Feb 23, 2016
House and home
3 Speaking and reading
a In pairs or groups, discuss this question. Where do college students normally live in
Saudi Arabia? b The University of California at Los Angeles
has four apartment buildings for students. Read
the students’ questions below. Then read the
UCLA Web site and answer the questions.
3 Speaking and reading 1 Are the college apartment buildings on,
near, or some distance from the campus? 2 Do I have to buy any furniture? 3 Do I have to share an apartment with
another person? 4 What kind of cooking and cleaning facilities
are there? 5 If I apply for an apartment, will I get one? 6 What is the shortest period I can rent an apartment? 7 How can I get more information about the apartments?
b Compare your answers in groups of three.
Discuss the advantages and disadvantages of
these different types of accommodations for
college students: living in an apartment, living
in a dorm, living at home.
Decoration
1 Speaking and listening a Look at this picture of a room. What would
you change to make it look nicer? Discuss your
ideas with a partner. b Listen to a conversation between two
people and answer these questions. 1 Who decorated the apartment? 2 What does Dan think of the decoration? 3 One thing doesn’t need changing. What is
it? 4 What’s the problem with redecorating the
apartment?
2 Speaking and reading
a What are the main things that
affect the decoration of a
room? Discuss your ideas in
groups of three. Then quickly
read the excerpt from an
interior design textbook to
check your answers.
b Read the article again and fillin the spaces with the namesof the correct rooms.c In pairs, describe and discuss aroom you really like in yourown house or a relative’s orfriend’s house. What makes itso special?
3 Word builder: multi-word verbs
a Read the sentences and underline the multi-word
verbs. In pairs, discuss the meanings of the multiword
verbs. Use a dictionary if necessary. The first
three have been underlined for you.
1 I’ll take care of your apartment while you’re away.
2 Prices of houses and apartments do not
often go down. 3 I wish the neighbors would
turn their TV down.
4 There are tools all over the
floor. Put them away
before you go to bed.
5 They gave away their old car.
6 We should take down that old
bathroom mirror.
7 I turned the water off.
8 The candle went out.
9 How do you put up with the
mess in John’s bedroom?
10 The decorator’s car broke
down so he won’t be
coming today.
b Complete these sentences using multi-word
verbs from exercise 3a. Some of the verbs are
in a different tense.
1 The cost of wallpaper has (1) _____________
a lot recently.
2 I’m not going to (2) ______________
this horrible furniture a minute longer.
3 If you (3) _________ things (4) _______ when
you finish with them, your room will stay neat.
4 Please (5) _______ the TV (6) _______!
I can’t hear myself think!
Phrasal Verbs and other multi-word verbs
Phrasal verbs are part of a large group of verbs called "multi-word verbs". Phrasal verbs and other multi-word verbs are an important part of the English language. Multi-word verbs, including phrasal verbs, are very common, especially in spoken English. A multi-word verb is a verb like "pick up", "turn on" or "get on with". For convenience, many people refer to all multi-word verbs as phrasal verbs. These verbs consist of a basic verb + another word or words. The other word(s) can be prepositions and/or adverbs. The two or three words that make up multi-word verbs form a short "phrase" - which is why these verbs are often all called "phrasal verbs".
The important thing to remember is that a multi-word verb is still a verb. "Get" is a verb. "Get up", is also a verb, a different verb. "Get" and "get up" are two different verbs. They do not have the same meaning. So you should treat each multi-word verb as a separate verb, and learn it like any other verb. Look at these examples. You can see that there are three types of multi-word verb:
look direct your eyes in a certain direction
You must look before you leap.
single-word verb
look after take care of Who is looking after the baby?
multi-word verbs
look up search for and find information in a reference book
You can look up my number in the telephone directory.
look forward to
anticipate with pl
look direct your eyes in a certain direction
You must look before you leap.
Multi-word verbs The plane has now taken off. Look at these pictures. He thinks he can get away with
everything.
Multi-word verbs …are multi-word combinations that comprise relatively idiomatic units and function like single verbs. 3 main types: Phrasal verbs: verb + adverb particle Prepositional verbs: verb + preposition Phrasal-prepositional verbs: verb + particle + preposition
passives—present, past, future, and modal
Street scenes
1 Listening and speaking
a In pairs or groups, compare the two scenes
above. What are the similarities and the
differences between them?
b Listen to two people talking about
where they live. Decide which of the areas in the
photographs they live in, and list the
things in the area they mention. Compare your
answers in pairs.
