Understanding Technical English 1
Understanding Technical English 1
Understanding Technical English 1
TECHNICAL
ENGLISH
K. METHOLD
D.D. WATE RS
DIP.I.E.T.(MANC.),F.I.O.B., F.A.I.B.,
MB.I.M., CHARTERED BUILDER (AUST)
Contents
To the Teacher
2. Using a Hacksaw
+ 3. Safety Rules
4. Painting
5. Working with Metal
\ 6. Measuring
L-7.
8. Hammers
9. Electricity
10. What is a Camera?
1 1. Aluminium
13. Machines
14. Fuses
15. Fibres
16. Making Things with Glass: Glassblowing
To the Teacher
This four stage, graded reading course is intended for students of
English as a foreign language w h o w i s h t o relate their reading in
English t o topics relevant t o their future careers as craftsmen or
technicians. The course contains the following features:
2. The vocabulary
N o attempt has been made t o teach a highly specialised technical vocabulary. The emphasis throughout is o n presenting a
general technical vocabulary common t o all crafts and technologies. The vocabulary has been selected from a careful
analysis of the words most frequently used i n basic texts o n
woodwork, metalwork, technical drawing, mechanics and
fundamentals of electrical technology. Full details of this technical lexis and of the core general English lexis are given in the
teacher's handbook t o the series.
3. Structural control
A l l the material is structurally graded. A basic assumption has
been made concerning the students' knowledge at point of
entry, and details of w h a t the students are expected t o know,
if only passively, are given i n the teacher's manual. A l l other
structures are introduced gradually, i n a predetermined order,
and are fully dealt w i t h i n the exercises. The complete structure
list is provided i n the teacher's manual. This list differs from
other widely used lists i n that it takes into account those
sentence patterns most commonly used i n technical writing.
4. The exercises
These are designed t o 'exercise' and t o test the students'
knowledge. A l l the exercises require the students t o use those
words and structures that they have encountered i n the reading
passages. A n important feature of the exercises is that they
continually revise the vocabulary introduced in earlier passages.
There is, therefore, a carefully built-in revision factor throughout
the book. For this reason there are n o separate revision units.
5. Objectives
This course is n o t intended t o be a basic English course, and
should be used in conjunction w i t h any g o o d general English
course. Its purpose is t o provide supplementary material w i t h a
technical bias t o the usual English programme.
l . SIMPLE MACHINES
Lever
Pulley
Wedge
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
2 Comprehension
A. Which of a, 6,c or d is correct ?
b.
d.
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences:
(i) Move the rock. Use a lever.
(ii) Move the rock w i t h a lever.
(cut)
(touch)
c,.
(use>
(open)
4 Composition
These men are building a house. They are using many machines. Write sentencesabout the
picture like this:
2. USING A HACKSAW
1 . The man cuts the iron rod into two parts.
He cuts the rod with a hacksaw. He has put
the rod into a vice. Now he uses his thumb as
a guide and he makes the first cut. He moves
the saw backwards and forwards a few times
across the metal.
2.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Complete each of the sentences with one
of the words in the box.
a. The edge of this piece of metal is not
b.
c.
d.
e.
smooth.
Use this
to make it smooth.
The iron
is one centimetre
thick.
The boy is making a
for a
picture.
The
of the knife is not sharp.
How many
shall I cut this
piece of wood into?
blade frame
strokes vice
2 Comprehension
A. Answer the questions about the pictures:
3 Language Practice
A. Read this sentence:
The man cut the rod w i t h a hacksaw.
Make sentences like this. Use these words:
a.
b.
c.
d.
turn/lock/key
break/window/stone
write/answer/pen
lift/car/screw- jack
4 Composition
3. SAFETY RULES
There are many sharp tools in a workshop. Some can cut wood and some can cut metal.
Remember these safety rules or you will cut or injure yourself.
1.
2.
3.
4.
5.
6.
7.
8.
9.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Complete each of the sentences with one of the
words in the box.
a. The boy pulled the
started.
b. A good workman has sharp
c . The students waited for the teacher's
d . The students took off their ties and put on their
e. The boy cut himself when he
tool.
with a
2 Comprehension
A. Look at the pictures on the right. Which safety rules
have the men forgotten 7
3 Language Practice
Read this sentence:
4 Composition
Read the safety rules again and answer these questions in sentences:
Why must you wear an apron or overalls in the workshop?
Why must you keep the tools in their places?
Why must you walk and not run in the workshop?
Why mustn't you experiment with tools?
9
4. PAINTING
Rub the surface of the wood with glasspaper. This will make it smooth. Give the
surface one coat of priming paint. Use a flat
brush. Paint across the grain first. Then paint
with light strokes along the grain. Let the first
coat of paint dry.
