Задание

British people like their newspapers.

About 70 per cent of British people read a national newspaper every day and many also read a local newspaper. There are two main types of daily newspapers in Britain. The "broadsheets" contain national and international news, and pages on topics such as money, the arts and travel. These are the four daily broadsheets:

The Times is very old - it started in 1785. It sells about 680,000 copies a day and it costs 50 pence.

The Guardian started in 1821, in Manchester (most newspapers started in London). It sells about 325,000 copies a day, and it costs 55 pence.

The Daily Telegraph sells more copies than the others — about 975,000 a day, and it costs 60 pence. It started in 1855.

The Independent only began in 1986. It sells about 205,000 copies a day, and it costs 60 pence.

"Tabloids" contain mostly national news. They have a lot of pages on sport and the lives of famous people. The tabloids are more popular than the broadsheets.

The Daily Mail started in 1896 and it sells about 2,422,000 copies a day now. It costs 40 pence.

The Daily Express started in 1900. It sells about 878,000 copies a day and costs 40 pence.

The Daily Mirror started in 1903. It costs 35 pence and sells about 2,200,000 copies a day.

The Sun is quite new — it started in 1964 — but it is really popular. It sells about 3,452,000 copies a day. It costs 30 pence.

DATE STARTED CIRCULATION PRICE

The Daily Express

The Daily Mail

The Daily Mirror

The Daily Telegraph

The Guardian

The Independent

The Sun

The Times