MARIA EUGENIA VILORIA
ORTIN
http://es.geocities.com/mevo_uny
| [email protected]
IDIOMA
AVANZADO INTENSIVO
Trabajo Nº 6 | HID-3364
Reading Comprensión
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Stonehenge is a
Neolithic and Bronze Age megalithic monument located near Amesbury in the
English It is composed of
earthworks surrounding a circular setting of large standing stones and is
one of the most famous prehistoric sites in the world.
Archaeologists think
that the standing stones were erected between 2500 BC and 2000 BC although
the surrounding circular earth bank and ditch, which constitute the
earliest phase of the monument, have been dated to about 3100 BC.
The site and its
surroundings were added to the UNESCO's list of World Heritage Sites in
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Questions Now,
answer the questions about the text.
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1. True False We don't
know 2. It is about
True False We don't
know 3. Archaeologists
think that the stones were erected 4000 years ago. True False We don't
know 4. One part of the
monument was built around 3100 BC. True False We don't
know True False We don't
know |
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The
Rolling Stones
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The Rolling Stones
are a British rock and roll band who rose to prominence during the
mid-1960s. The band was named
after a song by Muddy Waters, a leading exponent of hard-rocking blues. In
their music, The Rolling Stones were the embodiment of the idea of
importing blues style into popular music. Their first
recordings were covers or imitations of rhythm and blues music, but they
soon greatly extended the reach of their lyrics and playing, but rarely,
if ever, lost their basic blues feel. The band came into
being in 1961 when former school friends Jagger
and Richards met Brian Jones. They named themselves after a song by Muddy
Waters, a popular choice of name —at least two other bands are believed to
have called themselves The Rolling Stones before the Jagger/Richards/Jones band was formed. The original
lineup included Mick Jagger (vocals), Brian
Jones (guitar), Keith Richards (guitar), Ian Stewart (piano), Charlie
Watts (drums) and Dick Taylor (bass). By the time of their
first album release Ian Stewart was "officially" not part of the band,
though he continued to record and perform with them. United by their
shared interest in rhythm and blues music the group rehearsed extensively,
playing in public only occasionally at Crawdaddy
Club in The band rapidly
gained a reputation in The choice of
material on their first record, a self-titled EP, reflected their live
shows. Similarly, the album The Rolling Stones (England's Newest Hitmakers) which appeared in April 1964 featured
versions of such classics as "Route 66" (originally recorded by Nat King
Cole), "Mona" (Bo Diddley) and "Carol" (Chuck
Berry). |
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Questions Now,
answer the questions about the text.
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1. Their first
recordings were based on blues music. True False We don't
know 2. The band was
created in 1960 1961 We don't
know 3. Keith Richards
had learned to play the guitar from the recordings of Chuck Berry.
True False We don't
know 4. The group used to
rehearse a lot. True False We don't
know 5. They occasionally
played in public in True False We don't
know |
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Jack
the Ripper |
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Jack the Ripper is a
pseudonym given to an unidentified serial killer (or killers) active in
the largely impoverished Whitechapel area and
adjacent districts of The legends
surrounding the Ripper murders have become a complex muddle of genuine
historical research, freewheeling conspiracy theory and dubious folklore.
The lack of a confirmed identity for the killer has allowed subsequent
authors, historians and mostly amateur sleuths—dubbed Ripperologists—to point their fingers at a wide
variety of candidates. Newspapers, whose circulation had been growing
during this era, bestowed widespread and enduring notoriety on the killer
due to the savagery of the murders and the failure of police to effect a capture, with the Ripper sometimes escaping
discovery by mere minutes. Victims were women
earning income as casual prostitutes. Typical Ripper murders were
perpetrated in a public or semi-public place; the victim's throat was cut,
after which the cadaver was subjected to abdominal and sometimes other
mutilations such as those found in lust murder. Many now believe that the
victims were first strangled in order to silence them. Due to the nature
of the wounds on some presumed Ripper victims, several of whom had
internal organs removed, it has been proposed that the killer had a degree
of surgical or medical skill, or was perhaps a butcher, although this
point, like most of the beliefs about the killer and facts in the case, is
in dispute. |
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Questions
Now,
answer the questions about the text.
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1. The murders were
committed in 1888. True False We don't
know 2. The name was
taken from a letter received by the Central News Agency.
True False We don't
know 3. The killer was
never identified. True False We don't
know 4. The killer may
have had medical skills. True False We don't
know 5. The killer may
have been a butcher. True False We don't
know |
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The American
Pepper |
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"Mummy! Mummy!"
shouted little Murna racing from the front door
through to the kitchen. "There's a parcel. The postman's brought a
parcel!" Her
mother, Savni, looked at her in surprise. She
had no idea who could have sent them a parcel. Maybe it was a mistake. She
hurried to the door to find out. Sure enough, the postman was there,
holding a parcel about the size of a small brick. "From
It was
true. In the top right-hand corner of the brown paper parcel were three
strange-looking stamps, showing a man's head. The package was addressed to
Savni, in big, clear black letters.
