viernes, 13 de septiembre de 2013
jueves, 4 de abril de 2013
House and furniture
Here you have a link to several vocabulary exercises on those topics
- Interlex group is formed by a pannel of teachers designing games and exercises for secondary students.
- In learning chocolate you are going to find vocabulary with the possibility of listening to the pronunciation of the word; have a look at it, but I hope most of the words are going to be known by you.
- And here you have an exercise on partitives.
- Interlex group is formed by a pannel of teachers designing games and exercises for secondary students.
- In learning chocolate you are going to find vocabulary with the possibility of listening to the pronunciation of the word; have a look at it, but I hope most of the words are going to be known by you.
- And here you have an exercise on partitives.
Back to school
In this unit (7), we are learning vocabulary about school.
How do you say “goma”, ” borrador”, tijeras” etc… in English? Let’s revise the vocabulary of school supplies.
Then, visit a well-known public boarding school in UK Eton school and find out about it.
lunes, 4 de febrero de 2013
CONDITIONAL SENTENCES
CONDITIONAL SENTENCES
Here you have a presentation with the conditional connectors and types of conditional sentences plus some exercises for you to practice; remember this term we will study only the zero, first and second type; however, I have included all the information for you to have a complete idea of the grammar.
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MODAL VERBS
Here you have anther tutorial, plus a very useful set of exercises; have a go and practice; I'm sure you will find them useful.
MODAL VERBS TUTORIAL and EXERCISES
PHRASAL VERBS
Phrasal Verbs
Phrasal
verbs are a group of multi-word verbs made from a verb plus another
word or words. Many people refer to all multi-word verbs as phrasal
verbs but we have to make a distinction between three types of
multi-word verbs: prepositional verbs, phrasal verbs and
phrasal-prepositional verbs. Now we'll just look at phrasal verbs proper.
Phrasal verbs are made of:
verb + adverb
Phrasal verbs can be:
- intransitive (no direct object)
- transitive (direct object)
Here are some examples of phrasal verbs:
| phrasal verbs | meaning | examples | ||
| direct object | ||||
| intransitive phrasal verbs | get up | rise from bed | I don't like to get up. | |
| break down | cease to function | He was late because his car broke down. | ||
| transitive phrasal verbs | put off | postpone | We will have to put off | the meeting. |
| turn down | refuse | They turned down | my offer. | |
Separable Phrasal Verbs
When
phrasal verbs are transitive (that is, they have a direct object), we
can usually separate the two parts. For example, "turn down" is a separable phrasal verb. We can say: "turn down my offer" or "turn my offer down". Look at this table:
| transitive phrasal verbs are separable | They | turned | down | my offer. | ||
| They | turned | my offer | down. |
However, if the direct object is a pronoun, we have no choice. We must
separate the phrasal verb and insert the pronoun between the two parts.
Look at this example with the separable phrasal verb "switch on":
| direct object pronouns must go between the two parts of transitive phrasal verbs | John | switched | on | the radio. | These are all possible. | ||
| John | switched | the radio | on. | ||||
| John | switched | it | on. | ||||
| John | switched | on | it. | This is not possible. |
Some dictionaries tell you when phrasal verbs are separable. If a dictionary writes "look (something) up", you know that the phrasal verb "look up" is separable, and you can say "look something up" and "look up something". It's a good idea to write "something/somebody" as appropriate in your vocabulary book when you learn a new phrasal verb, like this:
- get up
- break down
- put something/somebody off
- turn sth/sb down
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