Tuesday, November 13, 2018

A2 12-13/11/18

Every now and then

OTHER WAYS TO SAY THANK YOU AND GOOD BYE:

cheers /tʃɪəz $ tʃɪrz/ interjection   
1 used when you lift a glass of alcohol before you drink it, in order to say that you hope the people you are drinking with will be happy and have good health
2 British English informal thank you

ta /tɑː/ interjection British English informal spoken   
thank you




That's nothing
It’s ok

pleased /pliːzd/ to meet you

God /ɡɒd $ ɡɑːd/ 
Thank God/goodness/heavens
Used to show that you are very glad about something
- Thank God that’s over! I’ve never been so nervous in my life!
Thank God/goodness/heavens for
- ‘Only ten miles to go.’ ‘Thank heavens for that!’

evening /ˈiːvnɪŋ/ ●●● S1 W1 noun   
1 [countable, uncountable] the early part of the night between the end of the day and the time you go to bed
- I’m usually out on Friday evenings.
- What are you doing tomorrow evening?

Good ˈnight ●●● S3   
Used to say goodbye when you are leaving someone or they are leaving at night, or before going to sleep → good evening
- Good night. Sleep well.

Register
In informal everyday English, people often just say Night or, especially to children, Night night:
Night night, darling. See you in the morning.

Good night, sleep tight.
Don't let the bed bugs bite.

See you later alligator
After while crocodile

Unit 2: Jobs (occupation)

Indoor - outdoor
JOBS IN YOUR FAMILY

A Housewife
A civil servant
A pyrotechnician
Fork crane driver
Truck/taxi/lorry driver
An office worker
A banker
Administrative worker
Retired
Unemployed
A nurse
A midwife
A taylor
A flight assistant
Aluminium
The manager
An electrician
Chemist
Educator
Teacher with handicapped people.
Physiotherapist
Professor (at university)
A mechanic
A hospital porter
A housewife - A househusband
My father’s job is builder
My father’s a builder

Me too – me neither
Pounds (pence)- £ and dollars (cents)- $
Ex. 1
Indoor - outdoor
He has two weeks’ holiday
He has a two-week holiday

zo‧ol‧o‧gist /zuːˈɒlədʒəst, zəʊˈɒ-/

work for
- He works for a law firm. He’s a lawyer.
work at/in
- I work at the university.

He works ON an oil rig.

He has two weeks’ holiday
He has a two-week holiday

Tomorrow’s meeting
Yerterday’s class
Salary -> earns
Prize / competition-> wins
He wins -> earns £200 a day

Snooker – billiards


Homework: p. 14, ex. 3 (complete with the verbs in the texts about Andrew and Claudia) and 4, p. 15, ex. 2 and grammar and pronunciation.



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