5-speed listening (Level 2)

Pompeii thieves say relics are cursed


Slowest

Slower

Medium

Faster

Fastest


Try  Level 0  |  Level 1  |   Level 3



MY e-BOOK
See a sample

This useful resource has hundreds of ideas, activity templates, reproducible activities for …

  • warm-ups
  • pre-reading and listening
  • while-reading and listening
  • post-reading and listening
  • using headlines
  • working with words
  • moving from text to speech
  • role plays,
  • task-based activities
  • discussions and debates
and a whole lot more.


More Listening

20 Questions  |  Spelling  |  Dictation


READING:

The ancient city of Pompeii in Italy gets hundreds of thousands of tourists every year. It is one of Italy's big tourist destinations. Most tourists leave the 2,000-year-old city with happy memories, photos and souvenirs, but some take more. They take historic relics, like small statues, stones or mosaic tiles. Many people are now regretting this. They say the relics are cursed and have filled their lives with bad luck. A senior official at Pompeii said he has had hundreds of relics from across the world returned. Many people apologised and wrote stories about their bad luck.

The senior official, Massimo Osanna, said one man from Latin America wrote about his life being full of traumas after he got home from Italy with a small tile from Pompeii. A man from Spain returned five packages, including a bronze statue he stole in 1987. He complained that the statue had put, "a curse on his entire family". Mr Osanna now wants to set up an exhibition of all the letters he has received. He said the letters might be more interesting than the relics. He added: "It's not that the stolen pieces are highly interesting or valuable. It's more the letters."

Other Levels

Try easier levels.

Level 0  |  Level 1  |   Level 3

All Levels

This page has all the levels, listening and reading for this lesson.

← Back to the Pompeii  lesson.

Online Activities

Help Support This Web Site

  • Please consider helping Breaking News English.com

Sean Banville's Book

Thank You