?>
Text. Leeds Kirkgate Market Leeds Kirkgate Market is on Vicar Avenue in the central of Leeds, England. It is a very large covered market. It has got 800 stalls selling everything from food to household objects. Over 100, 000 people visit the market every week. When the market opened in 1822, it was an open-air market. In 1850, they finished the construction and the market had an indoor and on door shopping area. Another interesting fact about this is that it is the original location of a very popular department store, Marks and Spencer. Michael Marks opened a penny bazaar in the outdoor market in 1884 and it is still open today. So, when you visit Leeds, make sure you make the Leeds Kirkgate Market one of your stop. You are going to find some good bargains and have a great shopping day! Task 2. Read the text again and answer the questions for the statements 5-6. 5. How is this market related to a popular department store? 6. Why might someone want to visit this market?
Ответы
A growing number of "gateways" tie more and more people to the Net every day, don't they?
When does the host system you are now using automatically generate an address for you?
The basic concepts behind e-mail parallel those of regular mail, don't they?
Can you subscribe to the electronic equivalent of magazines and newspapers?
How many distinct advantages over regular mail does E-mail have?
What is the most obvious advantage?
How fast can your message reach the other side of the world?
What will you be able to use e-mail for?
Does E-mail also have advantages over the telephone?
You send your message when it's convenient for you, don't you?
When does your recipient respond?
Can a phone call across the country or around the world result in huge phone bills? E-mail lets you exchange vast amounts of mail for only a few pennies, doesn't it?
Whom can you ask to help in an e-mail message if you are having problems with your computer?
What can bounce the message back to you, undelivered?
Why are Net addresses like phone numbers?
Do most net addresses now adhere to a relatively easy-to-understand system?
Earlier, you sent yourself a mail message using just your user-name, didn't you?
What code that represents their country do sites in the rest of the world tend to use?
Are some smaller U.S. sites beginning to follow this international convention?
You'll notice that the above addresses are all in lower-case, won't you?
What letters do some public-access sites allow for in user names?
The "mail" program is actually a very powerful one, isn't it?