Saturday, 4 April 2009

Quiz England and Wales

Check out this SlideShare Presentation:

Monday, 15 December 2008

Результаты 3 задания

1 место - Penguins 29
2 место - Winter 21
3 место - Apple 15
4 место - Eye 7
Более подробно смотрите Assessment table

Monday, 8 December 2008

Winter...

1)Which part of UK is the most populated and the lagest?
2)How many millions people of population live in England?
3)In which part of the UK live more than 46 millions of people?
4)What seas wash up coasts of England?
5)What dovers wash up coasts of England?
6)What happened with the sea in a history of England?
7)For what the sea was imported?
8)What has always been an imported industry?
9)In what part of the world fishing was especially imported industry?
10)On what the sea in England influenced?
11)Which from the rivers was the longest and the most impotant in England?
12)Why the rivers are especially important for England?
13)What relief mainlyprevails in England?
14)Whether is a mountains in England?
15)What three main parts make England?
16)Where in England it is possible to find the favourite holiday area?
17)Where the fast stream of the rivers goes downstares from hills to valleys?
18)In what part of Englan one of the oldest British settlements is found?
19)What was found in Southern England exept for an ancient settlements?

Thank you for attention!!!
Yours,
Winter....

Task 3.

1) Of the four parts which make up the UK England is the largest and most populated part.

Which is the largest and most populated part of the four parts which make up the UK?

2) Over 46 million people of the population of the UK live in England.

How many people of the population of the UK live in England?

3) The coasts of England are washed by the North Sea, the Irish Sea, the English Channel and the Strait of Dover.

What are washed by the North Sea, the Irish Sea, the English Channel and the Strait of Dover?
What is washed the coasts of England?

4) It is interesting to note that the sea has been imported in the history of England.

What is interesting to note in the history of England?

5) It was a good protection against the attacts of outside peoples.

What was a good protection against the attacts of outside peoples?
Which protection against the attacts of outside peoples doea it was?

6) Fishing has always been an imported industry, especially in the east.

Which an imported industry has always been, especially in the east?
Where has fishing always been especially an imported industry?

7) The sea also has a great effect on England's climate.

What has the sea also on England's climate?
What value has the sea to England?

8) There are many rivers in England.

For what rivers are of great importance?


9) The longest and the most important is the Thames.

Which is the longest and the most important?

10) The rivers are of great importance for communication and especially for carrying goods.

Why the rivers are of great importance?

11) England is mostly a lowland country.

Which country is mostly a lowland country?

12) There are upland regions in the north and in the southwest, but the rest of England is almost flat.

Where are upland regions in England?
Which is the rest of England?

13) Northern England, Midlands and Southern England - each part of England is different.

Which parts of England are different?

14) The Lake District in Northern England with its lakes, mountains and valleys is the favourite holiday area.

Which is the favourite holiday area?

15) On either side of the Pennines the plains of Yorkshire and Lancashire strech to the sea.

Where do the Pennines the plains of Yorkshire and Lancashire strech to the sea?

16) In Yorkshire swift rivers flow down from the hills into valleys called 'dales'.

Where do swift rivers flow down from the hills into valleys called 'dales'?


17) In Southern England are found some of the oldest British settlements and traces of ancient monuments such as Stonehenge.

What is Stonehenge and where is it?



Penguins.

Task 3

1) What is especially used the rivers?
2) What is the population of England?
3) Is the England lowland or highland?
4) What is the imported industry in England, especially in the east?
5) What are found in Southern England?
6) Where rivers flow down?
7) What else does the sea for British people?
8) What are the most popular mountains in England?
9) How long river Thames?
10) How many parts has the UK?

Wednesday, 3 December 2008

Marking Scale:

Number of questions
Grammar skills (number of correcr answers)

Срок выполнения до 08.12.08

Monday, 1 December 2008

Task 3. Read the text and ask special questions on it.

Geography of England.
Of the four parts which make up the UK England is the largest and most populated part. Over 46 million people of the population of the UK live in England.
The coasts of England are washed by the North Sea, the Irish Sea, the English Channel and the Strait of Dover.
It is interesting to note that the sea has been imported in the history of England. It was a good protection against the attacts of outside peoples. Fishing has always been an imported industry, especially in the east. The sea also has a great effect on England's climate.
There are many rivers in England. The longest and the most important is the Thames. The rivers are of great importance for communication and especially for carrying goods.
England is mostly a lowland country. There are upland regions in the north and in the southwest, but the rest of England is almost flat.
Northern England, Midlands and Southern England - each part of England is different. The Lake District in Northern England with its lakes, mountains and valleys is the favourite holiday area. On either side of the Pennines the plains of Yorkshire and Lancashire strech to the sea. In Yorkshire swift rivers flow down from the hills into valleys called 'dales'.
In Southern England are found some of the oldest British settlements and traces of ancient monuments such as Stonehenge.