Showing posts with label C1. Show all posts
Showing posts with label C1. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 11, 2023

Welcome back to term 3!

 

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B1

https://www.flo-joe.co.uk/preliminaryenglish/pet-reading-practice-tests.htm

Do parts 1-6

B2 First

Do parts 1-5

Paper One - Reading & Use of English

Part 1 - Multiple Choice Cloze

Multiple Choice Cloze - Quiz 1  Exercise Number: FCE001

Part 2 - Open Cloze

View quizzes and exercises for B2 First, Open Cloze

Open Cloze Exercise 1  Exercise Number: FCE046

Part 3 - Word Formation

Word Formation Exercise 1
Exercise Number: FCE062

Part 4 - Key Word Transformations

Key Word Transformations Exercise 1
Exercise Number: FCE018

Part 5 - Reading: Multiple Choice

The Earth's Plates
Multiple choice questions based on a text about the Earth's tectonic plates.
Exercise Number: FCE083

C1 Advanced - Certificate in Advanced English (CAE)

Do parts 1-5

Paper One - Reading and Use of English

Part 1 - Multiple Choice Cloze

Multiple Choice Cloze Exercise 1
Exercise Number: CAE001

Part 2 - Open Cloze

Open Cloze Exercise 1
Exercise Number: CAE018

Part 3 - Word Formation

Word Formation Exercise 1
Exercise Number: CAE034

Part 4 - Key Word Transformations

Key Word Transformations Exercise 1
Exercise Number: CAE050

Part 5 - Reading

https://www.flo-joe.co.uk/cae/students/tests/CAE-Part-5-Multiple-Choice-Practice-Test.htm  

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

greatly + verb/ adjective


source: http://www.englishcollocation.com/how-to-use/greatly

greatly (adv): by a large amount; very much

Thursday, June 8, 2017

CAE speaking


Examiners' comments: http://www.cambridgeenglish.org/images/173976-cambridge-english-advanced-examiners-comments.pdf

Wednesday, January 18, 2017

Narcolepsy in the film 'Deuce Bigalow: Male Gigolo' (1999)


Scripts:

[Doorbell Rings]
Hi, I'm Deuce Bigalow, your man-whore for this evening.
Hi, I'm Carol-- - [Thud]- [Snoring]

I have narcolepsy. It's a sleeping disorder. It isn't the worst thing. I'm just not allowed to fly in a plane or drive a car... or work in a gun range.
- [Chuckles] Yeah.
- [Giggles]
[Snoring]

This is such a treat. I've always wanted to try soup, but there's the fear of drowning. [Snoring]

I really had fun.
- Are you gonna be okay?
- I'll be fine.
- You sure?
- Yeah.
Good night.
[Thudding Down Stairs]

http://www.springfieldspringfield.co.uk/movie_script.php?movie=deuce-bigalow-male-gigolo  

Monday, January 16, 2017

Collocations of ADV+ADJ (Intelligence/ ability)

gifted adj.
VERBS be
ADV. exceptionally, extremely, highly, immensely, prodigiously, supremely, very | undeniably | naturally a naturally gifted sportswoman | uniquely | precociously | academically, athletically, intellectually, musically academically gifted children
PREP. at He's very gifted at maths. | in gifted in the art of healing | with Their helpers are gifted with amazing powers of patience.

talented adj.
VERBS be, seem, sound
ADV. exceptionally, extraordinarily, extremely, highly, hugely, immensely, incredibly, outstandingly, really, supremely, truly, very an extraordinarily talented designer Some of these young musicians are hugely talented. | not particularly | quite | precociously a precociously talented youngster | artistically, musically

promising adj.
VERBS be, look, seem, sound
ADV. extremely, highly, particularly, very | hardly The outlook is hardly promising. | quite

source: Online OXFORD Collocation Dictionary

Tuesday, December 27, 2016

Advanced Teachers' Handbook 2015

http://www.cambridgeenglish.org/images/cambridge-english-advanced-handbook-2015.pdf

Thursday, December 22, 2016

NEEDN'T & DON'T NEED TO. What's the difference between them?

http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammar/learnit/learnitv317.shtml
  

There is also a difference in use when these verbs are used to describe present situations. We can use both needn't and don't need to to give permission to someone not to do something in the immediate future. We can also use need as a noun here:

You don't need to water the garden this evening. It's going to rain tonight. 
You needn't water the garden this evening. It's going to rain tonight. 
There's no need to water the garden this evening. It's going to rain tonight. 
You don't need to shout. It's a good line. I can hear you perfectly. 
You needn't shout. It's a good line. I can hear you perfectly.                                      
There's no need to shout. It's a good line. I can hear you perfectly.
 
