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Bruno Leys
Marleen DesoeteLieven Dufour
Eric HuygheKathleen Van Ryckeghem
NEW Breakaway 1A N E N G L I S H C O U R S E F O R F I R S T G R A D E T E C H N I C A L S C H O O L S
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New Breakaway 1 bestaat uit
- een Textbook
- een Workbook met Pupils’ CD-ROM
- een Teachers’ Guide met Teachers’ CD-ROM
- een dubbele Teachers’ CD
New Breakaway 1 – Textbook
Bruno Leys, Marleen Desoete, Lieven Dufour, Eric Huyghe, Kathleen Van Ryckeghem
Language advisor: T. Millward
Grafische vormgeving: B.AD, Roeselare
Tekeningen: Pieter Nolf
Fotokopieerapparaten zijn algemeen verspreid en vele mensen maken er
haast onnadenkend gebruik van voor allerlei doeleinden.
Jammer genoeg ontstaan boeken niet met hetzelfde gemak als kopieën.
Boeken samenstellen kost veel inzet, tijd en geld.
De vergoeding van de auteurs en van iedereen die bij het maken en verhandelen
van boeken betrokken is, komt voort uit de verkoop van die boeken.
In België beschermt de auteurswet de rechten van deze mensen.
Wanneer u van boeken of van gedeelten eruit zonder toestemming kopieën maakt,
buiten de uitdrukkelijk bij wet bepaalde uitzonderingen,
ontneemt u hen dus een stuk van die vergoeding.
Daarom vragen auteurs en uitgevers u beschermde teksten
niet zonder schriftelijke toestemming te kopiëren
buiten de uitdrukkelijk bij wet bepaalde uitzonderingen.
Verdere informatie over kopieerrechten en de wetgeving
met betrekking tot reproductie vindt u op www.reprobel.be
De uitgever heeft ernaar gestreefd de relevante auteursrechten te regelen volgens de
wettelijke bepalingen. Diegenen die desondanks menen zekere rechten te kunnen
doen gelden, worden verzocht zich tot de uitgever te wenden.
© Uitgeverij Van In, Wommelgem, 2004
Alle rechten voorbehouden. Behoudens de uitdrukkelijk bij wet bepaalde uitzonderingen
mag niets uit deze uitgave worden vermenigvuldigd, opgeslagen in een geautomatiseerd
gegevensbestand of openbaar gemaakt, op welke wijze ook, zonder de voorafgaande en
schriftelijke toestemming van de uitgever.
Eerste druk, eerste bijdruk 2006; spellingherziening 2005
ISBN 90-306-3444-8
D/2006/0078/235
Art. 409670/02
NUR 110
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Table of Contents
Grammar Vocabulary Functions
Unit 1 (pp. 5-12)
5
to be (+) Greeting and meeting
someone.
Using numbers.
Spelling words.
Unit 2 (pp. 13-19)
13
to be (-) / (?)
possessives
the genitive
family Asking questions
with to be.
Talking about your family
and family relations.
Saying how many
there are.
Saying what you have.
Mrs, Mr, Miss, Sir
school necessities
numbers
Unit 3 (pp. 20-26)
20
plurals
to have (+)
this/that - these/those
animals
Unit 4 (pp. 27-34)
27
can (+) / (-)
to have (-) / (?)
rooms and places in
and around the house
furniture
Talking about rooms and
houses.
Making a list.
Writing an e-mail.
Saying what you
can(not) do.
Unit 5 (pp. 35-46)
35
days and months
ordinals
clothes
colours
Asking and telling the
time.
Saying and writing
dates.
Writing an invitation.
Describing clothes.
Saying what colour
things are.
Unit 6 (pp. 47-55)
47
simple present (+)
adverbs of frequency
means of transport
daily routines
Talking about daily
routines and regular
activities.
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Grammar Vocabulary Functions
Unit 7 (pp. 56-60)
56
simple present (-) / (?) hobbies Saying what you (don’t)
like.
Talking about hobbies.
Unit 8 (pp.61-66)
61
simple present (?) chatting
computers
the Internet
Interviewing someone.
Unit 9 (pp. 67-74)
67
prepositions of place
imperatives
public places
signs and directions
traffic
Telling and asking the
way.
Giving orders, telling
someone what (not)
to do.
Unit 10 (pp. 75-83)
75
question tag questions the railway station Travelling by train.
Reading timetables.
Asking for information.
Buying a ticket.
Unit 11 (pp. 84-90)
84
present continuous
tense (+) / (-) / (?)
ING-form
subjects
to wear / to carry
Talking about what’s
going on.
Unit 12 (pp. 91-97)
91
question tag questions
simple present versus
present continuous
parts of the body
injuries and illnesses
emergencies
Making an emergency
phone call.
Talking about health
and illness.
Understanding a short
news edition.
Unit 13 (pp. 98-107)
98
simple past (+) Talking about past
events.
Inferring the meaning of
words from a context.
Unit 14 (pp. 108-120)
108
simple past (-) / (?) food Talking about food.
Ordering a meal.
Unit 15 (pp. 121-131)
121
simple future (+) / (-)
/ (?)
comparisons
countries and
nationalities
weather
seasons
Talking about the weather.
Talking about holidays.
Predicting the future.
Discussing countries.
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5five
Unit 1
At the bus stop – waiting for the school bus
PHILIP: Hi, my name’s Philip.KEVIN: Hi, Philip. I’m Kevin.
I’m new here.PHILIP: Where are you from?KEVIN: I’m from Leeds, but I live
in York now.PHILIP: Look. There’s the school bus.
Let’s go.
In the staff room
MR CAMPBELL: Excuse me. Are you Paula Griffin, the new English teacher?
MRS GRIFFIN: Yes, I am.MR CAMPBELL: Nice to meet you, Paula.
I’m Peter Campbell, the French teacher.
MRS GRIFFIN: Hello, Peter. Or is it Pierre?MR CAMPBELL: Peter’s fine, thank you.MR CAMPBELL: Good luck, Paula!
They’re angels!
1.1
1
Als je het cd-icoontje met hettracknummer ziet, vind je dedialoog op de leerlingen-cd.
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6 six
Mrs = Misses[misiz]
1.2 - 1.3
first name: Petersurname: Campbell
Mr = Mister
De prikbordjes geven je korte,nuttige informatie. Je zou ze boven je bed kunnenhangen.
In the classroom
MRS GRIFFIN: Good morning, boys and girls. I’m Mrs Griffin, your English teacher. You’re class 8B.
CLASS: Good morning, Mrs Griffin.KEVIN: Wow! She’s beautiful!
We’re lucky!MRS GRIFFIN: What’s your name, boy?KEVIN: Kevin Pearson, Miss.MRS GRIFFIN: Sit down, please.KEVIN: Yes, Miss.
In the playground
HELEN: Hi, Philip. How are you?PHILIP: Fine, thanks. And you?HELEN: I’m great.
But who’s the new boy?PHILIP: This is Kevin. He’s from Leeds.HELEN: Hi, Kevin. Leeds or York,
schools are boring everywhere. PHILIP: Time to find out how boring …
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7seven
TO BE – POSITIVE (+)
SHORT FORM FULL FORM
I’m Kevin Pearson. (I am)
You’re from Leeds. (you are)
He’s the new boy. (he/she/it is)She’s the new girl.It’s a new school.
We’re lucky. (we are)
You’re class 8B. (you are)
They’re angels. (they are)
▼ Meeting / Greeting Someone
Now make a meeting & greeting conversation in pairs.
▼ Number Rhyme
Hi, my name’s ...Hi, I’m ...This is ...Excuse me, are you ...
Who’s ...What’s your name?
Where are you from?I’m from ...
Hi, ... . How are you?Fine, thanks.I’m great.
Nice to meet you.Hello.
1.4
1, 2 tie my shoe play no tricks start again
3, 4 close the door
5, 6
7, 8 don’t be late
9, 10
OVER TO
Watch out, I am alwaysa capital letter!(= hoofdletter)
My name’s Philip.
My name is Philip.
Het ‘Over To You’ - icoontjegeeft aan dat het jullie beurtis. Het gaat altijd om een mondelinge oefening.
2
Als je dit kader ziet, gaat het over te lerenwoordenschat.
Als je dit kader ziet, gaat het over grammatica.
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8 eight
▼ Telephone NumbersBarbara 0844 297 3180Kate 0841 162 5379Philip 0845 307 4691Jenny 0842 913 7526Mrs Griffin 0846 472 9385
8 9 0 4 2 6 oh
6 5 3 4 2double seven
Say these telephonenumbers aloud.
Pupil A: What’s your telephone number?
Pupil B: It’s …
0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 910 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 1920 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 2930 331 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 3940 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 4950 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 5960 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 6970 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 7788 779980 81 82 83 84 85 86 87 88 889990 9911 9922 93 94 95 96 9977 9988 99100
1000
101200
0oh
1one
2two
3three
4four
5five
6six
7seven
8eight
9nine
10ten
11eleven
12twelve
13thirteen
14fourteen
15fifteen
16sixteen
17seventeen
18eighteen
19nineteen
20twenty
21twenty-one
22twenty-two
23twenty-three
24twenty-four
25twenty-five
26twenty-six
27twenty-seven
28twenty-eight
29twenty-nine
30thirty
3311thirty-one
3322thirty-two
33thirty-three
3344 3355 3366 3377 3388 339940
forty4411 4422 4433 44
forty-four4455 4466 4477 4488 4499
50fifty
5511 5522 5533 5544 55fifty-five
5566 5577 5588 559960
sixty6611 6622 6633 6644 6655 66
sixty-six6677 6688 6699
70seventy
7711 7722 7733 7744 7755 7766 77seventy-seven
7788 779980eighty
8811 8822 8833 8844 8855 8866 8877 88eighty-eight
889990ninety
9911 9922 9933 9944 9955 9966 9977 9988 99ninety-nine
100one hundred
1000one thousand
110011a hundred and one
200two hundred
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAYListen and repeat.
thirteen - thirty sixteen - sixty eighteen - eighty fourteen - forty seventeen - seventy nineteen - ninetyfifteen - fifty
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
OVER TO
OVER TO
3
Het ’Look, Listen & Say’- icoontje geeft aan dathet om een uitspraak-oefening gaat.
▼ Numbers
Did you know?The number for the• emergency services: 999 (UK) or 911 (USA and Canada).• ‘talking clock’: 123. • UK Operator (inlichtingen): 100.• International Operator: 155.• Directory Enquiries (vragen i.v.m. telefoongids): 192.
7
7 7
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9nine
▼ School Necessities1.5 - 1.6 - 1.7 - 1.8
OVER TOA GAMEBingo!
A GAMEBingo!
Ask your teacher to play bingo in the classroom.
Examples: one - fizz - three - fizz - five - fizz - ...one - two - three - fizz - five - six - seven - fizz - ...
A GAMELet’s play
Fizz!
A GAMELet’s play
Fizz!
a biro a pen a pencil a felt pen
a marker a ruler a pair of scissors glue
a rubber / an eraser a pencil case a school diary a folder / a file
a school bag
a: a biro,a pen,a folder
an: an eraser,an atlas,an open book
1.9 - 1.10 - 1.11
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10 ten
▼ The Alphabet
Can you spell your name?
Time for a laugh
TEACHER: Mark. Give me a sentence beginning with ‘I’.
MARK: I is the …
TEACHER: No, Mark. You mustsay ‘I am’ not ‘I is’.
MARK: All right. I am theninth letter of the alphabet.
Alpha
Bravo
Charlie
Delta
Echo
Foxtrot
Golf
Hotel
India
Juliet
Kilo
Lima
Mike
November
Oscar
Papa
Quebec
Romeo
Sierra
Tango
Uniform
Victor
Whiskey
X-ray
Yankee
Zulu
1.12 - 1.13 - 1.14
OVER TO
Did you know?This is the international alphabet used byNATO, military forces and international air traffic control.
A apeB beeC ceiling (= plafond)
D deepE EveF JeffG GinaH RachelI ice-cream
J JamesK KateL ElvisM EmilyN endO openP PeterQ queue (= rij)
R arm
S EstherT teaU youV TVW double youX extraY Why?Z zzzzzzzz
4
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11eleven
TRANSPARENT WORDS
name naam telephone number telefoonnummerschool bus schoolbus late laatclass klas to start starten, beginnenschool bell schoolbel atlas atlasbook boek
FAMILIAR WORDS
time tijd everywhere overalangel engel or ofboy jongen someone iemandgirl meisje to live leven, wonenteacher lera(a)r(es) to look kijkenclassroom klaslokaal to listen luisterendoor deur to say zeggennew nieuw to close sluitenEnglish Engels to play spelenbeautiful mooi Good morning. Goeiemorgen.lucky gelukkig Good afternoon. Goeiemiddag.again opnieuw, weer Sit down. Ga zitten.Excuse me, ... Neem me niet Why? Waarom?
kwalijk, ... pardon Good luck! Succes!
NEW WORDS
In the morning the students meet to meet (elkaar) ontmoetenin the playground. playground speelplaatsThe teachers greet each other to greet (be)groetenin the staff room. staff room leraarskamer
I wait for the bus at the bus stop. to wait wachtenbus stop bushalte
Paula Griffin is the English teacher.Paula is her first name. first name voornaamGriffin is her surname. surname achternaam
VOCABULARY FOCUS▼
Deze woorden lijken op Nederlandse woorden.
Je kent allicht dezewoorden van tv, film,liedjes ...
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12 twelve
- Students say that French is boring. French Frans- I hear the school bell. Let’s go and boring saai, vervelend
find out if they’re right. Let’s go. Laten we gaan.to find out ontdekken,
erachter komen
Philip knows lots of tricks. trick truc
Sit down and tie your shoes. to tie (vast)binden
There’s a long queue at the bus stop. queue rij
Don’t look at the ceiling. ceiling plafondStop dreaming!
Grammar:- Form of ‘to be’ (TB 7 - WB 1.2,1.3)
Vocabulary:- Miss, Mrs, Mr, Sir (TB 6)- The numbers (TB 7, 8 - WB 1.4,1.5,1.6,1.7,1.8)- School necessities (TB 9 - WB 1.9,1.10,1.11)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 11,12)
- Greet and meet someone (TB 7 - WB 1.1).- Pronounce the numbers (TB 8 - WB 1.5,1.8,1.13,1.14).- Spell words (TB 10 - WB 1.12,1.13,1.14).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
In dit kadertje op het einde van elke unit vind je terug wat jezou moeten kennen (This is what you need to know) en wat jezou moeten kunnen (This is what you should be able to do).Tussen haakjes zie je waar dit behandeld wordt.
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13thirteen
5
2.1 - 2.2
IAN: Aaah, school’s out.KEVIN: How’s your class?IAN: Well, er, my class is great
except for my neighbour.We aren’t friends at all.He’s not funny and hisstories are so boring.
KEVIN: Really?IAN: Yes, and he isn’t nice to our
teachers.They have their handsfull with that boy.But, what about you?
KEVIN: I’m in the same class as mybest friend, Philip. Our favourite teacher isMrs Griffin.I really like her charm andshe’s so …
IAN: Smart?KEVIN: No, no, so …IAN: Nice? Pretty? Helpful?KEVIN: No, …IAN: You’re in love.KEVIN: NO, I’M NOT!IAN: Yes, you are!KEVIN: Come on, let’s get
out of here.
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14 fourteen
TO BE – NEGATIVE (-)
SHORT FORM FULL FORM
I’m not in love. (I am not)
You’re not in my class. (you are not)You aren’t
He’s not funny. (he/she/it is not)He isn’tShe’s not nice.She isn’tIt’s not a new school.It isn’t
We’re not friends at all. (we are not)We aren’t
You’re not good neighbours. (you are not)You aren’t
They’re not helpful. (they are not)They aren’t
TO BE – QUESTIONS (?)
YES/NO QUESTIONS SHORT ANSWERS
Are you the new English teacher? Yes, I am.No, I’m not.
Is she pretty? Yes, she is.No, she isn’t.
Am I your best friend? Yes, you are.No, you aren’t.
▲ We put the verb before the subject.
verb = werkwoordsubject = onderwerp
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15fifteen
2.3
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
6
2.4 - 2.5 - 2.6 - 2.7
2.8 - 2.9 - 2.10
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
How is your class?
Where are you from?
What ’s your name?What ’s not funny about your neighbour?
Who ’s your English teacher?
▲ Question word + verb
The voice often falls in question The voice usually rises in yes/noword questions. questions.
What’s your name?
Are you Kevin?Where are you from?
Is he your friend?
THE POSSESSIVE
I’m in the same classas Philip.
You’re in class 8B.
He’s not friendly.She’s so beautiful.It’s a new school.
We aren’t friends at all.
You’re thirteen.
They’re in love.
My name is Kevin Pearson.
What’s your name?
His tricks are so funny.Her surname is Griffin.Its playground is very big.
Mr Campbell is our Frenchteacher.
Your English books aregreat.
Their house is in SelbyRoad.
You’re funny, but yourneighbour isn’t.It’s time this schoolchanged its stupidrules.
My school is over there.Their neighbours are very helpful.They’re best friends.
question word= vraagwoord
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAYIntonationListen and repeat.
PERSONAL PRONOUNS POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS
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16 sixteen
▼ Meet the Simpsons!!
Homer Simpson is married to Marge. She’s Homer’s wife and
he’s Marge’s husband.
They have two daughters and a son. Their son’s name is Bartand their daughters’ names are Lisa and Maggie.
Bart is Lisa and Maggie’s brother. Lisa and Maggie are Bart’s sisters.
Homer is their father and Marge is their mother. They’re Bart, Lisa and
Maggie’s parents.
Abe is the children’s grandfather. So Bart is his grandson and Lisa and
Maggie are Abe’s granddaughters.
Homer’s boss is Mr Burns. He is Springfield’s richest man.
Waylon Smithers is Mr Burns’ assistant.
Ned and Maude Flanders are the Simpsons’ neighbours.
Rod and Todd are Ned and Maude Flanders’s sons.
™Marge
™Homer
™Maggie
™Lisa™Bart
™Abe
™Mr Burns
™Smithers
™Ned ™Maude
™Rod
™Todd
2.11
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17seventeen
▼ Family
GENITIVE
FORMATION
Homer’s wifeMarge’s husbandthe son’s nameLisa and Maggie’s brother + ’sBart’s sistersthe children’s grandfather
the daughters’ names + ’the Simpsons’ neighbours plurals ending in –s only take an apostrophe
Mr Burns’ assistant + ’(s)Ned and Maude Flanders’s sons names ending in –s mostly take ’s
(sometimes you also see the apostrophe alone)
grandfather & grandmother Pearson
PARENTS
WIFEHUSBAND
SISTERBROTHER
➔ ➔
➔ ➔
➔➔ ➔
➔SON DAUGHTER
GRANDSON GRANDDAUGHTER
2.12
father and mother
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18 eighteen
VOCABULARY FOCUS▼
TRANSPARENT WORDS
out uit taxi taxifriend vriend pop band popgroepbest beste intonation intonatiefavourite favoriete, lievelings-..... to rise rijzen, stijgencharm charme to fall vallen, dalenCome on! Komaan! Vooruit! actor acteurassistant assistent
FAMILIAR WORDS
funny grappig boss baasto like houden van, graag hebben rich rijksmart knap, elegant south of ten zuiden vanpretty mooi short korthelpful behulpzaam, hulpvaardig answer antwoordin love verliefd singer zangerto be married to getrouwd zijn met
NEW WORDS
The Pearsons aren’t at home, except for behalveexcept for the dog.
Ned Flanders is Homer’s neighbour buurneighbour.
- I like English. It’s my subject schoolvakfavourite subject.
- Really? really echtAre you good at it? to be good at goed zijn in
- Yes, I am.
- Is your neighbour nice nice aardig, vriendelijkto Mrs Griffin?
- Not at all! She has her not at all helemaal niethands full with him. to have your je handen vol
hands full with hebben aan
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19nineteen
Philip and Kevin are in same dezelfdethe same school.In this school there are male mannelijkemale and female teachers. female vrouwelijke
- This young actor is already a real televisioncelebrity. celebrity beroemdheid
- What’s his age? age leeftijd- He’s only seventeen.
- What a boring film!- You’re right! It isn’t
a good story. story verhaal- What about a drink in this What about... Wat zeg je van…
pub near the cinema? Wat is er met...- Great! Let’s get out of here. to get out of weggaan,
wegkomen uit
Grammar:Formation of : - negative form of ‘to be’ (TB 14 – WB 2.1, 2.2)
- questions with ‘to be’ (TB 14,15 – WB 2.4, 2.5, 2.6)- possessive form (TB 15 – WB 2.7, 2.8, 2.9, 2.10)- genitive (TB 17 – WB 2.12)
Vocabulary: - Family (TB 17 – WB 2.11, 2.12)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 18,19)
- Pronounce questions (TB 15 – WB 2.3).- Ask and answer questions with ‘to be’ (TB 14, 15 – WB 2.4, 2.5, 2.6).- Talk about family relations (WB 2.11, 2.12).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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20 twenty
▼ Tangram Puzzles
Tangram is a very old Chinese puzzle. Themeaning of the word tangram is ‘Seven-Boardof Cunning’ (cunning = vaardigheid). It’s veryeasy to make the puzzle. You need a squareof cardboard and you cut out seven pieceslike this:
a square a triangle a parallelogram
3.1 - 3.2
mountain top candle Indian chief
shark runner dancer
lady
When you’re doing tangram puzzles the idea is to use all seven pieces.
Look at the amazing things you can make with these seven pieces.
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21twenty-one
7PLURAL OF NOUNS - PRONUNCIATION
SINGULAR PLURAL
a book seventeen books / s /an Indian chief two Indian chiefs after / k, f, p, t /a shop five shops think of the worda cat eleven cats “coffeepot”
a page twelve pagesa pencil case eight pencil cases / i z /an exercise fourteen exercisesa box three boxes after hissing soundsa match six matches (sisklanken)
a brother three brothersa pencil nineteen pencils / z /a pen sixteen pens after all other sounds
▲ house [ h a υ s ] houses [ ’h a υ z i z ]
OVER TONow say these words:
a g e s ,
b u s e s ,
b o o k s ,
b u s s t o p s ,
s t o r i e s ,
f r i e n d s ,
c l a s s e s ,
s u b j e c t s ,
b o s s e s .
3.3
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22 twenty-two
3.4 - 3.5 - 3.6
Did you know?one sheep - two sheepone fish - two fishone mouse - two mice
PLURAL OF NOUNS - SPELLING
SINGULAR PLURAL
a cat cats regular form + sa dog dogsa horse horsesa monkey monkeys= vowel + y(= klinker)
a puppy puppies y ➔ iesa baby babies(consonant + y)(= medeklinker)
a bus buses after a hissinga box boxes sound (sisklank)a match matches + es
a man men [ m e n ] sounds as ‘pen’ irregular pluralsa woman women [ ‘w i m i n ]
sounds as ‘swimming’a child children
one goose - two geeseone wolf - two wolves
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23twenty-three
▼ York FM goes Nuts!Neil Nuts Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. This is Neil Nuts live, for York FM.
Next Saturday the Minster School in York holds a jumble sale1. The ideacomes from Daisy Wheel, the school’s bus driver.And guess2 who’s running in now …Good afternoon Daisy.