"Well, I
suppose it must be from Great-Aunt Pasni," said
Savni to herself, as the postman went on his way
down the street, whistling. "Although it must be twenty years since we
heard anything from her. I thought she would have been dead by now."
Savni's husband
Jornas and her son Arinas were just coming in from the garden, where
Murna had run to tell them about the parcel.
"Well, open it then!" said Arinas impatiently.
"Let's see what's inside!" Setting
the parcel down in the middle of the table, Savni carefully began to tear open the paper. Inside,
there was a large silver container with a hinged lid, which was taped
shut. There was also a letter. "What is
it? What is it?" demanded Murna impatiently. "Is
it a present?" "I have no
idea," said Savni in confusion. "I think it must
be from Great-Aunt Pasni. She went to "Well,
open the pot, anyway," said Jornas. "Let's see
what's inside."
Cautiously, Savni pulled the tape from
the neck of the silver pot, and opened the lid. Four heads touched over
the top of the container, as their owners stared down inside.
"Strange,"
said Arinas. "All I see is powder." The pot was
about one-third full of a kind of light-grey powder.
"What is
it?" asked Murna, mystified.
"We don't
know, darling," said Savni, stroking her
daughter's hair. "What do you think?" Murna
stared again into the pot. "I think
its coffee," she announced, finally. "American coffee."
"It's the
wrong colour for coffee, darling," said Jornas thoughtfully. "But maybe she's on the right
track. It must be some kind of food." Murna, by
now, had her nose right down into the pot. Suddenly, she lifted her head
and sneezed loudly. "Id god up
by doze," she explained. "That's
it!" said Arinas. "It must be pepper! Let me try
some." Dipping a finger into the powder, he licked it. "Yes," he said,
"it's pepper all right. Mild, but quite tasty. It's American pepper."
"All
right," said Savni, "we'll try it on the stew
tonight. We'll have
American-style stew!" That
evening, the whole family agreed that the American pepper had added a
special extra taste to their usual evening stew. They were delighted with
it. By the end of the week, there was only a teaspoonful of the grey
powder left in the
silver container. Then Savni called a halt.
"We're
saving the last bit for Sunday. Dr. Haret is
coming to dinner, and we'll let him have some as a special treat. Then it
will be finished." The
following Sunday, the whole family put on their best clothes, ready for
dinner with Dr. Haret. He was the local doctor,
and he had become a friend of the family many years before, when he had
saved Arinas's life after an accident. Once
every couple of months, Savni invited the doctor
for dinner, and they all looked forward to his entertaining stories of his
youth at the university in the capital. During
dinner, Savni explained to the doctor about the
mysterious American pepper, the last of which she had put in the stew they
were eating, and the letter they could not read. "Well,
give it to me, give it to me!" said the doctor briskly. "I speak English!
I can translate it for you." Savni brought
the letter, and the family waited, fascinated, as the doctor began to
translate. "Dear
Savni: you don't know me, but I am the son of
your old Great-Aunt Pasni. She never talked much
to us about the old country, but in her final illness earlier this year,
she told us that after her death, she wanted her ashes to be sent back
home to you, so that you could scatter them on the hills of the country
where she was born. My mother died two weeks ago, and her funeral and
cremation took place last week. I am sending her ashes to you in a silver
casket. Please do as she asked, and spread them over the ground near where
she was born. Your cousin, George Leary." (MDH 1995 -- from a
common urban legend) |
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Multiple-Choice
Questions Choose the answer
you think is correct. |
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1. Where does this
story take place? a) America b) Arinas c) India d)
Thetextdoesn'tsay 2. How was the
parcel wrapped? a)
in brownpaper b) in
silverpaper c) in
greypaper d) in
tape 3. WhowasSavni? a) a
littlegirl b) theGreat-Aunt c)
the mother of the family d) the
son of the family 4. Why don't the family read the letter? a) They
are too impatient to look in the container b) It is
addressed to the doctor c)
Itis in English d) Itismissing 5. What does Murna think is in the pot? a)
dust b)
ashes c)
coffee d)
pepper 6. Why does Arinas think that the powder is
pepper? a) Ittastesvery hot b)
ItmakesMurnasneeze c) It is
written on the pot d) Thelettersays so 7. What does the family do with the
powder? a) They
keep it to give to the doctor. b) They
send it back to c) They
make drinks with it. d)
They put it on their food. 8. Why does Savni save the last bit of the powder?
a) as a
souvenir b)
for Dr. Haret c) to
analyseit d) to
spread it on the hills 9. How does Dr. Haret solve the mystery? a) He
analyses the powder. b) He
recognizes the powder. c) He is
a friend of Pasni. d)
He translatestheletter. 10. What was really in the pot?
a)
coffee b)
Great-Aunt Pasni c)
dust d)
special American pepper |
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The
Hitchhiker |
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As Andrea turned off
the motorway onto the road to Brockbourne, the
small village in which she lived, it was four o'clock in the afternoon,
but already the sun was falling behind the hills. At this time in
December, it would be completely dark by five o'clock. Andrea shivered.
