Homework:
writing 1, workbook p. 17 e-mail (giving advice) + writing 2, workbook p 25
e-mail (asking for information) (120-150 words each).
weird /wɪəd/
dull /dʌl/
weren't /wɜːnt/
UK US
contracción de were not
aren't /ɑːnt/
UK US
•
contracción de
are not
they're /ðeə/
UK US
contracción de they are
where /weə/
were /wə, acentuado wɜː/ UK US
pasado de be.
end
up
phrasal verb
to be in a particular situation, state, or place after
a series of events, especially when you did not plan it:
He came round for
a coffee and we ended up in bed together.
I wondered where
the pictures would end up after the auction.
squad
/skwɒd/ UK US sustantivo
1
selección, equipo [en deportes]
2 brigada
3 pelotón
adorable /əˈdɔːrəbəl/ UK US adjetivo
adorable,
encantador -a
lie /laɪ/ UK US verbo [intransitivo] (pasado
lay, participio lain, gerundio lying)
1
estar acostado -a/tumbado -a
to
lie still/awake estar quieto -a/despierto -a [en la cama, etc.]
2
acostarse, tumbarse
to
lie on your back/front tumbarse boca arriba/boca abajo
3 estar (situado -a)
The town lies in a valley.
La
ciudad está situada en un valle.
lie about/around phrasal verb
1 to leave sth lying about/around dejar algo tirado
2 estar sin hacer nada
He lies around the house all day.
Se
pasa el día en casa sin hacer nada.
lie
ahead
phrasal verb
(hablando
de lo que nos espera en el futuro)
the problems that lay ahead
los problemas que se avecinaban
Who knows what lies ahead?
¿Quién
sabe lo que nos deparará el futuro?
lie
back
phrasal verb
recostarse
lie
down
phrasal verb
tumbarse,
echarse
lie in
phrasal verb (to have a lie in)
BrE quedarse
en la cama hasta tarde
lay past
tense and past participle laid
1
put somebody/something down
[transitive always + adverb/preposition] to put
someone or something down carefully into a flat position [= place]:
He laid his hand
on my shoulder.
They laid a wreath
at the place where so many people died.
Lay
the material flat on the table.
2
lay bricks/carpet/concrete/cables
etc
to put or fasten bricks, acarpet etc in the correct
place, especially on the ground or floor:
style='orphans: auto;text-align:start;widows: auto;-webkit-text-size-adjust: auto;
-webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px;word-spacing:0px' class=pronsentence
title="Look up a word starting with D or S for samples of headword or sentence pronunciations on the LDOCE CD-ROM"
v:shapes="_x0000_i1030">The carpet was
laid last week.
style='orphans: auto;text-align:start;widows: auto;-webkit-text-size-adjust: auto;
-webkit-text-stroke-width: 0px;word-spacing:0px' class=pronsentence
title="Look up a word starting with D or S for samples of headword or sentence pronunciations on the LDOCE CD-ROM"
v:shapes="_x0000_i1031">The project
involved laying an oil pipeline across the desert.
3
bird/insect etc
[intransitive and transitive] if a bird, insect
etc lays eggs, it produces them from its body:
The flies lay
their eggs on decaying meat.
A cuckoo is able
to lay in a range of different nests.
4
table
[transitive] British English to put the
cloth, plates, knives, forks etc on a table, ready for a meal [= set]:
John was laying
the table.
crow /krəʊ/ UK US sustantivo & verbo
• sustantivo
1
cuervo
2
as the crow flies en línea recta
bush /bʊʆ/ UK US sustantivo (plural bushes)
arbusto,
matorral
squirrel /ˈskwɪrəl/
UK US sustantivo
The participial clause, starting with -ing or -ed, is more characteristic
of written English, as it allows us to say the same thing as a relative
clause, starting with who, which or that, but with
fewer words.
A participial clause, starting with –ed
or past participle, is used instead of a relative pronoun plus passive voice.
Study these further examples:
Food
sold (= which is sold) in this supermarket is
of the highest quality.
Anyone
found touching (= who is found ) these
priceless exhibits will be escorted out of the museum.
The
tailback on the A34 caused ( = which was caused
/ which had been caused) by the head-on collision stretched for over 20 miles
in both directions.
It
took the ambulances called ( = that were called
/ that had been called) to the scene over half an hour to get through.
A participial
clause, starting with -ing is
used instead of a relative pronoun plus active verb, continuous or simple.
The
train now arriving (= which is now arriving) at platform 1 is the 6.36 from
Newcastle.
There
are delays for people travelling to work (= who
are travelling to work) on Southern Region trains this morning.
Anyone
touching (= who touches ) these priceless
exhibits will be escorted out of the museum.
The
police impounded all the vehicles belonging to
(= which belonged to) his brother.
The
boy driving (= who was driving) the BMW was
underage, unlicensed and over the limit.
Note that when we are talking about a
single completed action in a defining relative clause, we cannot use an active
participle:
The
girl who fell down the cliff broke her leg.
(NOT:
The girl falling down cliff…)
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