Daisy Wheel (Out of breath) Hi Neil, it’s not easy to park a school bus.Neil Nuts So tell us Daisy. Why this jumble sale?
Daisy Wheel I often3 find a lot of things on and under the seats. The children sometimes collect4 their things the next day. But I have a lot of other objects and nobodywants them.
Neil Nuts Daisy, what do you have for this jumble sale?Daisy Wheel Well I have a lot of school necessities like pens and biros, books …
but you can’t believe what other things people leave on a school bus.Neil Nuts Let me guess Daisy … a colour TV … laptop computers … a few parents …
Daisy Wheel Are you nuts?Neil Nuts Yes, I am.
Daisy Wheel I mean, are you crazy?Neil Nuts No I’m not, Daisy.
Daisy Wheel Well, anyway, I don’t have any of those.But I have a few mobile phones, computer games, discmen, dirty5 socks, left shoes and right shoes. But never a pair.
Neil Nuts Do you have any food on sale6? You must find lots of packed lunches7.
Daisy Wheel I don’t think a lot of people are interested in rotten fruit … but I have my husband Willy to take care of8 that.
Neil Nuts Oh, you mean that he throws9 these lunches away.
Daisy Wheel Are you nut... out of your mind? My Willy is always hungry.
Neil Nuts That’s all very interesting.So listeners, next Saturday, bethere at Daisy’s Jumble Sale from9 till 12 in the Minster School inYork.In our next week’s programmewe’ll be talking to Willy Wheel,the man who never stopseating …
1 jumble sale: rommelmarkt2 to guess: raden3 often: vaak
4 to collect: ophalen, verzamelen5 dirty: vuil6 on sale: te koop
7 packed lunches: lunchpakketten8 to take care of: ervoor zorgen9 to throw away: weggooien
leftright
8
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24 twenty-four
▼ Minster School’s Jumble SaleOVER TO Say how many biros Daisy has.
Example: "She has sixteen biros."Now say how many … Daisy has.
HAVE – POSITIVE (+)
one shoea pair of shoes
one socka pair of socks
▼ After the jumble saleI have a book.You have two pens.She has twelve biros.We have two monkeys.You have six cats.They have three horses.
Sometimes people also say:"I’ve got six horses."(I have got)"He’s got two sheep."(he has got)
3.7 3.8
_ g
25twenty-five
VOCABULARY FOCUS▼
TRANSPARENT WORDS
old oud sock sokpuzzle puzzel shoe schoendancer danser pair paarbaby baby rotten rotman man fruit fruitSaturday zaterdag match matchto park parkeren idea ideeon op chief chefunder onder discman discman
FAMILIAR WORDS
lady dame sometimes somsshop winkel a lot of veelpage pagina nobody niemandwoman vrouw colour TV kleurentelevisiechild kind crazy gekgentleman heer mobile phone gsm, mobieltjelive rechtstreeks computer game computerspelto tell vertellen left linksto find vinden right rechts
- Are you interested inantiques?There’s a sale on the marketplace tomorrow morning.
- Are you out of your mind? (Are you nuts?)I don’t want the things otherpeople throw away.
Climbing mountains makes mehungry. I’m glad to have apacked lunch and some fruit inmy bag.
York FM has a lot of listeners.
to be interested in
sale
to be out of your mindto be nutsto want
to throw away
mountainhungry
packed lunch
listener
geïnteresseerd zijn in
verkoop
gek zijngek zijn
willenweggooien
berghongerig
lunchpakket
luisteraar
NEW WORDS
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26 twenty-six
People often leave foodon the bus. It’s the bus driver’sjob to take care of the dirtyseats.
Why do you run? You’re too late,anyway.
Can you guess the meaning ofthat word or do you need adictionary?
The children are hungry.Cut the cake in eight pieces.
My friend is moving house.To make it easy,she puts everything in cardboard boxes.
It’s very romantic to have dinnerby candlelight.
It’s amazing how these two getalong with each other.They hold each other’s hand allthe time.
oftento leave
foodbus driver
to take care ofdirtyseat
to runanyway
to guessmeaningto need
to cutpiece
easycardboard
box
candle
amazing
to hold
dikwijlsachterlaten
eten/voedselbuschauffeurzorgen voor
vuilzetel/zitplaats
lopenhoe dan ook
radenbetekenis
nodig hebben
snijdenstuk
gemakkelijkkarton
doos
kaars
verbazingwekkend
(vast)houden
Grammar:- Spelling of plurals (TB 22 - WB 3.3, 3.4)- Use of ‘have’ – positive (+) (TB 24 - WB 3.7)- Use of ‘this’ – ‘that’ / ‘these’ – ‘those’ (TB 24 - WB 3.8)
Vocabulary:- Animals (TB 22 - WB 3.1, 3.5)- Vocabulary focus (TB 25, 26)
- Pronounce plurals (TB 21 - WB 3.2, 3.4).- Say what you have (TB 24 - WB 3.7).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
_ g
27twenty-seven
4.1
9An hour later...REA: Hello Mrs Griffin. Welcome to the
house of your dreams!PG: First show me the inside.REA: Of course. Follow me through the
hall into the living room.It has four big windows and a cosyfireplace.
PG: Lots of space for all my furniture.REA: There’s more to see...
And now the kitchen. It’s notbrand-new, but it has everything youneed: a cooker, a fridge, a sink anda dishwasher.
PG: Oh and a lovely view of thegarden!The terrace must be greatin the summer.
REA: Yes, it can be quite sunny.PG: This is all very interesting, but what
about the bedrooms?REA: This way, please.
Have a look in the bathroom first.PG: Oh, there’s no shower.REA: Yes, but there’s a double wash-
basin, a large bath and a toilet.PG: Now the bedrooms, please.REA: Room enough for a double bed and
a wardrobe.PG: My first impression is positive, but
what about the rent?REA: Let’s discuss the business details at
the office.
Unit 4
Paula’s Dreamhouse?
Paula Griffin is looking for a house nearMinster School.
REA: Barnes Real Estate Agency.PG: Good morning.
This is Paula Griffin. I’m looking for a place to rent in theYork area.
REA: Are you looking for a house or a flat?PG: I want a two bedroom house and a
garden is a real must.REA: Mrs Griffin, I think I have the perfect
place for you: a modern bungalowin a quiet neighbourhood, justoutside the city centre.We can show you around any time.
PG: Wonderful! I can comeright away.
REA: I’ll wait for you at 24 Haxby Road at 10 o’clock. Bye!
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28 twenty-eight
CAN
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE (-)
I can play the piano. I can’t play the guitar. (cannot)You can You can’t (cannot)He can He can’t (cannot)
She can She can’t (cannot)It can It can’t (cannot)
We can We can’t (cannot)You can You can’t (cannot)
They can They can’t (cannot)
(short form) (full form)
▲ I can help [ æ ] (‘can’ sounds like ‘the’) I can’t [ ɑ� ] (‘can’t’ sounds like ‘plant’)
For sale:You can buy this house.
To let:You can rent this house.
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
CAT [ æ ]taxi, family, band, man, tangram
ANSWER [ ɑ� ]I can’t, bathroom, father, arm, smart
4.2 - 4.3 - 4.4
USE:CAN(’t) + infinitive without toYou use can(’t) to express what you can or cannot do.Je gebruikt can(’t) om uit te drukken wat je al dan niet kunt.
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAYListen and repeat.
10
_ g
29twenty-nine
OVER TO▼ Is there - Are there?
Ask your partner questions about her/his house using the words from the grid.
Example: Is there a bath in the bathroom? Yes, there is.Is there a sofa in the hall? No, there isn’t.Are there any chairs in the living room? Yes, there are.Are there any tables in the bathroom? No, there aren’t.
Is there
Are there
a cookera fridgea sinka dishwashera showera batha washbasina toilet a carpeta wardrobe
any tablesany cupboardsany bedsany sofasany armchairsany curtainsany chairsany mirrorsany desks
in the garden?in the hall?in the garage?in the attic?in the garden?in the kitchen?in the bedroom?in the cellar?in the bathroom?in the study?in the garden shed?in the veranda?on the terrace?in the living room?
4.5 - 4.6
_ g
30 thirty
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
Making a list: watch out for the right intonation.
In my room I have a TV and a bed.
In the bathroom there’s a washbasin, a bath and a cupboard.
Play the game in your class. Say what you have in your room.Repeat all the words and each time add a new item.
In my room I have a chair.In my room I have a chair and a radio.In my room I have a chair and a radio and a poster.In my room I have a chair, a – er – poster.Wrong! The right word is radio.
Let’s start again.
▼ My New HouseAfter visiting the house, Paula sends an e-mail to her colleague Peter Campbell.
Hi Peter
Let me tell you about my new home.It has a lovely garden. And you know how important that is to me.The house has three bedrooms, a kitchen, a living room, a hall and an attic. It doesn’thave a cellar. The bathroom has a shower. The house doesn’t have a garage, but I don’t have a car anyway. So, that’s not really aproblem. It’s not far from school. I can even walk.Do you have time to come and help me move my furniture?Does your car have a tow bar*? We don’t have all the time in the world, so pleaseanswer me soon.
LovePaula
P.S. What’s your house like?
*tow bar : trekhaak4.7 - 4.8 - 4.9
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAY
A GAMEIn My Room
A GAMEIn My Room
11
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31thirty-one
TO HAVE – NEGATIVE (-)
SHORT FORM FULL FORM
I don’t have a car. I (do not have)You don’t have a garden. You (do not have)He/She/It doesn’t have a cellar. He/She/It (does not have)
We don’t have time. We (do not have)You don’t have a double bed. You (do not have)They don’t have any friends. They (do not have)
▲ Subject + don’t + havedoesn’t
TO HAVE – YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) + SHORT ANSWERS
Do I/you/we/they have a DVD-player? Yes, I/you/we/they do.No, I/you/we/they don’t.
Does he/she/it have a dish-washer? Yes, he/she/it does.No, he/she/it doesn’t.
▲ Do + subject + have? Yes, subject + do/does.Does No, subject + don’t/doesn’t.
TO HAVE – QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What do I/you/we/they have for lunch? I/you/we/they have fish for lunch.
When does he/she/it have a shower? He/she/it has a shower every morning.
▲ QW + do + subject + have?does
_ g
32 thirty-two
She has a car.
She doesn’t have a car. Does she have a car?
➔ ➔
4.10 - 4.11 - 4.12
OVER TO
Your teacher will give you a card. Find a person for every sentence.Example:
A GAMEFind someone
who...
A GAMEFind someone
who...Find someone who...
can play the saxophone.
has two brothers.
can play chess*.
doesn’t have a TV.
Find someone who...
can play the saxophone.
has two brothers.
can play chess*.
doesn’t have a TV.
Find someone who...
can play the saxophone.
has two brothers.
can play chess*.
doesn’t have a TV.*to play chess: schaken
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33thirty-three
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDShouse huis colleague collegaflat flat problem probleembungalow bungalow toilet toiletmodern modern hall halperfect perfect(e) terrace terrascentre centrum veranda verandainteresting interessant garage garageto discuss discussiëren dream droom
FAMILIAR WORDSoutside buiten far verinside binnen world wereldfirst eerst(e) to answer antwoordenbusiness zaken wonderful prachtigcar wagen, auto
Are you looking for a cosyplace to live?Visit Barnes Real EstateAgency. It’s in the city centre,near Minster School.
Are you new in this neighbour-hood? Follow me. I’ll take sometime to show you around.
For the summer holidays I wantto rent a flat in sunny Spain, in aquiet area, near the sea.That must be fun!
- What is your hotel room like?- It’s quite big! There’s a lot of
space and this is veryimportant to me.Through the windows I havea lovely view on the garden.
to look forcosy
to visitreal estate agency
citynear
neighbourhoodto follow
to show around
summerto rentsunnyquietareafun
What is ..... like?quitespace
importantthroughwindow
viewgarden
zoeken (naar)gezellig(e), knus(se)een bezoek brengen
immobiliënkantoorstad
dichtbij
buurt, omgevingvolgen
rondleiden
zomerhuren
zonnig(e)rustig
gebied, omgevingpret
Hoe ziet ...... eruit?nogal
ruimte, plaatsbelangrijk
doorvenster, raam
uitzichttuin
NEW WORDS
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34 thirty-four
- This is my new house. What’syour first impression?
- It’s wonderful! Are youmoving in, soon?
- Yes, I am. Can you come andhelp me move my brand-newfurniture?
- Of course, I can.
This is the house of your dreams.It has a living room, a kitchenand a cellar.On the first floor there are threebedrooms, a bathroom and astudy. There’s even an attic.The garden has a garden shed.Do you think you can pay therent?
Every day I walk my dog in thepark.
- Can you come to my office?- I’ll be there right away.
impression
to move insoon
to movebrand-newfurnitureof course
living roomkitchencellar
bedroombathroom
studyevenattic
garden shedrent
to walk
officeright away
indruk
intrekkenbinnenkortverhuizen
splinternieuwmeubelsnatuurlijk
woonkamerkeukenkelder
slaapkamerbadkamer
studeerkamerzelfs
zoldertuinhuis
huur(prijs)
wandelen
kantooronmiddellijk
Grammar:Formation of:- positive and negative of ‘can’ (TB 28 - WB 4.2)- negative form of ‘to have’ (TB 31 - WB 4.8, 4.10, 4.11)- yes/no questions and question word questions with ‘to have’ (TB 31 - WB 4.9, 4.10, 4.11)
Vocabulary:- Vocabulary Focus (TB 33, 34)- Rooms and places in and around the house (TB 29 - WB 4.6)- Furniture (TB 29 - WB 4.3, 4.4, 4.5)
- Ask questions about someone’s house (TB 29).- Talk about your own house/room (TB 30).- Pronounce [ ae ] and [ ɑ� ] (TB 28).- Make a list and use the right intonation (TB 30).- Write or send an e-mail about your house (WB 4.12).- Ask for information: what does(n’t) someone have / what can(‘t) someone do ? (TB 32).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
_ g
35thirty-five
▼ What time is it?
OVER TO
TO PAST
half past …
… o’clock
It is a quarter past eleven.
It is half past eleven.
It is a quarter to twelve.
It is twelve o’clock.
Pupil A: What time is it, please?Pupil B: It’s ...
Pupil B: What time is it, please?Pupil A: It’s ...
five (minutes) to
ten (minutes) to
a quarter to
twenty (minutes) to
twenty-five (minutes) to
five (minutes) past
ten (minutes) past
a quarter past
twenty (minutes) past
twenty-five (minutes) past
a.m.: in the morning,before 12 o’clock
p.m.: time between noonand midnight
(a.m. = ante meridiem)(p.m. = post meridiem)
_ g
36 thirty-six
12 o’ clockIt’s noon.
12 o’ clockIt’s midnight.
5.1 - 5.2
15Monday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
16Tuesday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17Wednesday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
18Thursday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
19Friday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
20Saturday
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21Sunday
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
12
Watch out!We use capitals to writethe days of the week!
MondayTuesday…
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAYListen and repeat.
_ g
37thirty-seven
▼ A song: Happy Days
Sunday, Monday, happy days.Tuesday, Wednesday, happy days.Thursday, Friday, happy days.
The weekend comes.My cycle hums.Ready to race to you.
These days are all,happy and free. (Those happy days)These days are all,share them with me. (Oh baby)
Goodbye grey sky, hello blue.There’s nothing can hold me when I hold you.Feels so right, it can’t be wrong.Rockin’ and rollin’ all week long.
Sunday, Monday, happy days.Tuesday, Wednesday, happy days.Thursday, Friday, happy days.Saturday, what a day.Groovin’ all week with you.
These days are all,share them with me. (Those happy days)These days are all, happy and free.These happy days are yours and mine.These happy days are yours and mine, happy days.
_ g
38 thirty-eight
OVER TO
Ask questions about this week’s programmes.
Pupil A: When is … on?Pupil B: It’s on at eight o’clock on Thursday.
When is … on?Pupil B: …
5.3 - 5.4
MONDAY
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.05Doctors
14.35Murder,
She Wrote
15.45Mona the Vampire
16.10All or nothing
17.25Newsround
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.50Cash in the attic
19.20Walking with
Cavemen
20.50Betrayed
22.00BBC News
Weather
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.10Trading up
15.00Balamory
15.35Viva S Club
17.10Catchphrase
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55Emmerdale
19.10The Nation’s
Favourite Food
20.45Journeys to the
Bottom of the Sea
21.20Trouble at the Top
22.00BBC News
Weather
22.45Medical Horrors
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.05Cheers
14.40Pet Rescue
15.20Home and Away
16.10Family Affairs
16.50Brain Teaser
17.20Starsky and Hutch
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55Carlton Country
19.50Changing Rooms
20.30Frantic
22.00BBC News
Weather
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.10The Witness
14.35Pandora and
the flying Dutchmen
15.30Hall of Fame
16.05Escape to the country
16.45Ready Steady Cook
17.15Weakest Link
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55Treasure Hunt
20.20The Aristocracy
21.05Britain my Britain
22.00BBC News
Weather
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.05Cheers
14.30Wild Heritage
16.05Home and Away
16.30Art Attack
17.10Black Hole High
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55Fire and Rescue
21.10Ellen MacArthur:
In the Eye of the
Storm
22.00BBC News
Weather
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.15Digby – the Biggest
Dog in the World
16.10Boohbah
16.40Tiny Planets
17.15Sitting Ducks
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55The Bill
19.40Walking with
Cavemen
22.00BBC News
Weather
13.00BBC News
Weather
13.45Neighbours
14.10The Spy with
my face
16.25Family Affairs
17.15All or nothing
18.00BBC News
Weather
18.30Eastenders
18.55Treasure Hunt
20.25Now and Again
20.55Dentists from Hell
22.00BBC News
Weather
TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY SUNDAY
_ g
OpeningTimes
Monday-Saturday 8.30 a.m. - 9.30 p.m.
Sunday9.00 a.m. - 18.30 p.m.
Did you know?• GMT = Greenwich Mean Time [ ’� r e n i d � ]
The prime meridian (de nulmeridiaan) (00.00 h) runs through Greenwich near London.Almost all countries use GMT as a standard. The time on the European continent isone hour ahead (voorop) of GMT. So you might arrive in Britain earlier (vroeger) thanyou started.
• Bank Holidays:An official holiday (on a day other than Saturday or Sunday) when banks, post offices,factories (fabrieken) and many shops are closed. The bank holidays are: New Year’s Day(or the first working day after it), Good Friday, Easter (Pasen) Monday, the first Monday inMay (May Day Bank Holiday), the last Monday in May (Spring Bank Holiday), the lastMonday in August (Summer Bank Holiday), Christmas Day (or the Monday followingwhen it falls on a Saturday or Sunday) and Boxing Day (or the next working day afterChristmas Day).
Take a look at these opening hours and read theclues below.Match the opening times to the buildings.
thirty-nine
5.5
A GAMEOpening TimesA GAMEOpening Times
CluesThe swimming pool opens before the National Railway Museum.The swimming pool opens every day.The Jorvik Viking Centre doesn’t open on Sundays.The Castle Museum opens for five days a week.The swimming pool and the Castle Museum don’t close at lunchtime.
OpeningHours
Monday-Friday9.00 a.m. - 12.30 noon2.00 p.m. - 5.30 p.m.
Saturday9.00 a.m. - 12.30 noon
Closed on Sundays
opening hoursMonday - Friday
9.30 a.m. - 3.30 p.m.
OPENING HOURS
Tuesday-Sundayfrom 9.15 a.m. - 6.45 p.m.
closed every Monday
39
_ g
40 forty
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
13
Date!
- on 7th February- on February 7th- on July 5- on 15 November
- on the twenty-first of March- on March the twenty-first
▼ Sarah’s Birthday Calendar
Watch out!We use capitals to writethe months of the year!
JanuaryFebruary…
Please come to
Philip’s Surprise
Birthday Party
on Saturday
7th December
at 3 o’clock.
Please come to
Philip’s Surprise
Birthday Party
on Saturday
7th December
at 3 o’clock.
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAY
_ g
forty-one
OVER TO
Ordinal Numbers
first 1stsecond 2ndthird 3rdfourth 4th
fifth 5th
sixth 6th
seventh 7th
eighth 8th
ninth 9th
tenth 10th
eleventh 11th
twelfth 12th
thirteenth 13th
fourteenth 14th
fifteenth 15th
sixteenth 16th
seventeenth 17th
eighteenth 18th
nineteenth 19th
twentieth 20th
twenty-first 21sttwenty-second 22ndtwenty-third 23rdtwenty-fourth 24th
thirtieth 30th
…
hundredth 100th
…
thousandth 1000th
Hap-py birth-day to you! Hap-py birth-day to you!
Hap-py birth-day, dear Phi-lip. Hap-py birth-day to you!
5.6 - 5.7 - 5.8 - 5.9 - 5.10 - 5.11
▼ When are their birthdays?Pupil A: When is Kevin’s birthday?Pupil B: It’s on the 15th of February.
When is Helen’s birthday?Pupil A: …
▼ Look at these people’s birthdays.
Find the days of the week for this year.
Jenny: 4/10 Her birthday is on a … this year.Becky: …Ian: …Kevin: …My birthday: …My friend’s birthday: …
41
_ g
42
▼ Shopping14
forty-two
HELEN Sarah and I are going shopping.Do you want to come along, Kevin?
KEVIN Are you mad? I never go shopping with girls.I want to be home before dark.
SARAH Boys!Let’s go Helen.
HELEN Sarah, look at that red skirt.SARAH It’s beautiful! Try it on.SARAH Is it any good?HELEN No, not really. It’s too short.SARAH I don’t think Philip will mind.HELEN Philip is not my type and the skirt is not my size anyway.
Can you give me that black one in a larger size?SARAH Here you are.SARAH It’s perfect!HELEN Okay, I’ll take it.SHOP ASSISTANT Can I help you?HELEN I have this skirt but I want something to go with it.SHOP ASSISTANT What about this white blouse?HELEN White! I don’t want to look like my mum.SHOP ASSISTANT Oh, I see.
What do you have in mind then?HELEN Something younger like a top.SHOP ASSISTANT What colour?HELEN Er… orange or pink … or purple.SHOP ASSISTANT Let me see what I have.
Here, try these on.SARAH You look great in that
pink one.HELEN How much are the skirt
and the top?SHOP ASSISTANT £ 50.20.HELEN Oh no, I don’t have
enough money on me!SARAH I’ll lend you
some money.You can pay mebacktomorrow.
HELEN Thanks alot Sarah.
SARAH That’s whatfriends arefor.
to lend= uitlenen aan
to borrow= lenen van
_ g
forty-three
£5
£20
Some British Money
5p
1p20p
50p
2p
Sizes:
- small- medium- large- extra large / x-large
Money
£ 20
In front of the numbers
➔
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
15
thirty pounds twenty, fourteen pounds fifty-five, sixty pounds sixteen …
▼ Colours
red yellow greenbrown blueorange purple black white pink
5.12 - 5.13▼ Clothes
a coat
a sweater
a skirt
underpants
socksa pair ofshorts a T-shirt a shirt trainers
a top
a dress
a tiea suit
stockings / tights
a pair oftrousers
a belt
a blouse
a pullover
an anorak
boots
a pair ofjeans
knickers
a bra
a jacket
shoes
£1
£2
There are 100 pence (p) in apound (£).
a coin of 2p = two pence ortuppence [´t�pəns]
£10
10p
grey
43
_ g
44 forty-four
OVER TO
We say in picture one.
