Exam date in June: 29th May
p. 49
null /nʌl/ adjective [only before a noun]
1 zero or nothing
p.109
HOWEVER (after . or , )
-This is a cheap and simple process. However, there
are dangers.
- It’s an extremely unpleasant disease that is,
however, easy to treat.
Be proud of
Wife-wives
Life (vida) – lives /ai/
Live (v) /i/
/mɪˈlæn/
It’s a win, win situation
Ex. 1
And, however, so, until, when, because, when, until,
but, and
Ex. 3
And, when, because, until, however, so, because, but,
when, so, however, because.
p. 50
vil‧lage /ˈvɪlɪdʒ/
tu‧na /ˈtjuːnə/ atún
love‧ly /ˈlʌvli/ ●●● S1 W3 adjective (comparative
lovelier, superlative loveliest)
1 especially British English beautiful or attractive
She had a
lovely face.
What a lovely
house!
Text:
Two, didn’t, have, late, some, went, studied, earn, about,
stop, did, caught.
Generally, the adjective order in English is:
Quantity or number.
Quality or opinion.
Size.
Age.
Shape.
Color.
Proper adjective (often nationality, other place of
origin, or material)
Purpose or qualifier.
ma‧jor /ˈmeɪdʒə $ -ər/very large or important
and so on (and so forth)
I’m her guinea pig
Homework: ex. 3 p. 50
Asked /t/
Replied /aid/
Smiled /d/
Laughed /t/
Thanked /t/
p. 52
an‧noyed /əˈnɔɪd/ ●●●
S2 adjective
slightly angry SYN irritated, →angry
ex‧cit‧ed /ɪkˈsaɪtɪd/
●●● S2 adjective
1 happy,
The world is your oyster
tu‧na
/ˈtjuːnə/
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