Read the text and choose the correct answers.
Your mobile phone vibrates in your pocket. 'Need to see you,' reads the screen. Nothing new
considering that texting is currently the most common form of long-distance communication.
But how were messages conveyed in the past?
One of the first methods was the smoke signal. This practice was used by Chinese soldiers
guarding the Great Wall to warn of the enemy's approach. The Greeks devised a whole
alphabet of smoke signals for sending messages. But it was Native Americans who made the
system mobile by carrying small bunches of dried grasses around with them. These could be
lit quickly from any place at any time.
Moving on to messages transmitted by sound, an early technique was the drum. Drums are
still used today in the rainforests of Africa, Papua New Guinea and Central and South America
for broadcasting news. The instrument is made from a hollow log and this is hit with a stick.
On receiving the message, each village passes it on to the next, which means that news can
travel at up to 150 km an hour.
Another instrument traditionally used for long-distance communication is the alphorn. These
four-metre long wooden horns were common in most mountainous regions of Europe and
their deep rich sound could be heard over 6 km away. Farmers would use them to send
messages across the valley as well as to call in their cows. Today, the alphorn is a form of
entertainment, and Switzerland alone has around 4,000 players.
In some parts of the world, humans are able to convey messages over long distances without
using instruments. On La Gomera, one of the Canary Islands, people use Silbo, or the
'whistling language' to communicate across the valleys. The language involves the use of the
tongue, lips and hands to make sounds, which can travel up to 5 km. To ensure its
continuation, Silbo is currently a compulsory subject in primary and secondary schools on the
island.
A look at long-distance communication would not be complete without mentioning the art of
yodelling. This is a form of singing, in which the voice changes pitch very quickly, making it
easily heard over long distances. It is believed that the technique was developed in the Swiss
Alps, but it is also found in other places such as Central Africa. At one time, yodelling was
popular in theatres and music halls, but this is no longer so.
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Explicație:
Read the text and choose the correct answers.
1. A - It could comminicate words.
2. C - The speed of the transmission
3. C - Farmers used them just for communication.
4. B - With their mouths and their hands.
5. A - Moving frrequently between high and low tones.
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