OVER TO
OVER TO
▼ What’s wrong with the clothes?
5.14 - 5.15 - 5.16
Some clothes are always plural and need a plural verb.
trousers My trousers are blue.shoes These shoes aretoo tight.
shorts…
So watch out:
This pair of shorts is
too small.
(a pair (of shorts) is singular)
My shorts are too small.
(shorts are plural)
▼ Two picturesLook at the two pictures. They aren’t the same.
Example: The ball is … in picture one and … in picture two.Go on.
Talk about the clothes in the picture.Say what’s wrong with them.too short / long, too wide / tight, too big / small
Look at the clothes in the picture and ask for their price.
Example: Pupil A: How much is the blue T-shirt?Pupil B: It’s £ 8.44.
How much is the green sweater?Pupil A: it’s...
▼ How much is it?
_ g
forty-five
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
television/TV televisie/tv small smallprogramme programma medium mediumweek week large largecalendar kalender extra-large extra largeyoung jong long langwide wijd invitation invitatie, uitnodiging
FAMILIAR WORDS
morning morgen, ochtend tomorrow morgennoon middag colour kleurmidnight middernacht big grootopening hours openingsuren mad gek, domopening times openingstijden hand (of a clock) wijzerbirthday verjaardag phone call telefoongespreksurprise verrassing money geldto shop winkelen
NEW WORDS
- What time is it?What’s the time?
- It’s seven o’clock p.m.It’s getting darkoutside.
- When is your favourite film on?
- It’s at 9.15 on Friday.
- I want something to gowith my black trousers.
- What do you have in mind?- I’m not sure.- What about this pink blouse?
Try it on.Is it any good?
- No, it isn’t. It’s not my size. It’s too tight and I don’t likethe colour. I don’t want to look likea little child.
What time is it?What’s the time?
dark
to be on
at on
to go with
in mind
to try onIs it any good?
sizetoo
tight
like
Hoe laat is het?
donker
te zien zijn, spelen
om op
passen bij
in gedachten
aanpassenPast het?
maatte
spannend, nauw aansluitend
(zo)als
45
_ g
46 forty-six
- My parents aren’t at home. They can’t driveme to Philip’s birthdayparty. Do you mind if Icome along with you?
- Not at all. That’s whatfriends are for.
- I like your schoolbag! I want to buy the same as yours.How much is it?
- £ 60.- I don’t have enough
money on me. CanI borrow £ 20, please?I’ll pay you back nextweek.
- I’ll lend you the money.Here you are.
to mindto come along (with)That’s what friends
are for.
How much is it?
to have on youenough
to pay back
to lendHere you are.
het erg vindenmeekomen/meegaan
(met)Daar zijn vrienden voor.
Hoeveel is het?Hoeveel kost het?
bij (je) hebbengenoeg
terugbetalen
lenena.u.b.
Vocabulary:- Days of the week (TB 36 - WB 5.3, 5.4)- Months of the year (TB 40 - WB 5.6)- Ordinals (TB 41 - WB 5.7)- Clothes (TB 43 - WB 5.11, 5.14, 5.16)- Colours (TB 43, 44 - WB 5.12, 5.13)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 45, 46)
- Ask and tell the time (TB 35,36 - WB 5.1, 5.2).- Say and write the date (TB 40).- Ask and say what programme is on at what day and time (TB 38).- Ask and say when a birthday is (TB 40, 41 - WB 5.8).- Write an invitation (TB 40 - WB 5.10).- Describe clothes and colours (TB 43, 44 - WB 5.11, 5.12, 5.13, 5.16).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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47forty-seven
16
6.1
Hello everybody.I'm Pluto. My people are the Pearsons - Mrs Pearsonand Mr Pearson and their children Kevin and Kate.
Kevin is my pet. Every morning I wake him up at aquarter past seven and wash his face.Then he washes his face again and makes my break-fast. After that, Kevin has breakfast, too.He always eats cornflakes.At twenty past eight he goes to school, but not onSaturdays and Sundays.
When Kevin is at school, I often take his mother for awalk in the park. She always gets lost there. Then shecalls my name and of course I find her at once.
After our walk, I sit outside in front of the door.At twelve o'clock Mrs Pearson gives me my lunch.Sometimes Fred, the neighbour's cat, comes over thegarden wall, but I always bark at him and then heruns away.
On Saturdays I take Kevin out to play.He always plays football with his friends.I teach the boys a lot of tricks. For example, when Ibring a stick, they throw it for me. When I bark at theirbikes, they ride away on them.
▼ Pluto, the Dog
unit 6unit 6
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48 forty-eight
Every Sunday I go out with my people in the car. Ialways get the best seat. I watch the other cars on theroad. Sometimes there are dogs in the other cars. Ofcourse I bark at them, and they bark at me, too. That'sgreat.
We often go out for picnics. I like picnicsbecause there's no table and I can sitin the middle.
In the evening my people always watch TV.Then we play a game.I sit in front of the TV and they throw shoesat me.I pick them up and take them into Kevin's bedroom.I like shoes.
At half past ten I take Kevin to bed. He's a good boy,so he can always sleep in my bed.
6.4
6.2 - 6.3
THE SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE
I play football.You play badminton.
Kevin play s tennis.Kate play s tennis, too.Pluto play s with that old tennis ball.
We play netball at school.But you play hockey.Sarah and Helen (=they) play in a team.
USE: The simple present tense describes regular activities. It's the common (=simple)form to talk about the present.(‘The simple present tense’ beschrijft activiteiten die regelmatig voorkomen. Het is de meest gebruikte vorm om over de tegenwoordige tijd te praten.)
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49forty-nine
17PRONUNCIATION OF THE 3RD PERSON -S
to pick he/she/it picks / s / after [ k , f , p , t ]to get he/she/it gets up think of the word “coffeepot”
to wash he/she/it washesto watch he/she/it watches / i z / after [ s , z , ʃ , � ]to push he/she/it pushes (hissing sounds) (sisklanken)
to throw he/she/it throwsto find he/she/it finds / z / after all other sounds to drive he/she/it drives
}
}
}
▼ A day with PlutoOVER TO
Look at the pictures and tell the story.
At a quarter past 7... Then... After that... At ten o’clock...
After the walk... Then... At 4 o’clock in theafternoon...
In the evening...
6.5
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50 fifty
SPELLING OF THE SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE 3RD PERSON SINGULAR
to fly he/she/it flies [ f l ɑ i z ] consonant + y = y ➔ iesto tidy up he/she/it tidies up [ ’t ɑ i d i z ]
to buy he/she/it buys [ b ɑ i z ]to play he/she/it plays [ p l e i z ] vowel + y = + sto say he/she/it says [ s e z ]
to go he/she/it goes [ � o υ z ] infinitives ending in o = + esto do he/she/it does [ d � z ]
to wash he/she/it washes [ ’w ɒ ʃ i z ] infinitives ending in hissing to dress he/she/it dresses [ ’d r e s i z ] sounds = + es
}
}
}}
consonant = medeklinkervowel = klinker
ADVERBS OF FREQUENCY (say how often things happen)
I always have breakfast at half past seven.We usually leave at a quarter past eight.Dad sometimes drives us to school.They often take Pluto for a walk in the park.
You are never on time.
▲ We place the adverbs of frequency in front of the main verb, except with the verb ‘to be’.(We plaatsen de ‘adverbs of frequency’ voor het hoofdwerkwoord, met uitzondering van het werkwoord ‘to be’.)
RA
I
D
D
L
E
WHAT IS IT?
It sometimes goes to school, but it never goes to a lesson.It often makes a lot of noise, but it never says a word.It sometimes has an upstairs, but it never has a hall.It is usually on time, but it can’t read the clock.It always takes people home and to the shops, that's its job.What is it? It's easy. It's a ......
6.6, 6.7, 6.8, 6.9
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51fifty-one
A Questionnaire ARE YOU AN IDEAL CHILD?!
NAME: Kate
Pearson
Make your bed.
Do the washing-up.
Tidy up your bedroom.
Make tea.
Repair your bike.
Help in the garden.
Tick off how often you do the following things.
x
x
x
x
x
x
Say what Kate sometimes / often / never / always / usually does.Say how often you do these things.
OVER TO
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52 fifty-two
OVER TO
Did you know?TEA: 1 The traditional popular British drink.
It’s drunk at all hours of the day.2 A light, usually uncooked (ongekookt,
koud) meal, taken between four and fiveo’clock, and traditionally made of breadand butter and jam, cakes and biscuits,and tea to drink.
3 A light supper (avondeten) (sometimescalled high tea), usually with a single(één enkel) cooked dish (warm gerecht)and with tea to drink.
6.10 - 6.11 - 6.12
6.13 - 6.14
▼ A DAY IN THE LIFE OF ME! Andrew Fusek Peters
Interview your partner about her/his morning and report back to the class. You can find inspiration in these questions.- What do you do on a typical weekday morning before you go to school?- Which activities do you most easily skip when you’re in a rush?
18
Day dawn 1,Stretch 2 yawn 3,Rise and shineBreakfast time,Mum fuss 4,School bus,Run aroundPlaygroundRead, writeTease 5 and fight.Queue for lunch,Monster munch 6.No surprise.
Time fliesHalf threeTime for teaIn the parkUntil darkQuick nosh 7,Then wash,Hamster fedTime for bed,Rain storm,Bed warm,Count sheepDeep sleep.
1 dawn: dageraad2 to stretch: uitrekken3 to yawn: geeuwen4 fuss: drukte, heisa5 to tease: pesten, treiteren6 to munch: knabbelen7 nosh: bikken, eten
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53fifty-three
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
to wash wassen to sit zittenthen dan in the middle in het middenlunch lunch, licht middagmaal train treinpicnic picknick hopeless hopeloosto sleep slapen
FAMILIAR WORDS
everybody iedereen road weg, straatto teach aanleren evening avondalways altijd never nooitgame spel for example bijvoorbeeldto fly vliegen to ride away wegrijdento fill in invullen
On a school morning my motherwakes me up at 7.00. I get up at 7.15.I have breakfast at 7.30. After that I wash my face and Idress. I leave for school at 8.00.I go to school by bike.I always arrive in time.
Put your bike against the wall.
In the evenings I usuallytake my dog for a walk.Then I play a game. I throw a stick. He brings it back.
Tidy up your bedroom!Pick up your clothes from the bathroom floor!Do the washing-up!
to wake upbreakfast
faceto dress
bybike
to arrivein time
wall
usuallywalk
stick
to tidy upto pick up
washing-up
wakker maken (worden)ontbijt
gezicht(zich) aankleden
met (+ transportmiddel)fiets
aankomenop tijd
muur
gewoonlijkwandeling
stok
opruimenoprapen, opnemen
afwas
NEW WORDS
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54 fifty-four
I like to fill in questionnaires.Most of them are about love. I really want to know what theideal partner is like.
- Can you do without my help?- I certainly can. Thanks, anyway.
- Do you have a pet?- Yes, I have a nice little dog,
called Bonzo. When I call hisname, he comes at once. Heonly barks at strangers.
Do you know this riddle?In the morning it walks on fourlegs, at noon it walks on two legs,in the evening it walks on threelegs. What is it?
- I’ll drive you to town.I don’t want you to get lost.
- No, thanks. I like to go on foot.
You put up your hand in class.You hand in your homework intime. You’re just doing fine!Carry on!
Are you in a rush? Don’t be!There are a lot of people waitingin front of the theatre. Don’tpush! It won’t help you.
Do you think you can repair mymicrowave, or do I have to buyanother one?
- I have little free time.- Liar! You do some horse-
riding, you play football, you’re in a youth club... and you tell me all about the TV-programmes you watch in the evening.
Don’t skip breakfast!It’s the most important meal of theday.
questionnaire
What’s he like?
certainly
pet
to callat onceto bark
riddle
to driveto get lost
on foot
to put upto hand in
to carry on
rush
in front ofto push
to repairto buy
liar
to watch
to skip
vragenlijst
Wat voor iemand is hij?
zeker
huisdier
roependadelijkblaffen
raadsel
rijdenverloren lopen
te voet
opstekenindienen
volhouden
haast
voorduwen
herstellenkopen
leugenaar
kijken naar
overslaan
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55fifty-five
Grammar:- Positive form of the simple present tense (TB 48 - WB 6.3, 6.6, 6.7, 6.9, 6.11, 6.13)- Adverbs of frequency (TB 50, 51 - WB 6.10, 6.11)
Vocabulary:- Use of to go / to ride / to run (WB 6.8)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 53, 54)
- Retell a story (TB 49 - WB 6.8).- Derive the use, spelling and pronunciation of the 3rd pers. sing. of the simple
present tense (WB 6.3, 6.4, 6.5).- Spell the simple present tense - 3rd person singular (TB 50).- Pronounce the simple present tense - 3rd person singular (TB 49 - WB 6.4).- Talk about daily activities (TB 51 - WB 6.12, 6.14).- Read, enjoy and understand poems (TB 52 - WB 6.12, 6.13).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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56 fifty-six
G.O.: Hello, Jichael. Thanks for meeting me.What’s the first thing you do when you wake up in the morning?
J.M.: Take a shower. Well, I get out of bed first. Then I have a shower. After that, I dress.G.O.: What clothes do you like?J.M.: A black hat, a red shirt, black trousers, white gloves, shiny shoes.
I don’t like jeans or shorts. So I never wear those.G.O.: How do you spend your weekend?J.M.: On Saturdays I usually go for a walk with my llama. I always give it a lump of sugar.
It’s very fond of sugar.G.O.: Do you like sugar, too?J.M.: No, I don’t. I never have it in my food.G.O.: Don’t you ever eat doughnuts?J.M.: I only eat healthy food, like chicken, bananas and fish.
I don’t eat fast food at all.G.O.: That’s why you are still so fit. You don’t look your age at all.
What do you do on Sundays?J.M.: I go jogging with Bobbles, my monkey. He doesn’t like
jogging but I don’t like going out alone. And I’m the masterafter all.I sometimes invite children to Everland on Sundays.
G.O.: What are your hobbies?J.M.: I like dancing and watching movies. I also
like undergoing plastic surgery. Oh, and Icollect snakes.
G.O.: Do you mean real snakes?J.M.: Of course I do. They’re my friends, they don’t
bite me.G.O.: You said you like movies. What’s your favourite movie?J.M.: Peter Pan.G.O.: Thank you, mister Mackson. I’m afraid this is the end
of our interview. We don’t have time for any morequestions.
▼ Spotlight on … Jichael Mackson !
7.1
7.2
19
G. Ossip, reporter for ‘The Moon’, interviews the famous popstar Jichael Mackson.
unit
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57fifty-seven
THE SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE – NEGATIVE (-)
I don’t like fish.You don’t need plastic surgery.He doesn’t come from Manchester.She doesn’t like pop music.It doesn’t work.We don’t forget the ‘s’ in the third person singular.You don’t know him.They don’t live there anymore.
Subject don’t + infinitivedoesn’t without to
7.3 - 7.4
roller-skatingplaying an instrumentlistening to musicice-skatingreadinghorse-ridingshoppingskiingplaying footballdancingskateboardingplaying tennisplaying basketballsurfing the Netwatching TVplaying computer gameschatting
She likes bananas.
She doesn’t like bananas.
Infinitive: to play
to go
to draw
▼ Hobbies
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58 fifty-eight
THE SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE – YES / NO QUESTIONS (?)
QUESTIONS SHORT ANSWERS
Do I look OK in this jumper? Yes, you do.Do you buy The Times? No, I don’t.
Does Kevin like listening to music? Yes, he does.Does he like shopping with girls? No, he doesn’t.
Does Helen come to school on foot? No, she doesn’t.Does she go to school by bus? Yes, she does.
Does the bus arrive at 9.15? Yes, it does.Does it take the children home No, it doesn’t.
again at twelve?
Do we learn English? Yes, you do.Do you watch TV every evening? No, we don’t.
Do the Addams’s look strange? Yes, they do.Do they live in Station Road? No, they don’t.
do + subject + infinitive without todoes
7.5 - 7.6 - 7.7
7.8 - 7.9
▼ An Interview – Pierce BrosnanRead this interview with the Irish actor Pierce Brosnan.
Do you like being 007?Oh yes, I don’t have to think about it. I likebeing James Bond. However it is not easy, Ihave serious competition1 in the field: Roger
Moore and Sean Connery are very goodBond actors2.Are you coming back on the screen3 asBond?This question is always asked. The answer is… yes. I’ll come back for a fifth. The successof "Die Another Day" tells me to go on. There’s a great sword4 fight in "DieAnother Day". Are these stunts dan-gerous?I am very proud of the sword fight. It isn’teasy of course. I hurt5 my knee while
filming. But that is all part of the job of beinga spy. It doesn’t come easy. And in the filmI have to wear these tights6. I really don’tlike them. Do your fans see you as Bond or asBrosnan?I don’t go round acting like James Bond. I’mnot James Bond, I’m just an actor playingthis man. But of course some people don’tsee the difference. I like the things Bondlikes: the cars and women and everythinglike this but I don’t want to kill people.
1 competition = concurrentie2 an actor = een acteur3 the screen = het scherm
4 a sword = een zwaard5 to hurt = bezeren, pijn doen6 tights = heel nauw aansluitende broek, maillot
▲
She likes music.
Does she like music?
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59fifty-nine
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
llama lama fit fitbanana banaan to jog joggenfish vis alone alleenfastfood fastfood master meester, baasjeto invite uitnodigen to bite bijtenstunt stunt serious serieuze, ernstigeknee knie competition competitie, success succes concurrentie
FAMILIAR WORDS
chicken kipmovie film to come back terugkomenplastic surgery plastische chirurgie fight gevecht
NEW WORDS
Famous popstars usually wearshiny clothes during their concerts. We would never wear them of course, but that’s the difference: we are not in the spotlight as most of them are.
I’m fond of lions. I collectpictures and posters of them. Ioften spend my weekends at thezoo, taking photographs of myfavourite animals.
It’s freezing outside. Keep yourhands warm and wear your gloves!
- Come to my room. I’ll show youmy collection of exotic animals.
- What’s the matter?- My snake is missing!!- Is it dangerous?- Of course it is. Its poison
(vergif) can kill people.
famousshiny
differencein the spotlight
to be fond ofto collectto spend
to weargloves
snakedangerous
to kill
bekende, beroemdeglimmende, blinkende
verschilin het middelpunt van de
belangstelling
dol zijn op, houden vanverzamelen
doorbrengen
dragen (van kleren)handschoenen
slanggevaarlijk
doden
_ g
60 sixty
- Wow! Good music!Crazy band!Do you see the man with thathat on? I think I like him.
- Do you mean the drummer ofthe band?I’m afraid it’s not the right manfor you. He’s almost 40.
- Oh no! He still looks veryyoung. He doesn’t look his age at all!
- You’re right. He really can be proud of his looks.
- Coffee?- I’d like to.- Black or white?- Black, please with a lump of
sugar.- Here you are.
You shouldn’t eat all these crispswhile you’re watching TV. I know they’re delicious.However, they’re not veryhealthy, you know!
hat
I’m afraid
stillto look one’s age
to be proud of
a lump ofsugar
howeverhealthy
hoed
Ik ben bang dat…Het spijt me dat…
nog, nog altijder zo oud uitzien als je bent
fier zijn op
een klontjesuiker
maar, echtergezond
Grammar:- Negative form (-) of the simple present tense (TB 57 - WB 7.2, 7.3, 7.4).- Formation of yes/no questions in the simple present tense (TB 58 - WB 7.5, 7.6).
Vocabulary:- Hobbies (TB 57 - WB 7.5, 7.6).- Vocabulary Focus (TB 59, 60).
- Ask questions (TB 58 - WB 7.5, 7.6).- Talk and write about things you like and don’t like. (WB 7.3)- Talk about your hobbies (WB 7.5, 7.6)- Pronounce / ɒ, υ, u�, oυ / (WB 7.7)- Write and say what a person does or doesn’t do. (WB 7.9)
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
_ g
2 chatters online
GUESTSYo(u)r(k)GirlFlipper
Yo(u)r(k)Girl has entered the room.
Flipper says> "Hi Yo(u)r(k)Girl! How old are you?"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "I’m 14. What about you?"
Flipper says> "Whaw, I’m 14 as
well. Are you from York?"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "%-}What do
you think? Can’t you read,
dummy?"
Flipper says> "Well, I live in
York as well."
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "Why do you
use "Flipper" as a nickname?"
Flipper says> "My friends call
me Flipper."
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> ":-C No way!
Where do you go to school?"
Flipper says> "Minster School."
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "Oh, I know
you! (-_-)"
sixty-one 61
▼ A Blind Chat DateHelen logs into an Internet Chatroom. She uses the nickname "Yo(u)r(k)Girl".Read the conversation. Can you guess who "Flipper" is?
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62 sixty-two
Flipper says> "What makes you think you know me?"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "I’m in that school too and I call you Flipper all the time."
Flipper says> "Who are you then?"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "Well … who wears pink?"
Flipper says> "Half of the girls I know! I need another hint."
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "Who never forgets your birthday? '-)"
Flipper says> "Mum… is that you?! :-o"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "Of course not, stupid! :/) I’m in your class remember?"
Flipper says> "Okay, I give up. Tell me."
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> ":-X Meet me tomorrow behind the bicycle shed."
Flipper says> "When do we meet there?"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl says> "At 8.30 sharp. Be there!"
Flipper says> "Bye!"
Yo(u)r(k)Girl has left the room.
Did you know?
:-) humour
:-? licking lips
:-r bleahh
(sticking tongue out)
:-D talks too much
:-( unhappy
(:-& anger
?-( black eye
||*( handshake offered
||*) handshake accepted
:-x kiss kiss
[] hug
:-* Ooops !
...---... S.O.S.
( ) You’re kidding !
ASL: Age Sex Location
ICQ: I Seek (zoeken) You
ASAP: As Soon As Possible
BRB : Be Right Back
BTW: By The Way
EOD: End Of Discussion
FYA: For Your Amusement
FYI: For Your Information
JIC: Just In Case
ONNA: Oh No, Not Again!
OTOH: On The Other Hand
RSN : Real Soon Now
FAQ: Frequently (dikwijls)
Asked Questions
URL: Uniform Resource
Locator = Web Page
Address
WWW: World Wide Web
EMOTICONS CHAT LANGUAGE iNTERNET LANGUAGE
8.1 - 8.2 - 8.3 - 8.4 - 8.5
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63sixty-three
QUESTION WORDS
Who? Sarah and Helen.
What? New clothes.
Where? In the shopping centre.
When? At 10 o’clock.
Why? Because they need something to wear.
How? By bus.
Time for a laugh
There is one word in the English language that is always pronouncedincorrectly. What is it?
SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE - QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What do the Pearsons do on Sundays? They go out for picnics.
Where does Mrs Pearson get lost? In the park.
How does Philip come to school? By bus.
Who do they call Flipper? Philip.
▲ Question word / to do / subject / infinitive without to
Who sits in front of the TV? Pluto does.
Who likes pink tops? Helen does.
What makes you feel happy? Love does.
▲ WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) + verb
▲ We don’t use ‘to do’ when the question word is the subject of a positive question.Compare: Who doesn’t like watching TV?
Nobody does.
HOW? [ h a υ ] = Hoe?
WHO? [ h u� ] = Wie?