Fill up any holes and cracks in the wood
with putty. Rub the surface of the wood with
glasspaper. Brush away the dust. Put on the
undercoat. Brush the paint well into the wood.
Paint across the grain first. Then paint with
light strokes along the grain. Let the undercoat
dry.
Paintir~g by machine
Make the surface smooth again with glasspaper. Brush away the dust. Put on the top
coat. Brush the paint well into the wood.
Paint across the grain. Then paint with light
strokes along the grain.
Do not put too much paint on your brush.
Dip only the tip of the brush into, the paint.
When you are not using your paint brushes,
keep them clean. Clean them first with turpentine. Then wash them in warm, soapy water.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
2 Comprehension
a. Put some
along the bottom of
the windows.
b. You have not painted the door very well.
Put on another
c. The
of this piece of wood is
not smooth.
d. You must paint across and along the
3 Language Practice
A. Most of the sentences in the passage
Examples :
Let the first coat o f paint dry.
Dip only the tip o f the brush into
the paint.
Make imperative statements from these
words. Put the words into the correct
order:
4 Composition
Write Part / of 'Using a kiacksa W ' again. Use
only imperative statements. Here is Part 2,
as an example:
a scriber
Exercises
2 Comprehension
1 Vocabulary
of this table?
of a
c. A
works with tools.
d. Use a file to make the
smooth.
e. Put the food on the
centre hollow dish soft
craftsman rough design
edges
3 Languagepractice
A. Read these sentences.
6. MEASURING
Every craftsman must be able to measure
accurately. He must be able to use measuring
tools. The simplest measuring tool is the ruler.
It has a number of units. These units are in
centimetres or inches.m n g r g L
e is a kind
of ruler. It also has a number of units.
A craftsman can get an accurate measurement
from a rule by tipping it on its edge. This brings
the markings on the rule nearer to the piece of
wood or metal.
The steel tape is a thin metal tool. A craftsman can hold it flat on an object. He can also
measure round objects with a steel tape. He
holds the end of the tape under his thumb.
Then he begins measuring.
Measuring tools are very important tools.
We must keep them clean and smooth. Old
or damaged measuring tools are not accurate.
We must keep our measuring tools in a separate place or other tools will damage them.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Complete each of the sentences with one
of the words in the box. Use each word
in its correct form.
desk?
d. Your work is not
this piece of wood
. Measure
.
--
accurate, accurately;
damage. damaged ;
measure. measurements ;
simple, simplest
2 Comprehension
A. Answer the questions about the pictures:
a. What is the craftsman doing?
Why is he doing i t ?
! 3 Language Practice
A. Look at the picture and read the sentence
about it:
'
&A
4 Composition
Think about the answers to these
questions:
Measuring distance
Exercises
! 1 Vocabulary
Complete these szntences about the pictures:
a. This is a
There is a
c . This
of copper
inside it.
is making
b. The
There is an
through the
d . The man is
of the
is moving
flowing
2 Comprehension
A. Which of these sentences are true about
the passage ?
a. The man wound a piece of copper
wire round a magnet.
b. The boy connected both ends of the
coil t o a galvanometer.
c. An electric current flowed through
the magnet.
d. A galvanometer measures an electric
current.
e. A generator is a kind of galvanometer.
3 Language Practice
A. Read this sentence:
When an electric current flows
into a galvanometer, the needle
will move.
Join the statements in A to those in B.
Write sentences like the above:
A. a. When the saw gets t o the end of
the cut
b. When the teacher gives instructions
c. When the priming paint is dry
4 Composition
Write instructions in the imperative on 'HoW
To Make An Electric Current'.
8. HAMMERS
There are many different kinds of hammers.
Not all hammers have the same kind of head.
The heads have different weights, and the
shapes are different, too. The length of the
handle may be different. Some carpenter's
hammers, for example, have a narrow straight
edge. The carpenter uses this kind of hammer
to hit small nails. He also uses a hammer with a
curved, forked shape to take nails out of
pieces of wood.
Exercises
l Vocabulary
Write sentences about these pictures of
hammers. Begin: 'This hammer has
Complete your sentences with words from
the box.
a curved shape a forked shape
a soft head a narrow straight edge
a wooden head
a.
2 Comprehension
A. Answer these questions in sentences:
Example :
What kind o f hammer do we use to
hit small nails?
We may use a hammer w i t h a narr o w straight edge.
a. What kind of hammer do we use to
give a softer blow?
b. What kind of hammer do we use to
take naiis out of pieces of wood?
c . What kind of hammer do we use to
spread the blow over a large area?
d. What kind of hammer do we use to
make a hollow in a piece of aluminium? (See Unit 5)
or a rubber
head.
d. Soft heads do not damage the
3 Language Practice
Look at the pictures on the previous
page and read the sentences:
a.
b.
