Unit 10 A Horse and Two Goats - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 112
About This Presentation
Title:

Unit 10 A Horse and Two Goats

Description:

Dowsing, not doing much, or just watching two goats graze in the pasture Slow life, boring, but a pastoral style Not rich, poor village 3. What ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:963
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 113
Provided by: pettGxtc
Category:
Tags: dowsing | goats | horse | two | unit

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Unit 10 A Horse and Two Goats


1
Unit 10 A Horse and Two Goats
2
Teaching Objectives
  • Topic Non-verbal communication
  • Grammar points adj. with an infinitive structure
    (including it is adj. to do for/of Np to do
    )
  • Vocabulary massive, disturb, plead, sacred,
    capital, replace, ingratiating, respectful, get
    out of sight, react to, refer to, dawn on, pace
    (v.), at the thought of, make somebody an offer
    for, sound policy to do
  • Writing Writing a good beginning

3
Unit 10 A Horse and Two Goats
Listening and Speaking Activities
Reading Comprehension and Language Activities
Extended Activities
Fun time
4
Listening and Speaking Activities
  • 1. Brainstorming
  • 2. Listening
  • 3. Speaking

5
Warming up
What is the purpose of language? Language is used
to communicate or tell people thoughts, feelings
and reactions.
6
Ways of communicating
Spoken language
Written language
Body language
7
What is body language?
Body language is one form of nonverbal
communication (?????) without using words. Eye
contact or gaze, facial expression, gesture (??),
and posture (??), or the way you stand, are
different kinds of body language.
8
Discuss the following questions.
  • In addition to verbal messages, what other means
    can human beings use for communication?
  • List at least two means and explain how they
    work.

9
Suggested points
  • Facial expressions (A more complicated system is
    LIP-READING.)
  • Gestures (A more complicated system is the sign
    language for the deaf or dumb.)

10
Speak while enjoying the picturesfacial
expressions.
11
fearful
12
happy
13
sad
14
sad, upset
15
angry
16
angry
17
confused
18
surprised
19
shy
20
contempt
disgust
anger
fear
joy
sorrow
surprise
21
confident
22
naughty
23
excited
depressed
24
ok
stop
good/well done
silent
25
applause
victory
26
Good/ Well done!
27
Bad!
28
Come here!
29
Good luck!
30
Me?
31
I dont know!
32

What does it mean?
Goodbye!
33
Brainstorming
  1. Expressions for understanding and getting the
    message across
  2. Expressions for failure of communication
  3. Expressions for emotional states
  4. Expressions for body language
  5. Expressions for differentiating between various
    meanings

34
Expressions for understanding and getting the
message across
  • understand, know, learn, acquire (knowledge,
    information), have an idea of, take / get the
    message, be well informed about something, get /
    put the message across, express, reveal, display,
    make oneself understood, dawn on somebody,
    something clicks in one's mind, something occurs
    to someone

35
Expressions for failure of communication
  • misunderstand, don't know .., be confused
    about...., get ... wrong, take too much for
    granted, be ignorant about something, have
    misconceptions about...., be biased / prejudiced
    against... be puzzling / puzzled, be mystifying
    / mystified, make a faux pas (a culturally
    embarrassing mistake), blunder in etiquette

36
3. Expressions for emotional states
  • happy/ unhappy, satisfied / dissatisfied,
    friendly / unfriendly, hospitable, hostile, cold,
    enthusiastic, be embarrassed / embarrassing, sad,
    depressed, low-spirited, moody, cheerful,
    delighted, glad, overjoyed

37
4. Expressions for body language
  • nod, winking, raise ones eye-brows, stare at
    somebody, avert one's eyes from somebody, pout
    one's lips, stick out ones tongue, make a face,
    put on a smiling/good / happy face, move / turn
    one's head, wave, beckon, palm up down, take
    ... into ones arms, kiss someone on the cheek/
    mouth/ forehead etc.. / touch, eye contact, his
    /her eyes speak for herself... ., a cloud crosses
    his/her face ...., be red in the face, blush, beam

38
Go on enjoy body languages.
39
baby kiss
handshake
hug
kiss your hand to sb.
bow
shake
nod
40
5. Expressions for differentiating between
various meanings
  • meaning(s), nuances of meaning, (fine) shades of
    meaning, tell the slight differences between
    ...., recognize the importance / significance
    of...., realize serious consequences, capture
    the delicate meaning of , ... actions speak
    louder than words

41
Listening
  • An Unusual Medium of Communication
  • Task
  • 1. Report the gist of the story.
  • 2. Answer the questions in P137.

