Consolidation of grammar.



a) Write questions in the present continuous or present simple.

A What are you eating? (you / eat) B Besparmak.

1 A Where ___________ lunch today? (you / have) B At home. My mum’s making kuyrdak

2 A What ______________? (he / do) B He is an accountant.

3 A _________________ this weekend? (you / go away) B No, we are staying here.

4 A ________________ to eat out tonight? (you / want) B Yes, that would be nice. Where shall we go?

5 A What ______________? (she / cook) B I don’t know, but it smells good.

 

b) She goes to the gym three times a week. (go)

1. He _______________ at home today. (work)

2. __________ you usually _____________ late? (get up)

3. They __________ usually ____________ a big meal in the evening. (not have)

4. What ___________ you ______________ tonight? (do)

5. I ______________ going out to restaurants. (love)

 

 

Exercise 1. Warming up. Before reading the text, answer the questions. Then read the text and translate the 3rd paragraph

1 Is food a pleasure for you?

2 What do you normally eat in a typical day?

3 What food is healthier in Kazakh cuisine?

4 Do you ever eat “unhealthy” food? How do you feel about it?

5 What food in Kazakh cuisine do you like most?

 

Kazakh cuisine

Traditional Kazakh cuisine revolves around mutton and horse meat as well as various milk products. For hundreds of years, Kazakhs were herders who raised fat-tailed sheep, Bactrian camels, and horses, relying on these animals for transportation, clothing, and food. The cooking techniques and major ingredients have been strongly influenced by the nation’s nomadic way of life. For example, most cooking techniques are aimed at long-term preservation of food. There is large practice of salting and drying meat so that it will last, and there is a preference for sour milk, as it is easier to save in a nomadic lifestyle.

Meat in various forms has always been the primary ingredient of Kazakh cuisine, and traditional Kazakh cooking is based on boiling. Horse and mutton are the most popular forms of meat and are most often served in large uncut pieces, which have been boiled. Kazakhs cared especially for horses which they intended to slaughter-keeping them separate from other animals and feeding them so much that they often became so fat they had difficulty moving.


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