famous for his work NIKOLA TESLA invented a new kind of electrical
with electricity. He invented the light bulb and power, the fluorescent light and the radio. He
the first machine for playing music. He also was born in Croatia in 1856 and invented his
improved the telephone. The world’s first power first machine at the age of four! He loved
station was built using Edison’s plans. literature and reading books. But after university
He was born in 1847 in the USA and as a he became an electrical engineer.
child never stopped asking questions! He loved When he was 28 Tesla emigrated to America.
Shakespeare, poetry, science and maths. With He arrived in New York with very little money
his parents’ permission he made a science and some drawings of inventions. Fortunately,
laboratory at home. At fourteen he was also he got a job in Edison’s laboratory. Edison’s
allowed to start a newspaper. He got some electric lights were popular and his power
money from this little business and he used the station supplied the electricity. But it was
money to buy scientific equipment. dangerous and Tesla wanted to improve it.
At 16 Edison got a job as a telegraph Tesla believed that his AC (Alternating
assistant. He then went to New York with very Current) was better than Edison’s DC (Direct
little money. One day in the Financial District Current). With AC you could send electricity
he helped repair a counting machine. And then much further and more easily. The two men
he got his first job in New York, looking after it! argued.
The first payment he received for an Tesla left and joined Edison’s rival George
invention was $40,000. In 1876 he used that Westinghouse. In 1893 they illuminated the
money to create an ‘invention factory’. In 1887 Chicago World’s Fair, using Tesla’s invention.
he opened a research and development centre Soon the world changed to AC.
where he improved the movie camera. Tesla gave exhibitions in his laboratory to
Edison died in 1931. On the day of his teach people about electricity. He made money
funeral, people all over the world turned off in his lifetime, but he always invested it in new
their lights. projects. So he died in 1943 a poor man.
Scientists are still studying his ideas today.
80
Inventions 11
Reading
1 BEFORE YOU READ Work in groups. Think about life 150 years ago. There was
no electricity in people’s homes. How was life different then?
There weren’t any computers. You couldn’t phone your friends.
2 Read the article on page 80. For each person (Edison and Tesla) write:
3
• the first job he got in New York
Listening
4 N 11.4 What were the five most important inventions in history? Listen to Hiba
and Lama. Write the inventions they chose.
the electric light the computer the bicycle the telephone
the camera the Internet the train nuclear power
the TV the aeroplane the radio the car the fridge
Speaking
5 OVER TO YOU Work in pairs. Choose the five most important inventions in the
last 200 years. Use these expressions:
I agree. I see what you mean. Me too! That’s true. I’m not sure. I don’t agree.
81
12 Creativity
Grammar
If he creates …, he builds …;
If you wear …, you will be …
Changing approach
When we try to solve a problem, we often
think of only one way to approach it. But if
you change the approach, you sometimes find
a different solution. For example, most city
planners slow traffic down with speed
restrictions and road signs. But one planner
proved that if you take all the signs away, cars
go slower! This is because drivers have to be
more careful.
82
Creativity 12
Comprehension
1 BEFORE YOU READ How creative are you? Work in groups. Think of as many
things as possible to do with these objects:
paper clip metal ruler wooden spoon pencil
5 Talking about conditions Work in pairs. Say what is true for you.
•• If I sleep badly, I …
If I don’t eat enough lunch, I …
83
Science quiz
www.sciencequiz.links.com.
84
Creativity 12
Vocabulary verbs
1 BEFORE YOU READ Match the verbs with the definitions.
1 explode a recognise the flavour of food and drink
2 breathe b heat liquids to a high temperature
3 damage c make something break up with a loud noise
4 taste d cause physical harm to something
5 remove e take air into your body and send it out again
6 boil f take away
Comprehension
2 OVER TO YOU Work in pairs. Do the quiz on page 84. Make a note of your
answers.
3 a N 12.1 Listen to the answers to the quiz and correct your answers. How many
did you get right?
b N 12.1 Listen again and write the missing words.
1 We need (1) to taste food.
2 (2) clothes reflect the sun’s rays and you stay (3) . (4) clothes
absorb the rays and you get (5) .
3 The rain won’t only hit his (6) and shoulders – it will hit all over the front of
his (7) .