42
pre-listening questions
  1. Do we blow whistles for communication? When might
    you hear a whistle?
  2. Explain what are the cultural meanings and rules
    for the following body language in different
    cultures.

43
Listening
  • 1.When and where did the speaker discover the
    whistled speech?
  • 2.How did Mr. Martinez and the corn seller
    communication with each other?
  • 3.Why did the speaker decide to stay longer with
    Mr. and Mrs. Martinez?
  • 4.What did the speaker finally find out about the
    whistled speech used in the community?

script
44
An Unusual Medium of Communication
  • Human beings sometimes have to employ unusual
    methods of communication, such as sign language
    or lip-reading on occasions when they cannot get
    their meanings across with spoken language, or
    when using language to communicate becomes less
    convenient or impossible. Some examples of the
    various forms of sign language are those used by
    deaf or dumb people, by football or basketball
    referees, traffic policemen, and auctioneers to
    name but a few. But perhaps the most unusual
    method of communication is a kind of whistled
    speech, which I found in Mexico recently.

45
  • It was in a remote area in Mexico where I was
    traveling last month that I found some members of
    a community who live there using the whistled
    speech. I stayed in Mr. Martinez's house for the
    night, and when I got up in the morning, I saw
    him standing in front of his hut, whistling to a
    man a considerable distance away. The man was
    carrying a load of corn. Perhaps he was going to
    the market to sell it. The man answered Mr.
    Martinez with whistling. The interchange was
    repeated several times with different whistles.

46
  • Finally the man turned around and came up the
    footpath to Mr. Martinez's hut. Without saying a
    word he dumped his load on the ground. Mr.
    Martinez looked the load over, went into his hut,
    returned with some money, and paid the man the
    asking price. The man turned and left. Not a word
    had been spoken. They had talked, bargained over
    the price, and come to an agreement satisfactory
    to both parties, but they only used whistling as
    a medium of communication.

47
  • Originally I planned to leave for the next
    village after breakfast, but now I was extremely
    interested in this special way of communication
    and I decided to stay a little longer to find
    more. As Mr. and Mrs. Martinez had to go out on
    some business during the day, I had no chance to
    talk to them. When they came back, they told me
    that they had a successful day and they invited
    me to have dinner with them. I thought it was a
    good chance for me to talk to them, so I accepted
    their invitation happily.

48
  • I had expected them to whistle to each other at
    dinner, but they spoke in the normal way. I
    couldn't resist the temptation to ask them why
    they didn't whistle. Mr. Martinez laughed and
    explained Whistling is the man's privilege in
    their community and only men can use it. Women
    understand what it means but they never use it
    themselves. And, what's more, the whistled speech
    is mostly for business purposes, for bargaining,
    buying and selling in the market place. As to
    when they started this tradition and why they
    have kept it up, neither of them had the
    slightest idea. But I was quite satisfied with my
    investigation, and the next morning, I thanked
    Mr. And Mrs. Martinez for their hospitality, said
    goodbye to them, and went on with my journey.

