ABBREVIATIONS IN THE NAMES OF COMPANIES
COUNTRY Co TYPE ABBREVIATION MEANING
США Inc. Incorporated
Великобритания
відкрита Plc. Public Limited Company
Канада закрита Ltd. Limited
Франция відкрита S.A. Societe Anonyme
 Бельгия закрита Sarl Societe a responsabilite Limitee
Испания S.A. Sociedad Anonima
 Мексика
Бразилия S.A. Sociedade Anonima
 Португалия
Япония Ltd. Limited
Германия відкрита A.G. Aktiengesellschaft
Швейцария закрита GmbH Gesellschaft mit beschrankte Haftung
Нидерланды відкрита N.V. Naamloze Vennootschap
закрита B.V Besloten Vennootschap
Италия відкрита SpA Societa per Azioni
закрита Srl Societa a responsabilita limitata
Дания A/S Aktieselskab
Додаток 12Oxford and Cambridge Universities
   
    England is  famous for its educational institutes. There were many different kinds of  schools in Medieval England and the English universities were one of the most  significant creations. The students who attended either Oxford  or Cambridge Universities set an intellectual  standard that contrasted markedly with the norm of Medieval England. Today  both Universities are internationally renowned centres for teaching and  research, attracting students and scholars from all over the world.
  The University of Oxford,  located in the city of Oxford is one of the  oldest and most highly revered Universities in Europe.  It was the first university established in Britain. Oxford  is situated about 57  miles (90  km) north-west of London  in its own county  of Oxfordshire. The  city lies at the confluence of the Rivers Cherwell and Thames, or "Isis", as it is locally known, giving the  opportunity to enjoy such pleasant pursuits as boating and punting, or a  stroll along river banks. The story of Oxford  is one of a war, plague, religious persecution, heroes and the emergence of  one of the greatest Universities in the world. Known as the city of  "Dreaming Spires," Oxford  is dominated by the Medieval architecture of the University, and the  exquisite gardens within.
  According to legend Oxford University  was founded by King Alfred the Great in 872 when he happened to meet some  monks there and had a scholarly debate that lasted several days. A more  realistic scenario is that it grew out of efforts begun by Alfred to  encourage education and establish schools throughout his territory.
  Long after Alfred, during the late 11th  or early 12th century, it is known that Oxford  became a centre of learning for clerics, from which a school or university  could have sprung or evolved. The university was given a boost in 1167 when,  for political reasons, Henry II of England  ordered all English students at Paris to  return to England.  Most of the returning students congregated at Oxford and the University began a period of  rapid development. Oxford, like Cambridge, differs from  many other universities in that there is no central university campus.  Instead, the University consists of a large number of colleges and associated  buildings, scattered throughout the city.
  From the start there was friction  between "town and gown". Most students took lodgings with local  people, who soon realised that they could charge high prices and rents of the  Academics. However it was a strain on the resources of the community to have  to provide for the influx of people from elsewhere. In the 13th century,  rioting between students and localpeople hastened the establishment of  primitive halls of residence. These were succeeded by the first of Oxford's colleges or  endowed houses whose architectural splendour, together with the University's  libraries and museums, give the city its unique character.
  The first college, University College,  was founded in 1249 by William of Durham. Other notable colleges include All  Souls (founded in 1438), Christ  Church (founded in  1546) and Lady Margaret Hall (founded in 1878), which was the first women's  college. Since 1974, all but one of Oxford's  colleges have changed their statutes to admit both men and women. St Hilda's  remains the only women's college, and the rest enroll both men and women.
  Oxford  early on became a centre for lively controversy, with scholars involved in  religious and political disputes. John Wyclif, a 14th-century Master of  Balliol, campaigned for a bible in the vernacular, against the wishes of the  papacy. In 1530, Henry VIII forced the University to accept his divorce from  Catherine of Aragon. During the Reformation in the 16th century, the Anglican  churchmen Cranmer, Latimer and Ridley were tried for heresy and burnt at the  stake in Oxford.  During the Civil War, Oxford  was selected as the Royalist capital. The King stayed at Christ Church,  the Queen at Merton, and a passage was constructed to allow them to meet.  Most of the citizens were violently anti-Royalist, but not the University.
  Today Oxford University is  comprised of thirty-nine colleges and six permanent private halls, founded  between 1249 and 1996, whose architectural grandeur, together with that of  the University's libraries and museums, gives the city its unique character.  More than 130 nationalities are represented among a student population of  over 18,000. A  range of scholarships offer support for international students.Thirty  colleges and all halls admit students for both undergraduate and graduate  degrees. Seven other colleges are for graduates only; one has Fellows only,  and one specializes in part-time and continuing education. Each college is  practically autonomous with its own set of rules. There is central  administration, providing services such as libraries, laboratories, lectures  and examination.
