Thursday, December 14, 2017

NA2 14/12/17

p. 42
information on the windscreen
of the cockpit.
Situated documentaries
Stories about the previous building and its history.
Asylum

blueprint /ˈbluːˌprɪnt/ noun [countable] 
1 a plan for achieving something
blueprint for
 a blueprint for health-care reform
2 a photographic print of a plan for a building, machine etc on special blue paper
blueprint for
 a blueprint for the new shopping mall
3 technical a pattern that all living cells contain, which decides how a person, animal, or plant develops and what it looks like
- By changing the tomato’s genetic blueprint, scientists can alter the rate at which it ripens.

pedestrian adjective 
1 ordinary and uninteresting and without any imagination
 a painting that is pedestrian and unimaginative
 a rather pedestrian student

request /rɪˈkwest/ ●●● S3 W2 noun [countable] 
1 a polite or formal demand for something
request for
 They have made an urgent request for international aid.
request from
 requests from customers for more information
request that
 Anderson repeated his request that we postpone the meeting.
at somebody’s request (=because someone asked for it to be done)
- The study was done at the request of the Chairman.
on request (=if you ask for it)
- Further details will be sent on request.
by request
- There were no flowers at the funeral, by request.

faint /feɪnt/ ●●○ adjective 
1 difficult to see, hear, smell etc
 She gave a faint smile.
 a very faint noise
 the faint light of dawn

(just) out of interest/as a matter of interest
spoken used to say that you are asking a question only because you are interested and not because you need to know
- Just out of interest, how much did they offer you?

drop somebody a line
informal to write a short letter or email to someone
- Drop me a line and let me know how you’re getting on.

pop in/out/by etc
GO QUICKLY [intransitive always + adverb/preposition] spoken to go somewhere for a short time
- Why don’t you pop by the next time you’re in town?
- I need to pop into the drugstore for a second.
pop round British English
 Could you pop round to the shop for some bread?

cartridge /ˈkɑːtrɪdʒ/ UK  US  sustantivo
cartucho

be out of your depth
a) to be involved in a situation or activity that is too difficult for you to understand or deal with
- I felt completely out of my depth at the meeting.
b) British English to be in water that is too deep for you to stand in

purchase /ˈpɜːtʆɪs/ UK  US  verbo & sustantivo
 •  verbo [transitivo] (formal)
 comprar, adquirir
 •  sustantivo
 (formal) compra, adquisición

Homework: write a short email request like those on p. 41, bring it to class on Monday.

save the day
to stop things from going badly and make a situation end successfully 
A local businessman saved the day by donating £30,000 to the school.

call it a dayinformal to decide to stop working, especially because you have done enough or you are tired 

Come on, let’s call it a day and go home.

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