THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Geographical position The United States of America(“Land of opportunity”, “Melting Pot”, “God′s Country”, often called the United States (US) or America, is a country in North America. It is made up of 50 states, a federal district, and five territories. It has great influence over world finance, trade, culture, military, politics, and technology. The USA is situated in North America between 2 oceans: the Atlantic Ocean to the East and the Pacific Ocean to the West. The USA borders on Canada in the north and Mexico in the south. The total area is about 9,363,000 sq. km. which makes it the forth largest state in the world. The USA consists of 50 states and the District of Columbia where the capital of the country, Washington, is situated. The states are Alabama, Alaska, Arkansas, California, Colorado, Florida, Hawaii, Indiana, Connecticut, Delaware, Georgia, Kentucky, Montana, New York, Washington, etc. Alaska (1,530,700 sq. km.) is America′s largest state. In 1959 Alaska became the 49th state of the USA. It is called “the land of icebergs and polar bears”. The population of the USA is 325 million people (2017). The most populated cities are New York (8 million people) and Los Angeles (3,7 million). The USA is often called “a melting pot” //котел, в котором переплавляются нации where economic and social pressures have forced non-speaking immigrants to drop their native tongue and habits. People of different nationalities live and work there: Frenchmen, Italians, Puerto Ricans, Jews, Swedes, Poles, Germans, Ukrainians, Russians, Chinese, Japanese, etc. Half the territory of the USA is mountainous with the Appalachian Highland in the east and the Cordilleran Highland (including the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada) in the west. Between them there are vast valleys known as the Great Valley. America′s largest rivers are the Mississippi (“father of waters”) with its tributary Missouri (6,4000 km), the Rio Grande (a natural boundary between Mexico and the USA), the Ohio, the Columbia and the Colorado (“a river of enormous fury ” – wild, restless and angry). The USA is famous for its 5 Great Lakes: Lake Erie, Lake Ontario, Lake Huron, Lake Superior and the Michigan. The first four lakes are on the border with Canada and are the largest and deepest in the USA. There are also a lot of small lakes. For example, Minnesota is known as the land of 10,000 lakes. The USA has several climatic regions: from the continental climate in New England to subtropical in Texas, Louisiana, Alabama, and Florida. The weather ranges from the warm, wet conditions of the Appalachian Highland to the desert conditions of the western states. The USA is rich in mineral resources. It has major deposits of oil and gas in Texas and Alaska, coal in Virginia and Ohio, gold in Alaska and California, silver in Nevada, non-ferrous metals in Arkansas and Colorado. PRACTICE 1. Read the sentences using English equivalents. 1) The USA is situated in North America between 2 oceans: (Атлантическим океаном и Тихим океаном). 2) The USA (граничит с) Canada in the north and Mexico in the south. 3) The USA is often called (котел, в котором переплавляются нации) where economic and social pressures have forced non-speaking immigrants to drop their (родной язык) and (привычки) 4) (Население США) is 325 million people (2017). 5) Half the territory of the USA is (горная). 2. Find English equivalents in the text. влияние, океан, граничит c, государство, штат, родной язык, долина, горный, национальность, приток, минеральные ресурсы, цветные металлы, земля айсбергов и белых медведей 3. Answer the questions. 1) Where is the USA situated? 2) What countries does the USA border on? 3) What is the total area of the USA? 4) How many states does the USA consist of? 5) What is the total number of the population? 6) what are the most populated cities of the USA? 7) How is the USA often called? 8) Is the USA mountainous territory? 9) What rivers are the largest in the USA? 10) What state is known as the land of 10, 000 lakes? 11) How can you characterize the climate of the USA? 12) What mineral resources is the USA rich in? Political System The USA is a federal presidential democratic republic. The head of the state is the President. He is elected for a term of four years and can only be reelected for one more term. The term of office of the President begins at noon on January 20. The President must be a natural-born citizen of the USA, at least 35 years old, and a resident of the country for at least 14 years. The President of the state is also the head of the executive power, treaty maker, Commander-in-Chief of the army. He conducts foreign affairs, signs treaties //договора in the name of the USA, appoints diplomats, ambassadors, cabinet members, federal judges. The President can forbid (veto) any bill passed by Congress. The President of the USA is Donald Trump, an American businessman, television personality, and author. Trump was the Republican nominee for President of the United States in the 2016 election, having won the most state primaries, caucuses, and delegates at the 2016 Republican National Convention. The Constitution was adopted after the War of Independence by the Constitutional Convention on September17, 1787 in Philadelphia (was a national capital from 1790 to 1800). It consists of the Preamble and 7 articles. 27 amendments //поправки have been added to its original text. The first 10 amendments are known as the Bill of Rights (1791) the main principles of which are individuals rights and freedoms to all people of the State, including freedom of speech, freedom of the press, freedom of worship, freedom of enterprise etc. The “Father of the Constitution” was a rich plantation owner from Virginia, James Madison who proclaimed that “a private property is the backbone of liberty”. The legislative branch of the government is the Congress, which has 2 houses: the Senate (that represents the states) and the House of Representatives (that represents the population according to its distribution among states). Powers granted to Congress under the Constitution include the power to levy taxes, borrow money, regulate interstate commerce, declare war, seat members, control the nation′s finances, to hold foreign policy, to change the State Budget, to provide for military forces. The House of Representatives has a special power of its own. Only a member of the House can introduce a bill to raise money, but it must be praised by the Senate before it can become a law. The Supreme Court is the highest court in the country and the head of the judicial branch of the US government. The Supreme Court Building is a beautiful building of white marble in Washington, D.C. The figures over the entrance represent the national ideas of law and liberty – “Equal Justice Under Law”. The US Supreme Court includes a Chief Justice (главный судья) and eight Associate Justices. One of the most important duties of the justices is to decide whether laws passed by the Congress agree with the Constitution. Besides the US Court there are various district courts and courts of appeals (апелляционные суды). These courts handle both civil and criminal cases. Today the USA has 2 major political parties: the Democratic Party (its emblem is the Democratic donkey) and the Republican Party (its emblem is the Republican elephant). There is very little ideological difference between them. Both parties defend the free- enterprise capitalist system as the basis of American society. The main religion is Christianity. The official language is English. The monitory unit is dollar ($). Dollars became America′s official currency in 1792. American money comes in bills (paper money) and coins. A slang word for a dollar is “buck”. It’s interesting that whatever the domination is all bills are of the same colour and size. The American dollar is an important currency that is used for trade between countries all over the world; the world price for gold is given in dollars. It is the world’s primary reserve currency. It is the most used currency in the international transactions. With Americans the most common way of making payment is by credit card, the major ones being Visa, American Express, and Master Card. Other ways of completing business transactions or making a purchase is by means of a check book and a banking card. Credit and banking cards are commonly called “plastic money”, or just plastic. PRACTICE 1. Match English words with their Russian equivalents. 1 to elect 2 executive power 3 Commander-in-Chief 4 amendment 5 judicial branch 6 legislative branch 7 monitory unit 8 currency 9 to forbid 10 to adopt a constitution a) главнокомандующий b) судебная власть c) избирать d) денежная единица e) запрещать f) принять конституцию g) валюта h) поправки, изменения i) законодатльная власть j) исполнительная власть 2. Read the sentences using English equivalents. 1) The USA is a (федеральная президентская демократическая республика). 2) (срок правления) оf the President begins at noon on January 20. 