  There have been many famous people who  have studied at Oxford Univeristy and they include John Locke, Adam Smith,  Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lewis Carroll, Oscar Wilde, J. R. Tolkien, Indira  Gandhi, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, Bill Clinton, Rupert Murdoch, Rowan  Atkinson (Mr Bean), and Hugh Grant. All in all, Oxford has produced four  British and at least eight foreign kings, 47 Nobel prize-winners, 25 British  Prime Ministers, 28 foreign presidents and prime ministers, seven saints, 86  archbishops, 18 cardinals, and one pope. Seven of the last eleven British  Prime Ministers have been Oxford  graduates.
  Oxford's  teaching and research is consistently in the top rank nationally and  internationally, and is at the forefront of medical, scientific and  technological achievement. Amongst the University's old members are many  widely influential scientists. Contemporary scientists include Stephen  Hawking, Richard Dawkins and Nobel prize-winner Anthony James Leggett, and  Tim Berners Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web.  
  University of Cambridge is  the second-oldest university in the English-speaking world (after Oxford). The start of  the University is generally taken as 1209, when some masters and students  arrived in Cambridge after fleeing from rioting  in Oxford.
  Cambridge is  situated about 50 miles  (80 km)  north of London.  The town of Cambridge  originally took its name from the river on which it stood - the Granta.  Through a convoluted process of evolution, the name 'Grontabricc' became 'Cambridge', and the river became the 'Cam'.  The town is referred to in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales as 'Canterbridge'.
  The university was basically established  to study for religious purposes. The earliest teaching sessions of the  University were carried out in churches or private houses. This was obviously  unsatisfactory, and so the University authorities began to establish  buildings for its own use. Some of these early 'schools' still exist on the  site known, appropriately, as the 'Old Schools'. During the 14th and 15th  Centuries, the University gradually gained its independence from the church,  with the Chancellor taking on both religious and civil duties.
  Cambridge University is composed of more than thirty  constituent colleges, one of the most illustrious of which is Emmanuel College. This college was founded in  1584 by Sir Walter Mildmay, Chancellor of the Exchequer to Queen Elizabeth I.  Many Emmanuel graduates, including John Harvard, were among those who settled  in New England in the first half of the 17th  century. The oldest building is in St  John's College  but the oldest college as institution is Peterhouse, dates from 1284. King  Henry VIII founded the largest college, Trinity, in 1546.
  Many of the University buildings are of  historical or architectural interest, and the University's museums contain  many rare, valuable and beautiful items. King's College Chapel, begun in  1446, is one of Britain's  most magnificent buildings. The mulberry tree under which the poet John  Milton is reputed to have written Lycidas is on the grounds of Christ's  College. Samuel Pepys's library, housed in the original cases, is at Magdalene College. Two of the colleges contain  chapels designed by Christopher Wren-Pembroke and Emmanuel. The gardens and  grounds of the colleges along the River Cam are known as the  "Backs," and together they form a unique combination of large-scale  architecture, natural and formal gardens, and river scenery with student  boaters.
  The University at present has more than  16,500 full-time students - over 11,600 undergraduates and nearly 5,000  graduates. About 17% of the student body is from overseas, coming from over  100 different countries. Because of its high academic reputation, admission  to the University is highly competitive, and most overseas students already  have a good degree from a university in their own country.
  The University also has a worldwide  reputation for other aspects of its work. Cambridge University Press (one of  the world's oldest and largest publishers) and UCLES (University of Cambridge  Local Examinations Syndicate) are world leaders  in their respective fields and allow the University to make a direct  educational and academic contribution to the lives of millions of people  around the world.
  Cambridge University is more renowned  than its rival for mathematics and natural sciences, and has produced 80  Nobel-prize winners (33 more than Oxford and the highest number of any  university worldwide), 13 British Prime Ministers (12 less than the other  place) and 8 Archbishops of Canterbury, among others.
  The list of illustrious alumni is  endless. Among the most famous are Desiderius Erasmus, Francis Bacon,  Christopher Marlowe, Lord Byron, Charles Darwin, Ludwig Wittgenstein,  Jawaharlal Nehru, Vladimir Nabokov, Lee Kuan Yew (PM of Singapore from 1959  to 1990), and Rajiv Gandhi. The great Russian scientist Pavlov came to Cambridge to receive  the degree of the Honorary Doctor of Cambridge. University of Cambridge  is known as a great centre of science, where many fomous scientists have  worked.     Sources: http://www.ox.ac.uk/aboutoxford/history.shtml
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Oxford
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Cambridge
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 England is  famous for its educational institutes. There were many different kinds of  schools in Medieval England and the English universities were one of the most  significant creations. The students who attended either Oxford  or Cambridge Universities set an intellectual  standard that contrasted markedly with the norm of Medieval England. Today  both Universities are internationally renowned centres for teaching and  research, attracting students and scholars from all over the world.
