Загадки о школе на английском языке. Их можно использовать как на уроках, так и во внеклассной деятельности по английскому языку. Загадки на логику на английском языке способствуют обогащению словаря, развивают мыслительные функции учащихся, прививают интерес к познавательной деятельности. Загадки стимулируют интерес к изучению иностранного языка.
загадки о школе.docx
RIDDLES ABOUT SCHOOL
Загадки о школе
What is it that looks like a ball,
But stands still and does not fall
Off its thin and graceful legs?
Children like to turn it round,
Rivers, mountains, lakes are found,
Countries, states and their towns
Can be seen all around.
What is it?
(A globe.)
Boys and girls are twolegged creatures
And they run about a lot;
Mine is a different kind of features
And although I am fourlegged,
I stand still as you can see,
The teacher puts his things on me,
The whole day I serve the school
And this I am very proud to do.
What am I?
(A table.)
The teacher writes on me with chalk.
My face is black, I cannot talk;
Unlike the boys whose voices hum
I do my work although I'm dumb.
What am I?
(A blackboard.)
What is white when it is dirty and black when it is clean?
(A blackboard.)
The teacher writes
On me with chalk,
My face is black,
I cannot talk.
What am I?
(A blackboard.)
My face is black,
As black as night.
On it with chalk,
All pupils write.
All right!
But it is disgrace
When they forget
To wipe my face.
(A blackboard.)
What table has no legs?
(A timetable.)
I am used to draw lines with,
I am long and white and thin;
On my face black figures shine.
Try, you must my name define.
What am I?
(A ruler.)
If you want
To draw a straight line,
Make use of me, For this business is mine.
(A ruler.)
Look at the lines on my wrinkled old face.
The land where you live you can easily trace.
And see where each nation has got its own place.
What am I?
(A map.)
I have got cities but no houses,
Forests but no trees;
Rivers without water.
What am I?
(A map.)
Where can you find
Roads without cars,
Forests without trees
And cities without houses?
(A map.)
It is blue, and green, and yellow.
It shows rivers (deep, not shallow).
Cities, mountains, lakes and seas –
All are there for him who sees.
(A map.)
In my house there is a smaller house
With windows and doors
And only one person living in it – Knowledge.
What is it?
(A bookcase.)
It is not a bush, but has leaves;
It is not a shirt, but is sewn together;
It has no tongue, but tells a tale.
(A book.)
It's not the shirt, but has seams;
It's not the scrub, but has sheets.
(A book.)
I know everything,
I teach everybody.
But to make friends with me
You must first learn.
(A book.)
My leaves are white.
They never grow.
And everything
You want to know
Is stored in those
Black marks you see
On every leaf
You find in me.
(A book.)
It is not a man,
It is not a woman,
But it teaches me.
(A book.)
We have friends.
They cannot walk, and cannot see,
But they are very good to you and me.
With these friends we sail on ships
And ride on trains and even fly in airplanes.
These friends show us towns, seas and lands, Can you guess who are these good friends?
(Books.)
The field is white,
Black is the seed,
And the sower who sowed it
Was clever indeed.
(A page in a book.)
He is not French, he is not Greek;
He tells us how to write and speak,
But in a language not our own –
Which none of us could do alone.
What is he?
(A teacher.)
What word of three syllables contains twentysix letters?
(Alphabet.)
What word is it of only three syllables
Which combines in it twentysix letters?
(Alphabet or ABC.)
What three letters mean twenty six letters?
(The ABC.)
What is it you keep in your schoolbag and that shows how you learn your lessons?
(Your daybook.)
Your teacher puts marks in it.
(A daybook.)
What tells you the answers, but gets you bad marks and is not a person?
(A crib.)
What is small and black,
With a tail and a bent back.
It doesn't bark, it doesn't bite,
But it doesn't let you pass
From one form to the next.
(A «two».)
What is it that gives light to the world although it is black?
(Ink.)
What is that which, though black itself, enlightens the world?
(Ink.)
This little traveller
Is very strong.
He takes a drink of water
And runs a thousand miles.
Before he starts,
He takes off his hat.
When he rests,
He puts it on.
(A fountain pen.)
A black fellow in a wooden cloak,
Wherever he turns his nose
He makes a black mark.
(A pencil.)
This coloured chalk
In a holder of wood
For drawing and writing
Is perfectly good.
(A pencil.)
I'm black, and red, and blue.
I draw a picture for you.
(A pencil)
Our little John Has a wooden shirt on
And a long sharp nose.
He leaves his mark
Wherever he goes.
(A pencil.)
Is writing on an empty stomach harmful?
(No, but paper's better.)
The black snow lays on the white ground.
(A paper and characters.)
Black seeds are sown
On the white ground.
(A paper and characters.)
This little mark,
All so plump and round,
At the end of sentences
Is to be found.
(A full stop.)
An old gentleman, bent with age,
Is asking questions on every page.
(A questionmark.)
A disgusting, unwanted guest
Stopped on a page of my notebook to rest.
The teacher saw him, and so did the class.
I got a poor mark. I deserve it, alas!
(A blot.)
What are the tallest buildings in the world?
(Libraries: they have so many stories.)
Ten tiny balls on each wire mount.
They help little children learn to count.
(An abacus.)
Загадки о школе на английском языке
Загадки о школе на английском языке
Загадки о школе на английском языке
Загадки о школе на английском языке
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