3) The legislative branch of the government is (конгресс), which has 2 houses: (сенат) and (палата представителей) (that represents the population according to its distribution among states). 3) (Верховный суд) is the highest court in the country and the head of the judicial branch of the US government. 4) Today the USA has 2 major political parties: (демократическая партия) (its emblem is the Democratic donkey) and (республиканская партия) (its emblem is the Republican elephant). 5) The American dollar is an important (валюта) that is used for trade between countries all over the world. 3. Find Russian equivalents to the following. a natural-born citizen, a resident of the country, to appoint, ambassador, to win, worship, enterprise, to levy taxes, borrow money, to regulate, state budget, government, duty, free-enterprise capitalist system, to make payment, transaction, to make a purchase, primary reserve currency 4. Answer the questions to the text. 1) Is the USA a republic or a monarchy according to the Constitution? 2) Are there any requirements for being elected for the post of the president? 3) What are the main functions of the president? 4) When and where was the Constitution of the USA adopted? 5) What are the main principles of the American constitution? 6) Who is the father of the constitution? What did he proclaimed? 7) How many branches of power in the USA? 8) What are the main functions of the legislative, executive and judicial branches? 9) What is the main religion? 10) What is the official language? 11) What is an official monitory unit in the USA? 12) What can you say about the importance of the dollar in the world economy? National Symbols The National Flag of the USA is red, white and blue. The red stripes proclaim courage, the white – liberty, the field of blue stands for loyalty. The 50 stars represent the 50 states. The 13 red and white stripes represent the first 13 colonies. The Flag symbolizes American people, American land, and American way of life. The first American flag was approved by the Continental Congress in Philadelphia on June 14, 1777. The US flag is known as “Old Glory”, “The Stars and Stripes”, “Star-Spangled Banner” («Звездное знамя»). Americans enjoy their flag. They sometimes use the stars and stripes as popular designs on shirts, shoes, hats, jeans, but there are laws that prohibit using the flag in appropriate ways. The Stars and Stripes are flown on government offices and public schools, they stand by the president’s desk. The flags hang in every classroom in America, and every day children salute it before the school day begins. On the 4th of July, Independence Day, the Stars and Stripes can be seen everywhere – on the streets, on the houses and big parades. The official emblem of the USA is the American eagle. It appears on the Presidential flag and on some coins. The coat of arms of the US represents an eagle with wings outspread, holding a bundle of rods (symbol of administering) in the left claw and an olive twig (the emblem of love and peace) in the right claw. The motto on the coat of arms is “E Pluribus Unum” // Едины в многообразии. The National Anthem of the USA was written by Francis Scott Key during the war of 1812 between the USA and Great Britain. The symbol of freedom is the Statue of Liberty. It is a 225-ton steel female figure, 150 ft in height, facing the ocean from Liberty Island in New York Harbor. The right hand holds a torch and the left hand carries a tablet upon which is written: ”July 4, 1776”. The Statue symbolizes the alliance of France and the USA in the American Revolution and their friendship. PRACTICE 1. Match English words with their Russian equivalents and learn them by heart. 1) to proclaim 2) courage 3) liberty 4) state 5) star-spangled banner 6) to prohibit 7) independence 8) eagle 9) coat of arms 10) a bundle of rods 11) olive twig 12) claw 13) female 14) torch a) свобода b) независимость c) оливковая ветвь d) провозглашать e) герб f) женский g) фонарик h) звездное знамя i) лапа j) орел k) запрещать l) пучок стрел m) мужество, смелость n) штат, государство 2. Answer the questions. 1) What colours are in the USA flag? 2) What do the colours symbolize? 3) When was the first American flag approved? 4) Do the Americans enjoy their flag? 5) How is the flag called? 6) What is the official emblem of the USA? 6) When was the national anthem written? Who wrote the anthem? 7) What does the Statue of Liberty symbolize? Economy and Industry The USA has one of the strongest economies in the world, with a national market of about 265 million people. It is the world leader in aeronautics, space technology, electronics, computer hardware and software. One-fifth of the world’s cars are produced there (General Motors, Ford, Chrysler all with headquarters in Detroit – automobile city). Many Americans work in the service sector. They also provide services ranging from banking to transportation and tourism. About a quarter of jobs are in construction and manufacturing industries such as chemicals, clothing and textile, and machinery. Less than 4% of working population are in mining, agriculture, fishing, forestry //лесное хозяйство. The US economy is based on three-enterprise system: private businesses compete against one another with relatively interference from the government. The USA is rich in natural resources: oil, natural gas, coal. It is a leading producer of copper, gold, silver, aluminum, iron, and lead. The USA grows wheat, corn, and other crops and raises many cows, pigs, and chickens. International trade is very important for the USA. Major exports include machinery and high technology equipment, chemicals, cars, aircraft, and grains. Major imports include machinery and telecommunications equipment, oil, cars, metals, and chemicals. Financial markets are big business for the USA. Over 90 million shares are bought and sold on the New York Stock Exchange every day. The most important cities in the USA are the following: New York is the largest city and seaport in the USA. It’s a city of skyscrapers and business center of the shipbuilding, machine building, aircraft, electronics, chemical, light and food industries. About 5 hundred transatlantic airplanes come to and leave New York every day. Chicago is a center of industry for the middle of the country. Chicago is a Great Central Market of the USA; it is an important center of heavy industry, the rail-road, meat-packing and grain center of the nation. Chicago is an industrial center of Illinois. Illinois leads all other states in the manufacture of farm machinery, electronic parts, diesel engines, railroad cars and food products. It’s a leading steel producing state and is the fourth in coal production. World War made the city a center of aircraft manufacturing and shipbuilding. Other important industries today are food processing, chemical products, metal goods, machinery and aerospace production. The Boeing Company is the largest employer in the area. The Boeing heavy bomber airplane became a symbol of Seattle. Engineering occupies the leading position in the USA economy. Automobile industry with the main center of Detroit, aviation and rocket industries in San Diego, Los Angeles, Dallas, New York, Baltimore, shipbuilding industry in Boston, New York, Philadelphia, San Francisco, Los Angeles contribute a great deal to the development of industry of means of transport and communication. The agricultural regions are the prairies and the Midwest part of the USA where wheat, maize and other crops grown. Cotton is grown in the Mississippi valley. Virginia and Maryland are well known for their tobacco plantations. Rice is grown in the south of the Gulf of Mexico. Cattle-farming is developed in the prairies, sheepfarming is developed in the western region of the country. The Midwest is often called the Corn Belt. Farming is the Midwest leading industry. Corn is the pioneer American crop. The Indians taught the early settlers how to grow it. As the pioneers began to move westward, corn moved with them. In the Midwest these pioneers found an ideal climate for growing corn. California is now the country’s most important cotton-producing state. Only Texas grows more cotton. PRACTICE 3. Match English words with their Russian equivalents. 1) aeronautics 2) hardware 3) software 4) headquarter 5) manufacturing industry 6) chemicals 7) clothing 8) textile 9) mining 10) forestry 11) interference 12) food processing 13) aircraft 14) sheep-farming 15) rocket industry a) программное обеспечение b) обрабатывающая промышленность c) одежда d) лесное хозяйство e) пищевая обработка f) текстиль g) химические препараты h) ракетостроение i) аппаратное обеспечение j) авиация k) овцеводство l) авиация o) вмешательство p) угольная промышленность q) центр 4. Continue the sentences. 1) The USA has one of the strongest … . 2) The US economy is based on … . 3) The USA is rich in natural … . 4) Major exports include … . 5) New York is a business center of … . 6) Chicago is an important center of … . 7) Engineering occupies the leading … . 8) Cotton is grown in … . 9) The Midwest is often called … . 