49
  • The speaker discovered the whistled speech while
    he was traveling in a remote area in Mexico the
    previous month. He found that some members of the
    tribe that live there use the whistled speech to
    communicate.

listening
50
  • Instead of talking in words, they whistled to
    each other. In this way, they bargained over the
    price and came to an agreement satisfactory to
    both allowing Mr. Martinez to buy the sellers
    corn.

listening
51
  • He decided to stay longer because he was very
    interested in the whistled speech and wanted to
    find more about it.

listening
52
  • He learned from Mr. Martinez that only men in
    their community use the whistled speech. It is
    used mostly for business purposes, for
    bargaining, buying and selling in the market
    place.

listening
53
3. Speaking
  • A Get your meaning across

54
Reading Comprehension and Language
Activities
  • 1. Pre-reading activity
  • 2. Questions for general comprehension
  • 3. Summaries
  • 4.Questions for discussion

55
lead-in activity
  • Cross-talking

56
A Horse
and
Two Goats
57
1. Where did the story take place?
  • A mountain village in India, at the village
    entrance,
  • The local language Tamil, not English as readers
    may assume

58
2. What was the old man doing at the
beginning of the story? Guess what kind of life
he led in the village.
  • Dowsing, not doing much, or just watching two
    goats graze in the pasture
  • Slow life, boring, but a pastoral style
  • Not rich, poor village

Question for general understanding
59
3. What did the old man take the American
tourist for at the beginning? And why did he
think so?
  • A police officer
  • Dressed in Khaki jacket, like a policeman in
    uniform
  • A murder not long ago in his neighborhood
  • Perhaps police the only uniform-dressed people
    he knew about

Question for general understanding
60
4.How did the American try to make the old
man understand him and what was the result?
  • Explaining everything at length, uttering each
    syllable carefully, pausing from time to time
  • Smiling politely, trying to be friendly
  • Causing more misunderstanding than successful
    communication

Question for general understanding
61
5.What was special about the horse statute
according to the old man?
  • The horse a sacred image a future
    reincarnation as the tenth avatar
  • Avatar the Guardian, the Redeemer, to save the
    villagers, and punish the wicked or evils at the
    end of the world
  • The horse hope of future bliss and eternal
    happiness for the villagers

Question for general understanding
62
6.What made the old man believe that the
American wanted to buy his two goats?
  • The American flourished the 100-rupee note, his
    eyes, his patting the goats on the backs etc.
  • His long-time dream to exchange goats for money
    for his projects

Question for general understanding
63
7.What did the old man mean by pointing at
the wagon and what did the American mean by
saying Yes, of course?
  • For the old man taking the goats away in that
    vehicle?
  • For the American taking the horse statue away in
    that wagon

Question for general understanding
64
8. Analyze the reasons for the failure of
communication between the old man and the
American tourist.
  • Suggested reasons
  • No common language (Language barrier)
  • Lack of shared information between them (The
    American tourist had no knowledge about the horse
    statue he took it as a commodity but the idea
    of selling the horse statute was last thing that
    the old man would think of.)
  • Body language is a useful means of communication
    in expressing emotions such as anger, happiness,
    satisfied, or complacency, but very limited in
    its informative power such as expressing the
    concept of murder, neighborhood, avatar, a good
    citizen, punish the evil, or get help for you etc.

Question for general understanding
65
9.The writer did not tell the readers what
finally happened to the American tourist. Imagine
an ending to the story.
  • This is an open question. Use your imagination to
    think.

Question for general understanding
66
3 Summarise the story
  • The story is about an encounter
    between an old Indian villager and an American
    tourist in India, neither of whom understand the
    other's language. As a result, the American's
    intention of buying the statue of a horse is
    misunderstood by the Indian as an offer to buy
    his two goats.

67
Reproduce the story
  • Work with your partner to act out the dialogue
    between the old man and the American tourist.
    Suppose both of them can speak English and then
    you will see how comical their conversation is.

68
Reproduce the story
  • The American tourist and the old Indian man
    talked at cross-purposes, i.e. they misunderstood
    and talked irrelevantly to each other. Suppose
    you were the son or daughter of the old man and
    understood English. Now, help your father to
    complete the following dialogue so that the
    conversation makes sense.

69
Body language
  • 1. Correct understanding The American tourist
    showed an interest in the statue and was
    overwhelmed by its beauty and craftsmanship.
  • The Indians interpretation The man in the khaki
    shirt behaved strangely, pacing around the
    statue, he seemed to be thinking hard about
    something. He must be a police officer, coming to
    investigate a recent murder in the neighborhood.

