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2.A special card sent on St Valentine's Day, usually anonymous.

3.A sweet brown treat that is made from cocoa powder, milk and sugar – very tasty!

4.An organ in your body that pumps blood. If you put your hand over this organ you can feel it beating!

5.This verb means 'to make an offer of marriage'. A true man will always kneel in front of a woman before asking her to become his wife!

6.A jar or container that you use for displaying flowers. This is often filled with roses on St Valentine's Day!

7.A person whom someone loves. This word is often used in Valentine poems:

Roses are red, Violets are blue, Honey's sweet And so are you.

I'll be your____________

If you'll be mine, All my life

I'll be your Valentine!

8.A very strong feeling of liking someone.

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9. If a boy is completely, uncontrollably in love with a girl, we say: 'He is head over _______in love with her!'

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10.Valentine's Day is celebrated during this month.

11.A man who is about to be married or just married.

12.A woman who is about to be married or just married.

13.This colour is a symbol of love.

14.Something that is given as a gift on Valentine's Day, like a box of chocolates.

3. What do you think of St. Valentine’s Day? Read what young people in Britain and the USA think of St. Valentine’s Day and then answer this question.

I love Valentine's Day. My boyfriend always sends me a huge card with a poem in it. And flowers and chocolates. And takes me out to dinner!

Jessica, 19

I HATE Valentine's Day. I always end up stressing about whether I'll get a card, and sometimes I only get one from my mum or my aunt from Australia!

Louise, 14

I love Valentine's Day. The best part is the excitement of sending a card to someone, even if you don't receive one yourself. And there are always the fun discos, etc to enjoy.

Anna, 16

I think Valentine's Day is OK, but it can be depressing when you don't get a card, especially if you were expecting one.

Catherine, 18

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Pic. 14

I see Valentine's Day just as any other day. If I have a valentine, that's cool, if I don't then I don't stress about it!

William, 17

I hate Valentine's Day. It's all commercial and it's just an excuse for shops to make loads of money! If you love someone, show it all year round, not on one day!

Tom, 16

I think it is wonderful to celebrate love!!! And it's exacting when you get a card and you don't know who it's from!

Kate, 19

These days, things are very difficult. Men have sleepless nights, take days off work, get high blood pressure because there's that horrible thought nagging at the back of their minds saying 'Remember Valentine's Day, remember Valentine's Day.' They have to spend many hours lying there thinking of something that would make a difference. They know they've got to do something special, but what?

David, 21

Valentine's Day makes you feel lonely if you don't get a card, but embarrassed if you do.

Rose, 14

Valentine's Day is all very well, but I hate it when you have to go to school on the 14th of February, because if you get a card, people make fun of you, but if you don't they make fun of you even more!

Pete, 13

It's a great tradition! I think the only people who hate Valentine's Day are the people who don't get any cards!

Nancy, 15

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4. Read the text and try to retell it to your neighbour. Write a Valentine card to your boy/girl friend.

Valentines over the Years

The first true Valentine card was probably written by a young Frenchman, Charles, Duke of Orleans. Charles was captured by the English and imprisoned in the Tower of London in 1415. He felt very lonely, and to fight his loneliness he started writing love poems to his wife in France. His 'valentines' are now kept in the British Museum.

In 1537, King Henry VIII officially recognized St Valentine's Day, which is ironic because he wasn't the most romantic of men – he had six wives (and two of them were executed)!

The early valentines were handmade, and young people spent hours composing their own poems. In 1784, the first 'Valentine Encyclopaedia' was published under the title of: “The New English Valentine Writer, or the High Road to Love, for both Sexes, Containing a Complete Set of Valentines, which the Young may read without Blushing, and those of Riper Years find Pleasant and Entertaining.”

As time passed, valentine cards became more and more popular. The Victorians decorated their cards with hearts and Cupids, wild flowers, silk, lace, feathers – you name it!

When the modern postal system was set up in the nineteenth century, a real Valentine's Day industry was found. Ready-made cards were massproduced, just as they were for Christmas and birthdays.

Today, many people send electronic valentines to their loved ones. But the person who gets an e-valen-tine will know who it's from! You can't sign it 'From your secret admirer'!

Here are some mobile phone text abbreviations used by young people in Britain. Do you know what they mean?

1)WUBMV?

2)ILUVU or ILU

3)LUWAK<3

4)KOTL

5)LOLV

6)Xoxoxoxoxo

7)12x@>--,--

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5. Read the text and try to quiz.

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Nobody knows for sure if Romeo and Juliet, Shakespeare's romantic heroes, really existed but millions of people go to Verona, Italy, to see 'the house of Juliet'. This 13th-century house belonged to the Cappello family (sounds a bit like the Capulets, doesn't it?) who had a daughter called Juliet.

Juliet Cappello was born on the 16th of September, 1284. There were many legends and poems about her romance with a young man, and these legends probably inspired William Shakespeare to write his famous play in 1596.

Tourists like to be photographed standing on the balcony of 'the house of Juliet' because they believe that it's the balcony where Juliet Capulet and Romeo

Montague revealed their love to each other. And thousands of lovers from all over the world leave their love notes on the walls of the house. The town's cleaners have tried to remove them many times but they keep appearing again and again – and in greater numbers.

There is also an unusual volunteer organization in Verona – the Juliet Club. Every year, they receive about 5,000 letters from heartbroken men and women all over the world. And each letter is answered!

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