4 Composition
C.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
a.
b.
c.
d.
What is lightning ?
Where does lightning come from?
What is a battery?
What can a generator d o ?
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences.
(i) What is a spark from a cloud?
I t is lightning.
(ii) A spark from a cloud is called
lightning.
Write these sentences like (ii):
2 Comprehension
(ii) a.
b.
c.
d.
4 Composition
What tools do you know how to use?
Write sentences about them, like this:
I
I
.I
Lightning
27
.
-.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Look at the picture. Give names to a, b, c
and d. Use words from the box.
2 Comprehension
Language Practice
Composition
A television camera
11. ALUMINIUM
Aluminium is a soft, light metal.
It has a bluish-white colour. Electricity can flow easily through it.
Aluminium is not a strong metal.
We usually mix a little copper with
aluminium to make it stronger.
Aluminium is not a poisonous
metal and it does not rust. It is easy
to work with. We can make it
thinner and spread it out by hammering it. We can bend it, fold it,
hammer it, roll it, and cut it into
simple shapes.
We use aluminium to make
many things. We use it to make
household equipment, parts for
cars, aircraft bodies, ships and
railway carriages. It is one of the
most important metals.
Exercises
! 1 Vocabulary
flow
bend
fold
cut
rust
roll
3 Language Practice
2 Comprehension
we make aluminium
mix it with copper.
hammer it.
bend it.
fold it.
4 Composition
Read the first paragraph of the passage
again. Write a paragraph like it about silver.
Here are some notes to use:
Silver: soft, white, electricity flows,
not strong, mix w i t h copper,
easy to work w i t h but expensive
Fig. 1
I
~
i2 ~
>
3 . 2 ~'. 3 . 2 m .
3.6m.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Look at Figures 7,2 and 3:
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences:
2 Comprehension
a.
b.
c.
d.
Fig. 4
The
The
The
The
6- 8m.
Aq
4 Composition
Study all the Figures o n page 34. They are
different drawings of the same building.
What d o you k n o w about this building?
Write all the details i n sentences. Here are
your first three sentences:
1r MACHINES
-'-,
A nut-cracker does not work without help. The nutcracker helped you but you helped the nut-cracker. You
pressed the arms of the nut-cracker. You used some of
your strength. You used the power of your hand to move
the arms of the nut-cracker. You put power into the
nut-cracker. The nut-cracker did not have any power
inside it. The power came from outside the machine.
It came from you. The power made the parts of the
machine move, and then the machine did the work.
Look at the two drills below. The drills are boring
holes in a piece of wood. One drill is getting its power
from a man. He is turning the handle of the drill. The
other drill is getting its power from electricity. An electric current is driving a motor inside the drill. The motor
is turning the drill.
Hand-drill
Electric drill
1 Vocabulary
b. file
c . saw
d. brush
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences:
(i) A nut-cracker must have help.
(ii) A nut-cracker won't work
without help.
Write sentences like (ii) for these words:
2 Comprehension
4 Composition
Read the first paragraph of the passage
again. Now w r i t e paragraphs like i t about
the following:
14. FUSES
We put fuses into electric appliances t o
make electric appliances safe. Radios, television sets, heaters, and refrigerators
are all
electric appliances. These appliances have
fuses.
and it is n o t safe.
Wire fuse
Cartridge fuse
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
2 Comprehension
3 Language Practice
What is the man doing? Is he opening the door? No, he isn't. He wants
t o open the door, but the door will
not open. The man is trying t o open
the door.
safe.
tences:
a. small
b. wide
c . heavy
d. short
)[&L____
4 Composition
Write out the two most important
sentences in the passage.
15. FIBRES
A fibre is long and thin. Textiles are made
from fibres. Different textiles are made from
different fibres. We use textiles all day and
every day.
Mattresses on some beds have cotton
covers. Sheets and pillow-cases are made of
cotton, too. Cotton is a fibre.
Cotton yarn
Wool yarn
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
3 Language Practice
Read these sentences.
(i) All textiles are made from
fibres.
(ii) We make textiles from fibres.
Write these sentences like (ii):
a. Sheets and pillow cases are made
from cotton.
b. Sacks are made from jute.
c. Drip-dry shirts are made from
polyester.
d. Elastic is made from rubber.
2 Comprehension
A. a. Make a list of the natural fibres.
b. Make a list of the man-made fibres.
c. Make a list of all the different textiles
in the class-room or workshop.
d. Make a list of all the different textiles
in your home.
B. Choose the true sentences:
Fibres are important t o us.
Textiles are long and thin.
All shirts are made of polyester.
Most fibres come from sheep.
We use different fibres to make different textiles.
