Ex. 20. Speak on the topic: “Classification of ships”.
UNIT II
PASSENGER SHIPS
Ex. 1. Read and translate the words. Include them into your vocabulary:
Accommodation, cruising speed, car ferry, foil, hydrofoil, flare, flarecraft, body, lounge, drag, ground effect, fan, thrust, watch, kit, estuary, catamaran, sovereign, strait, Chunnel, schedule, horsepower, capacity, displacement, forerunner, priority, significance, review;
Switch, lie, dominate (over), admit, cease, pierce, resume, handle, abolish, trace, yield;
Afloat, kit-built, marshy, smart, urgent, notable, inferior
Ex.2. Insert the right word:
Fans, pierce, hydrofoil, afloat, car ferry, admit, dominated, switch, marshy, flarecraft, watch, drag, bodies.
1. Drivers can use a … to cross the channel. 2. The radio signal is poor. Let’s … to another wave. 3. A … is the fastest and rather comfortable way of sea journey. 4. The ¾ of earth surface is covered with large … of water. 5. The huge transatlantic liner … over the rest ships in the harbor. 6. The hovercraft and its high speed variant, the … , are propelled with large … . 7. The … garbage is a serious … for the boat moving. 8. We must … that in … areas it’s much more convenient to use hovercrafts than any other vessels. 9. The boat was moving at such a speed that it seemed to … the waves. 10. The … noticed the coming danger immediately.
Ex. 3. Change the words of italic type with their synonyms from your active vocabulary:
1. The development of hovercrafts as cross-channel vessels was stopped with the Chunnel construction in 2002. 2. The United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland is situated on the British Isles. 3. The upper-class sitting room on this liner is very spacious and comfortable. 4. The ability of the structure to resist the side pressure was also taken into account. 5. Buying a ticket provides you seat and service. 6. The Great Lakes are the natural reservoirs containing the largest quantities of water in North America. 7. This old boat is still aswim. 8. It is acknowledged that the boggy areas in the south of Belarus are the lungs of the region. 9. River deltas have always been a preferable place for settlement. 10. The double-hulled boat of ready-made parts is one of the most popular variant of a pleasure vessel.
Ex. 4. Define in one word:
a) a big air propeller using in hovercrafts;
b) the time period when a part of crewmen is responsible for the ship operation while the others are having a rest;
c) something which can be assembled of ready-made parts;
d) moving on the water surface;
e) a vessel for transporting vehicles along and across rivers, channels, bays, etc.
f) horizontal or side pressure;
g) a high-speed vessel, which raise itself on special foils over the water surface while moving;
h) a high-speed vessel on the air cushion.
Ex. 5. Translate into Russian:
-to stress passenger comfort
-the fastest ocean liner afloat
-to switch from sails to steam power
-because of a lack of passengers
-to offer the best accommodations
-railroad passenger cars
-largely because of
-high-speed transportation
-to offer serious competition
-relatively short distances
-to enter the race
-completely out of the water
-to take the lead in
-to provide fast trips for short
distances
-the dimensions of fashion and
luxury
-a powerful horizontal fan
-with free yaw on a course
-a strong, continuous thrust of air
-reliability of engines
-airplane-style propellers
-experience of helm's watch
-the commercial success
-at about half the cost
-rapid rises in fuel prices
-to lie at anchor
-small homebuilt and kit-built vehicles
-the pride of the nation's passenger fleet
-for both civil and military purposes
Ex. 6. Read and translate the text:
TEXT 2A
LINERS
The sailing packets that began to cross the Atlantic Ocean in the early 1800’s were the first ships to stress passenger comfort. From then on, shipping companies provided better and better passenger services. As ships switched from sails to steam power during the 1800’s, British companies
Pic. 2: The Normandie in dry dock
offered the best accommodations, largely because of Brunei's excellently designed ships.
Two British firms — the Cunard Line and the White Star Line — dominated transatlantic service until about 1900. Then, Germany's North German Lloyd Line and Hamburg American Line began to offer serious competition. Later, French and Dutch lines entered the race for transatlantic passenger business. Much of this business came from transporting immigrants from the Old World to the New World. The United States took the lead in providing service across the Pacific Ocean with the founding of the Pacific Mail Steamship Company in 1848. As various shipping lines competed for passengers, ships became larger, faster, and more luxurious.