10) … is the pioneer American crop. 5. Translate the following words and word combinations into English. Предоставить услуги, сельское хозяйство, угольная промышленность, основываться на, частный бизнес, высокотехнологичное оборудование, пищевая промышленность, сталь, медь, золото, алюминий, свинец, зерно, кукуруза, сделать вклад, автомобильная промышленность 6. Answer the questions. 1) What kinds of industries are developed in the USA? 2) What city is considered to be automobile? 3) What system is the US economy based on? 4) What natural resources is the USA rich in? 5) What are the major imports and exports in the USA? 6) What are the most important industrial cities in the USA? 7) What regions are agricultural? BIG CITIES OF THE USA The United States today is a nation of urban dwellers. About 80% of the population lives in cities. There are many big cities and towns in the USA. New York, San Francisco, Washington, Chicago, Los Angeles are the biggest. The largest and the most famous city is New York (population 7,868,000). It is the gateway to the USA. It is also a window through which the life of the whole nation may be observed. It is also called the Big Apple or the city that never sleeps, because it is never quite and many people either work or go out to enjoy themselves at night. The first view to the city can never be forgotten. It is represented by Liberty Island with the bronze Statue of Liberty (a symbol of American Independence), presented to the USA by France in 1876. The statue is about 50 meters high and stands on a pedestal of almost the same height. Its torch towers about 200 feet (60 meters) above the harbour and can be seen at night for many miles. New York is a national leader in business, finance, manufacturing, communications, service industries, fashion and arts. “Money-making” is the main law of life in New York. New York is a city of contrasts. The richest people in the USA work and live there, earning millions of dollars. And at the same time the poorest people inhabit a part of New York called Harlem. New York consists of 5 boroughs//районы: Manhattan, the Bronx, Queens, Brooklyn and Richmond. Brooklyn is the largest in population (3,000,000). It is even called “bedroom of New York”. The heart of the city is Manhattan, a rocky island. It is the center of American finance, advertising, art, theater, publishing, fashion – and much more. Perhaps nowhere are New York′s extreme contrasts more obvious than in the Times Square area, around 42nd Street and Broadway. Many big plays and musicals open there. Beneath the bright neon signs of Times Square, you will find the most elegant theaters some of its sleaziest “adult” shows and shops. Chicago is the thirdlargest city in the USA and one of the busiest airport, country′s leading industrial, commercial, financial and transport centers. It has the world’s Chicago-O’Hare International Airport. It is also the most important rail and haulage center and a significant port handling both domestic and international trade. The city is first in the nation in manufacturing of machinery and electronic parts. It is often called the “Great Market of the USA”. Chicago is the railroad and grain center of the nation. It is also called “Cross-Roads of the Continent”. It is served by 19 trunk lines and handles 50,000 freight cars daily. More airlines converge//сходятся on Chicago than any other city of the USA. Lakes freighters and river barges deliver bulk //насыпной или наливной груз commodities such as iron, ore, limestone, coal, chemicals, oil, and grain. Chicago is a major center of higher education with numerous colleges and universities. It is a leader in nuclear research. The world’s first skyscraper was constructed in Chicago in 1885. The central part of the city has one of the tallest building – the Sears Tower at 110 storeys high. Philadelphia (often called “Philly”) is the 4 largest city in the USA (1,5million people). For 10 years Philadelphia was the 1st national capital of the USA (1800). That city was the place of the First and Second Continental Congresses, and the Constitution of the USA was also adopted here on June 4, 1776. th Philadelphia is known as an important industrial and financial center, it is also an important international port on the Delaware River. The leading industries are shipbuilding, printing, publishing, textile, machinery. The city is also famous for its ice-cream, pepper-pot soup and a sausage-like product called scrapples //кушанье из свинины с кукурузной крупой. Washington, D.C. is one of the few capitals in the world that was specially built to house the American national government. The terms Washington and the District of Columbia are practically synonymous. Washington was named after the first US President – George Washington. It is not the largest city in the USA. Its population is about 900 thousand people, but it is the largest “one-industry” city in the world. That industry is government. The city’s main product is law and government decisions. The center of the city is the Capitol Building which dominates all Washington. It is the place where the US Congress meets to discuss the nation’s affairs, place where the inaugurations of the President and Vice-President are held. On the dome of the Capitol there is a bronze Statue of Freedom which symbolizes the main idea of the US Сonstitution that free people may govern themselves. Pennsylvania Avenue joins the Capitol and The White House which is the President′s Residence. It has 107 rooms and 31 bathrooms. All American presidents have lived there except George Washington as the White House was not yet built at that time after damage by fire in 1814. Washington is a wonderful city. You can hardly find a park, a square or an open area in it without a monument or memorial. The most impressive are the Washington Monument and the Lincoln Memorial. The Washington Monument looks like a big pencil. Its height is 160 meters and it is hollow inside. A special lift brings visitors to the top in 70 seconds and from it they can enjoy a beautiful view of the whole city. The Lincoln Memorial is built in the style of a Classic Greek Temple. It has 36 columns that show the number of states in the Union in Lincoln′s time. Inside the Memorial there is a large white marble statue of the 16th President of the USA who was loved by supporters and hated by enemies who killed him in 1865. Washington is a city of museums, art galleries, theatres. It is an important scientific center. There are 5 universities there, National Academy of Science, the famous Library of Congress, one of the largest in the world. George Washington University, Howard University are the most popular. There are no skyscrapers in Washington, because they would hide the city′s numerous monuments from view. Besides, no building in the city may be no more than 40 meters tall, i.e., It cannot be higher than the White House. Los Angeles The city was founded in 1781 by Spanish colonists who came to the west coast of America from Mexico. The village built by them was called “The Town of Our Lady, The Queen of Angeles”. It is a city of many beaches, with surfers, volleyball players, and people getting tan. It is also the center of the movie industry home to many movie stars. LA has money and glamour; the Beverly Hills neighborhood, for example, is famous for its mansions and high-priced shops. LA is a city of fads//прихоть, фантазия and trends. Clubs, restaurants, shops, and styles have been known to appear and disappear overnight. LA is not only a center for entertainment and tourism, but also for manufacturing, business and finance, aerospace, oil, and trade. LA faces some serious problems. With so much traffic. LA has the dirtiest air in the USA; too often sunshine is hidden by smog. Crime and violence are also major problems. Police say there are at least 500 gangs in LA. Violence among gang members has grown with the spread of drugs and drug money. Experts emphasize that the problems must be solved if LA is to maintain the Southern California lifestyle for which it’s famous. Las Vegas Las Vegas is a center of gambling in America. For this reason, some say the name Las Vegas comes from a mispronunciation of the phrase “lost wages”. In reality, “Las Vegas” is Spanish for “meadows”. Early settlers were impressed by the fact that Las Vegas was an oasis of green grass in the middle of the desert. Today Las Vegas is still an oasis – not of grass, but of neon lights. Its hotels and gambling casinos, shows use so much neon that Las Vegas has been nicknamed the City of Lights. In fact, all the entertainments of Las Vegas are open 24 hours a day. Las Vegas is like an “adult Disneyland”, a fantasy oasis in the Nevada desert. Detroit Detroit is the world’s car manufacturing center, giving Detroit its nickname the Motor City. It is also one of the nation’s leading industrial centers. Detroit produces steel, metal products, machine tools, chemicals, office machines, and pharmaceuticals. The metropolitan area contains the international headquarters of such major motor-vehicle firms as General Motors Corporation, Ford Motor Company, and