pátek 4. dubna 2008

Angličtina - The United Kingdom

Topics:
  • geography, location
  • population, languages
  • governmental system
  • holidays and celebrations
  • London (transport, famous places)
  • other cities
  • Commonwealth
Background:
  • long form of the country name: United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
  • first inhabitans 3000 BC; Romans from 43 BC until 5th century,
  • Great britain was dominant industrial and maritime power of 19th century.
  • At it's zenith, the British Empire stretched over one-fourth of the earth's surface.
  • UK depleted it's strength during two world wars in 20th century.
  • In the first half of 20th century UK rebuilded itself into modern European nation.
  • UK is a founding member of NATO and of the Commonwealth, member of EU except the European Monetary Union.

Geography

  • location: islands including one-sixth of the island of Ireland located in Western Europe between the North Atlantic Ocean and the North Sea, 35 km from France
  • area, land boundaries: 244,820 sq km, border with Ireland (360 km)
  • climate: temperate, more than one-half of the days are overcast
  • terrain: mostly rugged hills and low mountains; level to rolling plains in east and southeast; highest point: Ben Nevis 1343 m, lowest point: The Fens -4 m
  • natural resources: coal, natural gas, iron ore, lead, gold, zinc
  • natural hazards: winter windstorms, floods
  • largest cities: London, Birmingham, Liverpool

People

  • population: more than 60 mil.
  • ethnic groups: English (80%), Scottish (9.6 %), Irish (2.4 %), Welsh (1.9%), other
  • religions: Anglican and Roman Catholic 40 mil., Muslim 1.5 mil.
  • languages: English, Welsh, Scottish form of Gaelic

Basic facts

  • capital: London

Symbols of the country

  • flag: Union Jack = Union Flag
    • blue field with the red cross of Saint George (patron saint of England) edged in white
    • superimposed on the diagonal red cross of Saint Patrick (p.s. of Ireland)
    • which is superimposed on the diagonal white cross of Saint Andrew (p.s. of Scotland)

Government

  • constitutional monarchy
  • executive branch:
    • chief of state: Queen Elizabeth II.
    • head of government: Prime Minister Gordon Brown (Downing Street 10)
    • cabinet: Cabinet of Ministers appointed by the prime minister
    • elections: none, the Monarchy is hereditary, leader of the majority party is usually the prime minister
  • legislative branch:
    • Parliament:
      • House of Lords
      • House of Commons
    • Scottish Parliament and Welsh Assembly
  • main paries
    • Labour Party, Conservative Party

Economy

  • one of the strongest in Europe, low inflation and unemployment
  • currency: GBP British pound
  • labor force: services 74%, industry 25%, agriculture 1%
  • industries: motor vehicles and parts, electronics, machine tools, automation & railroad equipment
  • agriculture products: cereals, potatoes, vegetables
  • export partners: US, Germany, France

English way of life

  • the British are very conservative (school uniforms, driving on the left, their system of weights and measures)
  • they call La manche channel as English channel and rest of Europe the Continent
  • they are polite and have good manners
  • they drink 25% of all tea which grows in the world each year
  • children under 14 can't go inside a pub and pubs closes at 11 p.m.
  • they stay in line in queues
  • correct response to "how do you do?" is repeat "how do you do?"

Holidays and celebrations

  • Pancake Day - to use up all the butter and eggs before Lent, which starts the following day
  • Remembrance Day honours veterans (second Sunday near 11th November)
  • St Patrick's Day - (patron saint of Ireland) people often wear green, March 17th
  • Mothers Day
  • Easter
  • Halloween  - children say "trick or treat"
  • Guy Fawkes Night - 5th November; fireworks; celebrate Fawkes' failure in his attempt to blow up the Houses of Parliament
  • Christmas
    • December 24th - Chrismas Eve - some children hang a stocking at the end of bed;
    • 25th - Chrismas Day - presents from Father Chrismas (in stocking or around a Chrismas tree); mid-day dinner - Roust turkey & Mince pie (with spices and fruits) & Christmas pudding (with brandy)
  • Boxing Day - gentry would  give presents to servants, trades people etc., tips
  • New years day, Good Friday, Eater Monday

London

  • was found by Romans in 43 AD
  • oldest part known as "the City" is now business and banking center
  • London's famous shops, theatres and hotels stretch from the City to West End
  • situated on the river Thames in south-east England
  • largest airport in Europe - Heathrow
  • in 19th century it was the largest city, port and financial center in the world
  • big fire in 1666 (Hollar's drawings of London), heavily damaged during World War II.
  • Whitehall street, Globe theater
  • parks; Hyde park
  • transport
    • Double-deckers
      • with open upper deck for sightseeing 
    • The Tube (Underground)
      • crowded and dirty, not safe to travel alone in night, the oldest underground
    • Black taxies
      • very knowledgeable drivers, not overcharged
    • cars
      • taxes for driving in the center, average speed 2-3 km/h in rush hour
    • cycling becoming popular
  • Buckingham Palace
    • home of Queen, she is at home when flag is flying
  • Trafalgar Square
    • statue of Admiral Nelson who defeated the French at Battle of Trafalgar in 1805
    • National Gallery
  • Piccadilly Circus
    • meeting point of six main streets, in the middle is a famous statue of Ero (the Greek god of love)
  • The house of Parliament
    • Big Ben = bell inside the clock tower
  • Westminster Abbey
    • since 1066 all English kings and queens have been crowned here
    • tombs of kings and famous people
  • The Tower of London
    • build as fortress, later became a prison
  • St Paul's Cathedral
    • Whispering Gallery
  • Tower Bridge

Interesting places and cities but London

  • Plymouth - west-south historic seaport, departure point of the Mayflower
  • Stonehenge with prehistoric monuments (circles of huge stones, 3500 BC)
  • Brighton - a beach resort with Royal pavilion
  • Oxford, Cambridge
  • Hadrian's wall in the north
  • Edinburgh - capital of Scotland and seat of Scottish parliament, birthplace of Walter Scott
  • Cardiff - capital of Wales
  • Belfast - capital of Northen Ireland, originaly center of ship-building

Commonwealth of Nations

  • group of 51 countries with around 1100 mil. people (a quarter of the population of the world)
  • 17th, 18th centuries - a lot of overseas colonies
  • giving colonies a larger degree of self-rule, most countries became independent
  • Queen Elizabeth II. is Head of the Commonwealth
  • English language

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