Graveyard
Cemetery
Halloween riddles
1. Why didn't
the skeleton cross the road?
|
c
|
A. Ice Scream
|
2. What do skeletons say before they begin dining?
|
f
|
B. They have no body to dance with
|
3. What do ghosts serve for dessert?
|
a
|
C. He didn't have the guts.
|
4. When is it bad luck to meet a black cat?
|
e
|
D. Because people are dying to get in
|
5. Why don't skeletons like parties?
|
b
|
E. When you're a mouse
|
6. Did you hear what happened to the boy and girl
vampires?
|
h
|
F. Bone appetit!
|
7. Why are there fences around cemeteries?
|
d
|
G. They get all wrapped up in their work
|
8. Why do witches fly on brooms?
|
j
|
H. They loved in vein
|
9. Why do mummies make good employees?
|
g
|
I. His ghoul friend
|
10. Who did Frankenstein take to the prom?
|
i
|
J. Vacuum cleaner cords aren't long enough
|
p. 26
money /ˈmʌni/
man‧y /ˈmeni/
seafood
joined
p.226
be worth something
a) to have a value in money
- The house must be worth quite a lot of money now.
- One of the pictures is worth £50,000.
Borrow /ˈbɒrəʊ/ - Can I borrow your
car?
Lend – Can you lend me your car?
can/could afford
[usually negative]
a) to have enough money to buy or pay for something
afford (to do) something
- We can’t afford to go (V) on vacation this year.
- How can she afford to eat (V) out every night?
- I couldn’t afford the rent (N) on my own.
charge ●●● S1 W2 verb
1 MONEY
a) [intransitive, transitive] to ask someone for a
particular amount of money for something you are selling
- The hotel charges $125 a night.
charge somebody £10/$50 etc (for something)
- The restaurant charged us £40 for the wine.
I owe /əʊ/ my
brother $50.
I hate owing money to people.
A concert to raise
/reɪz/ money for charity.
Waste money / time
She put at least £30 a
week aside for food.> to save money regularly, usually for a
particular purpose
Ex.1a
Save, lend, borrow, waste, can’t afford to buy, charge, cost,
owe, invest, earn, is worth, raise.
Shares – acciones
Make a profit – tener beneficio
Nearly half the students said they were in debt /det/.
Ex. 2
Pay for, spend on, invest in, lend to, borrow from,
charge for, get into debt.
Ex. 3
bill /bɪl/ ●●● S1 W1 noun
[countable]
1 REQUEST FOR PAYMENT a written list showing how much
you have to pay for services you have received, work that has been done etc
bill for
- The bill for the repairs came to $650.
- Have you paid the phone bill?
budget /ˈbʌdʒɪt/ ●●○ S3 W3 noun
[countable]
1 the money that is available to an organization or
person, or a plan of how it will be spent
budget of
- a welfare program with a budget of $2 million
budget for
- The budget for photography has been cut.
contactless /ˈkɒntæktləs $
ˈkɑːn-/ adjective
a contactless debit card or credit card is one you can
use to pay for things by waving it over a machine, without
using a pin number
payment /ˈpeɪmənt/ ●●● S2 W1 noun
1 [countable] an amount of money that has been or must
be paid
- You can make a payment in any bank.
insurance /ɪnˈʃʊərəns $ -ˈʃʊr-/ ●●● S2 W2
noun
1 [uncountable] an arrangement with a company in which
you pay them money, especially regularly, and they pay the costs if something
bad happens, for example if you become ill or your car is damaged → assurance,
third party insurance
Your father
took out insurance to cover the mortgage.
Salary, tax, loan, budget, mortgage /ˈmɔːɡɪdʒ/,
contactless payment, insurance.
$2,000 – 2 thousand dollars / twenty hundred dollars
$1856 – eighteen hundred fifty-six dollars
I want to go to a concert, but I can’t afford to spend
a lot of money.
Ex. 4
- the number of families who live on benefits.
- I don’t know how they manage to live on £55 a week.> to have a particular amount of money to buy food and other necessary things.
- How much would you like to take out?> to
get money from your bank account. SYN>
withdraw
- I’ll pay you back
on Friday.
- We’re paying back the loan over 15 years.> to give someone the money that you owe them SYN repay
- Dad lost his job and we had to live off welfare
- Mom used to live off the interest from her savings.> to get your income or food from a supply of money or from
another person
Cash point – ATM
Little money> not enough
A little money> enough
Make
ends meet- llegar a fin de mes
With my salary I have problems to make ends meet.
I try
not to waste money.
I’d (would) like to have a job with a good salary and
earn a lot of money which I could save so that I can afford to buy a piece of
land.
I want to borrow my mother’s car but she can’t lent it to me because it’s not
insured.
I need to ask for a loan.
I asked for a loan to invest the money in a business.
I’m broke /ruined.
The really cost a fortune.
I was evicted so I had to collect / raise money to recover my house.
I don’t like owing money to banks. However, I have a
loan and I pay it every month.
borough /ˈbʌrə $ -roʊ/ noun
[countable]
a town, or part of a large city, that is responsible
for managing its own schools, hospitals, roads etc
- the borough of Queens in New York City
- Lambeth Borough Council
Halloween with Mariah
Celtic Holiday
Harvest
Carve (cut)
Pumpkin
Jack o lantern
Trick or treat , smell my feet
Costume (fancy dress)
Corn maze
Apple bobbing
Vampire
Homework:
reading activity p. 26 – 27, ex. 3 b and c.
No comments:
Post a Comment