  The University of Oxford,  located in the city of Oxford is one of the  oldest and most highly revered Universities in Europe.  It was the first university established in Britain. Oxford  is situated about 57  miles (90  km) north-west of London  in its own county  of Oxfordshire. The  city lies at the confluence of the Rivers Cherwell and Thames, or "Isis", as it is locally known, giving the  opportunity to enjoy such pleasant pursuits as boating and punting, or a  stroll along river banks. The story of Oxford  is one of a war, plague, religious persecution, heroes and the emergence of  one of the greatest Universities in the world. Known as the city of  "Dreaming Spires," Oxford  is dominated by the Medieval architecture of the University, and the  exquisite gardens within.
  According to legend Oxford University  was founded by King Alfred the Great in 872 when he happened to meet some  monks there and had a scholarly debate that lasted several days. A more  realistic scenario is that it grew out of efforts begun by Alfred to  encourage education and establish schools throughout his territory.
  Long after Alfred, during the late 11th  or early 12th century, it is known that Oxford  became a centre of learning for clerics, from which a school or university  could have sprung or evolved. The university was given a boost in 1167 when,  for political reasons, Henry II of England  ordered all English students at Paris to  return to England.  Most of the returning students congregated at Oxford and the University began a period of  rapid development. Oxford, like Cambridge, differs from  many other universities in that there is no central university campus.  Instead, the University consists of a large number of colleges and associated  buildings, scattered throughout the city.
  From the start there was friction  between "town and gown". Most students took lodgings with local  people, who soon realised that they could charge high prices and rents of the  Academics. However it was a strain on the resources of the community to have  to provide for the influx of people from elsewhere. In the 13th century,  rioting between students and localpeople hastened the establishment of  primitive halls of residence. These were succeeded by the first of Oxford's colleges or  endowed houses whose architectural splendour, together with the University's  libraries and museums, give the city its unique character.
  The first college, University College,  was founded in 1249 by William of Durham. Other notable colleges include All  Souls (founded in 1438), Christ  Church (founded in  1546) and Lady Margaret Hall (founded in 1878), which was the first women's  college. Since 1974, all but one of Oxford's  colleges have changed their statutes to admit both men and women. St Hilda's  remains the only women's college, and the rest enroll both men and women.
  Oxford  early on became a centre for lively controversy, with scholars involved in  religious and political disputes. John Wyclif, a 14th-century Master of  Balliol, campaigned for a bible in the vernacular, against the wishes of the  papacy. In 1530, Henry VIII forced the University to accept his divorce from  Catherine of Aragon. During the Reformation in the 16th century, the Anglican  churchmen Cranmer, Latimer and Ridley were tried for heresy and burnt at the  stake in Oxford.  During the Civil War, Oxford  was selected as the Royalist capital. The King stayed at Christ Church,  the Queen at Merton, and a passage was constructed to allow them to meet.  Most of the citizens were violently anti-Royalist, but not the University.
  Today Oxford University is  comprised of thirty-nine colleges and six permanent private halls, founded  between 1249 and 1996, whose architectural grandeur, together with that of  the University's libraries and museums, gives the city its unique character.  More than 130 nationalities are represented among a student population of  over 18,000. A  range of scholarships offer support for international students.Thirty  colleges and all halls admit students for both undergraduate and graduate  degrees. Seven other colleges are for graduates only; one has Fellows only,  and one specializes in part-time and continuing education. Each college is  practically autonomous with its own set of rules. There is central  administration, providing services such as libraries, laboratories, lectures  and examination.
  There have been many famous people who  have studied at Oxford Univeristy and they include John Locke, Adam Smith,  Percy Bysshe Shelley, Lewis Carroll, Oscar Wilde, J. R. Tolkien, Indira  Gandhi, Baroness Margaret Thatcher, Bill Clinton, Rupert Murdoch, Rowan  Atkinson (Mr Bean), and Hugh Grant. All in all, Oxford has produced four  British and at least eight foreign kings, 47 Nobel prize-winners, 25 British  Prime Ministers, 28 foreign presidents and prime ministers, seven saints, 86  archbishops, 18 cardinals, and one pope. Seven of the last eleven British  Prime Ministers have been Oxford  graduates.
