Listening activity: watch the video
and answer the following questions
1.
What’s the other
name of St Patrick’s Day?
2.
When did Saint Patrick live?
3.
On which day did Saint Patrick die?
4.
What did Saint Patrick do?
5.
What colours are associated with this day?
6.
Where are the five largest Saint Patrick Day’s
parades? Which one is the largest?
7.
Where do they dye the river green?
8.
When did they start to have St Patrick’s Day parades
in Ireland?
9.
Why is St Patrick’s Day so popular?
Afterwards, correct yourselves by reading the transcript:
St Patrick's Day or "Paddy's Day" is the Irish feast day which
celebrates none other than Saint Patrick, the patron saint of Ireland , who was around from 386-461 AD. The day is celebrated worldwide by
the Irish, the Scottish and increasingly by anybody who just wants to party and
drink too much Guinness. The day has come to be associated with everything
Irish, anything green and gold, shamrocks and plain old good luck. The biggest
celebrations in Ireland outside Dublin are in Downpatrick where St
Patrick was buried following his death on March
17th 461 AD . The man himself is largely credited with converting Ireland from a Pagan to a Christian
nation. He also banished snakes from the island driving them into the sea,
although the snakes are probably a metaphor for the druids. Many Irish people
still wear a bunch of shamrock on this day, even presidents of the United States . Paddy’s Day Parades in Ireland date from the late nineteenth
century originating in the growing sense of nationalism of the period. In the
mid nineties a group called the Saint Patrick’s festival was set up by the
government. They aimed to offer a national festival to promote Ireland ’s sophisticated modern image. The
five largest parades in recent years have been held in Dublin , New York City, Manchester , Montreal and Boston . The New York Parade is generally
regarded as the largest. Parades also take place in other cities including London , Paris , Rome , Munich , Hong Kong , Copenhagen and Chicago where they dye a stretch of the
river emerald green. The Paddy’s day custom came to America in 1737 that was the first year St
Patrick’s Day was publicly celebrated in the US in Boston . One reason St Patrick’s Day might
have become so popular in the US and elsewhere is that it takes
place just a few days before the first day of spring. So say goodbye to the
winter blues and wear the green on St Patrick’s Day.
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