Ivan The Terrible!

뉴스 & 시사 영어

Lesson 1

Ivan The Terrible!

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Lesson 1

Ivan the Terrible!

Ivan the Terrible!

Intermediate 25 min Speaking 75%
3 min

Warm-up

Talk about these questions with your teacher.
선생님과 이야기해 보세요.

  1. Have you ever experienced a typhoon or a severe storm? What was it like?
    태풍이나 심한 폭풍을 경험한 적이 있나요? 어땠나요?
  2. Hurricane Ivan was called "the Terrible." What do you think makes a hurricane so dangerous?
    허리케인 이반은 "공포의 이반"이라고 불렸습니다. 허리케인이 그토록 위험한 이유는 무엇이라고 생각하나요?
3 min

Key Vocabulary

Learn these words from today's lesson.
오늘 레슨의 주요 단어를 배워봅시다.

topple to fall over or cause something to fall over 넘어뜨리다, 쓰러지다 The strong winds toppled trees and power lines across the entire neighborhood.
lash to strike with great force (used for wind, rain, or waves) (바람·비가) 세차게 몰아치다 Heavy rain lashed the coastal towns for hours before the hurricane made landfall.
fury extreme strength or violence, especially of weather 맹위, 격렬함 Residents were shocked by the fury of the storm as it tore through their city.
churn to move with great force in a circular or turbulent way (거세게) 휘몰아치다 The hurricane churned through the Caribbean before heading toward the U.S. coast.
storm ashore to move powerfully onto land from the sea 해안으로 상륙하다 Ivan stormed ashore early Thursday morning, catching many residents off guard.
5 min

Reading

Read the passage with your teacher.
선생님과 함께 지문을 읽어보세요.

Ivan the Terrible!
As another storm hits, experts are predicting that more will come
Hurricane Ivan stormed ashore last Thursday morning, toppling trees, ripping off roofs and flooding neighborhoods. Ivan hit land along the Gulf of Mexico. Winds of up to 130 miles per hour lashed the Gulf Coast. Communities in southeast Louisiana, southern Mississippi and Alabama and northwest Florida felt the storm's fury. "We have never seen a hurricane of this size come into Alabama," said Governor Bob Riley.
Tornadoes spun off of the storm, causing even more damage. More than 1.5 million homes and businesses in the Gulf states lost power. As of last Friday, at least 33 people in the United States had died as a result of Ivan.
On September 9, Hurricane Ivan became a Category 5 storm, with winds at speeds greater than 155 miles per hour. Over the next few days, Ivan churned through the islands of the Caribbean, killing at least 68 people and destroying towns. By the time Ivan reached the U.S., it was a Category 3 storm--a bit weaker, but still powerful.
A Flurry of Hurricanes
When Ivan hit, Florida was still struggling to recover from Hurricanes Charley and Frances. Ivan was the third hurricane to pound the area in the last five weeks.
Residents are reeling from the back-to-back blows. But scientists expected an especially stormy season, says Stanley Goldenberg, a research meteorologist in Miami, Florida. "I'm in shock over the damage and the deaths, but I am not surprised," he told TIME.
Ten years ago, scientists began warning residents in coastal areas that big hurricanes were headed their way. In 1995, there were 19 major tropical storms in the Atlantic Ocean. It was the second busiest season on record. Some experts believe that this year could produce 16 tropical storms, including five major hurricanes.
Why are there so many big storms? Scientists believe that one factor is higher ocean-surface temperatures. In the mid-1990s, surface temperatures in the Atlantic increased by 1?F to 1.5?F. Scientists think that naturally shifting ocean currents and patterns caused the increase.
Such a change may seem slight, but it is significant. The last time the Atlantic Ocean warmed, between 1926 and 1970, a slew of severe storms hit the coastal U.S. We may be in for another stretch of deadly tropical weather. But now the risk to Americans is greater, because the coastlines are much more heavily populated. More than 50% of the U.S. population lives along the coast.
How Much More Can We Take?
As residents in areas battered by Ivan emerged from the storm, Jeanne, the next storm, was churning through the Caribbean. Forecasters predicted it could strike eastern Florida, South Carolina and Georgia by early this week.
Despite the threat, rescue workers continued to help storm victims. "We are not waiting for the skies to turn blue to respond," said Craig Fugate, the director of Florida's division of emergency management. "We have got to keep our people safe."
A Hurricane's Life
Hurricanes get their start over Africa. The swirling storms are fueled by wet weather, winds and warm ocean waters.
1. Born in West Africa
When hot, dry air from the Sahara desert meets cooler, moist air from the Sahel region to the south, small storms form.
2. Across the Atlantic
Some storms remain small. But a few gather warm ocean moisture, speeding up as they travel west. When bands of these thunderstorms form a swirling pattern, the system is called a tropical depression.
3. Tropical storms and hurricanes
If the storm holds together, a column-shaped "eye" forms at its center. Winds spin around it, faster and faster. When winds reach 40 miles per hour, the system is called a tropical storm. When winds reach 74 miles per hour, it's a hurricane.
4. After the storm
Hurricanes weaken after they reach land. Some never hit land, but instead turn northeast and die out over the Atlantic Ocean.
WORDS TO REMEMBER:
1.hurricane - [n] a severe tropical cyclone usually with heavy rains and winds moving a 73-136 knots (12 on the Beaufort scale)
2. struggling – [adj] - be engaged in a fight; carry on a fight
3. pound – an act of pounding( delivering repeated heavy blows)
4. Meteorologist – a specialist who studies processed in the earth’s atmosphere that cause weather conditions.
5. significant - [adj] important in effect or meaning
6. battered - [adj] beaten repeatedly with heavy blows
QUESTIONS FOR DISCUSSION:
1.What are the areas affected by Ivan?
2.What are the damages?
3.Who is Stanley Goldberg? What did he say about Ivan?
4.What is the warning given by the scientists to the residence?
5.Where are there so many storms?
6.We can't prevent storm, what will you do for you to have less damage?