Some textiles are made from natural
fibres.
Some fibres are man-made fibres.
All textiles are made from natural
fibres.
Polyester is a kind of cotton.
We make textiles from fibres.
4 Composition
Make a list of ten things i n the room that you are in
now. Write t w o sentences about each. Say what it is
made of. Say what w e use it for.
In
a textile factory
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
a.
crucible.
the handle t o the side of
b.
the jug.
g lass.
is a large clay pot.
2 Comprehension
Why
Why
Why
Why
b. Glass is a
of silica and
soda.
c. A glassmaker works w i t h
a.
b.
c.
d.
d. He b l o w s i n t o the jug.
. W e can see
through it.
d. A
4 Composition
Rewrite the sentences about the pictures
7 -8 on the previous page in the Imperative.
17 :PLUGG l p g A
~ WALL
.
..
+.*
Exercises
l Vocabulary
Complete each of these sentences with a word from
the box:
a. Take out the
split
scrape
mortar
punch
stay
opposite
2 Comprehension
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences.
(i) The piece o f wood will not go into the
hole. I t is too thick.
(ii) The piece of wood is too thick t o go
into the hole.
Write these sentences like (ii):
4 Composition
Fig. '1
Fig. 3
Fig
Fig. 4
Fig. 5
Fig. 6
Fig. 7
52
Exercises
l Vocabulary
Here are t w o lists of words. Each word in A
is opposite in meaning to a word in B.
Write these words in pairs.
A
join
pull
apart
U PPer
B
push
together
lower
separate
2 Comprehension
A. Answer these questions i n sentences:
3 Language Practice
A. Read these sentences:
(i) There is a single nail. I t joins
the two pieces o f wood together.
(ii) There is a single nail joining the
two pieces of wood together.
Write these sentences like (ii):
55
.
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
Complete the answers to these questions
with words from the box:
a. What can we do to a blunt tool? We can
it.
sharpen
remove
it.
strop
press
spoil
2 Comprehension
A. Answer the questions about each of the
pictures belo W :
a. What is wrong with this tool?
b. What is the man doing to the edge
of the tool?
c . How is he moving the tool on the
grindstone ?
d. What is the man doing wrong?
e , What is the man doing now? Why
is he doing i t ?
f . What is the man doing ?
g. What kind of stroke is the man using?
h. What is the man doing wrong?
i. What is the man doing now? Why is
he doing i t ?
3 Language Practice
4 Composition
Exercises
1 Vocabulary
rod
spool
lime
electric motor
2 Comprehension
4 Composition
3 Language Practice
is dipped
are filled
-1
a.
b.
c.
d.
e.
f.
is rolled
is placed/is turned/is made
is blown/is formed
is made
is added to/is cut away from
are made
g. is added to/is fixed to
Acknowledgements
Text-
We are grateful to The Bodley Head Ltd for permission to use ideas
and extreme adaptation from The Boy's Workshop Companion by
W Oakley.
Illustrations-
We are grateful to the following for permission to reproduce copyright photographs on pages:
The Aluminium Development Association and Aluminium Laboratories Ltd for page 32 (bottom right); British Ropes Ltd for page 58
(bottom); Cathay Pacific Airways Ltd for page 31 (top); China Light
& Power CO t t d for page 1 9 (bottom); Glass Blowing Department,
University of Hong Kong for page 46; Government Information
Services, Hong Kong for pages 39 and 45; Hong Kong Technical
College for page 43; J Roger Preston Ltd for page 36; Labour
Department, Hong Kong Government for page 7; Brian Lawrence
for page 27; Terence Le Goubin for page 32 (top left); John A Rose
for page 32 (top right); Stewart Bale Ltd and the British Steel Corporation for page 59; Television Broadcasts Ltd for page 30; and
TransHarbour Constructors Ltd for the cover photograph.
We are also very grateful to the staff of the Hong Kong Technical
College and the Morrison Hill Technical Institute without whose
assistance many of the photographs in this book would not have
been possible.
1;
.&*
U N D E R S T A N D I N G T E C H N I C A L E N G L I S H is a three v o l u m e graGed
language practice course for craft a n d vocational students w h o are
learning English as a foreign or second language
The text, b y Ken M e t h o l d , provides reading passages f o l l o w e d b y
comprehension a n d c o m p o s i t i o n exercises that are strictly relevant
t o t h e students' needs a n d interests A l l t h e passages are o n
,
t h e exercises are n o t o n l y carefu Ily
craft or technical t o p ~ c sand
related t o t h e passage b u t t o t h e students' w o r k s h o p environment.
In this way, therefore, t h e language practice w o r k is f u l l y
situational and exists w i t h i n t h e c o n t e x t o f the students' o w n
experience.
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