Слайд 1If you feel like singing.
A Bicycle Built For Two
Слайд 2Billy Boy.
(D) Where have you been Billy Boy, Billy Boy
Where
have you been charming (A7) Billy?
I have been to seek
a wife
She's the (D) joy of my life
She's a (A7) young thing
and cannot leave her (D) mother
Did she bid you come in Billy Boy, Billy Boy
Did she bid you come in charming (A7) Billy?
Yes she bade me come in
There's a (D) dimple in her chin
She's a (A7) young thing a
and cannot leave her (D) mother
Can she make a cherry pie Billy Boy, Billy Boy
Can she make a cherry pie charming (A7) Billy?
She can make a cherry pie
Quick's a (D) cat can wink its eye
She's a (A7) young thing
and cannot leave her (D) mother
Oh oh where have you been Billy Boy, Billy Boy
Where have you been charming (A7) Billy?
I have been to seek a wife
She's the (D) joy of my life
She's a (A7) young thing
and cannot leave her (D) mother
Слайд 7A street organ (a barrel organ)
Слайд 9A Bicycle built for two
Daisy, Daisy,
Give me
your answer, do!
I'm half crazy,
All for the love of you!
It
won't be a stylish marriage,
I can't afford a carriage
But you'll look sweet upon the seat
Of a bicycle made for two.
Patrick, Patrick, here is your answer true!
I know that trick, and it will never do.
If you can`t afford a carriage,
Then there will be no marriage,
For I insist I won’t be kissed
In a bicycle built for two
Слайд 10The song’s Background.
Bicycle riding became very popular in 1890-s in
England and other countries. Harry Dacre, a songwriter from London,
wrote a waltz about an imaginary romantic problem with a bicycle built for two. It was immediate success. When a bicycle craze (boom) was over? People have continued to sing about Daisy, and even have added to the story.
Слайд 11
In the 1970-s bicycles once again became fashionable for adult
riders all over the world.
Daisy’s answer to Patrick was written
by an American teacher, Garry Gabriel? During a seminar for teachers of English in Yugoslavia in 1972.
Слайд 12Words and expressions from the song:
marriage - when
a young man and a girl become a wife and
a husband
carriage - a car, some kind of transport
Daisy
to marry – to become a wife or a husband
do - here: please
half crazy – 50% fool
all for the love of you – because I love you
stylish marriage – a fashionable marriage, a marriage in the latest style
to afford a carriage – to have enough money to pay for a carriage ( a car)
Слайд 13
to look sweet – to look very beautiful
Patrick –
a boy’s name
here is your answer true – here:
yes, I’ll look sweet
I know that trick – you are sly, cunning –хитрый
it will never do – I will never agree with it
for I insist – I am very serious
I won’t be kissed – I will not marry
Слайд 14Crossword Puzzle
Across:
1. A girl’s name.
3. The pronoun used
to refer to a bicycle.
5. Also called a “bike”
6. In
the alphabet, the letters that come right before and after “m”
7. The pronoun used to a trick
9. People sometimes take _______ to learn how to ride a bike.
11. Pronoun referring to Daisy.
Слайд 15
Down:
2. Fashionable.
3. Not well; sick.
4. Campers and soldiers sleep
in them.
5. Found on a bicycle and at the door
of the house.
8. A finger on your foot.
10. Abbreviation for “steamship”.
Слайд 16Fill the gaps with the words and expressions.
Daisy, Daisy,
Give me
your answer, do!
I'm ---- -----,
All for the love of you!
It
won't be a ------- marriage,
I can't afford a --------
But you'll look sweet upon the seat
Of a ------- made for two.
Patrick, Patrick, here is your answer true!
I know that trick, and it will never do.
If you can`t afford a carriage,
Then there will be no --------,
For I insist I won’t be kissed
On a bicycle ----- for two.