Wednesday, December 02, 2015

C1 31/11-1/12/15

Homework: reading p. 48 (1, 2, 3 and 4)

p.45
be spoilt for choice›
to be ​unable to ​choose because there are so many ​possible good ​choices:
There's so much good ​theatre in New York City - one is ​spoilt for ​choice.
feasible
adjective /ˈfiːzəbl/
› able to be done
factible, viable
a feasible solution to the problem.

stunt 1 /stʌnt/ noun [ C ]
1 DANGER when someone does something dangerous that needs great skill, usually in a film
He always does his own stunts .
2 ATTENTION something that is done to get people's attention
Their marriage was just a cheap publicity stunt .

There are better possibilities other than this one.

feasible /ˈfiːzəbl/ adjective
possible to do
a feasible plan
[ + to do sth ] It may be feasible to clone human beings, but is it ethical?
feasibility /ˌfiːzəˈbɪləti/ noun [ U ]

no pun intended (=used to show you do not mean to make a joke about something)
The clergy prey (no pun intended) on bereaved families.

propel /prəˈpel/ verb [ T ] present participle propelling , past propelled
1 propel sb into/to sth
to cause someone to do an activity or be in a situation
The film propelled him to international stardom.
2 to push or move something somewhere, often with a lot of force
a rocket propelled through space

rail
smooth‧ly
1 in a steady way, without stopping and starting again:
Traffic flowed smoothly.
2 if a planned event, piece of work etc goes smoothly, there are no problems to spoil it:
It'll take about three hours if everything goes smoothly.
Donna keeps the office running smoothly.
3 if you say something smoothly, you say it in a calm and confident way:
'All taken care of,' he said smoothly.
4 in a way that produces a smooth surface:
The jacket fit smoothly over her hips.

Amusement
Pedal
Above

Breakthrough [countable]
an important new discovery in something you are studying, especially one made after trying for a long time
breakthrough in     
Scientists have  made    a major breakthrough in the treatment of cancer.

con‧trap‧tion [countable]
a piece of equipment or machinery that looks funny, strange, and unlikely to work well:
a bizarre contraption

sewing /ˈsəʊɪŋ/ noun [ U ]
1 ACTIVITY the activity of joining pieces of cloth together or repairing them with a needle and thread
2 CLOTH the pieces of cloth that you are joining together or repairing with a needle and thread

ec‧cen‧tric
1 behaving in a way that is unusual and different from most people:
His eccentric behaviour lost him his job.
Aunt Nessy was always a bit eccentric.

off-the-wall informal
very strange or unusual, often in an amusing way:
an off-the-wall concept

preposterous /prɪˈpɒst ə rəs/ adjective
extremely stupid
That's a preposterous idea!

ex‧hil‧a‧rat‧ing
making you feel happy, excited, and full of energy:
an exhilarating experience
an exhilarating walk

bizarre /bɪˈzɑː r / adjective
very strange and surprising
bizarre behaviour
bizarrely adverb

wack‧y informal
silly in an exciting or amusing way [= crazy]:
a wonderfully wacky idea

ob‧nox‧ious
very offensive, unpleasant, or rude:
She's really obnoxious.
an obnoxious idea
obnoxious odours

nifty /ˈnɪfti/ adjective
informal well-designed and effective
a nifty piece of software

litter 2 /ˈlɪtə r / verb [ T ]
If things litter an area, they cover parts of it in an untidy way.
Clothes littered the floor.
be littered with sth phrasal verb
to contain a lot of something
The whole book is littered with errors.

a case in point
a good example of something
Supermarkets often charge too much for goods. Bananas are a case in point.

Come about
phrasal verb
1 to happen, especially in a way that is not planned:
The opportunity to get into computing came about quite by accident.
How did this situation come about?

Come with sth phrasal verb
To think of a plan, an idea, or a solution to a problem
We need to come up with a good scheme to make money.

Come down to sth/doing sth phrasal verb
If a situation, problem, decision, etc comes down to something, then that is the thing that will influence it most.

Come across sb/sth phrasal verb
To meet someone or discover something by chance
I came across a lovely little restaurant in the village.
Finding and discovering
Meeting people ▶ See also Official meetings
Come across SEEM phrasal verb
1 to seem to be a particular type of person
He came across as shy.
Seeming and purporting to be ▶ See also Faking and pretending
Come across CLEAR verb2 If an idea or emotion comes across, it is expressed clearly and people understand it.
His bitterness comes across in his poetry.

Come off phrasal verb1
To happen successfully
His attempt to impress us all didn't quite come off.

Come up against sb/sth phrasal verb
To have to deal with a problem or difficulty

She came up against a lot of sexism in her first engineering job.

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