Where’s your house?Where can I find her?▲ Questions with
‘to be’ and ‘can’ never take ‘to do’!
MIND:
The short answer to
these questions takes
‘to do’!
SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE - SUBJECT QUESTIONS (?)
incorrectly
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64 sixty-four
OVER TO
Make dialogues with your partner.
Pupil A: Where do your parents live?Pupil B: They live in …
Where? What time? How? What? When? Who? Why?
live get up go to do on watch TV go to …school Saturdays school with
Time for a laugh
There is a house with four walls. Each wall faces south. There is a window in each wall. A bear walks by one ofthe windows. What colour is the bear?
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS WITH PREPOSITIONS (?)
Who do you come to school with?
What’s this book like?
What do they talk about?
▲ In questions we put the prepositions (voorzetsels) at the end of the sentence.
8.6 - 8.7 - 8.8 - 8.9 - 8.10
Fill in the questionnaire the teacher gives you. The teachercollects all the questionnaires and a pupil chooses one.Ask questions to find out whose questionnaire it is.
A GAMEMystery(Wo)Man
A GAMEMystery(Wo)Man
White. If all the walls face south, the house is at the north pole, and the bear,
therefore, is a polar bear.
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65sixty-five
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
to log in inloggen to give up opgevenhint hint, aanwijzing Where? Waar?to forget vergeten What? Wat?online online, aangemeld
FAMILIAR WORDS
date afspraak all the time voortdurend, aldoorblind date afspraak met iemand half of de helft van
die men nooit eerder How? Hoe?gezien heeft When? Wanneer?
to know weten, kennen Who? Wie?to think denken
NEW WORDS
If you enter a Chatroom, don’tuse your real name. It’s best tohave a nickname if you don’twant to give away youridentity.
- Oh Mum, I have a date with mymysterious chatboyfriend. Whatclothes am I going to wear?
- No way! You’re not going anywhere, dummy!How can you be so stupid asto believe everything this boytells you!
Do you remember our first date? We kissed behind thebicycle shed.
Is Mrs Griffin your English teacher?She’s mine as well.
to enterto use
nickname
No way!
dummystupid
to rememberbehind
bicycle shed
as well
zich aanmeldengebruiken
bijnaam
In geen geval! Dat kanniet!
dommerik, uilskuikendwaas, dom
zich herinnerenachter
fietsenstalling
ook
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66 sixty-six
Grammar:- Question word questions in the simple present tense (TB 63 - WB 8.4, 8.6, 8.7)- Subject questions in the simple present tense (TB 63 - WB 8.5, 8.6, 8.7)- Question word questions with prepositions (TB 64 - WB 8.7, 8.8)
Vocabulary:- Vocabulary Focus (TB 65)
- Read for information (WB 8.1).- Make question word questions (TB 63 - WB 8.4, 8.5, 8.6, 8.7).- Derive the use of question word questions to the subject (WB 8.5).- Make question word questions with prepositions (WB 8.8).- Write a short interview (WB 8.9).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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67sixty-seven
9.1 - 9.2
20
▼ LostNeil Nuts is on his way to the TV studios because he’s a candidate in the Master Mind Quiz.But of course he gets lost …
NEIL NUTS: Excuse me, could you tell me the way to the CCB studios, please?PASSER-BY: Let me see … Oh yes, that’s where they record the Master Mind Quiz.NEIL NUTS: Yes, Yes, I’m the winner of tonight’s show.PASSER-BY: If you make it there in time.
So you go straight on and turn left at the second crossroads. The post office is on the corner. Straight on again, pass the hospital and at the T-junction turn right.Walk to the roundabout. There you go left into Broadcast Street until you reachthe traffic lights. Cross the street. Use the pedestrian crossing because it’s adangerous crossroads! The church is on your right hand side, and the CCB studios are on your left.
NEIL NUTS: Thanks a lot. So I go straight on and at the second crossroads turn right …PASSER-BY: No, no left!NEIL NUTS: Sure. But I was close anyway. Then I go straight on past the hospital and at the
T-junction turn right till I meet the roundabout and then I er …PASSER-BY: Left into Broadcast Street.NEIL NUTS: Oh yes, till I reach the traffic
lights. There I wait for theGreen Man, cross the streetand go straight into the church.
PASSER-BY: I thought you wanted to go tothe CCB studios?
NEIL NUTS: Yes, but I want to burn acandle for good luck. Thank you very much. I’m onmy way.
PASSER-BY: Sir, sir! It’s the other way!!
unit 9
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68 sixty-eight
TELLING & ASKING THE WAY
Could you tell me the way to …?
At the T-junction … go straight on.the traffic lights … turn left.the crossroads … turn right.the roundabout …
Take the first, second on your left/right.
Cross the bridge / street.
Take the bend.
Pass the crossroads.
Did you know?Countries that drive on the left:
Australia – the Bahamas - Bangladesh – Barbados - Bermuda –
Botswana – Brunei – Cyprus – East Timor – the Falkland Islands
– Fiji – Grenada – Hong Kong – India – Indonesia – Ireland –
Jamaica – Japan – Kenya – Lesotho – Malaysia – the Maldives –
Mali – Malta – Mauritius – Montserrat – Mozambique – Namibia
– Nepal – New Zealand – Pakistan – the Seychelles – Singapore
– South Africa - Sri Lanka – Suriname – Swaziland – Tanzania –
Thailand – Uganda – the United Kingdom – Zambia - Zimbabwe
Why do the British people drive on the left?
It was Julius Caesar who let his citizens (burgers) use the leftside of the road. In those days soldiers had to carry theirswords in their right hand, so being on the left side of theroad they could easily defend (verdedigen) themselves whenthey suddenly met an enemy (vijand).Later Napoleon didn’t agree (akkoord gaan met) with thisstrategy and he decided (besliste) that everyone shoulddrive on the right. But Napoleon never got to Britain, so theBritish continued (bleven doorgaan met) driving on the left.
Did you know?1 mile = 1.6 km
1 yard = 0.91 km
1 foot = 30.47 cm
1 inch = 2,53 cm
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69sixty-nine
library
a town hall
a railway station
a tourist info centre
the post office
a police station
the theatre
a church
the cathedral (York Minster)
a pub
a car park a parkan airport
▼ Public places
a hospital a public toilet
a super market
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70 seventy
Time for a laugh
PUBLIC PLACES SIGNSZOO, HUNGARY:
PLEASE DO NOT FEED THE ANIMALS. IF YOU HAVE ANY SUITABLE(geschikt) FOOD, GIVE IT TO THE GUARD ON DUTY (dienstdoende bewaker).
RESTAURANT:
OPEN SEVEN DAYS A WEEK, AND WEEKENDS TOO.
MATERNITY WARD (kraamafdeling) IN HOSPITAL:
NO CHILDREN ALLOWED (toegelaten).
BAR, TOKYO:
SPECIAL COCKTAILS FOR THE LADIES WITH NUTS.
AIRLINE, COPENHAGEN:
WE TAKE YOUR BAGS (koffers) AND SEND THEM IN ALL DIRECTIONS.
9.3 - 9.4
PREPOSITIONS OF PLACE
Prepositions: in / between / next to / on / under / in front of / behind / opposite
a b c d
e f g h
Pluto is behindthe window.
Pluto is underthe bed.
Pluto is in front of the door.
Pluto is sitting betweenthe 2 cupboards.
Pluto is onthe stairs.
Pluto is inthe bed.
Pluto is standingopposite the cat.
Pluto is next to me.
_ g
Pack
Puck
Pim
Peck
Pock
Pick
Pam
Pom
71seventy-one
Fred, the neighbour’s cat, has got kittens. Say where they are.OVER TO
OVER TO
9.5
9.6 - 9.7
Check the language for askingand telling the way in the gridon p.68.
Do as in the example and swap roles each time.
Pupil A: You’re at school. Go along to the end of the road and turn right. Then take the third street on the left. Go straight on to the end of that road. Then turn right and go along for fifty metres.Where are you?
Pupil B: I’m at ....
School
Bank
Hospital
Cinema
ParkHotel
RailwayStation
0 50 100
metres
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72 seventy-two
OVER TO
Work in pairs:
Pupil A: Think of a place near your school. Give your partner directions,but don’t say which place it is!
Pupil B: Listen to the directions. Where are you?
Time for a laugh
‘My dog is lost.’‘Why don’t you put an ad inthe paper?’‘Don’t be silly – he can’t read.’
IMPERATIVE
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE (-)
Turn left at the crossroads.Follow that car.Try again.
Don’t park here.Don’t get lost.Don’t feed the animals.
FORMATION:The imperative is the infinitive without ‘to’.
The imperative is ‘don’t’ +the infinitive without ‘to’.
USE: We use imperatives for instructions, advice and to tell people what (not) to do.(We gebruiken ‘imperatives’ voor instructies, advies en om mensen te zeggen wat ze aldan niet moeten doen.)
The teacher or one of the pupils is Simon and comes in front. Allthe others stand up. Simon gives the group an order (bevel) such as "touch your nose" or"turn around".
If Simon starts his order with "Simon says" (for example, "Simon says, 'touch your nose'"),the class has to do what Simon says. If his order doesn’t start with "Simon says" (for example, he just says, "Touch your nose"),then the pupils who listen to Simon and follow his order are out of the game and must sitdown. The last person standing is the winner and gets to be Simon for the next round.
A GAMESimon Says
A GAMESimon Says
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73seventy-three
21
2 Stamp your feet!
3 Give a kiss!
4 Say ‘Hey man!’
5 Do all four!
▼ A SONG : If you’re happy…
9.8
9.9 - 9.10
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
Ride on the left. ride Write your name. write Find the answer. find [d] - [t]Don’t fight! fight
Grab (grijpen) your coat. grabRap this song. rap [b] - [p]
Log into the chat room. logLock the door. lock [g] - [k]
Don’t sniff your nose. sniffGive it back. give [f] - [v]
}}
}
}
LOOK, LISTEN AND SAYListen and repeat.
_ _ g
74 seventy-four
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDScandidate kandidaat show showwinner winnaar to pass passeren, voorbijgaan
FAMILIAR WORDSway weg tonight deze avondto record opnemen luck geluk
NEW WORDSLast night my neighbours’ housewas on fire. A passer-by noticedthe fire and called the police.
Be careful! The plate is hot.You’ll burn your fingers.
Go straight on till you reach thetraffic lights. Wait for the GreenMan. Cross the street. Go to theT-junction. On the corner, you willfind the theatre. Hurry up if youwant to make it in time.
passer-by
to burn
to reachGreen Man
to crosscorner
to make it in time
voorbijganger
verbranden
bereikengroen(e) verkeerslicht
overstekenhoek
op tijd aankomen
Grammar:- Prepositions of place (TB 70 - WB 9.5, 9.7)- Imperatives (TB 72)
Vocabulary:- Telling and asking the way (TB 68)- Public places (TB 69 - WB 9.3, 9.4, 9.7)- Traffic signs (WB 9.1)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 74)
- Don’t pronounce silent letters (TB 73 - WB 9.9).- Tell and ask the way (WB 9.2, 9.6, 9.7, 9.8).- Use imperatives or advice, instructions and to tell someone what (not) to do
(TB 72 - WB 9.10).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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75seventy-five
22
▼ The Master Mind QuizBRIAN BRAIN: Good evening, ladies and
gentlemen. This is the MasterMind Quiz and today’s mainprize is a brand-new Jaguar. Your host is Brian Brain. Andtoday my guest is Neil Nuts.Hello Neil, where are you from?
NEIL NUTS: I’m from the Scilly Isles, but Ilive in York now.
BRIAN BRAIN: You’re married, aren’t you?NEIL NUTS: Yes, I am. And so is my wife.BRIAN BRAIN: And you have ten children,
don’t you?NEIL NUTS: Yes, their names are Jill, John,
Jack, Jennifer, Jane,...........BRIAN BRAIN: All right, all right,.... Let’s start
the game. Here’s the firstquestion. "What’s the capital ofScotland?"
NEIL NUTS: That’s Loch Ness, isn’t it? BRIAN BRAIN: I’m afraid not. The right answer
is Edinburgh. The secondquestion."What’s the name of London’sfamous clock?"
NEIL NUTS: Oh, I know that one! That’sLittle Ben, isn’t it?
10.1
BRIAN BRAIN: Very close, but it’s Big Ben. Third question. I’m sure you’ll know this one: "Where do English kings andqueens live?"
NEIL NUTS: They live in a castle, don’t they?BRIAN BRAIN: I want the exact name.NEIL NUTS: Birmingham Palace. This time
I’m right, aren’t I?BRIAN BRAIN: Not exactly. It’s Buckingham
Palace. Fourth and lastquestion. All or nothing: "Whatdoes a taxider-mist do ?"
NEIL NUTS: He doesn’t drive taxis, does he?
BRIAN BRAIN: No, he doesn’t. NEIL NUTS: Oh well then, he
stuffs deadanimals, doesn’t he?
BRIAN BRAIN: Incredible! You win a Jaguar...
NEIL NUTS: Yes!!!! BRIAN BRAIN: ...matchbox car.
10.2
_ g
SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE: QUESTION TAG QUESTIONS (QTQ) (?)
76 seventy-six
10.3 - 10.4 - 10.5 - 10.6 - 10.7
Question tag questions
with ‘to be’ and ‘can’ never
take to do.
Example:
You can speak English, can’t you?
That’s not your English book, is it?
The tag of ‘I am’ is ‘aren’t I’.
Example:This time I’m right, aren’t I?
➔
USE: We mostly use question tags when we expect somebody will agree.These are not real questions, but more like statements. These tags have a falling tone.
Example: You have ten children, don’t you?
We gebruiken meestal ‘question tags’ als we verwachten dat de persoon die we
aanspreken het met ons eens zal zijn. Het zijn geen echte vragen, meer
vaststellingen. Deze ‘tags’ hebben een dalende intonatie.
Sometimes question tags can ask real questions. These tags have a rising tone.
Soms kunnen ‘question tags’ echte vragen zijn. Deze ‘tags’ hebben een stijgende intonatie.
form:
+ - +POSITIVE STATEMENT NEGATIVE TAG EXPECTED SHORT ANSWER
Pluto likes shoes, doesn’t he? Yes, he does.Kevin has a dog, doesn’t he? Yes, he does.
- + -NEGATIVE STATEMENT POSITIVE TAG EXPECTED SHORT ANSWER
Cats don’t bark, do they? No, they don’t.A taxidermist doesn’t drive taxis, does he? No, he doesn’t.
➔
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77seventy-seven
▼ The Railway Station
clerk sounds like bark
1
1 ticket office
2 ticket clerk
3 passenger
4 timetable
5 train
6 platform
2
3 4
5
6
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78 seventy-eight
10.8
23 ▼ A Ticket Home
After his glorious quiz victory Neil Nuts returns to York, his hometown.
TICKET CLERK: Yes, sir. Can I help you?NEIL NUTS: I feel like the luckiest man on earth today.TICKET CLERK: Then there’s not much else I can do for you then, I’m afraid.NEIL NUTS: Oh yes, there is.
I have to get home with my brand-new Jaguar.TICKET CLERK: I’m sorry, sir, but if you have a Jaguar, what are you doing in this railway station?NEIL NUTS: I want to buy a ticket.TICKET CLERK: For you and your Jaguar, sir?NEIL NUTS: Oh no just for me, I’ll keep the Jaguar in my pocket, while I travel.TICKET CLERK: In your pocket?!
You must be nuts.NEIL NUTS: Yes, indeed, Neil Nuts from that favourite television quiz. You recognized me
right away, didn’t you?TICKET CLERK: I can’t say I did. But, Mr Nuts, where do you and your Jaguar want to go?NEIL NUTS: A single to York, please.TICKET CLERK: New York, hopefully.NEIL NUTS: No, no, I live in the old one.
But actually I’m from the Scilly Isles.TICKET CLERK: I’m not surprised.
That will be £ 8.50, please.NEIL NUTS: What time is the next train?TICKET CLERK: The next train leaves at any moment, sir.NEIL NUTS: Oh, I’ll have to hurry, then.TICKET CLERK: No need to hurry, sir. The next train is
to Liverpool.NEIL NUTS: But when does my train leave?TICKET CLERK: Your train?
A Jaguar and a train?Well, departure for the nexttrain to York is at 10.42.
NEIL NUTS: Which platform is it?TICKET CLERK: Platform 5.NEIL NUTS: Thank God, that’s my
lucky number!I’ll be off then. Myfans are waiting.
TICKET CLERK: Sir, you forgot yourticket.
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79
Did you know?Boadicea was a warrior (krijgshaftige)queen who fought (streed tegen) theRomans in Britain almost 2000 years ago.In 1988 archaeologists were very surprisedwhen they found her grave (graf) underplatform 8 at King’s Cross railway station inLondon. Perhaps the station should be renamedQueen’s Cross.
In timetables you often see this:
or sometimes even
Then you can say:
six forty-seven / two thirty / four fifteen / five twenty-seven / nine oh eight
6.47 2.30 4.15 17.27 21.08
0647 0230 0415 1727 2108
▼ Timetables10.9
OVER TO
Make dialogues
Pupil A: PassengerPupil B: Ticket clerk
Swap roles each time.
Example:
A: What time is the next train to Manchester, please?
B: At 10.45.A: What time will I arrive?B: At 11.45.A: Which platform is it?B: Platform 5.
DESTINATION DEPARTURE PLATFORM
MANCHESTER 10.45 5NEWCASTLE 10.48 7
SCARBOROUGH 11.05 2LONDON 11.19 4
DARLINGTON 11.28
ARRIVAL
11.4512.0811.5014.1912.58 3
10.10
seventy-nine
_ g
80
How long / How far?You’re at the Manchester airport information office. Make dialogues with the grid.
Example:A: How long does it take to go to Hull by train, please?B: Two hours and forty minutes.
B: How far is it to Liverpool, please?A: 50 miles.
TOWN BY TRAIN BY CAR DISTANCEBLACKPOOL 1.35 1.30 59 MILES
CARLISLE 2.45 2.15 127 MILESCHESTER 1.35 0.45 41 MILESDURHAM 3.00 2.45 144 MILES
HARROGATE 2.30 1.45 71 MILESHULL 2.40 2.00 105 MILES
LEEDS 1.30 1.15 53 MILESLIVERPOOL 1.40 0.50 50 MILES
MIDDLESBROUGH 3.00 2.30 126 MILESNEWCASTLE 3.00 3.00 153 MILESSHEFFIELD 1.30 1.30 52 MILES
YORK 1.50 1.45 85 MILES
OVER TO
eighty
_ g
81eighty-one
Did you know?TRAINSPOTTING is a hobby in Britain.
It is popular mainly with boys, but also with adult
(volwassen) men. It involves (houdt in) going to
places where trains can be seen, especially rail-
way stations, and collecting the numbers of rail-
way engines you see by writing them down.
People sometimes make fun of this hobby and the
people who do it, because they think it’s a boring
and ridiculous (belachelijk) thing to do.
Did you know?
PUBLIC TRANSPORT IN BRITAINMany British town buses have two decks, and
the top deck is a good place from
which you see the view. In large towns such as
London, Newcastle and Liverpool you
find underground railways, also called "the
tube". The main train service, called
‘inter-city’, between London and the main towns to the north
and west runs at least every hour. All the inter-city trains have
parallel inter-city buses which compete (wedijveren) for pas-
sengers. The bus services,
however, are slow and infre-
quent. Heathrow in London is
the country’s most used airport.
London’s second airport is
Gatwick. There are also other
airports, for instance in
Manchester and Newcastle.
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82 eighty-two
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDSquiz quiz fan fanprize prijs, beloning How long? Hoe lang?dead dood How far? Hoe ver?guest gast
FAMILIAR WORDSking koning pocket zakqueen koningin to be surprised verrast zijnearth aarde
NEW WORDS
Ladies and gentlemen, this is aspecial announcement. The6.30 train with destinationLiverpool, will leave fromplatform 6. Arrival is expectedat 10.15.
All passengers for flight n° 789 must go to the departure hall in 10 minutes.
The ticket clerk will give you atimetable. Decide which trainyou want to take and then returnto the ticket office to get every-thing you need.
When you travel to Manchesterby train, you have to changetrains in Leeds.
- Liverpool, please.- Single or return?
- I’m from Manchester. What’s your hometown?
- Blackpool.- What’s the distance between
Manchester and Blackpool?- 59 miles.
announcement
destination
platformarrival
passengersflight
departure
ticket clerktimetableto return
ticket office
to travel
singlereturn
hometown
distance
mededeling
bestemming
perronaankomst
passagiersvlucht
vertrek
loketbediendedienstregeling
terugkomenloket
reizen
enkele reisretourticket
geboorteplaats,woonplaats
afstand
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83eighty-three
capitalmain
(not) exactly
actually
next
host
to hurryto be off
gloriousvictory
to expect
incredibleto recognize
to agree on
to stuff
hoofdstadbelangrijkste, voornaamste
(niet) juist, (niet) echt
eigenlijk
volgend(e)
gastheer
zich haastenweg zijn
roemrijk(e)overwinningverwachten
ongelooflijkherkennen
het eens zijn over,overeenkomen
opzetten
- Use question tag questions with the right intonation (WB 10.3).- Read timetables (TB 79).- Ask / listen for information at the railway station/airport (TB 79, 80 - WB 10.10).- Buy a ticket at the railway station (TB 79).
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
- Heathrow is the capital’s main airport, isn’t it?
- Yes, that’s true. And ManchesterAirport is London’s secondairport, isn’t it ?
- Not exactly. London’s second airport is Gatwick actually.
Let’s continue this evening’stelevision review. Next is theMaster Mind Quiz. Your hosttonight is Brian Brain.
- Hurry! You’ll miss the bus!- I’m off. Bye.
After last week’s gloriousvictory, everyone expectsMichael Schumacher to win hisfourth race in a row.
It’s incredible that you stillrecognize your niece afterstaying in America for more than20 years.
- Why don’t you agree on yourholiday destination?
- My wife likes the sun and thebeach and I like the mountains.
- What does a taxidermist do?- He stuffs dead animals.- How awful!
Grammar:- Formation of question tag questions (TB 76 - WB 10.2, 10.4, 10.6, 10.7)Vocabulary:- The Railway Station (TB 77 - WB 10.9)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 82, 83)
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
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84 eighty-four
11.1
11.2
24 ▼ What’s Going on?That morning Kevin and Ian are parking theirbikes in the school’s bicycle shed. They arequarrelling about last night’s football match.Suddenly they hear familiar voices frombehind the shed.
KEVIN Ssssh, Ian, isn’t that Philiptalking?
IAN Indeed it is. I wonder whathe’s doing.
KEVIN I want to know who he’stalking to.
IAN Hang on, I’ll peep through a hole in the fence.
KEVIN Tell me! What’s going on?IAN Guess who’s looking deep
into Philip’s eyes.KEVIN Let me have a look.IAN No, no, wait! Be quiet! I can’t hear
what they’re saying.KEVIN I don’t care what they’re saying.
I want to know who’s standing soclose to Philip.
IAN It’s a girl.KEVIN Anyone we know?IAN Oh yes … . Oh, he’s taking her hand.KEVIN Whose hand, Ian?IAN Good heavens, they’re kissing.
KEVIN Who’s kissing, for Christ’s sake?IAN Well, have a look yourself.KEVIN At last.
But that’s, that’s …, that’s Helenhe’s kissing.I can’t believe my eyes.
