Progress test (1-5)
1)
Did you wake up
Had lost
Have you ever eaten
I’m making
Were playing
Retire
Do
Is leaving / is going to
I’ve already got / gotten
Had started
2)
More
For
Should
Use (wolf /wʊlf/)
I usually go by car – I used to go by car
Won’t
Can’t - cannot
The
Anymore
Being
Ought to
I ought to go
I should to go – I must to go, I can to go
I have to go - I want to go - I need to go
3)
won’t see
didn’t use to – didn’t used to
I’m not going to…
Didn’t win
Don’t have to leave
4)
Do we have to work this evening?
Have you bought the tickets yet?
How long have you been learning the violin?
Shall I get you a glass of water?
How much money did you inherit?
5)
A, b, a, a, a, b, b, b, a, a
6)
2J, 3f ,
4a, 5k, 6g, 7b, 8i, 9c, 10h, 11d
7)
I’m tired – The match is tiring
B, a, c, b, b, c, a, c, b, a
really tiny
fascinated
by
amazed at/by
reliable people
fed up with
really tiny / huge
interested in
pleased with
proud of
8)
Rank, crowd, ex, stadium, couple, zone, stepchildren,
salary, insurance, goal
9)
To, of, stuck, on, paid, about, work, on, back,
together
be stuck/caught/held up in
traffic
Sorry I’m late – I was stuck in traffic.
live on something
to have a particular amount of money
to buy food and other necessary things
- I don’t know how they manage to live on £55 a week.
10)
B, d, a, b, c, b, d, b, b,
prawn /prɔːn/
home /həʊm/ alone
raw /rɔː/
pro‧fes‧sion‧al /prəˈfeʃənəl/
bridge /brɪdʒ/
ma‧chine /məˈʃiːn/
bull – cook - full
boot – afternoon – food -
phone – coach – sociable – leftover
clock – honest – horrible – responsible
rummage /ˈrʌmɪdʒ/ verb [intransitive always +
adverb/preposition]
(also rummage around/about) to search for something by
moving things around in a careless or hurried way
rummage in/through etc
- Looks like someone’s been rummaging around in my
desk.
plummet /ˈplʌmɪt/ (also plummet down) verb
[intransitive]
1 to suddenly and quickly decrease in value or amount
SYN plunge
plummet from something to something
- Profits plummeted from £49 million to £11 million
goodies /ˈɡʊdiz/
things that are nice to eat, such as cakes and
chocolates
cabin /ˈkæbɪn/ ●●○ noun [countable]
- a log cabin
cater /ˈkeɪtə $ -ər/ ●○○ verb [intransitive,
transitive]
to provide and serve food and drinks
at a party, meeting etc, usually as a business
cater for
- This is the biggest event we’ve ever catered for.
coaster /ˈkəʊstə $ ˈkoʊstər/ noun [countable]
butt /bʌt/ noun [countable]
1 PART OF YOUR BODY American English informal the part
of your body that you sit on SYN buttocks
a baby’s soft
little butt
→ be a pain in the butt
2 CIGARETTE the end of a cigarette after most of it
has been smoked
pitch in phrasal verb informal
1 to join others and help with an activity
- If we all pitch in, we’ll have it finished in no
time.
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