26- ] Spelling & Vocabulary Enrichment .
Fine
Arts
The arts .
A-] Things which
generally come under the heading of ‘the arts’ :
Literature
l
biographies short stories
l l
novels - drama poetry
Fine Arts
l
architecture ----- painting
ceramics sculpture
Performing Arts
l
theater cinema
drama ballet
opera , concerts : classical / rock /country & Western
- ‘The arts’ [plural] covers everything
in the network . ‘Art’ [ singular , uncountable ] usually means ‘fine art’ ,
but can also refer to technique and creativity .
-Have you read the ‘arts page’ in the
paper today ? [ that part of the newspaper that deals with all the things in
the network ]
- She’s great ‘art lover’ . [ loves
painting and sculpture ]
- Shakespeare was skilled in ‘the art
of poetry . [ creative ability ]
- ‘Dance’ usually refers to modern
artistic dance forms : ballet usually has a more traditional feel , unless we
say ‘modern ballet’ .
- A ‘novel’ is a long story , e.g.
200-300 pages ; a piece of short prose fiction , e.g. 10 pages is a ‘short
story’ .
B-] Use of ‘the’ -
definite article : When we refer to a
performing art in general , we can leave out the definite article [the] .
- Are you interested in cinema / ballet
/ opera / theatre ?
- But : Would you like to come to the
cinema / ballet / opera / theatre with us next week ? [ particular performance ]
C-] Describing a
performance :
We went to see a new ‘production’ of
Hamlet last night . The ‘sets’[ scenery , buildings , furniture on the stage or
in a studio ] were incredibly realistic and the ‘costumes’
[ clothes the actors wear on stage ]
were wonderful . It was a good ‘cast’ [ all the actors in it ] and I thought
the ‘direction’ [ the way the director had organized the performance ] was
excellent . The actors ‘gave’ a marvelous ‘performance’ . It ‘got rave
reviews’ [ means got very enthusiastic comments ] in the papers today .
C-] Words connected with
events in the arts :
- there’s an ‘exhibition’ of paintings
by Manet ‘on’ in London .
- They’re going to ‘publish’ a new
‘edition’ of the ‘works’ of Shaw next year .
- The Opera Society are doing a
‘performance’ of Don Giovanni .
- Our local cinema’s ‘showing’ Titanic
next week .
Music .
A-] Buying music :
- Many people now buy music on CD .
- ‘album’ [ a recording of a selection
of songs / tracks / pieces of music on a CD or cassette ]
- ‘hit singles’ [ best selling songs
issued individually ]
- ‘lead singer’ [ main singer in a band
]
- ‘backing’ [ the group providing the
background music /vocals for the song ]
B-] Types of music :
Music can be described in terms of the
instruments playing it : ‘piano music’ , ‘guitar music’ , ‘big band music’ ,
‘instrumental music’ [ instruments only with no vocals
[ voices , singing ], ‘electronic
music’ [ played be a synthesizer ] , ‘orchestral music’.
country & Western ---------blues
chamber music ------------- folk ------------ jazz
heavy metal -----------pop ---------classical
soul
country & Western ---------blues
chamber music ------------- folk ------------ jazz
heavy metal -----------pop ---------classical
soul
- ‘Western’ [ a style of US music based
on western a folk music ] .
- ‘chamber music’ [ written for a small
group of orchestral instruments ]
- ‘folk’ [ traditional ]
- The dinner was lovely , but the
‘background music’ was just too loud . We couldn’t talk .
- It’s difficult to concentrate on
work when there’s ‘dance music’ playing
.
- The ‘soundtrack’ of that film is
fantastic . I think it won an Oscar . [ music for a film]
I don’t really like restaurants where
they play ‘muzak’ [ recorded , light music played continuously in public places
; you can also say ‘canned music’ or ‘piped music’ ] .