Chrysler Corporation. The first motor car factories were founded in Detroit in 1899 and 1903 by Ransom Olds and Henry Ford. San Francisco The city is surrounded on three sides by water. It is famous for its bridges, fog, and foghorns. San Francisco has 40 hills. It is famous for its cable cars, which climb these hills, and for its steep and narrow streets. San Francisco is a wonderful city to explore on foot. San Francisco also has a reputation as an intellectual, liberal, and slightly crazy city – a city where new and different ideas can be explored. Don’t leave San Francisco without seeing the symbol of the city – the Golden Gate Bridge – a beautiful orange suspension bridge. The city has the largest Chinese neighborhood – Chinatown, a genuinely ethnic area Hollywood. An area of the city of Los Angeles famous primarily for its association with the film industry, Hollywood was originally a small independent agricultural community. It merged with Los Angeles in 1910 in order to obtain an adequate water supply. At approximately the same time, the film industry began to locate in the region, seeking to take advantage of natural sunlight that allowed year-round filming and a diverse southern California landscape that provided cheap scenery. In 1914, the director Cecil B. DeMille decided to locate his studio in Hollywood permanently, and other companies followed. By the 1920s, Hollywood had beaten out rivals such as Culver City and Burbank as the place most associated with the film industry, although in fact movie lots were scattered throughout the Los Angeles area. The growing power and romance of film made Hollywood a cultural icon and a major tourist attraction. In the 1950s and 1960s, Hollywood also began to attract television studios and record companies. While still home to many entertainment-related companies and remaining a popular destination for starstruck visitors, the area's actual role in film production began to lag in the 1970s. Soaring production and living costs in Los Angeles led many companies to seek opportunities elsewhere, and Hollywood itself struggled with problems associated with urban blight. Hollywood is a district in Los Angelis, California, the United States of America. Hollywood is known as a center in the cinema industry. A great number of movie studios are situated here as well as many movie stars have their houses in Hollywood. The Academy Awards are annually held in Hollywood in late February or early March. The main sightseeing of Hollywood is Hollywood Walk of Fame. It consists of more than 2400 five-pointed stars on the sidewalks along 15 blocks of Hollywood Boulevard. The stars are permanent public monuments for achievements in the entertainment industry. The stars have the names of actors, musicians, directors, producers, musical groups and even fictional characters. Hollywood is a very popular tourist destination. PRACTICE 1. Test your knowledge and choose the right variant. 1. The center of financial markets is … a) Los Angeles b) New York c) Detroit 2. The main centre of the automobile industry is … a) Dallas b) San Diego c) Detroit 3. The country’s most important cotton-producing state is a) California b) Virginia c) Alaska 4. What city is called “Big Apple”? a) Chicago b) Las Vegas c) New York 5. … is the railroad and grain center of the nation. It is also called “Cross-Roads of the Continent”. It is served by 19 trunk lines and handles 50,000 freight cars daily. a) Chicago b) Philadelphia c) Los Angeles 6. The 1st national capital of the USA (1800) was … a) Philadelphia b) Washington c) New York 7. … is famous for its ice-cream, pepper-pot soup and a sausage-like product called scrapples // кушанье из свинины с кукурузной крупой. a) Philadelphia b) Los Angeles c) Washington 8. It is a city of many beaches, with surfers, volleyball players, and people getting tan. a) Los Angeles b) Las Vegas c) Chicago 9. … is like an “adult Disneyland”, a fantasy oasis in the Nevada desert. It is a center of gambling in America. a) Detroit b) Las Vegas c) Florida 10. … has the largest Chinese neighborhood – Chinatown, a genuinely ethnic area a) San Francisco b) Chicago c) New York 11. … is a wonderful city. You can hardly find a park, a square or an open area in it without a monument or memorial. a) Washington b) Los Angeles c) Miami 12. … is the world’s car manufacturing center, giving … its nickname the Motor City. a) California b) Detroit c) Dallas 13. The city is surrounded on three sides by water. Don’t leave … without seeing the symbol of the city – the Golden Gate Bridge – a beautiful orange suspension bridge. a) San Francisco b) Chicago c) California 2. Match the English words with their equivalents and learn the words by heart. 1 urban dwellers 2 population 3 Liberty Island 4 manufacturing 5 to earn 6 advertising 7 publishing 8 adult 9 haulage center 10 to handle 11 domestic trade 12 to converge 13 freighter 14 bulk commodity 15 bulky 16 scrapples 17 monument 18 to get tan 19 gambling 20 headquarter 21 suspension bridge 22 neighborhood a) реклама b) взрослый c) центр перевозок, вывоза d) население e) внутренняя торговля f) памятник g) сходиться в одной точке h) громоздкий, объемистый i) центр, штаб j) городские жители k) кушанье из свинины с кукурузной крупой l) остров свободы m) грузовое судно, грузоотправитель o) азартный p) зарабатывать q) производство r)насыпной груз s) подвесной мост t) район u)издательское дело v) загорать w) управлять, торговать, регулировать HIGHER EDUCATION IN THE USA The first American college was Harvard, which was founded in 1636 by the graduates of Cambridge University. Later, in 1693, the college of William and Mary was founded in Williamsburg, Virginia, with Yale soon following in 1701. By 1776, there were 9 colleges in the colonies, including Princeton, Pennsylvania, Columbia, Brown, Rutgers. Today these universities are among the most respectful not only in the USA but all over the world. They are very selective and very expensive. The most outstanding of them are called the Ivy League (группа старейших университетов): Brown, Harvard, Yale, Columbia, Cornell, Darmouth College, Princeton and Pennsylvania. American higher education always presupposes that a student has undertaken 12 previous years of study. About 40% of high school graduates go to college. Students pay tuition to study at state and private universities. Some of them have scholarships to help with the cost of tuition. Even with scholarship, higher education is very expensive; many families take out loans to pay for their children’s college education. The USA now has about 3,350 accredited colleges and universities. They offer a great variety of requirements for admission and so many different types of programs that foreign visitors usually have some difficulty identifying American colleges and universities with those of their own countries. College-bound students generally take college admission tests during their last two years of high school. The terms “college” and “university” are often used interchangeably, although the former often is a part of the latter. An American college offers a blend of natural and social sciences and humanistic studies. Students, traditionally from 18 to 22 years old, attend classes for about 4 years to receive, if they successfully complete all requirements, a bachelor’s degree in arts or in sciences. A university is usually composed of an undergraduate college of arts and sciences, plus graduate schools and professional schools and facilities. A student can accumulate credits at one university, transfer them to a second and ultimately receive a degree from there or a third university. American universities and colleges are usually built as a separate complex, called “campus”, with teaching blocks, libraries, dormitories, and many other facilities grouped together on one site, often on the outskirts of the city. A student starting high school is called a freshman and becomes a sophomore in the second year. Eleven-grade students are called juniors, and twelfth-grade students are seniors. There are eight classes a day, usually from 8 a.m. to 3 p.m. The academic year begins in late August or early September and ends in May or June, for most colleges and universities. The semester system divides the academic year into two equal terms of approximately 16 weeks each. Usually there is also a fourth “summer quarter” for students who choose summer school and earn units which may help them to complete their degree work in a shorter length of time than normally is required. At the end of term students get a grade of A/A- (outstanding/ extremely good work), B+/ B/ B- (very good work/ good work/ a bit better than average), C+/ C/ C- (better than average/ satisfactory/ almost satisfactory), D+/ D (not good/ barely passing), or F (fail) for each subject. As they finish each class, students get a credit. When they have enough of these, they can graduate. Most colleges and universities in the United States have established “honor codes” «кодекс чести» – statements of certain rules students must follow in their academic year. Ignorance of the