Everyday English | страница 31
Young people rarely live with their parents. Usually, upon graduation from high school children move out of the family home. To reduce expenses young people frequently rent apartments or a house. Usually two to five young people rent an apartment or a house together and share other expenses.
While young people are getting married later in life, the divorce rate is increasing. Roughly 50% of all marriages in the United States now end in divorce. In cases of divorce the financial support required from the breadwinner>1 will vary from case to case and if agreement is not possible between the two parties the court will decide. The cheapest way of getting a divorce is through the no-fault system, that is, two parties come to an agreement between themselves about the distribution of property. If there is no agreement then each hires a lawyer and the divorce will be very costly, up to $25,000 and more for legal fees alone.
The most ominous>2 trend in American society is the increasingly high number of children being born to unmarried young people in poverty who are being raised without fathers. Two-thirds of black children are now being born in fatherless households. Undoubtedly these children are destined to add to the number of those in poverty and to those involved in delinquency>3 and crime.
(from “Life and Issues in the USA")
>1 breadwinner - a person who works to support the family
>2 ominous ['ominas] - treatening
>3 delinquency [di'lipkwansi] - crime; wrong doing
1. Do we witness the same trends in a Russian family?
2. What is the size of an average Russian family?
3. Having read the article, did you find a lot of things different/in common? Give the examples.
4. Can we say the same about Russian young people? “...young people rarely live with their parents...” Why?
5. What is the average marriage age in Russia?
6. Do we have a lot of single-parent families? Why?
(abridged)
by Aline Sullivan
As unromantic as it seems, figuring out how to divide assets>1 in case a marriage fails is a higher priority for an increasing number of newlyweds-to-be than traditional matters such as china patterns and guest list.
Proponents of prenuptial agreements cite rates of divorce that approach 50 percents in the United States and in some European countries, and its rising incidence in the Middle East and Latin America, to defend the practicality of such pacts. Where recognised by law, these agreements can help assuage the turmoil