- Music can be described in terms of its
period or place of origin :
‘contemporary’ , ‘modern’ , ‘20th
century’ , ‘ ‘sixties’ , ‘Irish’ , ‘Indian music’
C-] Other adjectives used to describe music :
- ‘live’ , ‘recorded’ , ‘deafening’ ,
‘loud’ , ‘rousing’ , ‘soft’ , ‘sweet’ , ‘innovative’ , ‘tuneless’ ,
‘discordant’ , ‘tuneful’ , ‘soothing’ , ‘relaxing’ , ‘peaceful’ , ‘modern’
D-] Things you do with
music :
- She ‘plays the piano’ very well , but
she doesn’t ‘read music’ .
- She’s got ‘ a good ear’ . [informal]
– She can ‘pick out’ any tune on the piano .[informal
- She doesn’t have to ‘practice’ much
at all . She’s ‘natural’ . [informal] .She can ‘play by ear’ .
- He’s very ‘musical’ . He ‘wrote an
arrangement of / arranged’ a Bach symphony for the band .
- You can ‘play a tune’ on an
instrument or you can ‘whistle’ [make a sound by pushing air through your lips]
or ‘hum’ [sing with lips closed] . You can ‘make music’ in lots of ways .
- I’ve some new ‘chords’ on the guitar
[several harmonizing notes played at the same time] .
- I have to ‘practice’ my ‘scales’ ,
but it’s boring . [sets of notes moving up and down in steps ]
Sport .
A- ] Some sports you may
not know :
-‘hang-gliding’ , ‘windsurfing’ , ‘[ten-pin] bowling’ ,
‘scuba-diving’ , ‘cross-country skiing’ , ‘show-jumping’ , ‘fencing’ , ‘snooker
/pool / billiards’ , ‘motor-racing’ , ‘archery’.
B-] Equipment - what you hold in your hand :
- ‘golf’ : ‘club’ , - ‘squash’/
‘tennis’ / ‘badminton’ : ‘racket’ – ‘darts’ : ‘dart’ ,
‘cricket’/ ‘table-tennis’ / ‘baseball’ : ‘bat’ ,- ‘[ice] hockey’ :
‘stick’ , - ‘snooker’ / ‘pool’/
‘billiards’: ‘cue’ , - ‘canoeing’ :
‘paddle’ , - ‘rowing’ : ‘oar’ , - ‘fishing’ : ‘rod’ / ‘line’
C-] Athletics – some
field events : -‘discus’ ,
-‘javelin’ , -‘high-jump’ , -long-jump’
- ‘pole-vault’ .
- She’s a great ‘sprinter’ [fast over
short distances ] . – She’s running the ‘final leg’ in the ‘relay’ . I hope
no-one drops the ‘baton’ .
- He’s a great ‘long-distance’ runner .
[e.g. 5000 meters , marathon]
- ‘Jogging’ round the park every
Saturday’s enough for me . It keeps me fairly fit .
D-] Verbs and their
collocations in the context of sport :
- Our team ‘won’ / ‘lost’ by three
‘goals’ / ‘points’ .
- She ‘broke’ the Olympic ‘record’ last
year .
- He ‘holds the record’ for the 100 meters
‘breast-stroke’ .
- Liverpool ‘beat’ Hamburg 4-2
yesterday .
- How many ‘goals’ / ‘points’ have you
‘scored’ this ‘season’ ?
- I think I’ll ‘take up’ bowling next
spring and ‘give up’ golf .
E-] People who do
particular sports :
- ‘er’ can be used for many sports ,
e.g. ‘footballer’ , ‘swimmer’ , ‘windsurfer’ , ‘high-jumper’ , ‘cricketer’ ,
‘golfer’ , etc.
- ‘Player’ is often necessary , e.g.
‘tennis-player’ , ‘snooker-player’ , ‘darts-player ‘ , and we can also say
‘football-player’ , ‘cricket-player’ .
- Some names must be learnt separately
, e.g. ‘canoeist’ , ‘mountaineer’ , ‘jockey’ , ‘archer’ [not archerer] ,
‘gymnast’ .