rules is not usually accepted as an excuse. You may be expelled from your school. There is a US idiom that applies here: “It is better to be safe than sorry”. Cheating is a failure of honesty. In the USA cheating means getting unauthorized help on an assignment, quiz or examination. You must not use unauthorized sources for answers during exam. You must not take notes or books to the exam if this is forbidden. Plagiarism is a failure to do your own original work in written assignments (письменные задания). Plagiarism is using someone else’s words or ideas as though they were own. It is literary “theft”. If you commit any act of dishonesty even for the first time: ▪You will certainly receive an “F” (failing grade) for the assignment; ▪You will probably receive an “F” for the entire course; ▪You may be expelled from the school. Methods of instruction: Lecture is the most common method of instruction at U.S. colleges and universities. Usually lectures are supplemented by an extra “discussion” class, reading assignments and periodic written assignments. Class discussion is regarded as a healthy sign of interest, attention and independent thinking. Seminars where students prepare presentations based on independent reading and research. Laboratories, esp. for science courses where theory learned in the classroom is applied to practical problems. Term papers are based on researches students have done in the library or the lab. The professor usually assigns a term paper early in the course and near the end of the course. All papers must be typewritten. PRACTICE Text 1 1. Learn the following words and word combination by heart. accreditation – аккредитация graduate – выпускник, аспирант to graduate from – окончит учебное заведение respectful – почтительный, уважающий selective – избирательный, выборочный, отборный to go to college – поступить в колледж to pay tuition – оплачивать обучение scholarship – стипендия cost of tuition - стоимость обучения requirement – требование admission – допуск, принятие admission test – вступительный тест natural sciences – естественные науки social sciences – общественные науки humanistic studies – гуманитарные науки dormitory – студенческое общежитие facility – приспособления on the outskirts of the city – на окраинах города Bachelor’s degree – степень бакалавра Arts – гуманитарные науки to accumulate credits – накопить кредиты to receive a degree – получить степень academic year – учебный год to complete a degree work – завершить дипломную работу satisfactory – удовлетворительно to get a grade – получить оценку honor code – кодекс чести to expel – исключить cheating – списывание assignment – задание quiz – опрос, экзамен, проверочные вопросы, проверка знаний to forbid – запрещать independent thinking – независимое мышление term paper – семестровая работа to do research work - заниматься исследовательской работой department- отделение faculty – факультет education – образование to study at – учиться в to provide training – предоставлять обучение Master’s degree – степень магистра 2. Decide whether the following statements about the USA higher education are true or false. 1) Higher Education is accessible and free for every citizen of the USA. 2) Students don’t pay tuition to study at state universities. 3) Higher education is not very expensive. Everybody can afford to pay for it. 4) The terms “college” and “university” are often used interchangeably, although the former often is a part of the latter. 5) Students don’t have the opportunity to accumulate credits at one university, transfer them to a second and ultimately receive a degree from there or a third university. 6) American universities and colleges are usually built as a separate complex, called “campus”. 7) The semester system divides the academic year into 4 equal modules. 8) Most colleges and universities in the United States follow certain rules that cannot be broken. TEXT 2 Many students, upon finishing high school, choose to continue their education. The system of higher education includes 4 categories of institutions. The community college, which is financed by the local community in different professions. Tuition fees are low in these colleges, that's why about 40 per cent of all American students of higher education study at these colleges. On graduation from such colleges American students get "associate degree" and can start to work or may transfer to 4-year colleges or universities (usually to the 3rd year). The technical training institution, at which high school graduates may take courses ranging from six months to three-four years, and learn different technical skills, which may include design business, computer programming, accounting, etc. The best-known of them are: the Massachusetts Institute of Technology and the Technological Institute in California. The four-year college, which is not a part of a university. The graduates receive the degree of Bachelor of Arts (BA) or Bachelor of Science (BS). There are also small Art Colleges, which grant degrees in specialized fields such as ballet, film-making and even circus performance. There are also Pedagogical Colleges. The university, which may contain: several colleges for students who want to receive a bachelor's degree after four years of study; one or more graduate schools for those who want to continue their studies after college for about two years to receive a master's degree and then a doctor's degree. There are 156 universities in the USA. Any of these institutions of higher education may be either public or private. The public institutions are financed by state. Most of the students, about 80 per cent, study at public institutions of higher education, because tuition fees here are much lower. Some of the best-known private universities are Harvard, Yale and Princeton. It is not easy to enter a college at a leading university in the United States. Successful applicants at colleges of higher education are usually chosen on the basis of: their high-school records which include their class rank, the list of all the courses taken and all the grades received in high school, test results; recommendation from their highschool teachers; the impression they make during interviews at the university, which is in fact a serious examination; scores on the Scholastic Aptitude Tests. The academic year is usually nine months, divided into two terms. Studies usually begin in September and end in July. Each college or university has its own curriculum. During one term a student must study 4 or 5 different courses. There are courses that every student has to take in order to receive a degree. These courses or subjects are called major subjects or "majors". At the same time there are subjects which the student may choose himself for his future life. These courses are called 'electives". A student has to earn a certain number of "credits" (about 120) in order to receive a degree at the end of four years of college. Credits are earned by attending lectures or laboratory classes and completing assignments and examinations. Students who study at a university or four-year college are known as undergraduates. Those who have received a degree after 4 years of studies are known as graduates. They may take graduate program for another 2 years in order to get a master's degree. Further studies are postgraduate which result in a doctor's degree. 1. Learn the following words and word combination by heart. institution — учебное заведение community college — колледж, в котором учатся студенты, живущие дома, и где учеба дешевле, так как часть расходов берут на себя местные органы власти tuition fee — плата за обучение graduation — окончание (учебного заведения) associate degree — степень ассоциата, первоначальная ученая степень, присваиваемая после двух лет обучения to transfer — переходить graduate — выпускник to include — включать accounting — бухгалтерское дело to receive — получать to contain — содержать, включать either... or — как ... так и, или ... или public — государственный private — частный successful — успешный applicant — кандидат, претендент grade — оценка, отметка impression — впечатление scores — баллы Scholastic Aptitude Test — тест на проверку способностей ученика: экзамен из двух частей, предлагаемый поступающим в университет term — семестр curriculum — учебный план, программа major subjects — профилирующие предметы electives — предметы по выбору, факультативные предметы credit — балл или зачет за прослушанный курс to earn — зарабатывать to attend — посещать to complete — выполнять assignment — задание further — дальнейший 2. Answer the following questions 1. What kind of institutions are there in the American system of higher education? 2. Is it easy to enter university in the USA? 3. What is necessary for a school graduate to get a place at a university? 4. Are all subjects compulsory for university students? 5. What degrees can students get at the university? 6. Can you compare Russian and American universities? 7. What is necessary for a Russian student to go to university in the USA? 8. Would you like to study in one of American universities? Why? 3. Match English words with their Russian equivalents. 