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English Audio Request

rmari
450 Words / 2 Recordings / 1 Comments
Note to recorder:

Slowly, please. Thank you!

Transport, the activity or process of moving things or people from one place to another.

Early humans dreamed of going faster and further than they could on foot. They probably first achieved this in northern countries before 3,000 BC (before Christ) using skis. The wheel was invented around 3,500 BC but carts were very slow without roads. So for many centuries the fastest and more popular means of transport was the horse, which can run at about fifty-five kilometres an hour. This record for speed was unbroken until the end of eighteenth century when the hot-air balloon and the railway both began to develop.
The hot-air balloon made its first free flight in 1783. Two Frenchmen, the Montgolfier brothers, were working as papermakers when they had the idea for the balloon. A fire heated the air, making the balloon rise. During the first flight, the two passengers were admiring the view when they suddenly saw smoke! The balloon was burning but, luckily, they managed to put the fire out and land safely.
The railway developed gradually from carts on tracks. The first vehicle with an engine to run on tracks was developed in 1803 by an Englishman, Richard Trevithick.
In 1804, he took the first passengers, although they didn't have to buy a ticket. Unfortunately, they were travelling in the train when it began to fall off the tracks and Trevithick realised that the tracks were no strong enough to take the weight of the train. The passengers escaped unharmed, but it was another example of how dangerous the development of transport can be.
Perhaps unexpectedly, the bicycle didn't appear until around 1840, when a Scotsman, Kirkpatrick McMillan, created the first one to have pedals. People rode bicycles without pedals before then, but they were slow and not very popular. It took around 140 years for McMillan's design to develop into modern mountain bikes.
The twentieth century saw the development of many other means of transport, including the hydrofoil and the hovercraft. The petrol-driven car (invented in 1885 in Germany) completely changed the way people thought about transport, and so did the aeroplane. People always dreamed of flying. One day, in 1903, that dream became a reality. Two American brothers, Wilbur and Orville Wright, managed to make a short flight in their aircraft, the Flyer. From there, a huge industry grew that allowed, and still allows, people to visit the whole world, easily and cheaply.
The challenge for the twenty-first century is transport in space. Since the first Moon landing in 1969, technology has developed to give us the space shuttle (1981) and even the space tourist (2002). The future of transport will probably be as exciting as its past.

Recordings

Comments

scandalousdan
Aug. 25, 2011

A few notes:
I believe the use of the word "transport," as a noun, is used chiefly in the UK. Americans would say "transportation" -- for us, "transport" can be a verb, as in "Suzy transported the goods to the restaurant."
Also, the use of the word "aeroplane" is chiefly British, with Americans using the word "airplane."
Lastly, in the UK they say "petrol," whereas we say "gas" or "gasoline."

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