Tuesday, April 23, 2013

ni2 23/4/13


Homework: grammarbank p. 152.

soaking /ˈsəʊkɪŋ/, también soaking wet UK  US  adjetivo
empapado -a, calado -a hasta los huesos

El Diluvio Universal: the Flood

It started to pour down half way to Niño de Mula, I was absolutely soaking by the time I got there.

consequence /ˈkɒnsɪkwəns/ UK  US  sustantivo
1 consecuencia
to take/suffer the consequences of sth pagar/sufrir las consecuencias de algo
2 to be of little/no consequence (formal) tener poca/no tener ninguna importancia

calm /kɑːm/ UK  US  adjetivo, verbo & sustantivo
 •  adjetivo
1  (referido a una persona) tranquilo -a, sereno -a
to keep/stay calm mantener la calma


2 (referido a un lugar) tranquilo -a

3  (referido al mar, el tiempo) en calma, sereno -a
 •  verbo [transitivo]
 calmar, tranquilizar
calm down phrasal verb
 calmarse, tranquilizarse
Just calm down and tell me what happened.
Cálmate y cuéntame lo que pasó.
 calm sb down phrasal verb
  calmar/tranquilizar a alguien
 •  sustantivo
calma, tranquilidad

feel at ease: sientete/ponte comodo
ease a pain ≠ he’s a pain.
You’ll m iss the train unless you set off at.

I picked up all my clothes - I picked all my clothes up - I picked them up.

I’m under a lot of pressure today, I’d better calm down.

Up and down the aisle of the plane.

aisle /aɪl/ UK  US  sustantivo
pasillo [en un avión, un teatro]


corridor /ˈkɒrɪdɔː/ UK  US  sustantivo
pasillo, corredor

teach somebody (how) to do something
class=pronsentence title="Look up a word starting with D or S for samples of headword or sentence pronunciations on the LDOCE CD-ROM" v:shapes="_x0000_i1025">My father taught me to swim.
Different methods of teaching children how to read

weren't /wɜːnt/ UK  US   contracción de were not

At ten-thirty/2 o'clock etc sharp
at exactly 10.30, 2.00 etc:
We're meeting at one-thirty sharp.

famine /ˈfæmɪn/ UK  US  sustantivo
hambruna, hambre

up‧lift‧ing
making you feel happier and more hopeful:
an uplifting experience

bribe /braɪb/ UK  US  sustantivo & verbo
  sustantivo
soborno
 •  verbo [transitivo]
sobornar
They  bribed  him  to  keep quiet about it.
Le sobornaron para que no dijera nada.

be‧friend [transitive]
to behave in a friendly way towards someone, especially someone who is younger or needs help:
They befriended me when I first arrived in London as a student.

barrier /ˈbæriə/ UK  US  sustantivo
1 barrera, valla (de contención)

2 a barrier to sth una barrera para algo

hustle and bustle
busy and noisy activity (usually + of ) He wanted a little cottage far away from the hustle and bustle of city life.

wealth /welθ/ UK  US  sustantivo
1 riqueza
2 a wealth of information/material etc gran abundancia de información/material etc

a wealth of experience una amplia experiencia
welfare state
1
 the welfare state
a system in which the government provides money, free medical care etc for people who are unemployed, ill, or too old to work [↪ social security]
2 [countable] a country with such a system

be/go on the dole (=be unemployed and receiving money from the government)

from scratch
if you start something from scratch, you begin it without using anything that existed or was prepared before:
We had to start again from scratch.
He had built the business up from scratch.

living standard [countable usually plural]
the level of comfort and the amount of money that people have[= standard of living]:
Living standards have improved over the last century.
rising living standards
There's been a decline in the living standards of old people.

filth‧y comparative filthier, superlative filthiest
1 very dirty:
The house was filthy, with clothes and newspapers strewn everywhere.

starve
1 [intransitive] to suffer or die because you do not have enough to eat:
Thousands of people will starve if food doesn't reach the city.
pictures of starving children
They'll either die from the cold or starve to death (=die from lack of food).
3
 be starving
also be starved American English to be very hungry:
You must be starving!


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