4 The sun’s rays are very (8) , so (9) look straight at the sun.
5 There is (10) air pressure at the (11) of a mountain.
6 This is (12) complicated to (13) !
7 Mars is (14) from the Sun than Earth. Venus is (15) .
8 The air pressure on the (16) is (17) than the air pressure (18)
the can.
85
Skills: Focus on accidental discoveries
Many great discoveries were made while scientists were researching something else. We
say they happened by accident. But the scientists were clever enough to recognise the
importance of something strange or unusual. They used a combination of imagination and
knowledge to understand the importance of what they found. As the inventor Art Fry said,
‘The more you learn, the more you are able to see.’
X-rays
Wilhelm Conrad Röntgen,
German physicist, 1845–1923
If you have an injury, doctors will give you an X-ray
to look for broken bones. But X-rays were only
discovered in 1895. Röntgen was actually studying
the rays which we use for TV screens and
fluorescent light. He wanted to see if the rays could
escape from a glass tube, so he covered it with black
cardboard. Suddenly he noticed a light a metre away
on a screen. ‘The cardboard has a hole in it,’ he
thought. But it didn’t. Then he realised that rays of
light were actually passing through the cardboard!
He then discovered that he could see the bones and
The first ever X-ray of Mrs Röntgen’s hand wedding ring of his wife’s hand using the rays. That
was the first X-ray.
Penicillin
Alexander Fleming,
Scottish scientist, 1881–1955
86
Creativity 12
Vocabulary experiments
1 BEFORE YOU READ You are going to read about two discoveries. Label the diagrams.
glass tube microscope screen dish cardboard mould
3 4
2 6
1
5
X-rays Penicillin
Reading
2 Read the article on page 86. Decide if the sentences are true (T) or false (F).
1 Knowledge and education help scientists come up with new ideas.
2 X-rays were discovered over 100 years ago.
3 Röntgen invented the TV screen.
4 The X-rays went through a hole in the cardboard.
5 Fleming was experimenting on diseases when he discovered penicillin.
6 The penicillin mould killed the bacteria.
Listening
3 N 12.2 Listen to Lee Johnson, an expert on creative thinking. Decide if the
sentences are true (T) or false (F). Correct the false sentences.
1 Always carry a notebook and pen or pencil. 4 Watch a lot of TV.
2 Go for a drive in a car. 5 Exercise your brain.
3 Don’t read a lot of books. 6 Have a positive attitude.
Pronunciation work
4 N 12.3 Copy the words. Listen and underline the sounds. Then listen and repeat.
1 work 2 turn 3 research 4 learn 5 worse 6 bird
Speaking
5 OVER TO YOU Work in groups. Tell a group story.
Each person says a line of a story. Start:
Did you know?
Hassan was listening to the news when the phone rang.
X-rays are not only
used in hospitals,
Writing but also at airports
on luggage and in
6 Write the story you told in exercise 5. factories to check
••Discuss how you can change or improve it.
Write out your own version.
for small faults.
87
Project
88
Literature Spot 1
JANE EYRE Before you start
BY CHARLOTTE 1
1 Read about Charlotte Brontë and answer these questions.
In what way was Jane Eyre like Charlotte?
BRONTË 2
3
What inspired the sisters to write?
What were Charlotte’s sisters and brother like?
6 Do you know any love stories like Jane Eyre ? Tell the class.
89
My name is Jane Eyre and this is the story of my life.
It is the 1830s and I was living in Thornfield Hall, a big
house in the country. It was my first job and I was a
teacher, teaching a young French girl. The owner of the
house, Mr Rochester, was looking after the girl. But I
had not met the owner yet, as he was usually abroad.
My life was good at Thornfield Hall. I spent my days with
the servants, who were all friendly. Only Grace Poole,
who sewed in the attic, was quiet and cold. Strange
shouts and cries often came from her room at the top of
the house.
One day, Mr Rochester came home. He seemed unfriendly.
“He’s never happy here,” said Mrs Fairfax, the housekeeper.
“Thornfield Hall reminds him of his family troubles.” That night I woke up and heard a
laugh outside my room. I got up and looked outside the door. I saw smoke was coming
from Mr Rochester’s room. I went in and saw that his bed was on fire. I quickly put water
on the fire and it went out. “Thank you, Jane,” said Mr Rochester. “You have saved my
life.” I began to love my master.