IAN Why? What’s happening?
KEVIN They’re still kissing.But Helen, my Helen …
IAN Hey Kevin. Why are you runningaway?Are you crying?
KEVIN I’m not crying, Ian. There’ssomething in my eye.
IAN Must be a splinter from yourbroken heart.
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85eighty-five
THE PRESENT CONTINUOUS TENSE
11.3
POSITIVE (+) AND NEGATIVE (-)
I ‘m (not) reading a book.am (not)
You ‘re (not) going to the shops.are (not)aren’t
He ‘s (not) playing in the garden.She is (not)It isn’t
We ‘re (not) wearing blue trousers.You are (not)They aren’t
SUBJECT TO BE ING-FORM
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Am I dreaming? Yes, you are.No, you’re not.
Are you sleeping? Yes, I am.No, I’m not.
Is he working? Yes, he is.she No, she’s not.it No, it isn’t.
Are we winning? Yes, we are.No, we aren’t.
you travelling? Yes, we are.No, we aren’t.
they writing? Yes, they are.No, they aren’t.
TO BE SUBJECT ING-FORM
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86 eighty-six
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What am I doing?Why are you leaving?Who is she talking to?
heWhere are we going?
youthey
QUESTION WORD TO BE SUBJECT ING-FORM
USE: The present continuous tense describes what’s (not) happening NOW.(De present continuous beschrijft wat er nu (niet) aan het gebeuren is).
11.3
syllable: lettergreepconsonant: medeklinkervowel: klinkerstressed: beklemtoond
11.4 - 11.5 - 11.6 - 11.7 - 11.8 - 11.9
to for’get forgetting
Last syllable of the
infinitive is stressed.
to ‘enter entering
Last syllable of the
infinitive is NOT stressed.
SPELLING OF THE –ING FORM
I am playing play + ing infinitive + inggoing go + ingworking work + ing
writing write + ing infinitive ends in –e: e + ingdriving drive + ing
sitting sit + t + ing When the infinitive ends in a running run + n + ing syllable with a short vowelforgetting forget + t + ing and one final consonant AND
that syllable is stressed:➔ final consonant is doubled
entering enter + ing last syllable is not stressed:budgeting budget + ing infinitive + ingopening open + inghappening happen + ing
travelling travel + l + ing infinitive ending in –el:modelling model + l + ing ‘l’ is doubled
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87eighty-seven
▼ Fashion ParadeThese people are modelling the newest fashion collection.Describe what they are wearing.
Mime an activity. Your partner asks questions to find out whatyou’re doing.
Example: A: What am I doing?B: Are you writing?A: No, I’m not writing. (or: Yes, I’m writing.)
You can also play this game with the class.
OVER TO
11.12
11.10 - 11.11
Describe what your partner is wearing.Now you can have a fashion parade in your class!
What you wear:I often wear blue trousers.You’re wearing a red skirt.
What you carry:I’m carrying my schoolbag.Mum’s carrying the baby.
A GAMECharade
A GAMECharade
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88 eighty-eight
▼ Kevin’s Timetable
11.13 - 11.14
Look at Kevin’s timetable for a minute.
Pupil A: Close your book.Pupil B: Ask questions.
Example: B: Does Kevin have French on Monday?A: Yes, he does.B: You’re right. (or: You’re wrong)
A GAMETest YourMemory
A GAMETest YourMemory
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89eighty-nine
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDSto hear horen broken heart gebroken hartfamiliar familiair, vertrouwd to kiss kussento wonder zich verwonderen over, to model modelleren, (als
zich afvragen mannequin) showendeep diep
FAMILIAR WORDS
voice stem eye oogto talk praten, spreken to cry wenen, huilenWhat’s going on? Wat gebeurt er? to believe gelovenindeed inderdaad
NEW WORDS
On Wednesday morning pupilsfrom the Minster School meet inthe playground. They talk andquarrel until the headmasterarrives and suddenly everyoneis quiet.
- York 870152.- Hi Helen. It’s Sarah here.
How was your date last night?- Hang on, Sarah.
My mum is peeping through thekeyhole and is listening to ourconversation. I’ll send herdownstairs.(a few minutes later…)Here I am again, Sarah.
- At last.- Yes, but my mum asked a lot of
questions.- I don’t care what your mother
said. Tell me all about your date!
to quarrelsuddenly
Hang on.to peep
hole
At last.
I don’t care.
ruziemaken of ruzie hebbenplotseling
Wacht even, blijf aan de lijn.gluren
gat
Eindelijk.
Het kan me niets schelen.
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90 ninety
- Let’s play charade.- I will mime a job. You’ll try to
find out who I am and what I’mdoing.
- It looks like a fashion parade.You’re showing clothes whilewalking.You must be a model.
- Very good! Next job!- You’re carrying glasses and
cups. You must be a waiter.- Stop! I don’t want to go on.
You’re too good at it.
- When I was about 16, I wasmadly in love with the girl nextdoor.My father built a wooden fencearound our garden, so I couldn’tstand close to her anymore.
- Good heavens! Hasn’t heever been young?
to mime
fashion parade
to carry
fence
close
imiteren, nabootsen
modeshow
dragen
omheining, hek
dicht(bij)
- Listen for information (WB 11.1, 11.5, 11.6, 11.13).- Use the present continuous tense in positive and negative sentences and in questions
(TB 85, 86 - WB 11.2, 11.4, 11.7, 11.8, 11.9, 11.14).- Correct use of ‘to carry’ and ‘to wear’ (WB 11.10, 11.11).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
Grammar:- Form of the present continuous tense (TB 85, 86 - WB 11.2)- Use of the present continuous tense (TB 86 - WB 11.4, 11.7, 11.8, 11.9, 11.14)- Spelling of the ing-form (TB 86 - WB 11.3, 11.4, 11.5, 11.6, 11,7, 11.8)
Vocabulary: - Subjects (TB 88 - WB 11.12, 11.13)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 89, 90)
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91ninety-one
Time for a laughPATIENT: Doctor, am I going to die?DOCTOR: That’s the last thing you’re going to do.
Time for a laughDoc, my child has just swallowed (ingeslikt)a pen. What should I do?
Use a pencil, next.
HELEN’S BEDROOM DOOR OPENSDOCTOR HEART: Good evening.
What’s the matter?HELEN: I think I have a cold, doctor.DOCTOR HEART: I see. Show me your tongue
and say AH.HELEN: AH.DOCTOR HEART Your throat is rather red.
It looks painful.HELEN: Only when I cough. But my
nose is runny all the time.And I have a slightheadache, too.
DOCTOR HEART: What’s your temperature?HELEN: It’s 38°.DOCTOR HEART: I’m going to write a
prescription for you for nosedrops and syrup.
HELEN: I’m not missing school allweek, am I?
DOCTOR HEART: You’re the first patient in mycareer who doesn’t likemissing school.I’m sorry but you’ll have tostay inside for three days.
HELEN: You’re kidding, aren’t you?DOCTOR HEART: Oh no, I’m not! These colds
are very contagious. You would infect yourclassmates.
HELEN: Oops, I think I already have.
25
12.1 - 12.2
WHAT A COINCIDENCE!RING … RING …PHILIP: Philip speaking.HELEN: Hi, Flipper! It’s me.PHILIP: Oh, hi Helen! Nice to hear you!HELEN: I’m so sorry I wasn’t at school.
I’m not feeling very well and Ihave been in bed all day today. But I already miss you lots.
PHILIP: How weird. I’m lying in my bed,too.
HELEN: Oh, dear. What’s the matter?PHILIP: I have a bad cold. I’m sneezing
all the time – ATCHOO!HELEN: Bless you.
DOOR BELLHELEN: Sorry. I’ll have to call you
back. That must be thedoctor.
PHILIP: So long, babe.
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92 ninety-two
▼ Parts of the body
eareye
mouthchinthroat
chest
nose
foot
ankle
knee leg
head
back
breast
handfinger
face
neck
toe
hip
bottom / buttocks
elbowarm
belly, stomach
shoulder
trunk
tongue
hair
one foot
two feet
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93ninety-three
12.3 - 12.4
Did you know?
THE ENGLISH HAVE A FEW TYPICAL EXPRESSIONS THAT REFER TO HEALTH AND ILLNESS:
Time for a laugh
Sign in a hospital canteen:‘Our spoons are not medicine.Don’t take them after meals.’
COUGHS AND SNEEZES SPREAD DISEASESMake sure you don’t infect someone when you cough and sneeze.
AN APPLE A DAY KEEPS THE DOCTOR AWAYFruit is very healthy.
SICK AS A DOGTo vomit (braken).
FEED A COLD AND STARVE A FEVERTo cure a cold, you must eat a lot,
to cure a fever, you mustn’t eat anything.
HEALTH IS BETTER THAN WEALTHIt’s better to be healthy
than to be very rich.
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94 ninety-four
PRESENT CONTINUOUS TENSE – QUESTION TAG QUESTIONS (?)
+POSITIVE STATEMENTS
-NEGATIVE TAGS
+EXPECTED SHORT ANSWER
You are kidding,Your back is hurting today,I am sneezing all the time,
aren’t you?isn’t it?aren’t I?
Yes, I am.Yes, it is.Yes, you are.
-NEGATIVE STATEMENTS
+POSITIVE TAGS
-EXPECTED SHORT ANSWER
I’m not missing school all week,You aren’t feeling well,He isn’t coughing,
am I?are you?is he?
No, you aren’t.No, I’m not.No, he isn’t.
12.5
12.6 - 12.7
Time for a laughPATIENT: Doctor, doctor, I’m very worried. This is my first operation.DOCTOR: That’s funny. It’s my first operation, too.
An Emergency Phone CallKEVIN: Nine, nine, nine, …
Come on ……. Hurry up!OPERATOR: Emergency Services. Fire, police or
ambulance?KEVIN: An ambulance as quickly as possible.OPERATOR: Where are you? What’s the matter?KEVIN: I’m speaking from the telephone box, near
Minster School in College Street. A man islying on the ground. I can see his bikeunder the bus. I think he’s badly injured.He’s not moving.Please come quickly.
OPERATOR: O.K. We’ll send an ambulance at once.What’s your name, please?
KEVIN: Kevin Pearson.OPERATOR: Thanks a lot, Kevin. Bye.
Time for a laughFIRST AID"How come you're late?" asked the bartender, as the blonde waitress walked into the bar."It was awful," she explained. "I was walking down Elm Streetand there was a terrible accident. A man was thrown from hiscar and he was lying in the middle of the street. His leg was bro-ken, his skull (schedel) was fractured (gebarsten), and there wasblood everywhere. Thank God I took that first-aid course."What did you do?" asked the bartender."I sat down and put my head between my knees to keep fromfainting (flauwvallen)!"
Time for a laughFIRST AIDIt was a stifling (broeierig) hot day and a man fainted in the middle of a busyintersection (kruising). Traffic quickly piled up (opeenhopen) in alldirections while a woman rushed to help him. When she kneltdown to loosen (losmaken) his collar (kraag), a man emergedfrom the crowd (menigte), pushed her aside, and said, "It's allright, honey, I've had a course in first aid."The woman stood up and watched as he took the ill man's pulse(polsslag) and prepared to administer (toepassen) artificial respira-tion (kunstmatige ademhaling). At this point she tapped him onthe shoulder and said, "When you get to the part about callinga doctor, I'm already here."
26
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95ninety-five
OVER TOMake 3 emergency phone calls.
1 You’re riding on your bike when you see a car sinking in the river Ouse.2 You’re walking home when you see a fire in a house.3 You’re coming from friends when you see thieves breaking into your house. 12.8
12.11
12.9 - 12.10
USE OF SIMPLE PRESENT AND PRESENT CONTINUOUSWe use the simple present tense to describe regular activities.(We gebruiken de ‘simple present tense’ om dingen te beschrijven die je regelmatig doet.)
e.g.: I come here every day.
We use the present continuous tense to talk about what is happening NOW.(We gebruiken de ‘present continuous tense’ om dingen te beschrijven die NU aan hetgebeuren zijn.)
e.g.: I’m speaking from the telephone box.
LOOK,� LISTEN�� SAY
�
27
/ ð / mother / θ / throat
‘It’s the tenth,’ says mother.‘The dog needs a bath.’‘OK,’ says my brother.‘Put them all in the bath.’
Then in get the three.‘There’s no room for me!’says my brother.‘Well I think,’ says my mother,‘it’s your turn next month.’
a doctoran ambulancedriver
a police officer
an ambulance
the firebrigade
a fireman
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96 ninety-six
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDSto miss missen to infect infecteren, besmettencold verkoudheid, koud police politiepain(ful) pijn(lijk) ambulance ambulance, ziekenwagentemperature temperatuur ground grondnose drops neusdruppels thief diefsyrup siroop to break into inbrekenpatient patiënt to sink zinkencareer carrière doctor dokter
FAMILIAR WORDS
to feel well zich goed voelen You’re kidding! Dat meen je niet!already al fire vuurOh dear! Och (hemel)! quick(ly) snel, vlugWhat’s the matter? Wat scheelt er? possible mogelijkto call telefoneren
- If someone comes to see me,tell him or her that I’m lying inbed. I’m down with flu. I haveto cough and to sneeze all thetime.Atchoo!
- Bless you!- Thanks. I have a slight
headache and a runny nose.- Anything else?- Yes, tell him or her this flu could
be contagious.
What a coincidence, meetingyou here at the dentist’s!
Don’t stay at the beach too long in this hot weather!Use sunburn lotion so that you don’t get sunstroke.
Don’t drink that much!Once the party is over, you’ll havea hangover.
to lieflu
to coughto sneeze
Bless you!slight
headacherunny nose
contagious
coincidencedentist
to stay
sunburnsunstroke
hangover
liggengriep
hoestenniezen
Gezondheid!een beetje, lichte
hoofdpijnloopneus
besmettelijk
toevaltandarts
blijven
zonnebrandzonnesteek
kater
NEW WORDS
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97ninety-seven
- I’m not feeling well today.I’m suffering from foodpoisoning.
- How weird. I visited my parents this morning and theyboth had a stomach-ache too. They went to this new restaurantin town last night.
- You’re kidding. I also haddinner there yesterday.
- What’s the matter with you?- I don’t know what’s wrong,
but I feel rather tired.
Yesterday, my brother fellon the school playground. He wasbadly injured. One of theteachers called emergencyservices.
Your mother is ill. Take thisprescription to the chemist.He’ll give you some medicine.
food poisoning
weird
ache
rather
injuredemergency services
prescription
voedselvergiftiging
ongewoon, vreemd
pijn
nogal
gewondspoedgevallen
voorschrift
Grammar:- Question tag questions in the present continuous tense (TB 94 - WB 12.5).- Simple present tense and present continuous tense (TB 95 - WB 12.8, 12.9, 12.10).
Vocabulary:- Parts of the body (TB 92 - WB 12.2, 12.4)- Injuries and illnesses (WB 12.3)- Expressions referring to health and illness (TB 93)- Emergency Services (TB 94, 95 - WB 12.6)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 96, 97)
- Use the - present continuous tense in question tag questions (TB 94 - WB 12.5).- simple present tense and present continuous tense
(TB 95 - WB 12.8, 12.9, 12.10).- Make an emergency phone call (TB 94, 95).- Pronounce the / ð / and / θ / sounds (TB 95).- Derive translations from the context of a text (WB 12.1).- Understand a short news edition (WB 12.7).- Read, enjoy and understand poems (WB 12.11).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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98 ninety-eight
13.2 - 13.3 - 13.4
28
Lady – My Life As a Bitch, by Melvin BurgessAn adapted extract
Sandra Francy is a 17-year-old girl who is sick ofschool and doing as she's told. She wants to goout and go crazy. So she does. She sleeps withtoo many boys, drinks too much, takes too manydrugs. She is beginning to get bored with that kind oflifestyle when the accident happens: she changesinto a dog.At first of course she's terrified. A dog! Oh myGod - she's lost her family, who don't recogniseher and chase her away, her friends, her place atschool, everything. But she soon meets other dogs who were oncepeople and they tell her that a human's life is fullof stress and pain, work and tests. Now, a dog’slife is different.Only a fool would really prefer to be a humanbeing, if they had the choice ...
In this extract Sandra Francy goes home. Shewants her family to see her as their daughter.Therefore she tries to put on her old clothes.Being a dog this is, of course, not that easy …
▼ Lady
13.1
jumped down off the desk and ran to my ward-
robe. It was a new one, so it was quite easy to
open it. There inside were all my clothes, although
how I was ever going to get them on I didn't know.
I searched with my mouth and dumped them on
the carpet - my tee-shirts, my knickers, my tights,
my jeans and skirts and tops. Then, for the first time
in weeks, I got dressed.
I did the tee-shirt first, holding the sides with my
paws and pushing my head in. That was hard
enough, but the knickers were even harder. I hadto spread them out on the floor, stand in the leg
holes and then pull them up with my teeth. It tookme ages, but I did it. Then I tried to do the same
with my tights, but that was just so hard. I had to
keep doing little jumps to get my feet off them, and
then pull with my teeth. It was impossible! I stop-ped trying. I thought, one step at a time. Knickers
today, tights tomorrow, I said. I found my nice litt-
le stripy tee-shirt, the one with the yellow and blue
stripes. It used to be skintight, but now, of course,
it was all baggy, and I thought, at least I'm losing
weight! And I went, huf, huf, huf. Laughing mademe feel loads better. I loved it!
Next I put on my short black skirt. I climbed onto
the table and had a look at myself. I nearly cried. I
just looked absolutely ridiculous.
I tried some make-up. Holding the lipstick down
between my paws, I rubbed my black dog lips
around the red stick, but it was such a hopeless
mess, I licked it all off and tried again. I got better,
but after several goes, I decided that make-up with
a hairy face and no fingers is definitely not on.
And then - well! - it was now or never. Time to
introduce myself to my family.
Iunit 13
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99ninety-nine
Did you know?Melvin Burgess was born in London in 1954. After leaving school at eighteen hebegan training as a journalist. He then had some jobs in the building industry(bouw). He started writing in his twenties and wrote for fifteen years before his firstbook ’The Cry of the Wolf’ was published in 1990.He is now seen as one of the best writers in today’s teenager literature. Melvin'sbooks are always about subjects that fascinate teenagers: e.g. homelessness, love,witchcraft (hekserij), drugs…Melvin now writes full-time and lives in Manchester with his wife, Judith, and twochildren, Oliver and Sam.His most famous books are ‘Junk’(1996), ‘Bloodtide’ (1999), ‘Lady’ (2001), and‘Doing It’ (2003).
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE: SPELLING
jumpclimblookplay
jumpedclimbedlookedplayed
To make the regular past tense we add ed.
PRESENT PAST
PRESENT PAST
PRESENT PAST
PRESENT PAST
B U T
livearrivephone
livedarrivedphoned
If the infinitive ends in e, we only add d.
stoptravel
enter
stoppedtravelled
entered
If the infinitive ends in a stressed syllablewith a short vowel and 1 finalconsonant, we double the consonant.We do the same if the infinitive ends in el.
‘Enter’ doesn’t end in a stressed syllable.
trycarrymarry
triedcarriedmarried
If the infinitive ends in a consonant + y,y ➔ ied
In American English the
final l isn’t doubled:
‘traveled’
syllable: lettergreepconsonant: medeklinkervowel: klinkerstressed: beklemtoond
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100 one hundred
USE:
The simple past tense is PAST = the period is over.De ‘simple past’ is de verleden tijd = de periode ligt in het verleden.e.g. yesterday, last week … are signal words.
The common (or SIMPLE) form is used to talk about actions in the past.De gewone vorm wordt gebruikt om over gebeurtenissen in het verleden te praten.
13.5
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE OF TO BE, CAN AND TO HAVE
I you he she it we you they
waswerewaswaswaswerewerewere
I you he she it we you they
couldcouldcouldcouldcouldcouldcouldcould
I youhe she it we you they
hadhadhadhadhadhadhadhad
to be can to have
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE: PRONUNCIATION
to stopto workto coughto kissto watch
to startto need
to tryto liveto arrive
he stoppedhe workedI coughedthey kissedwe watched
we startedyou needed
I triedthey livedwe arrived
/ t / after / k, f, � ,p, s /
think of the word ‘coffeeshops’
/ i d / after / t, d /
/ d / after all other sounds
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101one hundred and one
29▼ Lady (2)
Excerpt: adapted from ‘Lady’, by Melvin Burgess.
Downstairs I could hear voices from the living room. I wantedto get down those stairs on two legs. I got up and tried tojump down… but I fell! I rolled all the way down to the bot-tom. Ouch! What a start to my first day back as a real girl! Then, I stood up on my hind1 legs and walked in to greet myfamily. My mother was the first to begin screaming, followedby Adam and Dad. My mother shouted ‘Mad dog! Mad dog!’Adam was trying to hide behind her. He said, ‘Keep it awayfrom me! Keep it away from me!’ in a loud voice.‘It’s wearing her clothes! Oh my God! It’s wearing herclothes!’ my mother shouted.It was time to say something. I knew from practising that ‘d’swere hard; so were ‘m’s at the beginning of words but theywere easier if they were in the middle, so I tried with mybrother first. I looked at him and I said, ‘Adam. Adam. Help.’ It came out beautifully. Perfect!‘Help’ was a bit of a mess - it sounded more like ‘Hrwworwwap.’ But still – not bad for a dog.‘It knows my name,’ said Adam. Mum put her hands to her mouth. ‘Oh my God,’ she whisper-ed. ‘What’s happening? What sort of an animal is it?’I said, ‘Mum,’ but it didn’t sound right. I tried Dad. It came out like a little bark2, but it wasn’tbad. ’Droow, drogghw, droughwd. Hrwworp,’ I said.‘What’s it saying now?’ Dad asked.‘It called you Dad,’ said Adam.Then I did the dog tricks. I sat back on my bum, put my paws up under my chin and wagged3
my tail. I waved one of my paws. ‘She wants to be friends,’ said my dad. He smiled and heldout his hand. ‘Good girl! Good girl!’ he said.Dad and Adam went out of the room. Mum closed the door. ‘This is girls’ talk, isn’t it, just youand me,’ she said.She looked at me and said, ‘Sit,’ and I sat. ‘Stand,‘ she said, and I stood. ‘Get up on the sofa,’she said, and I did. ‘Turn round. Lie down.’ I did all she said. ‘Count to three with your paw onthe carpet,’ she said. Now I knew she half believed that I was not just a dog. ‘Three timesfour?’ she asked. I did twelve. ‘Seven minus six?’ I did one.‘Oh my God. Oh my God,’ she said. She walked twice around the room. I just sat andwatched. It was all in her hands, everything was in her hands. My future. My life. ‘It’s not possible, of course it’s not, no matter how clever your are. Just not possible! The onlything is – how come you’re wearing the top that she always wore with that skirt? Who but mySandra knew that?’ I said ‘Mum!’ But she put her hands over her ears.‘Oh, Sandra! Oh, my darling, darling, darling - Oh, Sandra, what’s happened to you? Whathave they done?’ She held me tightly to her, kissing me and loving me and crying. I justwanted to cry too and to show her how I could cry, as if tears alone would wash me back towhat I was.