3 min

Korean Trap! / 한국인 실수 교정

Common mistakes Korean speakers make.
한국인이 자주 하는 실수를 알아봅시다.

❌ "The hurricane was arrived at the Gulf Coast last Thursday."
✅ "The hurricane arrived at the Gulf Coast last Thursday."

"Arrive"는 자동사이기 때문에 수동태로 쓸 수 없습니다. 한국어에서는 "도착되다"라는 표현이 자연스러울 수 있지만, 영어에서는 "arrived"만 사용해야 합니다. "The storm arrived," "Ivan hit land"처럼 능동태로 표현하세요.

5 min

Discussion

Discuss with your teacher.
선생님과 토론해 보세요.

  1. Hurricane Ivan caused over 1.5 million homes and businesses to lose power. How do you think communities can better prepare for natural disasters?
    허리케인 이반으로 150만 가구 이상이 정전되었습니다. 자연재해에 대비하기 위해 지역사회가 어떻게 더 잘 준비할 수 있을까요?
  2. Ivan reached Category 5 with winds over 155 miles per hour. Should people in hurricane zones be forced to evacuate, or should it be their choice?
    이반은 풍속 시속 155마일 이상의 카테고리 5에 도달했습니다. 허리케인 지역 주민들에게 대피를 강제해야 할까요, 아니면 본인의 선택에 맡겨야 할까요?
  3. Experts predicted that more storms would come after Ivan. Do you think climate change is making hurricanes worse? Why or why not?
    전문가들은 이반 이후 더 많은 폭풍이 올 것이라고 예측했습니다. 기후 변화가 허리케인을 더 악화시키고 있다고 생각하나요? 그 이유는 무엇인가요?

Lesson Summary / 수업 요약

Today's Topic: Ivan the Terrible!

Level: Intermediate (??)

Review this lesson before your next class! / 다음 수업 전에 복습하세요!