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Answer the following questions.

1. Is Russia the largest country in the world?

2. What seas and oceans wash the coast of this country?

3. How many countries border on our country? What are they?

4. Are Russian flora and fauna various?

5. What are the highest mountains here?

6. What is the Baikal famous for?

7. What is the climate in Russia like?

8. What are the national symbols of Russia?

9. What does the Federal Assembly consist of?

10. Who is the head of each chamber of the Federal Assembly?

 

Exercise 3.

Suppose that you are a school teacher of geography. What are you going to inform your pupils of concerning our Homeland?

Text B. M O S C O W

Moscow is the capital and largest city of Russia. It’s also the capital of Moscow Oblast, and it stands on the Moskva River. Moscow is the economic, political and cultural centre of Russia. Railways and numerous airlines link the city with all parts of the country. Navigable waterways, including the Moscow Canal, the Moskva River and the Volga-Don Canal make Moscow a port of 5 seas: the Baltic, the White, the Black, the Caspian and the Azov seas.

Moscow covers an area of about 880 sq km. Concentric boulevards divide the city into several sections. At the centre of the concentric circles (and semicircles) are the Kremlin, the former governmental seat of Russia, and adjacent Red Square, which form the hub of a radial street pattern. Moscow has a modern underground system famous for its marble-walled stations.

Situated on the north bank of the Moskva River, the Kremlin is the dominant landmark of the city. A stone wall, up to 21 m in height and with 19 towers, surrounds this triangular complex of former palaces, cathedrals and other monuments of tsarist times, some of them dating from the Middle Ages. The Great Kremlin Palace,completed in 1849, is the most imposing structure within the Kremlin. Other notable palaces are the Granovitaya Palace (1491) and the Terem (1636).

Among the many cathedrals, now used mainly as museums, are the Cathedral of the Assumption and the Archangel Cathedral, each with 5 gilded domes, and the Cathedral of the Annunciation (13th – 14th century), with 9 gilded domes. Another landmark of the Kremlin is the Tower of Ivan the Great, a bell tower 98 m high. On a nearby pedestal is the Tsar’s Bell (nearly 200 tons), one of the largest in the world. A recent addition to the Kremlin is the Palace of Congresses, completed in 1961. In this huge modern building were held meetings of the Supreme Soviet of the USSR and congresses of the Communist party of the Soviet Union; theatrical and other artistic performances have been held here as well.

St. Basil’s Cathedral, famous for its unique architecture and colored domes, stands at one end of Red Square.

One of the best-known sections of Moscow is the Kitaigorod (Chinese City), the ancientcommercial quarter lying to the east of the Kremlin. This section is now the site of many government office buildings. Other points of interest in Moscow include the Central Lenin Stadium, comprising about 130 buildings for various sports; and the tall Ostankino TV tower, which contains a revolving restaurant and an observation platform.



Exercise 1.


Date: 2016-03-03; view: 944


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