The great age of the ocean liner came in the early 1900s. It reached its height in the 1930’s with the launching of three of the most luxurious ships
ever built. They were the Normandie of France and the Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth of Britain. These giants, each almost 1,000 feet (300 meters) long, crossed the Atlantic Ocean in just over four days. In 1942, a fire destroyed the Normandie as it lay in New York Harbor.
In designingthe hull of the ocean liners the dimensions of fashion and luxury sometimes dominated over sea worthiness. Huge surface
Pic. 3: The hull architecture of the ocean liner
volume in bow part of the liner hull caused navigation with free yaw on a course, which did not admit by bulb. The wide aft deck essentially limited opportunities of a storm rate choice. As a whole the storm safety depended mainly on reliability of engines and experience of helm's watch.
Pic. 4: Modern passenger liner
Beginning in the late 1940's, the airplane began to attract more and mo re transoceanic passengers. Today, jet planes fly daily between the world's great cities. They cross the sea in hours, not days, and at about half the cost of an ocean trip. Most ocean liners cannot compete with the airplane and have given up. During the 1960's, Britain sold the Queen Mary Pic. 5: The Queen Mary 2
and Queen Elizabeth to American investors who planned to make tourist attractions of the ships. In 1972, fire destroyed the Queen Elizabeth asit lay at anchor in Hong Kong Harbor. In 1951, American shipbuilders launched the United States, the pride of the nation's passenger fleet. The United States had a cruising speed of 33 knots and was the fastest ocean liner afloat. But in 1969, the ship stopped operating because of a lack of passengers. Today, the United States has no major passenger liner service across the Atlantic.
Pic. 6: The Queen Mary 2 in Comparison
Today, the only luxury liner to make transatlantic crossings is Britain's Queen Elizabeth 2, which was launched in 1967. It crosses the Atlantic from April until December and it carries passengers on a cruise around the world during the winter months. Most liners today are used as cruise ships to the Mediterranean, the Caribbean, and other vacation areas. Norway's Sovereign of the Seas, a cruise ship that began service in the Caribbean in 1988 can carry more passengers than any other ship. The Sovereign can carry almost 2,700 passengers and 750 crewmembers.
Ex.7. Answer the questions:
1. What were the first ships to stress passenger comfort? 2. What country offered the best accommodations for the passengers in the XIXth century and why? 3. What did transatlantic passenger business come from? 4. What was the reason that ships became larger, faster, and more luxurious? 5. What period is considered to be the great age of the ocean liner? 6. Why were the passenger liners of that time sometimes unsafe? 7. How can you explain a considerable decline of ocean liner service in the second half of the XXth century? 8. What for most liners are used today?
Ex. 8. Agree or disagree with the following statements. Give grounds to your answer:
1. Ships switched from sails to steam power in the XIXth century. 2. British shipping companies had no serious competitors till WWII. 3. The great age of the ocean liner reached its height in the first half of the XXth century. 4. In designing the liner hull the dimensions of sea worthiness and safety were taken into account first of all. 5. Today we can travel across the Atlantic on board several luxury liners. 6. The development of transatlantic liner service was ceased due to the appearance of long-distance airplanes. 7. Many liners stopped their service because of the high fares and lack of comfort. 8. Today, the USA is the only country, which has regular passenger liner service across the Atlantic. 9. Today, Norway's Sovereign of the Seas is the largest cruise ship in the world.
Ex. 9. Translate into English:
1. Британские пароходные компании предлагали лучшие условия для пассажиров благодаря превосходно спроектированным кораблям. 2. В конце XIX века Великобритания и Соединенные Штаты заняли лидирующее положение среди стран, предлагающих путешествия через океан. 3. Самыми фешенебельными из когда-либо построенных океанских лайнеров были французская «Нормандия» и британские «Королева Мэри» и «Елизавета». 4. Особенности конструкции корпуса океанских лайнеров являлись причиной «рыскания» на курсе и существенно ограничивали возможности при шторме. 5. Надежность двигателей и опыт вахтенных были основными факторами, от которых зависела безопасность корабля. 6. «Королева Елизавета» была уничтожена пожаром на якорной стоянке в Гонконгской гавани. 7. Так как американские пароходные линии прекратили существование из-за нехватки пассажиров, единственным трансатлантическим лайнером класса «люкс» остается британская «Королева Елизавета 2». 8. Сегодня большинство лайнеров используются в качестве круизных судов в зонах отдыха.