That week Mr Rochester had a visitor, a handsome man called Richard Mason. In the night
I heard a scream and ran up to his room. Mr
Rochester was with him. Richard Mason’s face was
scratched and covered in blood. Mr Rochester asked
me to clean his cuts. Then he told me to keep my
door locked at night.
Later that summer, I was in the garden and Mr
Rochester joined me. I was very surprised when he
asked me to marry him. I said yes! We planned our
wedding and soon it was my wedding day. When we
were standing in the church, a stranger called out,
“They cannot get married! Mr Rochester already has
90
a wife!” Mr Rochester asked the man who he was. “I
am a lawyer for Richard Mason,” he said. “Mr
Rochester is married to Richard Mason’s sister.”
“It is true,” said Mr Rochester. “But she is not the
woman I married. I want you all to see her.” He took
us back to Thornfield Hall. We went to the attic room
at the top of the house. Grace Poole opened the door
for us, and behind her was a wild woman, making
noises like an animal. When the woman saw Mr
Rochester, she jumped on him and tried to scratch
him like a cat. It took three people to get her off. So
this was why Richard Mason was scratched!
“This woman,” said Mr Rochester, “is my wife. She is completely mad. And this lovely
girl,” he said, pointing to me, “is the girl I want to marry.”
Later, Mr Rochester told me that his parents had arranged the marriage with Richard
Mason’s sister because her family were rich. He did not know she was mad then. He had to
get Grace Poole to look after her, and he had to go away to find happiness. Then he met
me and found happiness at home once more. He asked me to stay at Thornfield Hall, but I
knew I had to leave.
I got a job as a teacher at a school in a different village. I found out that I had inherited
a large sum of money from my uncle. I was then rich! The man who gave me the job, Mr
St. John Rivers, asked me to marry him. I did not love him, but thought perhaps it was
the best thing for me. But suddenly I heard a voice
calling, “Jane!” It was the voice of the man I loved,
Edward Rochester. I told Mr St. John Rivers that I had
to leave.
It was a long journey back to Thornfield Hall but I
felt very happy when I walked into its beautiful
garden. But I was shocked to see that Thornfield Hall
was a ruin, with no roof. I went to the nearest village
and asked a shopkeeper: “What has happened to
Thornfield Hall?”
91
The shopkeeper told me the sad story: “The mad woman in the attic started a fire. Mr
Rochester saved the servants, but then saw the mad woman. He ran back inside to save her
too, but when he was inside, she jumped from the
window and died. The fire was now very big and the
roof collapsed. The servants pulled Mr Rochester
from the burning house, but he was badly burned
and now he cannot see.”
The shopkeeper told me that Mr Rochester was now
living with some servants at a small house nearby,
so I borrowed a horse and rode there.
The servant, Mary, opened the door and recognised
me. She asked me in. “Let me take his food to
him,” I said. I took a tray of food and went into the living room. Mr Rochester was
standing by the fire. He looked very sad.
“Ah, give me some water, Mary,” he said. “Mary’s in
the kitchen,” I replied. “Jane!” he cried. “This is my
dream. But a woman like you will not want to be
with a blind man like me!”
I explained how I wanted to make him happy.
“One day when I was in the garden,” he said, “I
called your name. I thought I heard your voice
answer”. I told him that I had heard his voice, too.
92
Literature Spot 2
TREASURE ISLAND Before you start
1 Read about Robert Louis Stevenson and answer the questions.
BY ROBERT LOUIS 1 Do you know any of his stories? What are they about?
2 If you do not know them, look at the titles. Can you guess what
they are about?
STEVENSON 2 The words below are important in the story. Complete the table.
B A C K G R O U N D Use a dictionary to help you.
Robert Louis Stevenson treasure crew attack battle rich pirate wounded sailor fire
(1850–1894) was born in guns chest coin captain
Scotland and is known for his
words to do with money people on a boat words to do with fighting
adventure stories. As well as
Treasure Island (1883), his
famous stories include Kidnapped
(1886) and The Strange Case of
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde (1886). He
suffered from bad health and
hoped better weather would Reading
make him better, so he often 3 Read the story and answer the questions.
travelled abroad. In 1888, he
moved to Samoa, where he got 1 What do you think the blind man and his friends were looking for?
better for a while before he died 2 Who was Flint and what did he hide?
suddenly at the age of 44. Many 3 What does the map show?
of his stories are now successful 4 What is Long John Silver planning to do?
films. 5 Who left Ben Gunn on Treasure Island?