1 dormitory 2 to accumulate 3 to expel 4 cheating 5 assignment 6 to pay tuition 7 admission 8 curriculum 9 applicant 10 department 11 to forbid 12 honor code 13 tuition fee 14 graduate 15 grade a) задание b) оплачивать обучение c) допуск d) запрещать e) исключать f) учебный план, программа g) кодекс чести h) студенческое общежитие i) отделение j) выпускник k) оценка l) списывание m) плата за обучение n) накопить o) кандидат, претендент 4. Fill in gaps. 1) The first American college was …, which was founded in 1636 by the graduates of … University. 2) Students pay … to study at … and … universities. 3) Higher education is very …; many families take out … to pay for their children’s college education. 4) The terms … and … are often used interchangeably. 5) A student can … credits at one university, … them to a second and ultimately … a degree from there or a third university. 6) The semester system divides the … year into two equal terms of approximately … weeks each. 7) Most colleges and universities in the United States have established … – statements of certain rules students must follow in their academic year. 8) Tuition fees are low in … colleges, that's why about 40 per cent of all American students of higher education study at these colleges. 9) The … institution, at which high school graduates may take courses ranging from six months to three-four years, and learn different technical skills. 10. Some of the best-known private universities are …, …, … . ECONOMY OF THE UNITED STATES The economy of the United States is the world's largest national economy and the world's second largest overall economy, the GDP (Gross Domestic Product) of the EU being approximately $2 trillion larger. The U.S. is one of the world's wealthiest nations, with abundant natural resources, a well-developed infrastructure, and high productivity. The U.S. is the world's third-largest producer of oil and second-largest producer of natural gas. It is the largest trading nation in the world. Its four largest export trading partners are as of 2011: Canada, China, Mexico and Japan. The United States has a mixed economy and has maintained a stable GDP growth rate, a moderate unemployment rate, and high levels of research and capital investment. It has been the world's largest national economy (not including colonial empires) since at least the 1890s. As of 2010, the country remains the world's largest manufacturer, representing a fifth of the global manufacturing output. Of the world's 500 largest companies, 132 are headquartered in the United States. This is twice the total of any other country. The labor market in the United States has attracted immigrants from all over the world and its net migration rate is among the highest in the world. The U.S. is one of the top-performing economies in studies such as the Ease of Doing Business Index, the Global Competitiveness Report, and others. The United States is ranked first globally in the IT (Information Technology) industry competitiveness index. About 60% of the global currency reserves have been invested in the United States dollar, while 24% have been invested in the euro. The country is one of the world's largest and most influential financial markets. The New York Stock Exchange (formally known as NYSE Euronext) is the world's largest stock exchange by market capitalization. Foreign investments made in the United States total almost $2.4 trillion, which is more than twice that of any other country. As of 2010, the European Union as a whole was the largest trading partner of the U.S., whereas Canada, China, and Mexico were the largest individual trading nations. Overview A central feature of the U.S. economy is the economic freedom afforded to the private sector by allowing the private sector to make the majority of economic decisions in determining the direction and scale of what the U.S. economy produces. This is enhanced by relatively low levels of regulation and government involvement, as well as a court system that generally protects property rights and enforces (приводить в исполнение) contracts. Today, the United States is home to 29.6 million small businesses, 30% of the world's millionaires, 40% of the world's billionaires, as well as 139 of the world's 500 largest companies. From its emergence as an independent nation, the United States has encouraged science and innovation. As a result, the United States has been the birthplace of Great Inventions, including items such as the airplane, internet, microchip, laser лазер, cellphone сотовый телефон, refrigerator, email, microwave, Personal Computer, LCD (Liquid Cristal Display) and LED (Light Emitting Diode) technology, air conditioning, supermarket, bar code штрих-код на продукции, electric motor, and many more. The United States is rich in mineral resources and fertile farm soil, and it is fortunate to have a moderate climate. It also has extensive coastlines on both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, as well as on the Gulf залив of Mexico. Rivers flow from far within the continent and the Great Lakes – five large, inland lakes along the U.S. border with Canada provide additional shipping access. These extensive waterways have helped shape the country's economic growth over the years and helped bind America's 50 individual states together in a single economic unit. The number of workers and, more importantly, their productivity help to determine the health of the U.S. economy. Throughout its history, the United States has experienced steady growth in the labor force, a phenomenon that is both cause and effect of almost constant economic expansion. Until shortly after World War I, most workers were immigrants from Europe, their immediate descendants потомки, or African Americans who were mostly slaves taken from Africa, or slave descendants. Labor mobility has also been important to the capacity of the American economy to adapt to changing conditions. When immigrants flooded labor markets on the East Coast, many workers moved inland, often to farmland waiting to be tilled обрабатывать землю. Similarly, economic opportunities in industrial, northern cities attracted black Americans from southern farms in the first half of the 20th century, in what was known as the Great Migration. In the United States, the corporation has emerged as an association of owners, known as stockholders, who form a business enterprise governed by a complex set of rules and customs. Brought on by the process of mass production, corporations, such as General Electric, have been instrumental in shaping the United States. Through the stock market, American banks and investors have grown their economy by investing and withdrawing capital from profitable corporations. Today in the era of globalization, American investors and corporations have influence all over the world. The American government is also included among the major investors in the American economy. Government investments have been directed towards public works, military-industrial contracts, and the financial industry. Employment There are approximately 154.4 million employed individuals in the US. Government is the largest employment sector with 22 million. Small businesses are the largest employer in the country representing 53% of US workers. The second largest share of employment belongs to large businesses that employ 38% of the US workforce. The private sector employs 91% of Americans. Government accounts for 8% of all US workers. Over 99% of all employing organizations in the US are small businesses. The 30 million small businesses in the U.S. account for 64% of newly created jobs (those created minus those lost). Jobs in small businesses accounted for 70% of those created in the last decade. Amongst large businesses, several of the largest companies and employers in the world are American companies. Amongst them are Walmart, the largest company and the largest private sector employer in the world, which employs 2.1 million people world-wide and 1.4 million in the US alone. Research, development, and entrepreneurship The United States has been a leader in scientific research and technological innovation since the late 19th century. In 1876, Alexander Graham Bell was awarded the first U.S. patent for the telephone. Thomas Edison's laboratory developed the phonograph, the first long-lasting light bulb лампочка, and the first viable жизнеспособный movie camera кинокамера. Nikola Tesla pioneered the AC induction motor and high frequency power transmission used in radio. In the early 20th century, the automobile companies of Ransom E. Olds and Henry Ford popularized the assembly line. The Wright brothers, in 1903, made the first sustained and controlled heavier-than-air powered flight. The late Steve Jobs and Bill Gates were two of the best-known American entrepreneurs. Entrepreneurship is the act of being an entrepreneur, which can be defined as "one who undertakes браться за innovations, finance and business acumen деловая хватка in an effort to transform innovations into economic