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Text 4. Sports and Games (Sports in our Life)

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  1. Olympic Games
  2. Sports and Pastime.
  3. Text 1. What is better watching sports or participating in sports?
  4. The Ancient Olympic Games
  5. The Modern Olympic Games
  6. Think over 5 differences between Ancient Olympic Games (see the previous text) and Modern Olympic Games. Do you find them all advantages or disadvantages? Give your reasons.
  7. Unusual and Eccentric British Sports

 

Thousands of people go in for sports, because sports help people to keep in good health. The most popular sports in our country are field — and — track athletics, football, volleyball, basketball, hockey, gymnastics, skiing and skating. There are lots of stadiums, sports clubs, and sports grounds in our country.

If you want to keep fit, you must go in for one kind of sport or another.

Sport is an essential part of my daily life. Every morning all the year round I do my morning exercises. Almost every day I do some training. In summer I go swimming and rowing. I usually spend my winter holidays in the country where I ski, skate or toboggan. In every school pupils spend much time going in for sports. First of all they have their physical training lessons. From time to time every school organizes competitions in different kinds of sport. All my friends go in for different kinds of sports, such as water sports, gymnastics with or without apparatus, fencing, wrestling, boxing. Of all outdoor games I prefer football. Sport makes people strong, healthy, and gay, I like it very much.

The Olympic Games have a very long history. It is a very old tradition in the world of sports. History tells us that the tradition began more than two thousand years ago, in Greece.

All the cities sent their best athletes to the city of Olympus to compete in the games. During the Olympic Games all wars between the cities stopped and the people lived in peace.

The Olympic Games are the favourite sports of all countries — running, high — jumping, gymnastics, football, basket — ball, swimming, skiing, skating and other sports that young people in all countries go in for.

The Olympic Games take place every four years. The Olympic Games Committee decides the place of the Olympic Games and the sports that the athletes will compete in.

 

Text 5. Japan centenarians at record high (from "The English-Russian world").

 

The number of Japanese people hitting the landmark age of 100 has reached record levels. There are now 36,276 centenarians in the country – a rise of 4,000 on last year figure, a report by the Health and Welfare Ministry found. Women make up the vast majority of those who are living past 100. Japan has one of the world`s longest life expectancies, but there are concerns about the burden this is placing on society. Both the country`s pension system and social services are under pressure from its burgeoning greying population.

According to the latest figures, almost 20, 000 people were set to turn 100 this year alone – receiving a congratulatory silver cup and letter from the prime minister. While the number of Japan`s centenarians has been rising for the last 40 years, the figures have accelerated in the past decade. UN projections suggest there will be nearly one million people over 100 years of age in Japan in 2050. Of the country`s current centenarians, a staggering 86% are women. The ministry, which released its annual report ahead of Japan`s Respect For the Aged Day on 15 September, said its elderly population were living more active lives than ever. Japan`s oldest woman is 113 and lives on the southern island of Okinawa, the ministry said. The oldest man is 112-year-old Tomoji Tanabe from the southern prefecture of Miyazaki. He rises early, reads his morning newspaper, has milk in the afternoon and writes his diary in the evening. Matsu Yamazaki is 103 years old but still works in her family`s grocery shop in Tokio, looks after her home and does puzzles to keep her mind agile. "Even if I go on living, I just don`t want to lose my mind," she told the BBC in July. "I know lots of people who have lost their memory. They go out and wander around town and can`t find their way home." The key to Japanese longevity has long been put down to a number of factors, including healthy diets, strong communities and excellent medical care.

 

 


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