1 hind legs: behind – achterste poten2 a bark : blaf3 to wag: kwispelen
13.6 - 13.7
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102 one hundred and two
▼ So Long
Fisher Z
When I read your letter I couldn't believe that you'd gone.I dialled your number but no one answered the phone.I asked your friends to tell me if they knew where you were,they said they thought that you were ill.I hired a detective to try and find out where you are.He managed to trace you, he said you were living in France.A watchman* saw you climb into someone else's car and drive *een bewakeroff laughing in the night. Why didn't you tell me? Not leave me this way.You could have told me and not waited for so long.
I've tried to forget you but I find myself walking the street.I went to the doctor and he gave me something to sleep. I've sent you telegrams but you haven't answered one. Your mother told me I best leave you well alone. I hope you're satisfied now you've done this thing to me. I hope you're pleased with what you've done.Why didn't you tell me? Not leave me this way. Oh you could have told me and not waited for so long.
For so long I never realised just exactly who you were. I never realised just exactly. I've never realised the girl I had before.I hope you're satisfied you won't hear from me again. I hope you're pleased with what you've done. Why didn't you tell me?Not leave me this way. Oh you should have told me and not waited for so long.
13.8
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103one hundred and three
13.9 - 13.10
LIST OF THE IRREGULAR VERBS
INFINITIVE
to beto haveto docan
to buyto thinkto catchto wearto bringto teachto see
to getto shootto forget
to meetto sleepto keepto meanto goto fallto leaveto feelto layto sayto readto holdto leadto send
to win
SIMPLE PAST
was/werehaddidcould
boughtthoughtcaughtworebroughttaughtsaw
gotshotforgot
metsleptkeptmeantwentfellleftfeltlaidsaidreadheldledsent
won
INFINITIVE
to knowto flyto throw
to driveto rideto writeto riseto waketo breakto speakto tellto sell
to drinkto runto sinkto swim
to find
to taketo standto put
to hurtto hear
to lieto giveto cometo eatto make
to costto cut
SIMPLE PAST
knewflewthrew
droverodewroterosewokebrokespoketoldsold
drankransankswam
found
tookstoodput
hurtheard
laygavecameatemade
costcut
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104 one hundred and four
▼ A Poem
My Dog Chewed Up My Homework by Bruce Lansky
I'm glad to say my homework's done.I finished it last night.I've got it right here in this box.It's not a pretty sight.
My dog chewed up my homework.He slobbered on it, too.So now my homework's ripped to shredsand full of slimy goo.
It isn't much to look at,but I brought it anyway.I'm going to dump it on your deskif I don't get an A.
13.11
13.12 - 13.13
A GAMEEveryone’s
Story
A GAMEEveryone’s
Story
Tell a story together in the class. But each person can only say one word.Look at the example and go on.
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105one hundred and five
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
to dump dumpen, laten vallen to lick likkenside zijde, kant hairy behaardhard hard, moeilijk bottom bodemto spread spreiden to wave wuiven, zwaaienstripe streep minus min
lip lip to hire hurenlipstick lippenstift
FAMILIAR WORDS
impossible onmogelijkbitch teef clever schrander, bekwaamto climb klimmen to change veranderento shout roepen, schreeuwen to put on aantrekkento sound klinken to pull trekkento smile (glim)lachen life levento turn draaien, keren
to rent a house, an apartmentto hire a boat, a bike, a detective
a lifeto livelive musicNEW WORDS
I’m losing weight and I amquite satisfied/pleasedabout how I look now, but I feelridiculous in my baggy trousersand wide T-shirt. Next time I goshopping, I’ll definitely buyclothes skintight.
If you want to become a goodtennis-player, you’ll have topractise several times a week.I had a go at it two years ago. I used to play tennis twice aweek. It really was not on! I decided to watch tennis on TVinstead.
weightto be satisfied/
pleasedridiculous
baggy
definitelyskintight
to practiseseveral
gotwice
to decide
gewichttevreden/verheugd zijn
belachelijkzakachtig, flodderig
heel zeker, zeker en vastnauwsluitend, spannend
oefenenverschillende
pogingtweemaal
beslissen
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106 one hundred and six
Do you want to teach your dog alot of tricks?It will take ages if you want totrain him all by yourself.Do it one step at a time.Teach him how to give a paw orhow to sit on his bum. Teach himhow to jump. If he does the jump well, give him a cookie.He’ll wag his tail to thank you.
Yesterday afternoon three armedmen surprised some late visitorsof the York Castle Museum. Onewoman started to scream, an-other began to weep. An old mantried to hide behind one of thestatues. A father held his littlechild tightly to him. It’s a goodthing that someone could dialthe number of the police. Theystarted to search the gunmenimmediately and managed totrace them in Holland.
You think your life is a total mess! Come on little girl.Losing your lover is not the end ofthe world. Rub your eyes andwipe away your tears.
- Why do you whisper?- Ssst! I don’t want that dog
to see us. Keep me awayfrom it.
- Don’t make me laugh. That dog is the sweetest one I’ve ever met. It doesn’teven know what it has teeth for.
to take ages
one step at a timepawbum
to jumpjump
to wagtail
to screamto weepto hide
tightlyto dial
to search
to trace
mess
to rubtear
to whisper
to keep away
to laugh
tooth (teeth)
lang duren
stap voor stappootje
achterstespringen
sprongkwispelen
staart
gillen, schreeuwenwenen
(zich) verstoppen
stevig dichtdraaien
zoeken
opsporen
warboel, mislukking
wrijventraan
fluisteren
weghouden van
lachen
tand (tanden)
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107one hundred and seven
Grammar:- Spelling of the simple past tense (regular verbs)
(TB 99 - WB 13.1, 13.4, 13.10, 13.12)- Simple past tense of to be, to have and can (TB 100 - WB 13.5)- Simple past of the irregular verbs (TB 103 - WB 13.9, 13.10, 13.12)
Vocabulary:- Vocabulary focus (TB 105, 106)
Use the simple past tense in positive sentences (TB 99, 100 - WB 13.5).Pronounce the simple past of regular and irregular verbs (TB 100, 103 - WB 13.3).Reading for information and fun (WB 13.6).Listening for information and fun (WB 13.1, 13.8).
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
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unit14
108 one hundred and eight
30
SIMPLE PRESENT – NEGATIVE (-) SIMPLE PAST – NEGATIVE (-)
I don’t want to talk about it. I didn’t trip over her handbag.
You don’t like candlelight dinners. You didn’t do it on purpose.
Helen doesn’t look too happy. Kevin didn’t know Helen’s a vegetarian.
We don’t come from London. We didn’t laugh with it.
You don’t know him. You didn’t like it at all.
They don’t come to school by train. They didn’t leave in time.
▲ don’t / doesn’t + infinitive ▲ didn’t + infinitive
He tripped over Helen’s handbag.
He didn’t trip over her handbag.
Kevin wasn’t ready at all.I couldn’t say a word.▲ Simple past negative
with ‘to be’ and ‘can’never takes ‘to do’!
14.1 - 14.2
In the playground
KEVIN: Ah, Philip! What’s up? You didn’t come to school with Helen today?
PHILIP: I don’t really want to talk about it.KEVIN: Come on. I’m your friend. You
know you can trust me.PHILIP: I really messed things up last
night. I’m such a fool.
▼ Such a fool!
KEVIN: We already know that. Now tell me what happened.
PHILIP: Well, I wanted to surprise Helen with a candlelight dinner. But things didn’t go as planned.
KEVIN: What went wrong? I bet you set the house on fire.
PHILIP: Well … it came close to that. Butlet me start at the beginning.
_ g
1 tomato – 2 tomatoes
[ t ə’m ɑ� t o υ ]sounds like "car"
1 potato – 2 potatoes
[ p ə’t e i t o υ ]sounds like "they"
14.3▼ Food
Vegetables
peas
a tomato
mushrooms
a cucumber
spinach
a cabbage
beans
a carrot
a cauliflower
a strawberry grapefruit
a pineapple
grapes
a lemon
an orangea pear
garlic
one hundred and nine
a banana
an applea kiwi
a cherry
Fruit
an onion
a potatolettuce
leek
109
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110 one hundred and ten
Meat
beef
pork
mutton (mutton-chops)
veal
lamb
rabbitpoultry
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111one hundred and eleven
Fish
A GAMELet’s play
Bingo!
A GAMELet’s play
Bingo!
OVER TO
A POEM
I eat my peas with honey.I ’ve done so al l my l ife .I t makes the peas taste funny.But i t keeps them on my knife .
A LIMERICK
A diner while dining at Crewe
Found a rather large mouse in his stew.
Said the waiter, ‘Don’t shout
And wave it about
Or others will all want one, too.’
Talk to a partner. Ask and answer questions about food.
Example: - Do you like fish?- No, I don’t. I can’t stand fish.
Or: - Yes, I love fish fingers with potato salad.
- What’s your favourite fruit / meat / … ?- Do you cook meals for your family?
Ask your teacher to play Bingo.
shrimps
a trout
a sole cod
a lobster
a salmon
tuna
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112 one hundred and twelve
Did you know?
English Breakfast
This is perhaps one of the best-loved clichés about British food.
Fruit juice, cereals and milk, then sausages, eggs, bacon, tomatoes, mushrooms and then
buttered toast with marmalade, all washed down (wegspoelen) with plenty of (een heleboel)
tea with milk.But this takes a very long time to prepare and is too filling (zwaar). This is why the British
have it only occasionally (nu en dan) at weekends as a brunch (= lunch +
breakfast).A much more common (gewoon) breakfast is a cup of coffee and a piece of
toast or yogurt.
LunchMost of the times afairly (nogal) lightmeal: a warm dish anda pudding (dessert).Even more common arethe ‘packed lunches’. Somesandwiches, a packet of crisps(chips), an apple and a can (blikje) of some-thing to drink kept in a plastic container.
ElevensesThis is usually not more than a cup oftea and biscuits (koekjes). As the namepoints out it is used somewhere aroundeleven a.m.
DinnerThings are changing and most British
people eat meals from many different
countries for example spaghetti or
curry (pikante schotel). In fact you
could even say that the British don’t
eat much British food.
However, the most typical thing to
eat for dinner is "meat and two veg".
This is a piece of meat and two dif-
ferent boiled (gekookt) vegetables,
covered (overdekt) with ‘gravy’ which is a
sauce made of the meat juices (sappen). One of the vegetables
is almost always potatoes. Beef, mutton and lamb are preferred to pork in Britain.
The English are famous for their meat puddings and meat pies (pastei, taart).
After the main course many families eat a pudding. This was traditional-
ly a sponge (biscuit) of pastry cooked with jam or fruit, served with
hot custard (vanillesaus). Now it can be a fruit salad, a pie, jelly
(gelei), or ice-cream.
TeaAround four o’ clock in the afternoon theEnglish have teatime. Some thin slices (snee-tjes) of bread and butter, sometimes withcheese, fish, ham or a meat paste (vlees-paté). Followed by jam, tarts, scones orcakes. And of course several cups of strongtea with milk.
Watch out if you order a coffee: it comes withmilk. If you want a coffee without milk youorder a black coffee.
FOOD IN BRITAIN
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113one hundred and thirteen
Typical English foodBaked beans Beans cooked in a tomato sauce, are normally
eaten on toast. The British are very fond of (dol zijn op) bakedbeans.
Bangers and mash Mashed (gepureerd) potatoes with sausages.
A Ploughman’s Lunch This is a very popular thing to eat when eating in a pub at midday. It’s a bread roll with a piece of cheese and a pickled (ingelegde) onion.
Yorkshire pudding A batter (deegbeslag) made with flour, eggs and milk and cooked inthe oven. This is most often eaten with roast beef.
Pie A pie is food surrounded (omringd) by pastry, normallybaked in the oven. The content of the pie can be sweet or savoury(gekruid). For example: apple pie (sweet) and steak and kidney (nier) pie(savoury).
Black pudding A thick sausage made with blood and fat.
Haggis This is normally eaten in Scotland. It’s sheep’s intestine(darm) stuffed with meat and vegetables.
Fish and Chips You will almost certainly go to a fish and chips shopwhen you visit Britain. You can buy fried potatoescalled chips there. They are usually accompanied by fish, peas … The chips used to be wrapped up (verpakt) innewspaper but now white paper is used. They often ask if you want salt and vinegar (azijn)to be sprinkled over your chips. Be carefulbecause sometimes they give too much.
Jacked potato A potato baked in its skin (schil).
Pint of beer The English pint of beer has to be filled until the edge (rand), withouta head (schuimkraag). A pint is about 0,5 litre. You can also orderhalf a pint.
14.4 - 14.5 - 14.6 - 14.7 - 14.8
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114 one hundred and fourteen
▼ Food in the Victorian Age
14.9
WHAT THE VICTORIANS ATEThe Victorian age (tijdperk) covers (omvat) the 71years from 1830 to 1901. For most of thisperiod Queen Victoria was on the throne. Itwas a time of enormous change in the livesof all Englishmen.During this time Britain became the mostpowerful (machtig) country in the world withthe largest empire (rijk) that had ever been.Britain ruled (regeerde) one fifth of theworld’s surface (oppervlakte) and one quarterof the people.In this week’s episode we’ll have a look atwhat people ate in the Victorian age.
We had an interview with historian andexpert in the Victorian age Dr BruceCadbury.
Dr Cadbury, was there a change in eating
habits (gewoontes) during the Victorian period?
Well, yes, there was. We see 1850 as a kind of turning
point.
Before 1850 up to one third of people living in cities
were very very poor. They could only eat bread and
dripping (vleesjus). But after 1850 the diet slowly got
better as wages (lonen) rose and cheaper food, such as
wheat (tarwe) and meat, came from abroad (buitenland).
I suppose (veronderstel) we could see a totally
different image in the rich houses?
Yes, of course. Rich people had a small army (leger) of
cooks and servants (bedienden).
They prepared enormous amounts of food.
What do you mean, enormous amounts?
To give you an example, breakfast alone could include
ham, tongue (tong), cold pheasant (fazant), partridge
(patrijs), beef, eggs, bacon, kidneys, toast, porridge
(pap), Indian and Chinese tea …
What about the quality of food in those
days?
The food industry knew its own kind of industrial revo-
lution. Big factories (fabrieken) started to produce mass
products. Bread, jam, margarine, biscuits, sweets and
many other types of food were sold at low cost.
Were there technical improvements
(verbeteringen)?
Refrigeration (afkoeling) was invented (uitvinden) and of
course there was the growth of the railways. These
two inventions made sure that food sold in shops was
fresher. Big stores such as Sainsbury, Boots, Marks
and Spencer and Woolworth appeared (verschijnen). And
the invention of canning (conserveren) brought more
variation into people’s diet.
Also during the 1800s, many famous modern brand
(merk) names appeared and food advertising (reclame)
began. Advertisements often tried to convince (overtui-
gen) people of the benefits (voordeel) of their food.
Well, Dr Cadbury, thanks for this interview.
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115one hundred and fifteen
SIMPLE PRESENT – YES/NO QUESTIONS (?)
SIMPLE PAST – YES/NO QUESTIONS (?)
QUESTIONS SHORTANSWERS
Do I look OK in this
jumper?
Do you buy The Times?
Does Kevin like listening to
music?
Does Helen come to school on
foot?
Does the bus arrive at 9.15?
Do we learn English?
Do they know each other?
Do you understand this?
Yes, you do.
No, I don’t.
Yes, he does.
No, she doesn’t.
Yes, it does.
Yes, we do.
No, they don’t.
Yes, we do.
QUESTIONS SHORTANSWERS
Did I look OK in this
jumper?
Did you buy The Times?
Did Kevin like listening to
music?
Did Helen come to school on
foot?
Did the bus arrive at 9.15?
Did we learn English?
Did they know each other?
Did you understand this?
Yes, you did.
No, I didn’t.
Yes, he did.
No, she didn’t.
Yes, it did.
Yes, we did.
No, they didn’t.
Yes, we did.
▲ do / does + subject + infinitive without to ▲ did + subject + infinitive without to
MIND: The short answers tothese questions take ‘to do’!
SIMPLE PAST TENSE - QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What did the Pearsons do on Sundays? They went out for picnics.Where did Mrs Pearson get lost? In the park.How did Philip come to school? By bus.Who did they call Flipper? Philip.
▲ Question word / did / subject / infinitive without to
SIMPLE PAST TENSE - SUBJECT QUESTIONS ( ?)
Who sat in front of the TV? Pluto did.Who liked pink tops? Helen did.What made you feel happy? Love did.
▲ WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) + verb in the simple past tense
▲ We don’t use ‘to do’ when the question word is the subject of a positive question.
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116 one hundred and sixteen
14.10 - 14.11 - 14.12 - 14.13 - 14.14
▼ At the restaurant
Waiter
What would you like to drink?Would you like a drink?
Would you like anything else?What will you have to eat?
What’ll you have?
May I take your order?
Customer
I would like a glass of water, please.I’d like a coffee, please.
No, thank you.I will have a sandwich, please.
I’ll have the special.
OVER TO
Make a conversation with your partner.The menu below and the sentences above will give you an idea.
Time for a laugh
WAITER: "Tea or coffee, gentlemen?"1ST CUSTOMER: "I'll havetea."2ND CUSTOMER: "Me, too - and be sure theglass is clean!"(Waiter returns)WAITER: "Two teas.Which one asked for theclean glass?"
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117one hundred and seventeen
14.15 - 14.16 - 14.17
▼ Song: Eat It (Weird Al Yankovic to the melody of "Beat It" by Michael Jackson)
How come you're always such a fussy• young man Don't want no Captain Crunch•, Don't want no Raisin Bran•Well don't you know that other kids are starvin'• in JapanSo eat it, just eat it
Don't want to argue•, I don't want to debateDon't want to hear about what kinds of foods you hateYou won't get no dessert 'till you clean off your plate•So eat itDon't you tell me you're fullJust eat it... eat it
Get yourself an egg and beat• itHave some more chickenHave some more pie•It doesn't matter if it's broiled• or fried•
Just eat it, just eat itJust eat it, just eat it... Woo!
Your table manners are a crying shame•You're playing with your food, This ain't• some kind of gameNow, if you starve to deathYou'll just have yourself to blame•So eat it. Just eat it.
• fussy: druk, zenuwachtig
• crunch: kauwen
• bran: zemelenbroodje
• to starve: verhongeren
• to argue: discussiëren
• plate: bord
• to beat: kloppen
• pie: taart
• to broil: roosteren, grillen
• to fry: braden
• a crying shame: echte schande
• ain’t (A.E.): isn’t
• to blame: schuld geven
Time for a laugh
Two men were in a restaurant and ordered fish. The waiter brought a dish with two fish, one larger than the other. One of the men said to the other, "Please help yourself." The other one said "Okay", and helped himself to the larger fish. After a tense silence, the first one said, "Really, now, ifyou had offered me the first choice, I would have taken the smaller fish!" The otherone replied, "What are you complaining for; you have it, don't you?"
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118 one hundred and eighteen
You better listen, better do as you're toldYou haven't even touched• your tuna casseroleYou better chow• down, or it's gonna• get coldSo eat it.
I don't care if you're fullJust eat it... eat it
Open up your mouth and feed• itHave some more yogurtHave some more spam•It doesn't matter if it's fresh or canned•
Just eat it! Eat it! Eat it! Eat it!Don't you make me repeat it!Have a banana, have a whole bunch•
It doesn't matter what you had for lunchJust eat it! Eat it!Eat it! Eat it!Eat it! Eat it!
If it's too cold, reheat• itHave a big dinner. Have a light snackIf you don't like it, you can't send it backJust eat it! Eat it!
Get yourself an egg and beat it!Have some more chickenHave some more pieIt doesn't matter if it's broiled or friedDon’t you make me repeat it.
• to touch: aankomen
• to chow down (dialect): eten
• gonna (A.E.): going to
• to feed: voeden
• spam (A.E.): vlees in blik
• canned: in blik
• bunch: tros
• to reheat: opwarmen
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119one hundred and nineteen
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
light licht toast toast, (sneetje) geroosterddinner diner, warme maaltijd broodto plan plannen jam jammarmalade marmelade vegetarian vegetariër
FAMILIAR WORDS
such zulk (een), zo(‘n) handbag handtasfool dwaas, gek to spot opmerken, in de gatenWhat’s up? Wat is er aan de hand? krijgento surprise verrassen bacon spek
NEW WORDS
- Your grandparents are coming todinner. Lay the table, please. Don’t drop my cups, dear.
- Mum, why don’t you trust me onthat? It’s wrong to think I’m stillyour little child.
- Did Keith take you to that danceparty last night?
- No, he didn’t.- Why not? What happened?- After school he went to the pub
with his classmates. He was so drunk that he startedto throw up.He doesn’t like dancing, so itwas obvious that he did iton purpose.
- Oh dear! What did you do?- I broke up. He won’t mess
up my evenings anymore!
to dropto trustwrong
to throw up
on purpose
to mess up
laten vallenvertrouwen
verkeerd
overgeven, braken
met opzet
verknoeien, bederven
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120 one hundred and twenty
It was a sunny day yesterday,so I asked my husband’s parents tohave dinner with us in the garden.Everything went well, until I tripped over my son’s football andspilled my delicious mushroom-sauce on my father-in-law’s suit.
- Waiter, can you take our order?
- Sure. What will you have?
to tripto spill
waiterorder
struikelenmorsen
kelner, oberbestelling
Grammar:- Formation of the simple past tense, positive (+), negative (-) and in questions (?)
(TB 108, 115 - WB 14.1, 14.2, 14.3, 14.4, 14.9, 14.10, 14.11, 14.12, 14.14).
Vocabulary:- Food (TB 109, 110, 111, 112 - WB 14.5, 14.6, 14.7, 14.8)- At the restaurant (TB 116 - WB 14.15, 14.16, 14.17)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 119, 120)
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
- Use of: - simple past tense positive (WB 14.1)- simple past tense negative (TB 108 - WB 14.2, 14.3, 14.4)- questions in the simple past tense
(TB 115 - WB 14.9, 14.10, 14.11, 14.12, 14.14)- Derive translations from the context of a text (WB 14.5).- Talk about food (TB 111).- Order food at a restaurant (TB 116 - WB 14.16).- Describe what went wrong at the restaurant (WB 14.15, 14.17).- Write about a crazy dream (WB 14.3).
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121one hundred and twenty-one
15.1
Hi, I’m Philip. Will I ever find a
girl like Helen again? I really
don’t know … But I do know that
I won’t blindly follow my heart
again. I hope I’ll be lucky.
Hi, I’m Kevin. I really believe that my lovelife will be a success now. I’m so in lovewith Helen and I will spend the rest of mylife with her. At last I’ll get what I deserve.
Hi, I’m Helen. I’m very fond of Philip. But will he really
make me happy? He’s sweet and charming, but oh, so
clumsy. He’ll drop everything that he picks up. And
then there’s Kevin. He’s always around. Will he really be
my prince charming on his white horse? When will I know
for sure? I wish I knew.
This is Paula. It won’t be easy to give upmy single life. But I really believe thatPeter will add some extra spice to mylife … And he has a car, that’s impor-tant, too. And it will be so much nicer tocook dinner for two!
NEIL NUTS: Goooood evening, ladies and gentlemen! I’m Neil Nuts for York FM. Welcome to "This is Your Future Love Life!", the show inwhich people from York predict their own future love life. As usual we’ve interviewed five people on the streets of York.
Unit 15
▼ “This is Your Future Love Life!”