Used to
I was asked on Pal Talk recently how to use used to and would.
If we say something used to happen we are talking about repeatedevents and actions in the past, usually things that happened a long time ago and are now finished.To express this we can use either used to or would.•When I was young I used to play with my dolls. = When I was young I would play with my dolls.Of course I no longer play with dolls!•We used to go out a lot in the summer.Implies that we no longer go out much.If you want to talk about repeated states or habits in the past, you must use used
to, you cannot use would : :•My dog used to bark at cats.•I used to smoke.•I used to be an administrative assistant.•I used to live in England.You should use 'use to' without a d in sentences when it follows 'did'or 'didn't' (don't worry too much about this because lots of people get it wrong).The question form is ‘Did you use to…?'. When asking a closed question you put did/didn't in front of the subject followed by use to, you cannot use would.•Did you use to go out with my sister?•Did they use to own the company?•Didn't we use to go to the same school?
Also when asking questions about states in the past you cannot usewould.•What sort of things did you use to like when you were young?. In the negative you cannot use would without a change in meaning.•I didn't use to play with my dolls.If I said I wouldn't play with my dolls. It would mean I refused to play with my dolls.•We didn't use to go out much in the winter months.If I said we wouldn't go out much. It would mean we refused to go out much.!Note - The general rule is when there is did or didn't in the sentence, we say use to (without d) when there is no did or didn't in the sentence, we say used to (with d).
My grandfather and his friends used to play with marbles
They used to play hide and seek
He used to listen to the radio
They used to travel by horse
He used to collect stamps
3 Speaking and reading
a Read the article and match the photograph to one of the paragraphs.
Which country was the photograph taken in? Guess the names of the other three places.
b Imagine you are going on vacation to one of the places in the article. In pairs, discuss what you could do in each of the countries. Decide which country you would like to visit most.
4 Speaking and writing
a Imagine you have been asked
to write a paragraph for a
tourist brochure describing a
typical street in your town or
city. In pairs, discuss
these questions.
1 Who is going to read what
you write? a local people b young people c tourists 2 What style of
writing are you going to use? a a very formal style b an informative style c an academic style
b In pairs, make notes to answer
these questions.
1 What might you see?
2 What might people be
doing?
3 What kinds of buildings
might you find?
4 What did the area use to
be like?
5 How might you feel looking
at the street scene?
.
c Write your paragraph. Look at
the article for more ideas.
When you have finished, swap,
and compare paragraphs with
a partner
places to stay
2 Timesharing Have you ever heard
of timesharing vacations?
Yes? No? What do you know about them? Discuss
the question. Then, read the article quickly and
check your answer.
Until timesharing came about, most Americans used to have only two main alternatives for taking vacations:
rent a hotel room with constantly increasing rates,
reservation hassles, and none of the comforts of home
or own a resort home or condominium which costs a
lot of money and which you would probably use only a couple of weeks a year.
But that has changed with a new type of business—
timeshares. With timeshare ownership, you arrange to
buy a vacation home and sell 51 weeks of the year to 51
other owners. This means that everyone involved can
afford a nicer place as the cost is divided between lots of
people. Annual expenses are much less because they are
shared and the apartment is occupied all year, which
also reduces costs.
With another form of timeshare, clients buy a
week for life in a resort. They and their families can
use this
during the lifetime of the owner. The
timesharer pays
maintenance costs and utilities (water,
electricity, and
telephone). With some companies, the
timesharer can
exchange his or her week for a week in
another resort,
or even rent the week out if he or she doesn’t
want to
use it.
3 Clinching a saleListen to the conversation between Ben Brown ofWorldwide Vacations and Mr. Turner, a client, andanswer the following questions.1 Where did the client see the information aboutthe timeshare?2 Who have the Turners talked to?
Dial up a word2
ABC1 3DEF
5JKL
4GHI
6MNO
8TUV
7PQRS
9WXYZ
0* #
61
What’s out?
SUMMARIZE THE NEW INFORMATION IN THIS
CONCEPTING MAP……
What I know?
What I want to learn?
What I learned?
How I can learn more?
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ANSWER THESE QUESTIONCONTROL YOUR KNOWLEDGE
PROGRESS
الله بحمد تم
Thank you for your listening
Good bye