70
  • 2. Intended message The American happened to
    look in the direction of the goats. He was going
    to offer a cigarette to the old man to start a
    friendly conversation.
  • The Indians interpretation The policeman
    understood that those two goats were my property,
    not stolen animals. Look. Hes going to smoke. It
    seems he's not in a hurry to leave and he's going
    to question me about the murder.

71
  • 3. Intended message The American tourist was
    trying to be nice and friendly to the old man
    because he wanted to get more information out of
    him.
  • The Indians interpretation The policeman
    probably had no more doubts about me concerning
    the murder.

72
4.
  • Intended message The American tourist was making
    the Indian an offer for the statue.
  • The Indians interpretation The policeman wanted
    to change a large note.

73
5.
  • Intended message The old man thought it funny
    that people should expect a poor man like him to
    be able to change a large note.
  • The Americans interpretation The old man
    thought one hundred rupees was not enough. He was
    trying to get a better bargain.

74
6.
  • Intended message He might look at his goats by
    chance, or he might do it when he remembered
    just then how much the village headman disliked
    him and his animals.
  • The Americans interpretation The old man
    seemed to love his pets. Perhaps it would be good
    policy to show an interest in the old man's goats.

75
7.
  • Intended message He wanted to show the old man
    that he also loved his goats.
  • The Indians interpretation The foreigner showed
    an interest in my goats. Oh. Yes. He wanted to
    buy them.

76
8.
  • Intended message The Indian wanted to know if
    the American was going to ship the goats home in
    that vehicle.
  • The Americans interpretation The old man
    was asking if I was going to ship the statue home
    in the vehicle.

77
9.
  • Intended message The old man was grateful for
    this foreigner who helped him to make his dream
    come true. He went away quickly because he was
    afraid the goats might follow him. If that
    happened, he would not get the money he needed.
  • The Americans interpretation The old man
    was grateful for the money and had gone to get
    some help to move the heavy statue into my
    vehicle.

78
(No Transcript)
79
Para 1
  • The story took place in a small mountain village
    called Kiritam in India. The villagers there
    speak the native language of Tamil and, as
    readers will soon find out, do not understand
    English.

Language points and vocabulary
80
Para 1
  • massive guardian The horse was worshipped by the
    villagers as a protector of the village. Massive
    indicates that the horse statue is not only large
    in size, but also heavy in weight.
  • Here is one more example The new stadium is a
    massive building.

81
massive
  • ????????
  • a massive piece of furniture.
  • a massive dose of a drug.
  • ???????
  • Try
  • The old castle was surrounded by ______ walls.

massive
82
  • in the shape of a prancing horse having the
    shape of a horse springing up from its hind legs.

Para 1
83
Para 1
  • his tail looped up with a flourish
  • The horses tail curled up spiritedly. A
    flourish is a decorative display intended to make
    people notice it.

84
Para 1
  • an old man was drowsing
  • An old man was failing into a light sleep.

85
Para 1
  • station wagon It is a kind of vehicle with
    removable seats and an area behind the seats for
    suitcases, bags, etc.
  • A station wagon is usually bigger than an
    ordinary car.

86
Para 2
  • khaki-coloured shirt yellowish brown shirt.
    Khaki is a type of fabric for jackets, which is
    often used for making army uniforms because it
    wears well. Thats why the old man took the
    American for a police officer.

87
Para 3
  • Tamil An official language spoken in Tamil Nadu
    state in India, and also one of the languages of
    Sri Lanka, Singapore and several regions in the
    Indian Ocean and the Middle East.

88
Para 3
  • My name is Muni, and the two goats are mine and
    mine only
  • The old man introduced himself to the American
    and emphasized that the two goats were his
    property. Hence the relationship between the
    goats and Indian is made explicit. This also
    shows that he wanted to make it clear to the
    police officer that he was a good man.