goods". Venture capital, as an industry, originated in the United States and it is still dominated by the U.S. Americans are “venturesome рискованный consumers” who are unusually willing to try new products of all sorts, and to pester manufacturers to improve their products. Although most of the U.S. economy is composed of services, the United States is the world's largest manufacturer, with a 2009 industrial output of US$2.33 trillion. Its manufacturing output is greater than of Germany, France, India, and Brazil combined. Main industries include petroleum, steel, automobiles, construction machinery, aerospace, agricultural machinery, telecommunications, chemicals, electronics, food processing, consumer goods, lumber, and mining. The US leads the world in airplane manufacturing, which represents a large portion of US industrial output. American companies such as Boeing, Cessna, Lockheed Martin, and General Dynamics produce a vast majority of the world's civilian and military aircraft авиация in factories stretching across the United States. The U.S. produces approximately 18% of the world's manufacturing output, a number that has declined as other nations developed competitive manufacturing industries. The job loss during this continual volume growth is the result of multiple factors including increased productivity, trade, and secular economic trends. In addition, growth in telecommunications, pharmaceuticals, aircraft, heavy machinery and other industries along with declines in low end, low skill industries such as clothing, toys, and other simple manufacturing have resulted in U.S. jobs being more highly skilled and better paying. There has been much debate within the United States on the decline in manufacturing jobs are related to American Unions and lower foreign wages. Although agriculture comprises less than two percent of the economy, the United States is a net exporter of food. With vast tracts участки of temperate arable культивированный land, technologically advanced agribusiness, and agricultural subsidies, the United States controls almost half of world grain exports. Products include wheat, corn, other grains, fruits, vegetables, cotton; beef, pork, poultry домашняя птица, dairy products; forest products; fish. Energy, transportation, and telecommunications The United States is the second largest energy consumer in total use. The U.S. ranks seventh in energy consumption per-capita на душу населения after Canada and a number of other countries. The majority of this energy is derived from fossil ископаемый fuels: in 2005, it was estimated that 40% of the nation's energy came from petroleum, 23% from coal, and 23% from natural gas. Nuclear power supplied 8.4% and renewable energy supplied 6.8%, which was mainly from hydroelectric dams дамбы although other renewables are included. American dependence on oil imports grew from 24% in 1970 to 65% by the end of 2005. In 2011, the United States imported 3,324 million barrels of crude сырая oil, compared to 3,377 million barrels in 2010. While the U.S. is the largest importer of fuel, the Wall Street Journal reported in 2011 that the country was about to become a net fuel exporter for the first time in 62 years. The paper reported expectations that this would continue until 2020. In fact, petroleum was the major export from the country in 2011. International trade Тhe United States is the world's largest trading nation. There is a high amount of U.S. dollars in circulation all around the planet. The dollar is also used as the standard unit of currency in international markets for commodities such as gold and petroleum. The United States had a $168 billion surplus on trade in services, and $803 billion deficit on trade in goods in 2010. China has expanded its foreign exchange reserves, which included $1.6 trillion of U.S. securities as of 2009. In 2010, the ten largest trading partners of the U.S. were Canada, China, Mexico, Japan, Germany, the United Kingdom, South Korea, France, Taiwan, and Brazil. Currency and central bank The United States dollar is the unit of currency of the United States. The U.S. dollar is the currency most used in international transactions. Several countries use it as their official currency, and in many others it is the de facto на деле, фактически currency. The federal government attempts to use both monetary policy (control of the money supply through mechanisms such as changes in interest rates) and fiscal policy (taxes and spending) to maintain low inflation, high economic growth, and low unemployment. A private central bank, known as the Federal Reserve, was formed in 1913 to supposedly provide a stable currency and monetary policy. The U.S. dollar has been regarded as one of the more stable currencies in the world and many nations back their own currency with U.S. dollar reserves. The U.S. dollar has maintained its position as the world's primary reserve currency, although it is gradually being challenged in that role. Almost two-thirds of currency reserves held around the world are held in US dollars, compared to around 25% for the next most popular currency, the Euro. Rising US national debt and quantitative easing has caused some to predict that the US Dollar will lose its status as the world's reserve currency, however these predictions have not come to fruition. PRACTICE 1. Learn the following words and word combination by heart. overall economy – общая экономика Gross Domestic Product(GDP) внутренний валовый продукт (ВВП) wealthy – богатый abundant natural resources – богатые природные ресурсы a well-developed infrastructure – хорошо развитая инфраструктура high productivity – высокая производительность to maintain a stable GDP growth rate – сохранить стабильный темп роста внутреннего валового продукта unemployment rate – уровень безработицы capital investment – капиталовложение manufacturer – производитель, предприниматель manufacturing output – производство, выработка продукции net migration rate – чистый уровень миграции competitiveness index – показатель конкурентоспособности influential financial markets – влиятельные финансовые рынки stock exchange - фондовая биржа to enhance - увеличивать to protect property rights – защищать права собственности to enforce - приводить в исполнение to encourage – поощерять, поддерживать, воодушевлять bar code штрих-код на продукции fertile farm soil – плодородная почва extensive coastlines – обширная береговая линия shipping access – доступ к судоходству productivity – производительность steady growth – устойчивый рост descendants потомки labor mobility – мобильность рабочей силы to adapt – адаптировать, приспосабливаться, применять to till обрабатывать землю economic opportunities – экономические возможности to emerge – появляться, возникать stockholder – акционер to withdraw capital – вывести капитал profitable – прибыльный all over the world по всему миру employer – работодатель scientific research – научное исследование viable жизнеспособный to pioneer – направлять, руководить, прокладывать путь to sustain – поддерживать, подкреплять entrepreneur – предприниматель entrepreneurship – предпринимательство to undertake – предпринимать, гарантировать, ручаться venturesome - рискованный to improve – улучшать military aircraft – военная авиация to decline – уменьшаться, ухудшаться, отказывать competitive – конкурентоспособный pharmaceuticals - фармацевтика wages - зарплата vast tracts – обширные участки участки arable культивированный land subsidy – денежное ассигнование, дотация energy consumption – потребление энергии to estimate – оценивать hydroelectric dams – гидроэлектрические дамбы renewable – возобновляемый business acumen деловая хватка free enterprise - свободное предпринимательство financial activities - финансовая деятельность labour force - рабочая сила Gross National Product - валовой национальный продукт dairy products – молочные продукты per year – за год 2. Fill in gaps using the text. 1) The U.S. is one of the world's … nations, with abundant natural …, a welldeveloped …, and high productivity. 2) The U.S. is the world's third-largest producer of … and second-largest producer of … … . 3) The United States is rich in … … and … … soil, and it is fortunate to have a moderate climate. 4) The United States has been a leader in scientific … and technological … since the late 19th century. 5) The dollar is also used as the standard unit of … in international markets for commodities such as … and petroleum. 6) The U.S. dollar is the currency most used in international … . 7) The late … … and … … were two of the best-known American entrepreneurs. 3. Match the words with their synonyms. 1 risky 2 to master 3 to guarantee, to promise 4 to decrease, to reject 5 producer 6 practical, realistic 7 to increase 8 lucrative 9 to launch, to establish 10 abundant 11 businessman a) wealthy b) to undertake c) venturesome d) to improve e) to decline f) manufacturer g) entrepreneur h) to pioneer i) viable j) profitable k) to enhance 4. Give English equivalents. внутренний валовый продукт, предпринимательство, рискованный, конкурентоспособный, деловая хватка, свободное предпринимательство, валовой национальный продукт, прибыльный, экономические возможности, уровень безработицы 5. True or false? 