This lesson contains 38 slides, with interactive quizzes, text slides and 13 videos.
Lesson duration is: 45 min
Items in this lesson
The Yeti
Listening Lesson
Slide 1 - Slide
In November 1951, a climber named Shipton took photos of mysterious footprints thought to be those of the "Abominable Snowman" on Mount Everest. This led to an obsession in the West...
Slide 2 - Slide
Watch & listen
Then, choose the correct answer.
GOOD LUCK!
Slide 3 - Slide
Slide 4 - Video
What did the explorers find while they were working on the glacier?
A
Pieces of bear skin.
B
Huge footprints that led down the glacier.
C
A lost pair of bagsacks.
D
A secret doorway into a cave.
Slide 5 - Quiz
Slide 6 - Video
What did Shipton use to compare the size of the footprint with?
A
His own ice axe.
B
His own shoe.
C
A huge stone.
D
His backpack.
Slide 7 - Quiz
Slide 8 - Video
What is "inexplicable" according to the documentary maker?
A
That the explorers were climbing there.
B
That there were no trees on the top.
C
To find footprints that high on a mountain.
D
That climbers could make a picture in the cold.
Slide 9 - Quiz
Slide 10 - Video
What Himalayan native people knew whose footprints these were?
A
The Budhas
B
The Eskimos
C
The Indians
D
The Sherpas
Slide 11 - Quiz
Slide 12 - Video
What did Tom Bordelon call the footprint they found, in his letter?
A
The Yeti
B
The Abominable Snowman
C
The Everest Snowman
D
The Sherpa Snowman
Slide 13 - Quiz
Slide 14 - Video
Back in the 50's, how did people react towards explorers?
A
People did not believe them.
B
People thought they were crazy.
C
People read about them in papers.
D
People respected and believed explorers.
Slide 15 - Quiz
What was the effect Shipton's footprint picture had on the rest of the world?
A
The so called "Yeti Mania" was born.
B
The explorers became famous.
C
Everyone started climbing mountains.
D
People went out to find footprints themselves.
Slide 16 - Quiz
0
Slide 17 - Video
Where does the word YETI come from?
A
From the Chinese language
B
From Old English
C
From the Sherpa dialect word Yeh Teh
D
From the Budha symbol for "bear"
Slide 18 - Quiz
Slide 19 - Video
What does the word "abominable" mean?
A
abnormaal
B
weerzinwekkend
C
lelijk
D
heel erg harig
Slide 20 - Quiz
Slide 21 - Video
According to Tibetan folklore, how many kinds of Yeti are there?
A
2
B
3
C
1
D
4
Slide 22 - Quiz
Slide 23 - Video
Why does the Yeti sometimes go to the highest part of the mountain?
A
Because it is safer for him there.
B
To mate with other Yeti.
C
Because the air is fresher there.
D
To hunt and find shelter.
Slide 24 - Quiz
Slide 25 - Video
What kind of creature is the "Meh Teh", according to the Tibetan tradition?
A
A mixture between humans and animals.
B
The ancestor of human kind.
C
A very old and unknown kind of human.
D
The ancestor of the animal world.
Slide 26 - Quiz
In which century did the first "Yeti" or "Meh Teh" stories appear?
A
18th
B
19th
C
17th
D
12th
Slide 27 - Quiz
Slide 28 - Video
Who is referred to as the "yogi" in the tale?
A
the tiger
B
the Yeti
C
the man
D
the monks in the monastery
Slide 29 - Quiz
Slide 30 - Video
Why did the hermit build a temple in 1667?
Slide 31 - Open question
Which objects did the hermit keep in the temple?
A
The scalp and hand bones of the dead Yeti
B
Pieces of stone form the cave
C
The Yeti's head
D
The Yeti's feet
Slide 32 - Quiz
aanduiden
kluizenaar
niet uit te leggen
hoofdhuid
weerzinwekkend
vervagen
Inexplicable
hermit
Abominable
Scalp
to refer to
to blur
Slide 33 - Drag question
beschrijven
representeren, biedt zich aan
perkament rollen
welwillend, goedaardig
fictie
gevestigd zijn, wonen
voorouder
nachtelijk
fiction
to reside
feature
benevolent
scrolls
ancestor
nocturnal
to describe
Slide 34 - Drag question
Which other names do people also use to refer to the Yeti?