The interior of the car was not cold, but the trees bending in the harsh
wind and the patches of yesterday's snow still heaped in the fields made
her feel chilly inside. It was another ten miles to the cottage where she
lived with her husband Michael, and the dim light and wintry weather made
her feel a little lonely. She would have liked to listen to the radio, but
it had been stolen from her car when it was parked outside her office in
She was just
coming out of the little When she did get
in, Andrea could see that she was not, in fact, so little. Broad and fat,
the old lady had some difficulty climbing in through the car door, with
her big bag, and when she had got in, she more than filled the seat next
to Andrea. She wore a long, shabby old dress, and she had a yellow hat
pulled down low over her eyes. Panting noisily from her effort, she pushed
her big brown canvas shopping bag down onto the floor under her feet, and
said in a voice which was almost a whisper, "Thank you dearie -- I'm just going to Brockbourne." "Do you live
there?" asked Andrea, thinking that she had never seen the old lady in the
village in the four years she had lived there herself.
"No, dearie," answered the passenger, in her soft voice,
"I'm just going to visit a friend. He was supposed to meet me back there
at Mickley, but his car won't start, so I
decided to hitchhike -- there isn't a bus until seven, and I didn't want
to wait. I knew some kind soul would give me a lift."
Something in the
way the lady spoke, and the way she never turned her head, but stared
continuously into the darkness ahead from under her old yellow hat, made
Andrea uneasy about this strange hitchhiker. She didn't know why, but she
felt instinctively that there was something wrong, something odd, something....dangerous. But how could an old lady be
dangerous? it was absurd. Careful not to
turn her head, Andrea looked sideways at her passenger. She studied the
hat, the dirty collar of the dress, the shapeless body, the arms with their thick black hairs....
Thick black hairs?
Hairy arms? Andrea's
blood froze. This
wasn't a woman. It was a man. At first,
she didn't know what to do. Then suddenly, an idea came into her racing,
terrified brain. Swinging the wheel suddenly, she threw the car into a
skid, and brought it to a halt. "My God!" she
shouted, "A child! Did you see the child? I think I hit her!"
The "old lady"
was clearly shaken by the sudden skid. "I didn't see anything dearie," she said. "I don't think you hit anything."
"I'm sure it was a
child!" insisted Andrea. "Could you just get out and have a look? Just see
if there's anything on the road?" She held her breath. Would her plan
work? It did. The
passenger slowly opened the car door, leaving her bag inside, and climbed
out to investigate. As soon as she was out of the vehicle, Andrea gunned
the engine and accelerated madly away. The car door swung shut as she
rounded a bend, and soon she had put a good three miles between herself
and the awful hitchhiker. It was only then
that she thought about the bag lying on the floor in front of her. Maybe
the bag would provide some information about the real identity about the
old woman who was not an old woman. Pulling into the side of the road,
Andrea lifted the heavy bag onto her lap and opened it curiously.
It contained
only one item -- a small hand axe, with a razor-sharp blade. The axe, and the inside of the bag, were covered with the
dark red stains of dried blood. Andrea began to
scream. (MDH 1994 -- From a
common urban legend) |
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Multiple-Choice
Questions Choose
on the answer you think is correct |
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1. Where
did Andrea work? a) Brockbourne b) Mickley c)
d) thetextdoesn'tsay 2. How
was Andrea feeling as she drove
home? a)
happy b)
afraid c)
lonely d)
hot 3. Why
didn't she listen to the radio? a)
The radio had been stolen from her car. b) She
liked peace and quiet. c) The
radio was broken. d) There
was a strike at the radio station. 4. Why
did she stop to give the old lady a ride? a) It was
a cold evening. b) Andrea
felt lonely. c)
She felt sorry for the lady. d) Alloftheabove. 5. Where
did the lady want to go? a)
Brockbourne b) Mickley c)
d) Thetextdoesn'tsay 6. What
made Andrea afraid when she looked at the old lady? a) Shehad a moustache. b) She
had a hard voice like a man. c) She
had a shopping bag. d)
She had hairy arms. 7. Why
did Andrea suddenly stop the car? a) She
thought she had hit a child in the road. b) She
skidded on some ice in the road. c)
She wanted to trick the passenger into getting
out. d) She
was so afraid that she couldn't concentrate, and she nearly had a
crash. 8. What
did Andrea do when the "old lady" got out? a) waited
for her b)
drove away quickly c) opened
her bag d)
switched off the engine 9. Why
did Andrea look in the old lady's bag? a) She
wanted to steal what was in it. b) She
wanted to find her address so that she could send the bag back to
her. c) She
wanted to borrow the old lady's tools. d)
She wanted to find out who the strange passenger
was. 10. What
was the "old lady" probably going to do to Andrea? a)
nothing b)
kill her c) give
her anaxe d) visit
her in Brockbourne |