6 How many people are alive at the end?
Vocabulary
5 Find words in the story that mean the same as the following.
1 a kind of hotel
2 held tightly
3 walked slowly and quietly
4 save from danger
5 an agreement
6 on land, by the sea
93
She took
My name is Jim Hawkins. some coins,
It is the eighteenth century. My and I took
mother owned the village inn, and some
one day an old sailor arrived and papers.
stayed at the inn. He had a large Suddenly
chest with him. “Call me captain,” the blind
he said. “Watch out for a sailor with man came
one leg,” he told me, “and I will give back with
you a coin every month.” He stayed seven other
every night at our inn. men. My
mother and
I hid. The
men saw that
the captain was dead. They
searched the house and found
the chest. “The papers are not
here!” said one of the men. Then
we heard guns firing. It was
Captain Dance with some law
officers. They were looking for
One day, a blind man arrived. He pirates. The men ran off. I showed
grabbed my arm and told me to take Captain Dance the papers from the
him to the captain. The blind man chest. One of them was an old map.
gave the captain a piece of paper,
then ran away. The captain looked
at the paper, fell over and died!
We called
the village
doctor, Dr
Livesey.
Then my
mother and
I opened
the
captain’s
chest to take
the money we
were owed.
94
“The
map
belonged to said Silver,
Flint, one of “we will take
the worst the treasure
pirates that and they can
ever lived,” die!” The sailors
said Captain laughed. I crept
Dance. away and told
“He was also Captain
one of the Smollett,
richest. The Trelawney and
map shows the doctor what Silver said. “We must
where he buried his treasure,” said Dr pretend we do not know their plan,”
Livesey. Squire Trelawney, a rich man said Smollett. We reached Treasure
in our village, decided to hire a ship Island. Most of the crew went on
to look for the treasure. He asked shore. I went on shore too, but
me and Dr Livesey to go with him. alone. No one saw me. I explored
He also hired Captain Smollett, and the island. Suddenly a man jumped
a crew, including a sailor with one out in front of me. His skin was burnt
leg, called Long John Silver. Our by the sun and his clothes were
boat, The Hispaniola, left for torn. I pointed my gun at him.
Treasure Island to look for Flint’s “Who are you?” I asked.
treasure. One night, I heard Long John “My name’s Ben Gunn,” he said.
Silver talking to two sailors. They did “I was left on the island three years
not see me. ago. Can you rescue me? Whose boat is
it?”
95
Then
” Meanwhile, Dr Livesey and we heard
Trelawney also went on shore with guns firing.
some men. Suddenly, the ship’s gun Two pirates
began to fire at them. They ran to a died and the
small wooden fort on a hilltop and other turned
hid there. I saw them and joined and ran. Dr
them. The next day, the pirates Livesey, Ben
attacked us. Many people died and Gunn and
were wounded, but we won the another man
battle. The pirates who were not came out
killed ran away. Ben Gunn told me from behind
where a small boat was hidden in the trees.
some bushes. That night I rowed it I was safe!
to the Hispaniola. There was just Dr Livesey explained what had
one pirate, Hands, on the boat now. happened. “Ben Gunn found the
We fought and I pushed him into treasure when he was alone on the
the sea at the far end of the island. He took it into a cave, so
island and walked back to the fort. the map was useless. That’s why
But inside the fort I found Long I gave the map to Silver.”
John Silver and the pirates. The next morning we took the
“Where are my friends?” I treasure to the Hispaniola and
asked. “Well, the Hispaniola has left the three remaining pirates
gone, so we have made a bargain. on the island. There were only five
We will leave them alone if they of us left. We shared the treasure
give us the map,” said Silver. He held among us, and now I am happy and
up the treasure map in front of me. rich!
“Come, boy, you
can help us find
the treasure.”
We followed
the map into
some trees
and found the
place where the
treasure was
buried. But we
found only a
hole. It was
empty!
96