II. Complete the useful expressions for checking into and out of a hotel
1. Good………………………………………….a reservation.
2. I’m staying for……………………………………………..
3. How…………….this…………………………………….?
4. Do………………………………..call tomorrow morning?
5. Could you tell me where…………………………………?
6. Good morning………………………………………please.
7. I’m afraid…………………………..with the remote control
8. I had a bottle of mineral water and…………………………
9. Can……………………………………..American Express?
10. Would it be OK…………………………………….here?
Speaking
1. Role-play checking into a hotel. You have a reservation for a double room for three nights at the Hotel Suisse in Lucerne. You need to know if there is a safe in your room and how it works. You would like to have dinner in the hotel and you need an alarm call every morning at 6 o’clock. Your partner will be the receptionist.
2. Role-play checking out of the same hotel. You’ve had a couple of things from the minibar, and, unfortunately, you dropped a bottle of champagne. You have also made several calls home. You would like to pay by credit card, and you need a taxi to go to the railway station. Your partner will be the receptionist.
Writing
Write a short review of your stay at the Imperial Hotel to post on their website. Include your opinion about your room, the food, the service, and the location of the hotel. Invent any details you need.
Lesson 5. Getting around the town
Warm up
· Some people say that men never want to ask for directions when they are lost. What is your opinion? What do you do?
· Are you good at giving directions? What are good directions?
Active Vocabulary
I. Translate the words and phrases and try to pronounce them correctly.
how do I get to ……? | opposite |
what's the best way to ……? | near |
where is …..? | next to |
go straight on (until you come to ….). | between |
turn back/go back | at the end (of) |
turn left/right (into ……-street). | on/at the corner |
go along …… | behind |
cross ……. | in front of |
take the first/second road on the left/right | (just) around the corner |
it's on the left/right | traffic lights |
straight on | crossroads, junction |
Reading
I. Skim the text for general understanding. Pay attention to the words in bold.
Travel scams
So, you arrive at your holiday destination, looking forward to a stress-free fortnight away from it all, but no sooner do you get off the plane than you’re tricked outof $ 200 of your spending money. That’s what happened to me, anyway, and I’ll tell you how. I took a taxi to my hotel, as everything was looking a little strange. When we stopped, I gave the driver a $100 bill, but he waved it in my face saying I’d confusedit with a $1note. So I gave him another bill, and while I was thanking him for pointing out my mistake, he drove off. It wasn’t until I got to my hotel room that I realized he’d somehow pocketed my first $ 100 bill and got me to give him another one. As simple as that. But the taxi dodge is only one of the many travel scams used to relieve tourists of their money and belongings. Here are five more common scams to watch out for when you’re far away from home:
1_____
You are walking down the street, enjoying a bit of the local culture and admiring the architecture, when splat! A large piece of what likes bird poo lands on your shoulders, dirtying your best holiday clothes.
Suddenly a person appears with a cloth and offers to wipe off the mess, complaining about the pigeons that live in their city. Beware. While cleaning you up, they will also be robbing you of all the valuables in your pockets.
2_____
You are at the airport and you put your laptop on the luggage scanner conveyor belt before waiting behind two people to go trough the metal detector. The first passes with no problems, but the detector goes off when the second person goes through. They then proceed to remove all their jewellery and empty their pockets of everything from coins to chewing gum. By the time you get through the machine the first person has disappeared, and so has your laptop.
3._____
You are delighted to find that changing your money on the black market from the suspicious-looking guy on the corner will give you a much better rate than at the bureau of change or the hotel front desk, and there’s no commission either. You hand over your cash to get a huge number of notes, which you rush to put away before someone can take them. Counting your money in the hotel room, you realize you’ve been handed a pile of worthless notes.
4_____
There you are feeling very pleased with yourself for managing to find an empty compartment. While waiting for your train to leave the station, someone on the platform taps at the window calling to you. You go to find them, only to see them run off. When you return to your seat, you find an even emptier compartment–your bags have been stolen.
5_____
A friendly stranger starts talking to you and while you are chatting away, a policeman approaches. He says he is looking for some false banknotes and asks to see your passport and money. The other traveler hand his over and gets them back. When you hand over your cash, the policeman and the traveler disappear with it.
Scam–a trick which is designed to take money from people in a dishonest way.
Business One: One, Oxford University Press
Reading comprehension
I. Read the text once again and find in the text English equivalents for the following Russian phrases:
обмануть, перепутать с чем-либо, указать на ошибку, купюра, афера/обман, имущество, протирать/вытирать, обокрасть, драгоценности, портативный ноутбук, пункт обмена валюты, горсть ничего не стоящих монет, купе в вагоне, стучать в окно, фальшивомонетчик.