- •Indefinite Tense Active
- •Passive
- •Образец выполнения задания
- •Variant I
- •1. Translate the text in the written form. Criminology
- •2 Find in the text the English equivalents of the following.
- •3. Match the legal terms on the left with their definitions on the right.
- •4. Answer the folowing questions.
- •5. Use the Present Continuous Tense in the sentences instead of the Present
- •Indefinite Tense
- •6. Find in the text of task 1 sentences with Participle и Gerund. Translate
- •7. Translate the text in the written form. The british police
- •8. Translate the words and remember them.
- •9. Complete the following text with the words from the box.
- •10. Find in the text of task 7 the English equivalents of the following.
- •11. Use the Past Continuous tense in the sentences.
- •12. Put sentences into Passive Voice.
- •Variant II
- •1. Translate the text in the written form. Punishment
- •2. Answer the following questions.
- •3. Give the Russian equivalents of the following.
- •4. Translate the following sentences into English.
- •5.Write down the sentences. Find out Participle and Gerund. Translate the
- •6. Use the Present Continuous Tense in the sentences.
- •7. Translate the text in the written form. Police powers. Stop and search
- •8. Match the words on the left with their meanings on the right.
- •9. Answer the following questions.
- •10. Translate the sentences into English.
- •11. Write down the sentences. Point out tense and form of the detatched verbs.
- •12. Make the following sentences interrogative and negative.
- •Variant III
- •1. Translate the text in the written form. Capital punishment
- •6. Put the verbs into the Present and Past Continuous Tense.
- •7. Translate the text in the written form. Police powers. Arrest.
- •8. Answer the questions.
- •9. Give Russian equivalents of the following.
- •10. Match the words and their meanings.
- •11. Underline the predicates. Write down the tenses of the verbs. Translate the sentences.
- •12. Make the sentences interrogative and negative.
- •Variant IV
- •1. Translate the text in the written form. The tower of london
- •7. Translate the text in the written form. Police powes. Charging
- •8. Match the words with their Russian equivalents.
- •9. Answer the questions.
- •10. Complete the text with the words from the box.
- •11. Write down the sentences. Point out the tense and form of the detatched verbs.
- •12. Make sentences 1, 2, 4, 7 of task 11 interrogative and negative. Translate them from English into the native language.
- •Variant V
- •1. Translate the text in the written form. Scotland yard
- •2. Answer the questions.
- •3. Match the English words and their definitions.
- •4. Translate the sentences from Russian into English.
- •5. Use the Present and Past Continuous Tense in the sentences instead of Present and Past Indefinite.
- •6. Write down the sentences. Find out Participle and Gerund.
- •7. Translate the text in the written form. Jury service
- •8. Give the Russian equivalents of the following.
- •9. Answer the following questions.
- •10. Put in the missed words and translate the sentences.
- •11. Write down the sentences. Point out the tense and form of the detatched verbs.
- •12. Make sentences 2, 3, 4, 5 of task 11 interrogative and negative.
8. Match the words with their Russian equivalents.
1. capital punishment а) штраф
2. probation б) тюремное заключение
3. life imprisonment в) испытание
4. fine г) смертная казнь
5. suspended sentence д) пожизненное тюремное заключение
6. corporal punishment е) телесное наказание
7. imprisonment ж) отсрочка исполнения приговора
8. theft з) кража
9. Answer the questions.
In what case may be person released on bail?
When is the person kept in custody?
When the detained after charge must be brought before a magistrates’ court?
10. Complete the text with the words from the box.
misconduct, opinion polls, justice, sympathy, mob violence, failures, complaints, terrorist offence, to confess |
Most people have a positive attitude to the police, and ________ _________ have indicated that there is much public ___________ with men and women who have to deal with _________ _________. There is a formal system through which ________ of police behaviour may be investigated, but in the late 1990s it was found that these prosedures had not prevented some serious ________ in the system of administering ________. Some Ipish people had been convicted of a ______ ______ on the basis of confessions which had been improperly extracted from them. There were other cases too in which there were grounds for suspecting that the police had persuaded people ________ to crimes which they had not committed. Some other inquiries revealed more cases of ________ by the police.
11. Write down the sentences. Point out the tense and form of the detatched verbs.
1. In Europe and the United States prisoners enjoy rights to file their own suits, to have direct access to the federal courts and others.
2. Prison facilities are providing a powerful incentive to good conduct.
3. All over the world hundreds of thousands of people are being held in overcrowded and insanitary prisons.
4. In many countries prison populations increased substantially in recent years.
5. Large amounts of money are spent on locking people up.
6. Prison is probably not deterring many people from crime.
7. Under such conditions diseases were spreading very rapidly and they were often fatal.
12. Make sentences 1, 2, 4, 7 of task 11 interrogative and negative. Translate them from English into the native language.
Variant V
1. Translate the text in the written form. Scotland yard
Scotland Yard is a popular name for the headquarters of London’s Metropolitan Police Force, and especially its Criminal Investigation Department (CID). The name is derived from a small area where the headquarters was situated from 1829 to 1890. The area, in turn, was named after the residence of Scottish kings in London. The custom of referring to the headquarters as a police station began soon after the police was reorganised by the British statesman Sir Robert Peel in 1829. The headquarters was moved in 1890 to new buildings erected on the Thames Embankment, which were known as ‘New Scotland Yard’. In 1967 the present headquarters, a mordern 20-storey building situated near the Houses of Parliament, was opened.