Title: English for Engineers
1English for Engineers
2Nowadays engineering became a worldwide field
- In order to succeed you need the knowledge of
foreign language.
3- You can already speak English, but you need the
knowledge of technical language in different
fields of engineering. - That is why we designed this course
4English for Engineers
- All the activities in this course are based on
the topics related to your field. You will read,
write, listen about famous buildings, see the
pictures of unusual structures, unique
constructions. You will look at architecture
from numerous perspectives at the same time you
will learn the language you will need in your
future career. - You will work with schemes and diagrams, pictures
and text, audio and video files, even poetry and
you will work on our own projects. - Lets take a quick look through typical topics
and exercises of the module.
5Schemes and drawings
Do you know what are the main functions of each
element of the building? The scheme will help
you to find out.
6What are the most significant, most beautiful,
or most interesting buildings of the past 1,000
years? Some art historians choose the Taj Mahal,
while others prefer he soaring skyscrapers of the
20th century. There is no single correct answer.
Perhaps the most innovative buildings are not
grand monuments, but obscure homes and temples.
In this quick list, we'll take a whirlwind tour
through time, visiting some of the most popular
buildings .. and a few forgotten treasures.
Do you know these ones?
Check in our picture gallery!
7Audio and video files
- Listen to the story The Vatican's Architecture
- 'Genius in the Design
-
8Architecture and poetry
- Arabesque ( Gustav BenJava)
- motion distilled in pure symmetry of lines a
breath between two dreams a precise pause
listening step to step
- Definition of Creative Art
- With shirt wide open at the collar,
- Maned as Beethoven's bust, it stands
- Our conscience, dreams, the night and love,
- Are as chessmen covered by its hands.
- And one black king upon the board
- In sadness and in rage, forthright
- It brings the day of doom.-Against
- The pawn it brings the mounted knight.
- In gardens where from icy spheres
- The stars lean tender, linger near,
- Tristan still sings, like a nightingale
- On Isolde's vine, with trembling fear.
- The gardens, ponds, and fences, made pure
- By burning tears, and the whole great span,
- Creation-are only burst of passion
Artist ( Marcia L Laycock) She stares the way
an artist does defining line, shadow, light
feeds herself onto her pallet with slip of
blue yellow white blends her self with dab
flow of her sable brush testing proving the mix
applying by intuition the texture of
knowingsays she loses herself in her workIn the
gallery I found her hung on the wall a hand
beckoning a foot caught fast stretching the
back of her head, her hair and there her eye
unblinking stares from the corner.
9Design and learn
- What is the house of your dream?
- Design your own!
This one?
Or this one?
This one?
10Text and Grammar exercises
- Part I. Architecture and Parts of Buildings
- Exercise 1. Listen to the first part of the text
- The beginning of Architecture
- Compared to other human activities, architecture
is a young art that had its beginnings only
10,000 years ago when men and women, having
discovered agriculture and husbandry, were able
to give up roaming the surface of the earth in
search of food. Until then they had been exposed
to the weather, precariously protected by tents
of animal skins. Perpetually on the move, they
cooked over campfires and gathered in small
tribes. - All of this changed when people became
sedentary. Tents were supplanted by more
substantial abodes, and a permanent hearth became
the center of the home. Numerous huts sprang up
in fertile areas villages grew. From village to
village a network of paths was worn. At times
paths had to cross rivers, requiring the
construction of footbridges made out of tree
trunks or suspended from ropes of vegetable
fibers. - In the last ten thousand years we who have
witnessed the incredible changes brought to our
cultures by the industrial revolution may feel
that architecture has not changed much, at least
over the last 6,000 years. Architecture is the
most conservative of the human arts. - Think how you can continue the text.
11- Exercise 2
- Put the verb into the correct form
- He (to start) his book A Visual Dictionary of
Architecture with a few ideas of different people
about architecture. - Architecture ( to depend) on Order, Arrangement,
Symmetry, Propriety, and Economy - Exercise 3
- Translate the sentences from English into
Russian. - Rural towns are sited, where possible, next to
rivers or springs, generally southerly slopes. - Walls are generally made wider just at the bottom
so as to get a better bearing on the ground
12Writing
- Write a abstract of the text. Compare your
abstract with ours.
13- Now you are ready to start Module 1. Go back to
the main page and enjoy.