domingo, 8 de junio de 2014

SOCIAL SCIENCE-GLOSSARY UNIT 9 & 10

UNIT 9
Freight: goods or produced transported by ship, aircraft, train, lorry or van.
Capital flows: the large amounts of money being moved around the world.
Exports: goods or services that are sold outside the country where they are produced.
Imports: goods or services that are brought into a country from abroad for sale.
Balance of trade: the difference between the monetary value of the exports and the imports of a country.
Balance of payments: a record of all monetary transactions between a country and the rest of the world.
Retail: a type of trade in which businesses sell small quantities of goods directly to consumers.
Wholesale: trade in which buyers purchase large quantities of goods and sell them in smaller quantities to other companies. Individual consumers don’t have access to these markets.
Trade bloc: a group of countries that join together to form an area with special trade regulations.
Transport network: made up of lines that join two or more points.
Market: the meeting of buyers and sellers of goods and services. The market can be tangible or abstract. The market decides the price of goods and services.
Infrastructure: the basic physical and organizational structures needed for an economy to function.
Trade: the buying and selling of goods to meet the needs of the population.
Bartering: exchanging certain goods for others.
Tourism: a sector dedicated to travel for recreational, leisure or business purposes.
Information society: a society in which the creation, distribution and manipulation of information has become the most significant economic and cultural activity.
Public services: services that cover the basic needs of the population and contribute to its well-being. They are financed by money from taxes.
Private services: services that offered and managed by private companies. People pay the company directly for the service that it offers.
UNIT 10
Cereals: grasses grown for the edible components of their grain.
Mortgage: a loan to finance the purchase of private residential or commercial property.
Speculation: investment in stocks, property or other assets in the hope of gain, but with the risk of loss.
Crop: a cultivated plant to be harvested as food, animal fodder, fuel or for any other economic purpose.
Agricultural landscape: a landscape that has been transformed by people to cultivate crops and/or rear livestock.
Cultural heritage: the things, places and practices that define who we are as individuals, as communities, as nations or cultures.
Domestic tourism: tourism in which tourist do not leave their own country.
Large-scale tourism: travel and accommodation offered to large groups at affordable prices by tour operators.
Tour operators: a company that combines tour and travel components to cater for large-scale tourism.
High-speed rail: a type of rail transport involving high-speed trains.
Peak season: time of the year during which demand of tourism is highest
Off-peak season: time of the year during which demand of tourism is lowest.

Recession: a business cycle contraction; a general slowdown in economic activity.

jueves, 8 de mayo de 2014

GLOSSARY UNIT 8 (SOCIAL SCIENCE)

Mechanization: the use of machinery in the production process.
Mining: the process of extracting minerals from the ground.
Mineral: a naturally occurring solid chemical substance.
Fossil fuels: fuels that are formed by the decomposition of buried organic material, and exposure to heat and pressure.
Industry: any economic activity that produces a service or transforms raw materials into consumer goods.
Energy: power that comes from the utilization of physical or chemical resources.
Biomass: organic material used as a fuel that releases energy when burned.
Management: guarantee that the usable products function efficiently and ensure that high-quality goods are produced that can be sold at competitive prices.
Workforce: the employees required to produce goods and services.
Wind turbine: they transform the energy produced by the wind into electricity.
Solar panel: they convert solar energy into electricity.
Renewable energy: energy sources that are inexhaustible.
Non-renewable energy: energy sources that their supplies are limited.
Traditional energy: energy sources that are most commonly used.
Alternative energy: energy sources that are still being developed.
Heavy industry: it uses large quantities of resources.
Light industry: it produces goods that are ready for consumption.
Cutting-edge industries: they employ advanced technology.

Craftsperson: a person who makes products using basic tools and manual labour.

miércoles, 7 de mayo de 2014

IDIOMS

1.-To be on the right track/To be on fire you are doing or thinking something in a way which could lead you to a good outcome.
2.-If you say you are as busy as a bee or call yourself a busy bee it means you are very busy.
3.-To go under the knife to have an operation
4.-If someone is two faced, it means they say nice things about someone to their face but say bad things about them behind their back.
5.-To feel blue means to feel sad.
6.-A grey area/Shades of grey is a topic with not clear solution often because there are no known rules or because it is hard to decide what is right or wrong.
7.-Pie in the sky to talk about something good that we would like to happen but which is unlikely to.

8.-In English, if someone wastes time trying to create something that has already been made, we say they’re reinventing the wheel.