However, when we are talking about general necessity, we normally use don't need to:
You don't need to pay for medical care in National Health Service hospitals.
You don't need to be rich to get into this golf club. You just need a handicap.

NEEDN'T HAVE & DIDN'T NEED TO. What's the difference between them?

 Both these forms are used to talk about past events, but there is sometimes a difference in use. When we say that someone needn't have done something, it means that they did it, but it was not necessary. Didn't need to is also sometimes used in this way:
You needn't have washed the dishes. I would've put them in the dishwasher. 
You didn't need to wash the dishes. I would've put them in the dishwasher. 
I didn't need to prepare all that food. They phoned to say they wouldn't be coming. 
I needn't have prepared all that food. They phoned to say they wouldn't be coming.
 But we also use didn't need to to say that something was not necessary under circumstances where it was not done:
The sun came out so we didn't need to take any rainwear on the trip.
We had plenty of petrol in the tank so I didn't need to fill up.
We didn't need to wait for long for them. They arrived just after us.
 

Sunday, November 13, 2016

Sensory disabilities

http://www.hwns.com.au/Resource-centre/Types-of-disabilities/sensory-disability

http://www.onetoonesupportservices.co.uk/Deafblind%20sensory%20impairments%20definitions.htm

https://www.britannica.com/topic-browse/Health-and-Medicine/Diseases-and-Disorders/Diseases-of-the-Senses/2

Tuesday, May 31, 2016

Reading: What comes NATURALLY


Irving Berli

Doin' What Comes Natur'lly Lyrics

Folks are dumb where I come from
They ain't had any learnin'
Still they're happy as can be

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Folks like us could never fuss
With schools and books and learnin'
Still we've gone from A to Z

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

You don't have to know how to read or write
When you're out with a feller in the pale moonlight
You don't have to look in a book to find
What he thinks of the moon or what is on his mind

That comes naturally
That comes naturally

My uncle out in Texas
Can't even write his name
He signs his checks with X's
But they cash 'em just the same

If you saw my pa and ma
You'd no they had no learnin'
Still they raised a family

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Uncle Jed has never read
An almanac on drinkin'
Still he's always on a spree (parranda)

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Sister Sal who's mus-i-cal
Has never had a lesson
Still she's learned to sing off-key (desafinado)

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

You don't have to go to a private school
Not to pick up a penny by a stubborn mule
You don't have to have a professor's dome (figurative: head)
Not to go for the honey when the bee's at home

That comes naturally
That comes naturally

My tiny baby brother
Who's never read a book
Knows one sex from the other
All he had to do was look

Grandpa Bill is on the hill
With someone he just married
There he is at ninety-three

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Sister Lou ain't got a sou figurative: a samll amount of money- coloquial : céntimo)

Although she goes out shoppin'
She gets all her stockings free

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Cousin Nell can't add or spell
But she left school with honors
She got every known degree

For doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

You don't have to come from a great big town
Not to clean out a stable in an evening gown
You don't have to mix with the Vanderbilt's
Not to take off your panties when you're wearing kilts (schoolgirl's pleated skirt)

That comes naturally
That comes naturally

My mother's cousin Carrie
Won't ever change her name
She doesn't want to marry
And her children feel the same

Sister Rose has lots of beaus (French- boyfriends)
Although we have no parlor (US- reception room: salòn)
She does fine behind a tree

Doin' what comes naturally
Doin' what comes naturally

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

Vacabulary: Describing rooms and houses

Dark and Dingy
 (dark in an unpleasant way + often dirty)

Bright and cheerful

Light and Airy
 ( light +well-ventilated)

Neat and tidy
 (well-organised)

Warm and cosy
 (comfortable)


Cramped and cluttered
(small + crowded + untidy)