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122 one hundred and twenty-two
Hello, I’m Peter. I’ll do anything I can to win Paula’s heart. I’ll propose marriage toher really soon. It’s just a matter of finding theright time. Paula, if you’re listening now, willyou marry me?
NEIL NUTS: So much for this week’s future in Loveland!Will Kevin and Helen finally fall into each other’s arms? Or will Philip win back his lost love?Will Paula accept Peter’s proposal or will she always have dinner alone?Tune in next week for a new edition of "This is Your Future Love Life!".Until then ciao ciao!
15.2
SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE - POSITIVE (+)
SHORT FORM FULL FORM
I ‘ll fall in love. (will fall)YouHe / She / ItWeYouThey
▲ subject + ‘ll / will + infinitive without to
SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE - NEGATIVE (-)
SHORT FORM FULL FORM
I won’t spend all that money. (will not spend)YouHe / She / ItWeYouThey
▲ subject + won’t / will not + infinitive without to
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123one hundred and twenty-three
SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE – YES/NO QUESTIONS (?)
Will I find a lover?youhe / she / itweyouthey
▲ will + subject + infinitive without to
SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE – QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
When will I know for sure?
▲ Question word + will + subject + infinitive without to
SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE - SUBJECT QUESTIONS (?)
Who will win Helen’s love ?
▲ WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) + will + infinitive without to
15.3 - 15.4
Peter has finally proposed to Paula and to celebrate their future marriage they decide to book a lastminute holiday. Here is what they see in the brochure.
USE:
The simple future tense is the common form to talk about the future and to make predictions about the future.(‘The simple future tense’ is de meest gebruikelijke vorm om over de toekomstige tijd te praten en om voorspellingen te doen.)
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124 one hundred and twenty-four
Paris
is the biggest city inFrance.
HOLIDAY BROCHURE EUROPEHOLIDAY BROCHURE EUROPE
Belgium
has the largest collectionof beers in the world.
The Matterhorn
is the highest mountain in Switzerland.
Italy
is said to have the mosthandsome men in the world.Pizzas and pastas are tastierhere than anywhere else.
Sweden
is said to have the most beautiful women.
The most importantharbour (haven) in theNetherlands is
Rotterdam.
French cuisine
is seen as the best in the world.
Greece
has one of the oldest cultures of Europe. Their Zorba is
faster than most other popular dances.
Manneke Pis
is probably the wetteststatue in the world and thedistances between cities inBelgium are shorter thanelsewhere in Europe.
OVER TOMake your own top 3 of your favourite holiday destinations.Discuss with your partner.
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125one hundred and twenty-five
TABLE OF COMPARISON
ADJECTIVE COMPARATIVE SUPERLATIVE
1 syllableshorthigh
shorterhigher
shortesthighest
nicelarge
nicerlarger
nicestlargest
hotwet
hotterwetter
hottestwettest
2 syllablesadjectivesending iny, er, le
heavyhappysimpleclever
heavierhappiersimplercleverer
heaviesthappiestsimplestcleverest
2 or moresyllables
handsomebeautiful
more handsomemore beautiful
most handsomemost beautiful
TABLE OF COMPARISON: EXCEPTIONS
ADJECTIVE COMPARATIVE SUPERLATIVE
GOOD BETTER BESTBAD WORSE WORSTFAR FURTHER FURTHESTMUCH/MANY MORE MOSTLITTLE LESS LEAST
15.7
15.5 - 15.6
syllable = lettergreep
capital country nationality
Brussels Belgium Belgian
Paris France French
London Great Britain British
Amsterdam the Netherlands Dutch
Berlin Germany German
Madrid Spain Spanish
Rome Italy Italian
Athens Greece Greek
Washington DC United States American
consonant + y
heavyy ➔ ier / iest
heavier / heaviest
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126 one hundred and twenty-six
Did you know?MORE ABOUT BRITAIN
• The Humber Bridge is 1410 metres long.• Scafell Pike is the highest mountain in England. It is
1170 metres high. Ben Nevis, in Scotland, is higher than Scafell Pike.
• The longest river is the Severn, which is 354 kmlong. The Thames is shorter. It is only 346 km long.
• The longest word in the Oxford English Dictionary isfloccinaucinihilipilification with 29 letters, meaning'the action of estimating as worthless'.
• The longest placename in the United Kingdom isLlanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllanty-siliogogogoch. This is the name of the village railwaystation in Anglesey, Gwynedd, Wales.
The class is divided in two. One pupil of the first group gives a sentence with a comparative orsuperlative about one of the pupils of the other group. For example: Simon is taller than Sarah. If the sentence is correct, that group gets a point. The group with most points is the winner. Pay attention: you can only use an adjective once!
15.8 - 15.9 - 15.10 - 15.11 - 15.12 - 15.13
▼ The Weather
▼ Comparing
sunny rainy showers snow
cloudy lightning thunder frost
windy wet hot freezing
slippery
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127one hundred and twenty-seven
▼ The 4 seasons
▼ The 4 compass points
In winter there’s a lot of snow and we have severe frost.
In spring the weather is better,but it can still be wet.
It’s sometimes very hot insummer, and there can be
thunder and lightning in the air.
It’s often very windy inautumn here.
NORTH
SOUTH
WEST EAST
15.14 - 15.15 - 15.16
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128 one hundred and twenty-eight
▼ The Weather Forecast32
The weather will be cloudy across England,Wales and Northern Ireland. It will be sunny in theNorth and in Scotland, but also very windy.Heavy rain will fall in the Republic of Ireland.Temperatures in the U.K.: 8° in the north to 15°in the south.
Outlook: The clouds and rain will clear tomorrow morning, to leave all areas with sunshine.
8
15
8
15
N
MORNING AFTERNOON EVENING
York
London
Berlin
Athens
= wet
= warm
= sunny
= cold
= very cold
OVER TO
Talk about the weather with your partner.
Did you know?THE WEATHER IN BRITAINMany people say that it rains all the time in the U.K. This is not really true and the U.K. gets no more rain in a yearthan many other European countries. Typical of the Englishweather is that it is hard to predict. This is why a lot of peopleoften watch weather forecasts on TV.Most parts of the U.K. have mild winters and in summer thetemperature rarely goes higher than 30° C.When two Englishmen meet their first conversation is usuallyabout the weather. It is a safe and polite subject.
Examples:
What will it be like in York tomorrow? It'll be wet in the morning but it'll be warm in the afternoon.
Will it be cold in Berlin tomorrow?Yes, it'll be cold there in the morning and very cold in the evening.
_ g
Many people from other countries, and even some English people, call everyone from theBritish Isles English. But that’s a mistake. After all, you don’t call everyone from BelgiumFlemish. So don’t be surprised if the Welsh - or the Scots - get angry when someone callsthem English!
The English are the people from England
The Scots are the people from Scotland
The Welsh are the people from Wales.
The Irish are the people from Ireland.
That’s easy to remember, but what about this:
The British Isles are the two large islands (Britain and Ireland) and all the other small islands around them.
Great Britain (GB), or just Britain, has three parts: England, Scotland and Wales.
The United Kingdom (UK) is England, Scotland, Wales and Northern Ireland.
The Republic of Ireland is NOT part ofthe United Kingdom.
The Union Jack is the British flag. It was designed in 1606 by king James I Stuart. The name comes from the dialect word ‘jack’, which means ‘sailor’. The flag used tobe seen on the ships ofthe Royal Fleet. The flagcombines the Irish, Scottishand English flags.
Calais
DUBLIN
IRELAND
NORTHERN IRELAND
SCOTLAND
WALES ENGLAND
Bristol
Leicester
Coventry
Birmingham
Sheffield
GlasgowEDINBURGH
Leeds
ManchesterLiverpool
Nottingham
CARDIFFLONDON
North
North-West
West
South-West
South
South-East
East
North-East
▼ The U.K.
one hundred and twenty-nine 129
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130 one hundred and thirty
▼ VOCABULARY FOCUS
TRANSPARENT WORDS
to interview interviewen culture cultuurrest rest, ’t overige popular populair, volks...prince prins nationality nationaliteitto cook koken windy winderigto win winnen snow sneeuwedition editie, uitgave cold koudto book boeken warm warmbrochure brochure north noorden, noordelijkhigh hoog east oosten, oostelijkbeer bier west westen, westelijkhot heet, zeer warm south zuiden, zuidelijkto accept accepteren, aanvaarden
FAMILIAR WORDS
happy gelukkig holiday vakantiesweet lief country landto wish wensen handsome mooi, knap (mannen)to marry trouwen, huwen fast snel, vlugmarriage huwelijk air luchtuntil then tot dan to be around in de buurt zijn
NEW WORDS
- Hi Peter. How are you?- Fine, thanks.- Did you propose to Paula
last night?- Yes, I did.- And… did she accept your
marriage proposal?- Yes, she did.- Wow! Let’s celebrate.
Come to my house this evening. We’ll drink to your new future!
- Can Paula come too?- Of course, loverboy!
to propose
(marriage) proposal
to celebrate
future
om haar hand vragen
(huwelijks)aanzoek
vieren
toekomst
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131one hundred and thirty-one
- Do you know the outlookfor tomorrow’s weather?
- They don’t predict verygood weather. The day willstart very cloudy and rainy.There will be some thunderand lightning in the after-noon, probably followedby heavy showers in the evening.
- Oh no! And it has alreadybeen a very wet week!
- It’s freezing outside. I won’t go out!
- You don’t know what you’re missing. It’s nice to walk in the woods, whenthere is a sharp frost andthe snow crackles under your feet.
Add some spice to this soup.It will make it tasty.
How can you be so clumsy!You’ve just made an owngoal.
- The whole town thinks this woman should get a statue.She used to spend her weekends and free timein helping the poor and sickpeople.
- Do you think she will finally get what she deserves?
- I don’t know. It’s just amatter of money.
outlook
to predict
cloudyrainy
thunderlightningprobablyshowers
wet
freezing
frost
to addspicetasty
clumsyown
statueto spend
finallyto deserve
a matter of
vooruitzicht
voorspellen
bewolktregenachtig
donderbliksem
waarschijnlijk, vermoedelijkregenbuien
nat
ijskoud
vorst
toevoegenkruiden (fig. pittigheid)
smakelijkonhandig
eigen (hier: trap in eigendoel)
standbeelddoorbrengen (spenderen,
uitgeven van geld)
uiteindelijkverdienen
een kwestie van
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132 one hundred and thirty-two
Grammar:- Form of the simple future tense, positive (+), negative (-) and in questions (?)
(TB 122, 123 - WB 15.2, 15.3, 15.4).- Comparisons (TB 125 - WB 15.7, 15.8, 15.9, 15.10, 15.11, 15.13, 15.15).
Vocabulary:- Countries and nationalities (TB 124, 125 - WB 15.5, 15.6)- The weather (TB 126 - WB 15.12)- The 4 seasons (TB 127)- The 4 compass points (TB 127)- Vocabulary Focus (TB 129, 130)
THIS IS WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW
THIS IS WHAT YOU SHOULD BE ABLE TO DO
- Use - the simple future tense, positive, negative and in questions(TB 122, 123 - WB 15.3, 15.4).
- comparisons (TB 125 - WB 15.7, 15.8, 15.9, 15.10, 15.11, 15.13, 15.15).- Talk about your holiday destination (TB 124).- Listen for information about the weather (WB 15.14).- Talk about the weather (TB 128).
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▼ VOCABULARY
133one hundred and thirty-three
Aa eento accept aanvaardenache pijnactor acteuractually eigenlijkto add toevoegenafternoon namiddagagain opnieuwage leeftijdto agree (on) het eens zijn overair luchtairport luchthavenalone alleenalready alalways altijdamazing verbazingwekkendambulance ziekenwagenan eenangel engelankle enkelannouncement mededelinganorak anorakanswer antwoordto answer antwoordenanyway hoe dan ookape aapapple appelApril aprilarea gebied, streekarm armarmchair leunstoelarrival aankomstto arrive aankomenart kunstassistant assistentat 1 aan 2 te 3 in 4 bij 5 opatlas atlasattic zolderAugust augustusautumn herfstaway weg
Bbaby babyback 1 rug 2 terugbacon spekbaggy zakachtig, flodderigbanana banaanbank bankto bark blaffenbasketball basketbalbat vleermuisbath bad
bathroom badkamerto be zijnto be around in de buurt zijnto be off weg zijnto be on te zien zijn (tv)beans bonenbeautiful mooibed bedbedroom slaapkamerbeef rundvleesbeer bierbehind achterto believe gelovenbelly buikbelt riembend bochtbest best(e)between tussenbicycle shed fietsenstallingbig grootbike fietsbiology biologiebiro balpenbirthday verjaardagbitch teefto bite bijtenblack zwartblind (date) afspraak met iemand die men
nooit eerder gezien heeftblouse bloesblue blauwbook boekto book boekenboots laarzen, hoge schoenenboring saai, vervelendboss baasbottom 1 bodem 2 zitvlakbox doosboy jongenbra bhbrand-new splinternieuwbreakfast ontbijtto break (into) (in)brekenbridge brugbrochure brochurebroken (heart) gebroken (hart)brown bruinbum achterstebungalow bungalowto burn verbrandenbusdriver buschauffeurbusiness zakenbus stop bushaltebutterfly vlinder
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buttocks zitvlakto buy kopenby met (+ transportmiddel)
Ccabbage koolcalendar kalenderto call 1 roepen 2 opbellen, telefonerencamel kameelcandidate kandidaatcandle kaarscapital hoofdstadcar auto, wagencardboard kartonto care erom geven, zich erom bekommerencareer carrièrecar park parkingcarpet tapijtcarrot(s) wortel(en)to carry dragento carry on volhoudencat katcauliflower bloemkoolceiling plafondto celebrate vierencelebrity beroemdheidcellar keldercentre centrumcertainly zekerchair stoelto change veranderencharm charmechatting het chatten (hobby)cherry kerschest borstkaschicken kipchief chefchild kindchin kinchurch kerkcity stadclass klasclassroom klaslokaalclever schrander, bekwaamto climb klimmenclose dicht(bij)to close sluitencloudy bewolktclumsy onhandigcoat mantelcod kabeljauwcoincidence toevalcold 1 koud 2 verkoudheidcolleague collegato collect 1 verzamelen 2 ophalencolour kleurcolour TV kleurentelevisieto come komen
to come along meekomen met, meegaan metto come back terugkomencompetition competitie, wedijvercomputer game computerspel(playing) computer games computerspelletjes
spelen (hobby)contagious besmettelijkto cook kokencooker fornuiscorner hoekcosy gezellig(e), knus(se)to cough hoestencountry landcrazy gekto cross overstekencrossroads kruispuntto cry wenencucumber komkommerculture cultuurcupboard kastcurtain gordijnto cut snijden
Ddancer danser(es)dancing dansen (hobby)dangerous gevaarlijkdark donkerdate 1 datum 2 afspraakdead doodDecember decemberto decide beslissendeep diepdefinitely zeker en vastdentist tandartsdeparture vertrekto deserve verdienendesk bureaudestination bestemmingto dial draaiendifference verschildinner avondeten, (warm) middagmaaldirty vuildiscman walkmanto discuss discussiërendishwasher vaatwas(machine)distance afstanddoctor dokterdog honddoor deurdream droomdress jurkto dress zich kledento drive rijdento drop laten vallenduck eenddummy dommerikto dump laten vallen, dumpen
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Eear oorearth aardeeast oosten, oostelijkeasy gemakkelijkedition uitgaveelbow elleboogemergency noodsituatieemergency services hulpdiensten, spoedgevallenEnglish Engelsenough genoegto enter zich aanmeldeneven zelfsevening avondeverybody iedereeneverywhere overal(not) exactly (niet) helemaal juistexample voorbeeldto expect verwachtenextra-large extra largeeye oog
Fface gezichtto fall vallenfamiliar familiair, vertrouwdfamous beroemd, bekendfan fanfar verfashion parade modeshowfast snelfastfood fastfoodfavourite favoriet(e), lievelings-February februarifelt pen viltstiftfemale vrouwelijkfence omheining, hekfight gevechtfile mapto fill in invullenfinally uiteindelijkto find vindento find out ontdekken, erachter komenfinger vingerfire vuurfirst eerst(e)first name voornaamfish visfit fitflat flatflight vluchtflu griepto fly vliegento follow volgenfood voedselfood poisoning voedselvergiftigingfool dwaas, gekfoot voet
football voetbalto forget vergetenfreezing ijskoudFrench FransFriday vrijdagfridge koelkastfriend vriend(in) front (of) voorfrost vorstfruit fruitfun plezier, pretfunny grappigfurniture meubelsfuture toekomst
Ggame spelgarage garagegarden tuingarden shed tuinhuisgarlic lookgentleman heergeography aardrijkskundeto get out of weggaan, wegkomen uitgiraffe girafgirl meisjeto give up opgevenglorious roemrijk(e)gloves handschoenenglue lijmgo pogingto go gaanto go with passen bijgoose gansgrapefruit pompelmoesgrapes druivengreen groenGreen Man groen(e) verkeerslichtto greet (be)groetengrey grijsground grondto guess radenguest gast
Hhair haarhairy behaardhalf (of) de helft vanhall halhand handhand (of a clock) wijzerhandbag handtasto hand in indienenhandsome mooi, knap (voor mannen)hangover katerhappy gelukkighard hard, moeilijkhat hoed
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to have hebbento have on you bij je hebbenhead hoofdheadache hoofdpijnhealthy gezondto hear horenhelpful behulpzaam, hulpvaardigto hide (zich) verstoppenhigh hooghint hint, aanwijzinghip heupto hire (in)hurenhistory geschiedenisto hold (vast)houdenhole gatholiday vakantiehometown 1 geboorteplaats 2 woonplaatshopeless hopelooshorse paardhorse-riding paardrijden (hobby)hospital ziekenhuishost gastheerhot heet, zeer warmhour uurhouse huisHow? Hoe?however hoewel, hoe…ookHow far? Hoe ver?How long? Hoe lang?hungry hongerigto hurry zich haasten
Iice-skating ijsschaatsen (hobby)idea ideeimportant belangrijkimpossible onmogelijkimpression indrukin inincredible ongelooflijkindeed inderdaadto infect infecteren, besmetteninjured gewondinside binnen(playing an) instrument een instrument
bespelen (hobby)interesting interessantto interview interviewenintonation intonatieinvitation uitnodigingto invite uitnodigen
Jjacket jas(je)jam jamJanuary januarijeans jeansto jog joggen
July julito jump springenJune juni
Kkangaroo kangoeroeto keep away weghouden vanto kill dodenking koningto kiss kussenkitchen keukenkiwi kiwiknee knieknickers onderbroekjeto know weten
Llady damellama lamalamb lam(svlees)large largelate laatto laugh lachento leave achterlatenleek preileft linksleg beenlemon citroento lend uitlenenlettuce slaliar leugenaarlibrary bibliotheekto lick likkento lie 1 liegen 2 liggenlife levenlight lichtlightning bliksemlike (zo)alsto like houden van, graag hebbenlip liplipstick lippenstiftto listen (to) luisteren (naar)listener luisteraarlistening to music muziek beluisteren (hobby)live rechtstreeksto live 1 wonen 2 levenliving room woonkamerlobster kreeftto log in inloggenlong langto look (at) kijken (naar)to look for zoeken naarlove liefdeluck geluklucky gelukkig(a) lump (of) een klontjelunch lunch, licht middagmaal
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Mmad gek, dommain belangrijkste, voornaamstemale mannelijk(e)man manMarch maartmarker markeerstiftmarmalade marmelademarriage huwelijkmarried getrouwdto marry trouwen, huwenmaster meester, baasjematch matchmaths wiskundeMay meimeaning betekenismedium mediumto meet (elkaar) ontmoetenmess warboel, mislukkingto mess up verknoeien, bederven(in the) middle in het middenmidnight middernachtto mime imiteren, nabootsento mind het erg vindenminus minmirror spiegelto miss missenmobile phone gsmto model modelleren, als mannequin showenmodern modernMonday maandagmoney geldmonkey aapmorning morgen, ochtendmountain bergmouse muismouth mondto move verhuizento move in intrekkenmovie filmmuseum museummushroom champignonmusic muziekmutton schapenvlees
Nname naamnationality nationaliteitnear dichtbijneck nekto need nodig hebbenneighbour buurneighbourhood buurt, omgevingnever nooitnew nieuwnext volgend(e)next to naastnice aardig, vriendelijk
nickname bijnaamnobody niemandnoon middagnorth noorden, noordelijknose neusnose drops neusdruppelsNovember november
OOctober oktoberoffice kantooroften dikwijls, vaakold oudon 1 op 2 aan, in werkingonion uionline online, aangemeldopening (bridge) open brugopposite tegenoveror oforange 1 oranje 2 sinaasappelorder bestellingout uit, buitenoutlook vooruitzichtoutside buitenown eigen
Ppacked lunch lunchpakketpage paginapain pijnpair paarpark parkto park parkerento pass passeren, voorbijgaanpassenger passagierpasser-by voorbijgangerpatient patiëntpaw pootjeto pay back terugbetalenP.E. (physical education) lichamelijke opvoeding
(L.O.)pear peerpea(s) erwt(en)pedestrian crossing zebrapadto peep glurenpen penpencil potloodpencil case etuiperfect perfect(e)pet huisdierphone call telefoongesprekto pick up oprapenpicnic picknickpiece stukpineapple ananaspink rozeto plan plannenplastic surgery plastische chirurgie
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138 one hundred and thirty-eight
platform perronto play spelenplayground speelplaatspleased blij, verheugdpocket zakpolice politiepolice station politiekantoorpop band popgroeppopular populair, volkspork varkensvleespossible mogelijkpost office postkantoorpotato aardappelpoultry gevogelteto practise oefenento predict voorspellenprescription voorschriftpretty lief, aardig, mooiprince prinsprize prijs, beloningprobably waarschijnlijk, vermoedelijkproblem probleemprogramme programmaproposal aanzoekto propose om haar hand vragenproud trotspublic (toilet) openbaar (toilet)to pull trekkenpullover truipup/ puppy jonge hondpurple paarsto push duwenpuss poes(je)to put on aantrekkento put up opstekenpuzzle puzzel
Qto quarrel ruziemaken of ruzie hebbenqueen koninginquestionnaire vragenlijstqueue rijquick(ly) snel, vlugquiet rustigquite nogalquiz quiz
Rrabbit konijnrailway station stationrainy regenachtigrather nogalR.E. (religious education) godsdienstto reach bereikenreading lezen (hobby)Real Estate Agency immobiliënkantoorreally echtto recognize herkennen
to record opnemenred roodto remember (zich) herinnerenrent huurto rent hurento repair herstellenrest rustrestaurant restaurantreturn retour(ticket)to return terugkerenrich rijkriddle raadselto ride (away) (weg)rijdenridiculous belachelijkright recht(s)to rise rijzen, stijgenroad wegroller skating rolschaatsen (hobby)rotten rotroundabout rotonde, verkeerspleinto rub wrijvenrubber gomruler lat, liniaalto run lopen, rennenrunny (nose) lopend, druipend
(loopneus, druipneus)rush haast
Ssale verkoopsalmon zalmsame dezelfdesatisfied verheugd, tevredenSaturday zaterdagto say zeggenschool bag schooltasschool bell schoolbelschool bus schoolbusschool diary schoolagendascience wetenschappenscissors schaarto scream schreeuwen, gillento search zoekenseat zetel, zitplaatsSeptember septemberserious serieuze, ernstigeseveral verschillendeshark haaisheep schaapshiny glimmende, blinkendeshirt hemdshoe schoenshop winkelto shop winkelenshopping winkelen (hobby)short kortshorts short (korte, niet tot de knieën reikende broek)
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shoulder schouderto shout roepen, schreeuwenshow showto show around rondleidenshower doucheshowers regenbuienshrimps garnalenside zijde, kantsinger zangersingle enkele reissink gootsteento sink zinkento sit zittensize maatskateboarding skateboarden (hobby)skiing skiën (hobby)skintight spannend, nauwsluitendto skip overslaanskirt rokto sleep slapenslight lichte, een beetjesmall smal(l)smart knap, elegantto smile (glim)lachensnackbar snackbarsnake slangto sneeze niezensnow sneeuwsock soksofa sofasole tong (vis)someone iemandsometimes somssoon binnenkortto sound klinkensouth zuiden, zuidelijkspace ruimte, plaatsto spend 1 spenderen, uitgeven van geld
2 doorbrengenspice 1 kruiden 2 pittigheidto spill morsenspinach spinazieto spot opmerken, in de gaten krijgen(in the) spotlight in het middelpunt
van de belangstellingto spread spreidenspring lentestaff room leraarskamerto start starten, beginnenstatue standbeeldto stay blijvenstick stokstill nog, nog altijdstomach maagstory verhaalstraight on rechtdoorstrawberry aardbeistripe streep
study studeerkamerto stuff opzettenstunt stuntstupid dwaas, domsubject 1 onderwerp 2 schoolvaksuccess successuch zo(‘n), zulk (een)suddenly plotselingsugar suikersuit pak (kleren)summer zomersunburn zonnebrandSunday zondagsunny zonnig(e)sunstroke zonnesteeksurfing the net surfen op het internet (hobby)surname achternaamsurprise verrassingto surprise verrassen(to be) surprised verrast (zijn)swan zwaansweater sweater, wollen sporttruisweet liefsyrup siroop
Ttable tafeltail staartto talk praten, sprekentasty smakelijktaxi taxito teach aanlerenteacher lera(a)r(es)tear traantechnology technologieteeth tandentelephone number telefoonnummertelevision televisie, tvto tell vertellentemperature temperatuur(playing) tennis tennis spelen (hobby)terrace terrasthan dan (in vergelijkingen)theatre theater, schouwburgthen danthief diefto think denkenthroat keelthrough doorto throw (away) (weg)gooien, (weg)werpento throw up overgeven, brakenthunder donderThursday donderdagticket ticketticket clerk loketbediendeticket office loketto tidy up opruimentie stropdas
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to tie (vast)bindentight nauw aansluitend, spannendtightly stevig dichttights sportkousen, panty (nylons)time tijdtimetable dienstregelingT-junction T-kruispunttoast toast, (sneetje) geroosterd broodtoe teentoilet toilettomato tomaattomorrow morgentongue tongtonight deze avondtoo 1 ook 2 tetooth tandtop 1 top 2 kort, hemdloos T-shirttourist information centre dienst van toerismetown hall gemeentehuis, stadhuisto trace opsporentraffic lights verkeerslichtentrain treintrainers sportschoenento travel reizentrick tructo trip struikelentrousers broektrout foreltrunk rompto trust vertrouwento try on aanpassenT-shirt T-shirtTuesday dinsdagtuna tonijnto turn draaien, kerentwice tweemaal
Uunder onderunderground metrounderpants onderbroekto use gebruikenusually gewoonlijk
V veal kalfsvleesvegetarian vegetariërveranda verandavictory overwinningview uitzichtto visit bezoekenvoice stem
Wto wag kwispelento wait wachtenwaiter kelner, oberto wake up 1 wakker worden 2 wakker maken
walk wandelingto walk wandelenwall muurto want willenwardrobe kleerkastwarm warmto wash wassenwashbasin wastafel, wasbakwashing-up afwasto watch bekijkenwatching TV tv kijken (hobby)to wave wuiven, zwaaienway wegto wear dragen (van kleren)Wednesday woensdagweek weekto weep wenenweight gewichtweird ongewoon, vreemdwest westen, westelijkwet natWhat? Wat?When? Wanneer?Where? Waar?to whisper fluisterenwhite witWho? Wie?Why? Waarom?wide wijdto win winnenwindow venster, raamwindy winderigwinner winnaarwinter winterto wish wensenwolf wolfwoman vrouwto wonder zich verwonderen over, zich afvragenwonderful prachtigworld wereldwrong verkeerd
Yyellow geelyoung jong
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ExpressionsWhat about?I’m afraidto take agesnot at allall the timeas wellat lastat onceto be fond ofto be good atto be interested into be married toto be nutsto be out of your mindto be pleasedto be proud ofto be satisfiedBless you!I don’t care.to take care ofCome on!of courseOh dear!except forExcuse me.to feel wellon footThat’s what friends are for.to have your hands full withto get lostLet’s go!What’s going on?Is it any good?Hang on.Here you are.You’re kidding.What is .... like?to look one’s agea lot ofin loveGood luck!to make it in timeWhat’s the matter?a matter ofin mindHow much is it?on purposeright awaySit down.one step at a timein timeWhat time is it?What’s the time?until thenWhat’s up?No way!