  Oxford's  teaching and research is consistently in the top rank nationally and  internationally, and is at the forefront of medical, scientific and  technological achievement. Amongst the University's old members are many  widely influential scientists. Contemporary scientists include Stephen  Hawking, Richard Dawkins and Nobel prize-winner Anthony James Leggett, and  Tim Berners Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web. 
  University of Cambridge is  the second-oldest university in the English-speaking world (after Oxford). The start of  the University is generally taken as 1209, when some masters and students  arrived in Cambridge after fleeing from rioting  in Oxford.
  Cambridge is  situated about 50 miles  (80 km)  north of London.  The town of Cambridge  originally took its name from the river on which it stood - the Granta.  Through a convoluted process of evolution, the name 'Grontabricc' became 'Cambridge', and the river became the 'Cam'.  The town is referred to in Chaucer's Canterbury Tales as 'Canterbridge'.
  The university was basically established  to study for religious purposes. The earliest teaching sessions of the  University were carried out in churches or private houses. This was obviously  unsatisfactory, and so the University authorities began to establish  buildings for its own use. Some of these early 'schools' still exist on the  site known, appropriately, as the 'Old Schools'. During the 14th and 15th  Centuries, the University gradually gained its independence from the church,  with the Chancellor taking on both religious and civil duties.
  Cambridge University is composed of more than thirty  constituent colleges, one of the most illustrious of which is Emmanuel College. This college was founded in  1584 by Sir Walter Mildmay, Chancellor of the Exchequer to Queen Elizabeth I.  Many Emmanuel graduates, including John Harvard, were among those who settled  in New England in the first half of the 17th  century. The oldest building is in St  John's College  but the oldest college as institution is Peterhouse, dates from 1284. King  Henry VIII founded the largest college, Trinity, in 1546.
  Many of the University buildings are of  historical or architectural interest, and the University's museums contain  many rare, valuable and beautiful items. King's College Chapel, begun in  1446, is one of Britain's  most magnificent buildings. The mulberry tree under which the poet John  Milton is reputed to have written Lycidas is on the grounds of Christ's  College. Samuel Pepys's library, housed in the original cases, is at Magdalene College. Two of the colleges contain  chapels designed by Christopher Wren-Pembroke and Emmanuel. The gardens and  grounds of the colleges along the River Cam are known as the  "Backs," and together they form a unique combination of large-scale  architecture, natural and formal gardens, and river scenery with student  boaters.
  The University at present has more than  16,500 full-time students - over 11,600 undergraduates and nearly 5,000  graduates. About 17% of the student body is from overseas, coming from over  100 different countries. Because of its high academic reputation, admission  to the University is highly competitive, and most overseas students already  have a good degree from a university in their own country.
  The University also has a worldwide  reputation for other aspects of its work. Cambridge University Press (one of  the world's oldest and largest publishers) and UCLES (University of Cambridge  Local Examinations Syndicate) are world leaders  in their respective fields and allow the University to make a direct  educational and academic contribution to the lives of millions of people  around the world.
  Cambridge University is more renowned  than its rival for mathematics and natural sciences, and has produced 80  Nobel-prize winners (33 more than Oxford and the highest number of any  university worldwide), 13 British Prime Ministers (12 less than the other  place) and 8 Archbishops of Canterbury, among others.
  The list of illustrious alumni is  endless. Among the most famous are Desiderius Erasmus, Francis Bacon,  Christopher Marlowe, Lord Byron, Charles Darwin, Ludwig Wittgenstein,  Jawaharlal Nehru, Vladimir Nabokov, Lee Kuan Yew (PM of Singapore from 1959  to 1990), and Rajiv Gandhi. The great Russian scientist Pavlov came to Cambridge to receive  the degree of the Honorary Doctor of Cambridge. University of Cambridge  is known as a great centre of science, where many fomous scientists have  worked.     Sources: http://www.ox.ac.uk/aboutoxford/history.shtml
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Oxford
  http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/University_of_Cambridge
  
 Vocabulary
  1.   to be famous ['feim 
 s] for -   2. medieval  [,medi'i:vl] а  -   3. to attend [ 
 l 
 bli 
 ]  v -   9.  county ['kaunti]  n -   10.  to lie  [lai] а   11.  confluence ['k 
 ti 
 ]  n   14.  punting [p 
 nti 
 ]  v
  31.  to charge  [ 
 
 
 l] n
  37.  to endow  [in'dau]  v
  38.  splendour ['splend 
 Key words and phrases
  
 Fill the gaps in the sentences, using the words and phrases below:
  evolved, rioting, stroll,  comprised, large-scale, carried, rival, stake,  confluence, attended, reputed, plague, controversy,  endowed, boost, illustrious, congregated, revered,  scholarships, overseas, convoluted, friction, renowned,  gained, lodgings, fleeing