1) The United States has a market economy. 2) The country is one of the world's largest and most influential financial markets. 3) The dollar is used as the standard unit of currency in domestic markets for commodities. 4) The United States has been the birthplace of Great Inventions, including items such as internet, microchip, laser, cellphone сотовый телефон, email, microwave, etc. 5) A central feature of the U.S. economy is the economic freedom afforded to the private sector by allowing the private sector to make the majority of economic decisions in determining the direction and scale of what the U.S. economy produces. What Are Americans Like? The United States is always compared with a 'melting pot' as people of different nations have immigrated to the USA. In 2000, white Americans were about 75% of the population, blacks or African Americans — about 12% of the population, Asians and Pacific Islanders — nearly 4 %, and American Indians and Alaska Natives — about 1%. About 8% were of mixed race and other races. Between 1492 and 1880 many immigrants came from Britain, Ireland, and Northern Europe. In the 19th and early 20th century European immigration to the USA increased massively, and another era of heavy immigration is occurring right now. The USA still accepts more immigrants each year than any other country in the world. People come to the USA as they all see this country as a land of hope and opportunity. The term 'melting pot' implies that all immigrants have become alike and have adapted to their new homeland. In the USA the aim of upbringing is to raise a responsible, self-reliant individual. At the age of 18 young people usually move out of their parents' house and live independently. A grown-up person who is still living with his or her parents may be considered 'immature', or 'tied to the mother's apron strings'. Americans believe that all men are created equal. It means that one tends to treat other people as peers, and that everyone expects to have equal opportunities to achieve his or her goals of life. As a result Americans are quite informal in their general behavior and in their relationships with other people. People of high standing can be seen in public wearing jeans, sandals, or other informal clothes. Americans call each other by their first names irrespective of a person's social position or age. When people talk, they usually smile a lot and use a lot of jargon and slang. Americans always feel uncomfortable with silence. They prefer to talk in order to fill the pause. Working hard is greatly valued in the United States. Americans respect doers, problem solvers and achievers. Great importance is attached to such qualities as efficiency, punctuality and practicality. Self-improvement is very important to any American. Idleness is considered to be shameful. Americans can't afford to waste time, to daydream, or to do nothing. There are many workaholics and people who are addicted to their work in the USA. Such people think constantly about their job and feel frustrated if they are kept from it, even during weekends and holidays. Americans see as heroes those people who have overcome a great number of obstacles in order to succeeded in life. In the USA the words 'This is a self-made man' are the best praise. People are placed in the stratification structure based on their individual merits or achievements. Americans are individualists. They consider themselves as separate individuals who are responsible for their own lives. Americans value privacy and personal space. Americans seem to be constantly in a hurry. They are extremely punctual and well-organized and hate to be late for meetings. Americans often say that 'time is money'. They become quite irritated if they have to wait more than 15 minutes beyond the scheduled time for appointments. Americans like to be open and honest. They ask direct questions and expect 'straight' answers. But at the same time, they are reluctant to discuss financial and health matters or to talk about their private life. Americans hate to argue or to refuse point-blank. Instead of saying 'no' directly, an American will say something like 'it is not convenient now'. Many Americans know very little about other cultures and the world beyond the borders of the USA. They are sure that their country is superior, probably the 'greatest' country in the world. Americans don't like foreigners and they tend to think that people born in other countries are not so lucky as they are. Most Americans are proud of their political system and they believe that it has advantages which other political systems lack. Democracy has become a synonym for the American way of life. 1. Read the following sentences and circle TRUE or FALSE: 1) In 2000, white Americans were about 45% of the population. T|F 2) In the 19th and early 20th century European immigration to the USA increased massively. T|F| 3) At the age of 21 young people usually move out of their parents' house and live independently. T|F| 4) Americans believe that all men are created equal. T|F| 5) Americans are very formal in their general behavior and in their relationships with other people. T|F| 6) Self-improvement is considered to be shameful in the United States. T|F| 7) Americans see as heroes those people who lead a modest life. T|F| 8) Americans ask direct questions and expect 'straight' answers. T|F| 9) Americans usually say 'no' directly. T|F| 10) Americans are sure that their country is superior, probably the 'greatest' country in the world. T|F| 2. Complete each sentence (A—J) with one of the endings (1-10): 1. Between 1492 and 1880 2. The USA still accepts 3. The term 'melting pot' implies that 4. A grown-up person who is still living with his or her parents may be considered 5. Americans call each other by their first names irrespective of 6. When people talk, they usually 7. Great importance is attached to such qualities as 8. Americans can't afford to 9. People are placed in the stratification structure based on their 10. Americans are reluctant to discuss A. individual merits or achievements. B. 'immature', or 'tied to the mother's apron strings'. C. efficiency, punctuality and practicality. D. more immigrants each year than any other country in the world. E. financial and health matters. F. all immigrants have become alike and have adapted to their new homeland. G. waste time, to daydream, or to do nothing. H. a person's social position or age. I. many immigrants came from Britain, Ireland, and Northern Europe. J. smile a lot and use a lot of jargon and slang. 3. Answer the questions 1) Why is the United States compared with a 'melting pot'? 2) Why do many immigrants come to the USA? 3) What is the main aim of upbringing in the USA? 4) What do Americans think of people's equality? 5) What do you know about Americans' behaviour in public? 6) What kind of person is respected by Americans? Why? 7) How can you describe a typical American workaholic? 8) What is the best praise in the USA? Why? 9) What do Americans think about other countries? 10) What are Americans especially proud of? Why? 4. Summarize all the information you have learnt and make up a short description of a typical American (10-12 sentences) 5. Read what other people think about Americans and comment on their opinions. Are there any statements you can't agree with? Americans are so dedicated to their jobs.' (Jamelia) 'Too many of us look upon Americans as dollar chasers. This is a cruel libel, even if it is reiterated thoughtlessly by the Americans themselves.' (Albert Einstein) 'Americans are very friendly and very suspicious, that is what Americans are and that is what always upsets the foreigner, who deals with them, they are so friendly how can they be so suspicious they are so suspicious how can they be so friendly but they just are.' (Gertrude Stein) Americans love to fight. All real Americans love the sting of battle.' (George S. Patton) Americans are so enamored of equality that they would rather be equal in slavery than unequal in freedom.' (Alexis de Tocqueville) 'As one digs deeper into the national character of the Americans, one sees that they have sought the value of everything in this world only in the answer to this single question: how much money will it bring in?' (Alexis de Tocqueville) 'I think the American Dream says that anything can happen if you work hard enough at it and are persistent, and have some ability. The sky is the limit to what you can build, and what can happen to you and your family.' (Sanford I. Weill) 6. A. What is a typical American like? Describe him using some adjectives from the table if you find them suitable. responsible, self-reliant, independent, hard-working, ambitious, informal, punctual, friendly, efficient, practical, persistent, well-organized, open, honest, patriotic, diligent, active, pushy, realistic, egocentric, self-confident B. Read the text 'What Are Americans Like?' What is the main difference between Americans and other nations?