89
Para 8
  • ingratiatingly respectfully, showing respect.
    The American tourist was trying to please the old
    man with a friendly humble smile.
  • Ingratiatingly is often used disapprovingly of
    someone who tries to make himself liked by other
    people in a humble manner. Another word with
    similar meaning but different connotation is
    gratefully, which is often used in a positive
    way.

90
ingratiating
  • 1)Pleasing agreeable
  • ??????????
  • Reading requires an effort. . . . Print is not
    as ingratiating as television(Robert MacNeil)
  • ??????????????????????(???????)

91
ingratiating
2) Calculated to please or win favor ???????,???
an unctuous, ingratiating manner. ?????,?????
92
Para 9
  • Our village has always had a clean record Our
    village has never had any crime. If someone has a
    clean record, he has no criminal record or has
    not done anything dishonest or immoral.

93
Para 13
  • at the end of Notice the difference between at
    the end of and in the end, the former for time,
    the latter for sequence or logical reasoning.

94
relate v. to narrate or tell.
  • He related the whole story of the long-standing
    dispute between the two families.
  • ???????????????.

95
Para 13
  • the tenth avatar, God Vishnu, and the Redeemer
    According to Hinduism, these three terms are
    different expressions referring to the same
    human-shaped or animal-shaped reincarnations of a
    god who lives in the spiritual and eternal world
    in heaven, and comes down as Avatar to punish the
    evil and save the good in the world.

96
Para 15
  • A conversation leading to mutual mystification
    followed
  • They continued to talk at cross purposes.

97
Para 15
  • drive a bargain for try to get a cheaper price
    for.

98
Para 17
  • the like of which a fairly formal usage, meaning
    here notes of this kind/ notes of such a large
    amount of money. This sentence indicates the
    poverty of the old man in the story. The
    expression can have another form the likes of

99
Para 18
  • I guess I could go a little higher I would be
    willing to offer more (if this is not enough.)

100
Para 20
  • sound policy a good idea or plan

101
Sound 1.based on truth or good judgment not
likely to be wrong2.in good condition without
disease or damage 3. solid firm strong
  • I think that it is sound policy to ban smoking in
    all public places.

????????????????????.
102
Para 21
  • dawn on (The idea) came to him all of a sudden.
    The old man thought that he suddenly understood
    the Americans intention. He was interested in
    the two goats!

103
Dawn on begin to appear grow clear ( to the
mind)
  • It dawned on me that he was actually trying to
    help me.
  • It suddenly dawned on the father that his son was
    lying.

?????????????.
104
Offer v. to hold out ( to a person) for
acceptance or refusaln. something which is
offered
  • The foreigner made the old woman an offer of
    1000 for the old jar, and she found herself
    unable to refuse.

?????????????????????,????????.
105
Para 21
  • capital money. Notice the different words for
    money Capital is more often used to mean the
    money to set up or expand a business fund is a
    sum of money collected for a special purpose, for
    example, to aid people who are in need of it.

106
Para 21
  • on this very spot an emphatic way of saying in
    this place. Very (adj.) is often used with a noun
    for emphasis.
  • For example, on that very day at that very
    moment.

107
Para 17
  • the like of which a fairly formal usage, meaning
    here notes of this kind/ notes of such a large
    amount of money. This sentence indicates the
    poverty of the old man in the story. The
    expression can have another form the likes of

108
at the thought of thinking of
  • She would burst into tears at the thought of her
    child killed in a traffic accident.
  • The prisoner felt regret at the thought of his
    past.

??????????????????.
109
Translation
  • 1. In the traditional Chinese opera, The White
    Snake who comes down to the earth in the shape of
    a beautiful girl and falls in love with Xuxian to
    whom she gets married later.
  • 2. She feels dizzy at the sight of blood.

110
Translation
  • 3.He kept drowsing in class this morning.
  • 4.He related the whole story of the long-standing
    dispute between the two families.

111
Translation
  • 5. She would burst into tears at the thought of
    her child killed in a traffic accident.
  • 6. It dawned on me that he was actually trying to
    help me.

112
Translation
  • 7. The cave for the three of them to hide in was
    no more than two meters high.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com