Wat zeg je van? Wat is er met…Ik ben bang dat… Het spijt me dat…
lang durenhelemaal niet
de hele tijdook
eindelijkdadelijk
dol zijn op, houden vangoed zijn in
geïnteresseerd zijn ingetrouwd zijn met
gek zijngek zijn
tevreden, verheugd zijnfier zijn op
tevreden, verheugd zijnGezondheid!
Het kan me niets schelen.zorgen voor
Komaan! Vooruit!natuurlijk
Och (hemel)!behalve
Neem me niet kwalijk. Pardon.zich goed voelen
te voetDaar zijn vrienden voor.
je handen vol hebben aanverloren lopen
Laten we gaan!Wat gebeurt er?
Past het?Wacht even. Blijf aan de lijn.
a.u.b.Dat meen je niet.Hoe ziet … eruit?
zo oud lijken als je bentveel
verliefdSucces!
op tijd aankomenWat scheelt er?
een kwestie vanin gedachten
Hoeveel is het? Hoeveel kost het?met opzet
onmiddellijkGa zitten.
stap voor stapop tijd
Hoe laat is het?Hoe laat is het?
tot danWat is er aan de hand?
In geen geval! Dat kan niet!
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▼ GRAMMAR SURVEY
1 SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE
1.1 FORM OF ‘TO BE’
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE (-)
I’m very rich. (am) I’m not from York. (am not)You’re from Manchester. (are) You’re not / aren’t on the list. (are not)He’s the new teacher. (is) He’s not / isn’t home tonight. (is not)She’s seven years old. She’s not / isn’t very tall.It’s a very big school. It’s not / isn’t a new school.
We’re all in class 4A. (are) We’re not / aren’t very happy. (are not)You’re very clever pupils. (are) You’re not / aren’t film stars. (are not)They’re late again. (are) They’re not / aren’t very kind. (are not)
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Are you the new headmaster? Yes, I am.No, I’m not.
Is she sweet? Yes, she is.No, she isn’t.
Am I in time? Yes, you are.No, you aren’t.
▲ We put the verb before the subject.
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
How is your school?Where are you from?What ’s your name?What ’s not nice about him?Who ’s your father?Who are you writing to?
▲ Question word / verb
1.2 CAN
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE (-)
I can read Chinese. I can’t speak Italian.You can You can’tHe can He can’tShe can She can’tIt can It can’tWe can We can’tYou can You can’tThey can They can’tsubject / can / infinitive without to subject / can’t / infinitive without to
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?)
Can you sing? Yes, I can.Can’t you be on time? No, I can’t.Can(’t) / subject / infinitive without to Yes, No / subject / can(’t)
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
Who can play the piano. Tom can.Who can’t sing? Alice can’t.
Question word / can(‘t) / infinitive without to
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1 SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE
1.3 FORM OF OTHER VERBS
consonant = medeklinkervowel = klinker
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE (-)
I work in a shop. I don’t work in a hotel.
You work at home a lot. You don’t work at school.
Kevin works every weekend. Kevin doesn’t work every day.
Kate sometimes works in a restaurant. Kate doesn’t always work in a restaurant.
Pluto always plays with our shoes. Pluto doesn’t play with my socks.
We often play football at school. We don’t always play football at school.
You play tennis on Sundays. You don’t play tennis on Fridays.
Sarah and Helen (=they) play in a hockey team. Sarah and Helen (=they) don’t play in a basketballteam.
Subject / (adverb of frequency) / don’t/doesn’t / infinitive (without to)infinitive (without to)for the third person singular + S
ADVERBS OF FREQUENCY say how often things happen.We place the adverbs of frequency in front of the main verb, except with the verb ‘to be’.(We plaatsen de ‘adverbs of frequency’ voor het hoofdwerkwoord, met uitzondering van het werkwoord ‘to be’.)e.g. I am always on time.
PRONUNCIATION OF THE 3RD PERSON -S
to pick he/she/it picks / s / after / k , f , p , t / (think of coffeepot)to get he/she/it gets up
to wash he/she/it washes / i z / after / s , z , ʃ, � / (hissing sounds)(sisklanken)
to watch he/she/it watches to push he/she/it pushes
to throw he/she/it throws / z / after all other soundsto find he/she/it finds to drive he/she/it drives
SPELLING OF THE SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE 3RD PERSON SINGULAR
to play he/she/it plays regular form + sto make he/she/it makes
to fly he/she/it flies consonant + y = y ➔ iesto tidy up he/she/it tidies up
to buy he/she/it buys vowel + y = + sto play he/she/it playsto say he/she/it says
to go he/she/it goes infinitives ending in o = + esto do he/she/it does
to wash he/she/it washes infinitives ending in hissing sounds = + esto dress he/she/it dresses
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Do I look OK in this jumper? Yes, you do.Do you buy The Times? No, I don’t.
Does Kevin like listening to music? Yes, he does.Does he like shopping with girls? No, he doesn’t.
Does Helen come to school on foot? No, she doesn’t.Does she go to school by bus? Yes, she does.
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1 SIMPLE PRESENT TENSE
Does the bus arrive at 9.15? Yes, it does.Does it take the children home No, it doesn’t.
again at twelve?
Do we learn English? Yes, you do.Do you watch TV every evening? No, we don’t.
Do the Addams look strange? Yes, they do.Do they live in Station Road? No, they don’t.
do / subject / infinitive without todoes
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS
What do the Pearsons do on Sundays? They go out for picnics.Where does Mrs Pearson get lost? In the park.How does Philip come to school? By bus.Who do they call Flipper? Philip.Who does she go to school with? She goes to school withPeter.
▲ Question word / do or does / subject / infinitive without to / (preposition)
SUBJECT QUESTIONS
Who sits in front of the TV? Pluto does.Who likes pink tops? Helen does.What makes you feel happy? Love does.
WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) + verb
We don’t use ‘to do’ when the question word is the subject of the sentence and the verb is positive.BUT!Who doesn’t like dance music? ➔ The verb is negative.
QUESTION TAG QUESTIONS (QTQ)
+ - +positive statement negative tag expected short answer
Pluto likes shoes, doesn’t he? Yes, he does.Kevin has a dog, doesn’t he? Yes, he does.
- + -negative statement positive tag expected short answer
Cats don’t bark, do they? No, they don’t.A taxidermist doesn’t drive taxis, does he? No, he doesn’t.
BUT!The tag of ‘I am’ is ‘aren’t I’.Example: This time I’m right, aren’t I?Question Tag Questions with ‘to be’ and ‘can’ never take to do.Example: You can speak English, can’t you?
That’s not your English book, is it?
The Simple Present Tense describes regular activities (e.g. hobbies). It's the common (=simple) form to talkabout the present.(‘The Simple Present Tense’ beschrijft activiteiten die regelmatig voorkomen (bv. hobby’s). Het is de meestgebruikelijke vorm om over de tegenwoordige tijd te praten.)
1.4 USE
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2 PRESENT CONTINUOUS TENSE
2.1 FORM
POSITIVE (+) AND NEGATIVE (-)
I ’m (not) reading a book.am (not)
You ’re (not) going to the shops.are (not)aren’t
He ’s (not) playing in the garden.She is (not)It isn’t
We ’re (not) wearing blue trousers.You are (not)They aren’t
SUBJECT TO BE ING-FORM
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Am I dreaming? Yes, you are.No, you’re not.
Are you sleeping? Yes, I am.No, I’m not.
Is he working? Yes, he is.she No, she’s not.it
Are we winning? Yes, we are.No, we aren’t.
you travelling? Yes, we are.No, we aren’t.
they writing? Yes, they are.No, they aren’t.
TO BE SUBJECT ING-FORM TO BE
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What am I doing?Why are you leaving?Who is she talking to?
heWhere are we going?
youthey
QUESTION WORD TO BE SUBJECT ING-FORM (preposition)
SPELLING OF THE –ING FORM
I am playing play + inggoing go + ing infinitive + ingworking work + ing
writing write + ing infinitive ends in e: e + ingdriving drive + ing
sitting sit + t + ing When the infinitive ends in arunning run + n + ing syllable with a short vowelforgetting forget + t + ing and one final consonant
AND that syllable is stressed:▲ final consonant is doubled
entering enter + ing last syllable is not stressed:budgeting budget + ing infinitive + ingopening open + inghappening happen + ing
travelling travel + l + ing infinitive ending in –el:modelling model + l + ing ‘l’ is doubled
_ g
146 one hundred and forty-six
2 PRESENT CONTINUOUS TENSE
3 SIMPLE PAST TENSE
Mind!for’get forgettingLast syllable of the infinitive is stressed.‘enter enteringLast syllable of the infinitive is NOT stressed.
QUESTION TAG QUESTIONS
+ - +positive statements negative tags expected short answer
You are answering, aren’t you? Yes, I am.Your back is hurting today, isn’t it? Yes, it is.I am coughing all the time, aren’t I? Yes, you are.
- + -negative statements positive tags expected short answer
I’m not missing school all week, am I? No, you aren’t.You aren’t playing well, are you? No, I’m not.He isn’t swimming, is he? No, he isn’t.
syllable: lettergreepconsonant: medeklinkervowel: klinker
stressed: beklemtoond
2.2 USE
The Present Continuous Tense describes what’s (not) happening NOW.(De Present Continuous beschrijft wat er nu (niet) aan het gebeuren is.)
3.1 FORM (REGULAR VERBS)
PRESENT PAST
jump jumped To make the regular past tenseclimb climbed we add –ed.look lookedplay playedB U T
PRESENT PAST
live lived If the infinitive ends in –e, arrive arrived we only add –d.phone phoned
PRESENT PAST
stop stopped If the infinitive ends in a stressedtravel travelled syllable with a short vowel
and 1 final consonant, wedouble the consonant.We do the same if the infinitiveends in – el.(In American English the finall isn’t doubled: ‘traveled’)
BUT!enter entered ‘Enter’ doesn’t end in a
stressed syllable.
PRESENT PAST
try tried If the infinitive ends in aconsonant + -y,
carry carried y ➔ iedmarry married
▲
_ g
147one hundred and forty-seven
3 SIMPLE PAST TENSE
INFINITIVE
to beto haveto docan
to buyto thinkto catchto wearto bringto teachto see
to getto shootto forget
to meetto sleepto keepto meanto goto fallto leaveto feelto sayto layto readto holdto leadto send
to win
SIMPLE PAST
was/werehaddidcould
boughtthoughtcaughtworebroughttaughtsaw
gotshotforgot
metsleptkeptmeantwentfellleftfeltsaidlaidreadheldledsent
won
INFINITIVE
to knowto flyto throw
to driveto rideto writeto riseto waketo breakto speakto tellto sell
to drinkto runto sinkto swim
to find
to taketo standto put
to hurtto hear
to lieto giveto cometo eatto make
to costto cut
SIMPLE PAST
knewflewthrew
droverodewroterosewokebrokespoketoldsold
drankransankswam
found
tookstoodput
hurtheard
laygavecameatemade
costcut
LIST OF THE IRREGULAR VERBS
NEGATIVE (-)
I didn’t fall over her handbag.You didn’t do it on purpose.Kevin didn’t think Helen’s a vegetarian.We didn’t play with it.You didn’t taste it at all.They didn’t arrive in time.subject / didn’t / infinitive without to
YES/NO-QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Did I look OK in this jumper? Yes, you did.Did you read The Times? No, I didn’t.Did Kevin like listening to music? Yes, he did.Did Helen go to school on foot? No, she didn’t.Did the bus leave at 9.15? Yes, it did.Did we speak English? Yes, we did.Did they meet each other? No, they didn’t.Did you enjoy this? Yes, we did.
Did / subject / infinitive without to Yes,No, / subject / did(n’t)
zijnhebbendoenkunnen
kopendenkenvangendragen, aanhebbenbrengen(aan)lerenzien
(ver)krijgenschietenvergeten
ontmoetenslapenhoudenbedoelengaanvallen(ver)latenvoelenzeggenleggenlezenhoudenleidenzenden
winnen
wetenvliegenwerpen, gooien
rijden(be)rijdenschrijvenrijzen, rechtstaanwakker worden/makenbrekensprekenvertellenverkopen
drinkenrennenzinkenzwemmen
vinden
nemenstaanzetten, plaatsen
pijn doenhoren
liggengevenkomenetenmaken
kostensnijden
_ g
148 one hundred and forty-eight
3 SIMPLE PAST TENSE
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
What did the Pearsons do on Sundays? They went out for picnics.Where did Mrs Pearson get lost? In the park.How did Philip come to school? By bus.Who did they call Flipper? Philip.Who did they have dinner with? With Peter and Paula.
Question word / did / subject / infinitive without to / (preposition)
SUBJECT QUESTIONS (?)
Who sat in front of the TV? Pluto did.Who liked pink tops? Helen did.What made you feel happy? Love did.
WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) + verb in the simple past tense
We don’t use ‘to do’ when the question word is the subject of a positive question.BUTWho didn’t eat breakfast yesterday?
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE OF TO BE, CAN, HAVE
to be can have
I you he she It we you they
waswerewaswaswaswerewerewere
I you he she It we you they
couldcouldcouldcouldcouldcouldcouldcould
I youhe she It we you they
hadhadhadhadhadhadhadhad
THE SIMPLE PAST TENSE: PRONUNCIATION
to stop he stoppedto work he workedto cough I coughed [ t ] after [ k, f, � ,p, s ]to kiss they kissedto watch we watched think off the word ‘coffeeshops’
to start we started [ i d ] after [ t, d ]to need you needed
to try I triedto live they lived [ d ] after all other soundsto arrive we arrived
3.2 USE
The simple past tense is PAST = the period is over.(De ‘simple past’ is de verleden tijd = de periode ligt in het verleden.)e.g. yesterday, last week … are signal words.
The common (or SIMPLE) form used to talk about actions in the past.(De gewone vorm om over gebeurtenissen in het verleden te praten.)
_ g
149one hundred and forty-nine
4 SIMPLE FUTURE TENSE
4.1 FORM
POSITIVE (+) NEGATIVE ( -)
I ‘ll fall in love. (will fall) I won’t spend all that money. (will not spend)You ‘ll win someday. You won’t play tomorrow.He / She / It ‘ll work. He / She / It won’t work.We‘ll forget about this. We won’t ever forget.You‘ll always remember. You won’t remember this.They‘ll survive. They won’t come tomorrow.subject / ‘ll / will / infinitive without to subject / won’t / will not / infinitive without to
YES/NO QUESTIONS (?) SHORT ANSWERS
Will I find a lover? Yes, you will.you No, you won’t.he / she / it weyouthey
will / subject / infinitive without to
QUESTION WORD QUESTIONS (?)
When will I know for sure?
Question word / will / subject / infinitive without to
SUBJECT QUESTIONS ( ?)
Who will win Helen’s love?
WHO / WHAT (= SUBJECT) / will / infinitive without to
4.2 USE
The Simple Future Tense is the common form to talk about the future and to make predictions about the future.(‘The Simple Future Tense’ is de meest gebruikelijke vorm om over de toekomstige tijd te praten en om voor-spellingen te doen.)
5 IMPERATIVE
Turn left at the crossroads.Follow that car.Try again.
Don’t park here.Don’t get lost.Don’t feed the animals.
FORMATION: The imperative is the infinitive without ‘to’.
The imperative is ‘don’t’ + the infinitive without ‘to’.
USE: We use imperatives for instructions, advice and to tell people what (not)to do.(We gebruiken ‘imperatives’ voor instructies, advies en om mensen tezeggen wat ze al dan niet moeten doen.)
+ -
_ g
150 one hundred and fifty
6 POSSESSIVE
I’m in the same class as Philip.
You’re in class 8B.
He’s not friendly.She’s so beautiful.It’s a new school.
We aren’t friends at all.
You’re thirteen.
They’re in love.
THE POSSESSIVE
My name is Kevin Pearson.
What’s your name?
His tricks are so funny.Her surname is Griffin.Its playground is very big.
Mr Campbell is our French teacher.
Your English books are great.
Their house is in Selby Road.
8 PLURAL OF NOUNS
7 GENITIVE
Homer’s wifeMarge’s husbandthe son’s nameLisa and Maggie’s brother + ’sBart’s sistersthe children’s grandfather
the daughters’ names + ’the Simpsons’ neighbours plurals ending in –s only take an apostrophe
Mr Burns’ assistant + ’(s)Ned and Maude Flanders’s sons names ending in –s mostly take ’s
(sometimes you also see the apostrophe alone)
PRONUNCIATION
Singular Plurala book seventeen booksan Indian chief two Indian chiefs / s /a shop five shops after / k, f, p, t /a cat eleven cats
a page twelve pagesa pencil case eight pencil cases / i z / an exercise fourteen exercisesa box three boxes after hissing soundsa match six matches
a brother three brothersa pencil nineteen pencils / z /a pen sixteen pens after all other sounds
_ g
151one hundred and fifty-one
8 PLURAL OF NOUNS
9 COMPARISONS
SPELLING
Singular Plurala cat cats regular form +sa dog dogsa horse horsesa monkey monkeys= vowel + y(vowel = klinker)
a puppy puppies y ➔ iesa baby babies(consonant + y)(consonant = medeklinker)
a bus busesa box boxes after a hissing sound + esa match matches
a man men [men] sounds as ‘pen’ irregular pluralsa woman women [‘wImIn] sounds as ‘swimming’a child children
BUT!one sheep - two sheepone fish - two fishone mouse - two miceone goose - two geeseone wolf - two wolves
BUT!adjective comparative superlative
GOOD BETTER BESTBAD WORSE WORSTFAR FURTHER FURTHEST
MUCH/MANY MORE MOSTLITTLE LESS LEAST
1 syllable shorthigh
shorter (than)higher
(the) shortesthighest
nicelarge
nicerlarger
nicestlargest
hotwet
hotterwetter
hottestwettest
2 syllables
adjectives ending in –y, -er, -le
heavyhappysimpleclever
heavierhappiersimplercleverer
heaviesthappiestsimplestcleverest
2 or more syllables tiredhandsomebeautiful
more tired more handsomemore beautiful
most tiredmost handsomemost beautiful
ADJECTIVE COMPARATIVE SUPERLATIVE
_ g