Tuesday, March 24, 2020

B1 23-24/3/20





P. 103
 Can you ( listening activity)
1-c
2-c
3-a
4-b
5-a


CGI /ˌsiː dʒiː ˈaɪ/ noun [uncountable]    
(computer-generated imagery) images in films, television programmes etc that are produced using computers
 The movie is an epic fantasy full of CGI.

P. 101

Ex. 6

Bold: Atrevido

Guinea pigs

ˈguinea pig noun [countable]    
1 a small furry animal with short ears and no tail, which is often kept as a pet
2 someone who is used in a scientific test to see how successful or safe a new product, system

lounge /laʊndʒ/ ●●○ S3 noun [countable]    
1 a waiting room at an airport
 the departure lounge
2 a public room in a hotel or other building, that is used by many people as a place to relax
 the television lounge

C)
4, 3, 5, 2, 1

D)
Your own wardrobe
True to yourself (se fiel a ti mismo)
How much money
A good pair of jeans


P. 107, unit 7
retake 2 to take an examination again because you have previously failed it SYN resit British English




1939



Italy

ˌsquare ˈroot noun [countable]    
the square root of a number is the number which, when multiplied by itself, equals that number
square root of
 The square root of nine is three.

I’m not really good at maths
Maths is not my thing

6

acronym /ˈækrənɪm/ noun [countable]    
a word made up from the first letters of the name of something such as an organization. For example, NATO is an acronym for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.

the UN
(the United Nations) an international organization that tries to find peaceful solutions to world problems

Universal Serial Bus

law /lɔ:/


Isaac Newton


3 (a trilogy) 
trilogy /ˈtrɪlədʒi/ noun (plural trilogies) [countable]    
a series of three plays, books etc that are about the same people or subject
- part 2 of a trilogy


Leg
tibia /ˈtɪbiə/ noun (plural tibiae /-bi-iː/ or tibias) [countable] technical    
a bone in the front of your leg


Hydrogen  /ˈhaɪdrədʒən/




School subjects

PE British English, P.E. American English /ˌpiː ˈiː/ ●●○ noun [uncountable]    
(physical education) sport and physical activity taught as a school subject
- a PE teacher


Biology
Chemistry/ˈkeməstri/
Geology
History
Information technologies
literature /ˈlɪtərətʃə/
Maths
maths /mæθs/ ●●● S2 noun [uncountable]    
British English informal mathematics SYN math American English
- the new maths teacher
- maths lessons
- She got top marks in maths and chemistry.
Physics
phys‧ics /ˈfɪzɪks/ ●●● S3 noun [uncountable]    
the science concerned with the study of physical objects and substances, and of natural forces such as light, heat, and movement

Wonderful world: Sam Cooke

c)
7, 8, 2, 1, 4, 6, 3, 5

P. 233

Nursery, secondary, state, private, boarding, pupils, student, head, terms, degree

com‧pul‧so‧ry /kəmˈpʌlsəri/ ●●○ adjective    
something that is compulsory must be done because it is the law or because someone in authority orders you to → voluntary

ˈboarding school noun [countable]    
a school where students live as well as study

ˈstate ˌschool noun [countable]    
1 British English a British school which receives money from the government and provides free education → public school

ˌpublic ˈschool noun [countable]    
1 in Britain, a private school for children aged between 13 and 18, whose parents pay for their education. The children often live at the school while they are studying → state school
2 a free local school, especially in the US and Scotland, controlled and paid for by the government → private school

pri‧vate /ˈpraɪvət/ 

ˌhead ˈteacher, headteacher ●●○ noun [countable]    
British English the teacher who is in charge of a school SYN principal American English


re‧sult /rɪˈzʌlt/ 
Finished /t/
Called /d/

Two halves (half)

1c)

High, grades, kindergarten /ˈkɪndəɡɑːtn/, twelfth, semesters, college.

second/eleventh etc grade one of the 12 years that students are at school in the American school system, or the students in a particular year → year

 My brother is in sixth grade.

kin‧der‧gar‧ten /ˈkɪndəɡɑːtn $ -dərɡɑːrtn/ noun [countable, uncountable]    
1 American English a school or class for children aged five
2 British English a school for children aged two to five SYN nursery school

Grade- (BE) nota, (Am E) curso


Divided /id/





2 a)

something is allowed (=something is officially permitted)
- Are dictionaries allowed in the exam?

expel somebody from something to officially force someone to leave a school or organization → expulsion
- Two girls were expelled from school for taking drugs.

cheat /tʃiːt/ ●●○ S3 verb    
1 [intransitive, transitive] to behave in a dishonest way in order to win or to get an advantage, especially in a competition, game, or examination
- He had cheated in the test by using a calculator.

misbehave /ˌmɪsbɪˈheɪv/ verb [intransitive]    
(also misbehave yourself) to behave badly, and cause trouble or annoy people OPP behave
- George has been misbehaving at school.

Behave yourself

Behaviour - comportamiento

Let, misbehave, be punished /t/, make, cheat, be expelled /d/

Make you stay behind- hacer que te quedes más tarde en clase.

2B)

Take, pass, revise, fail, result

Make sb do sth (hacer que alguien haga algo)
The teacher made me do extra homework

Let sb do sth (dejar que alguien haga algo)
My father let me use his car (let -let -let)

Allow sb to do sth (permitir que alguien haga algo)
My mother doesn’t allow me to go there. (active)
Smoking is not allowed at school. (passive)

Vocational training


extra curricular activities


To be a little naughty


The naughty or nice list

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