domingo, 6 de julio de 2014

The Last Blog of the Course 2013-2014

End of course blog!

Hi! This is my last blog for this course.

I am on holiday at last! But I haven’t been away yet. I’m just enjoying getting up late, meeting friends, not going to work and socializing!
Some of you will be back from your school trips now but you still have the whole summer in front of you. You may go to the beach, to your villages or your friends’ villages, to a summer camp … wherever you go, have fun, relax, enjoy and make lots of new friends. Study a little, if you have to, and write something in English so as to let me know how your summer is going.

I am sure Óscar and Pilar will have had lots of fun at Port Aventura. I also think that Alejandro will have enjoyed his tour of Italy. I’m sorry I couldn’t say ‘good-bye’ to Óscar because he didn’t come to class before the school trip.
I want to thank Andrea for coming to class on the last day; otherwise I would have been alone! Although David and Jorge told me they were coming! I saw Jorge in the morning, he did come to see our plays but I guess he got bored and decided he needed a holiday! As for David, congratulations – again- in passing your Trinity exam and the rest of your exams, which I’m sure you did.
 To all of you, it was a pleasure teaching you this course. I hope to have a group as nice as you next year!

Enjoy your summer!

On Thursday 26th, we saw a film called ‘O Brother’

 It’s a comedy based on the Odyssey by Homer, the Greek author. It stars George Clooney, John Turturro and Tim Blake Nelson. The story is about three prisoners who run away from prison. They escape persuaded by Everett Ulysses (Clooney), who tells them about a treasure. They run towards freedom and in search of the buried treasure, living the adventure of their lives!


Finally, here you have a summary of what we did in the last term of our course.This is what you learnt in 3rd term: 

VOCABULARY
Numbers
Dates, years, centuries, fractions, currency, money, decimals, percentages.
Sports

Names
Places
Equipment
Verb
Sport
People
Badminton

Ice- hockey,
Figure skating

Golf

Boxing

Fencing

Football

Court

Ice rink

Golf course

Boxing ring

Gymnasium

Pitch / field
Rackets, shuttle

Sticks, puck

Clubs, ball

Gloves, helmet

Mask, sword

Ball, sheen pads

go
Swimming
climbing
Swimmer
climber
do
Boxing
Athletics
Fencing
karate
boxer
athlete
fencer
play
Tennis

Football



Golf
Tennis player umpire
Football player referee footballer

Golfer, caddy
Other sport verbs
Kick, throw, hit, dive, shoot, dribble
Food
people
weather
Towns / cities
Delicious, spicy, bland, healthy, delicious.
Welcoming, helpful, relaxed, reserved, healthy, dangerous
Wet, freezing, changeable, windy
Polluted, crowded, touristy, welcoming cosmopolitan, industrial, dangerous
Adverbs (frequency)
Adverbs (manner)
Never, occasionally, sometimes, often, usually, always
Badly, fast, hard, regularly
Clothes (nouns)
Clothes (adjectives)
Combats, hoodie, sweatshirt, cardigan, flat shoes, wellies, apron, waistcoat, robe.
Long, short, baggy, loose, tight, flowery, spotty, plain, striped, checked.
The Mousetrap
Scotland
Guest house, snowbound, stranded, killed, foster, abuse, stash, settle
Scotch, kilt, tartan, bagpipes, Scot, Scottish, Gaelic, tartan, Edinburg festival


GRAMMAR
ZERO CONDITIONAL
If + present simple                  Present simple (for facts –Real conditional)

If you press the white button, the light goes on.
If it rains, her mother gives them a lift to school. If it doesn’t rain, they walk.
FIRST CONDITIONAL
If + present simple                  Future ( possible conditional)
                             Will /won’t + infinitive
If you wait until the sales, you won’t find your size.
If you buy your team’s shirt, you’ll get a cap for free.
SECOND CONDITIONAL
If + past simple                        would /wouldn’t + infinitive

Would you go on a spending spree if you won a lot of money? Or would you save it?
If a stranger offered buying me a drink, I’d refuse.
MODAL VERBS
Obligation / Must / have to/
In tennis you must hit the ball over the net.
You have to kick the ball with your feet, in football.
The referee has to show a card if there’s a foul.
Necessity / don’t have to / don’t need to / needn’t
You don’t have to buy the tickets on the net.
He doesn’t have to wear a mask to do boxing.
Children under four don’t need to pay to see the match.
Children under four needn’t pay to see the match.
PASSIVE VOICE
New York was called New Amsterdam until 1800.
The first Levi jeans were worn by miners
The rooms are cleaned daily.
DIRECT SPEECH
REPORTED SPEECH
“Your nose is cold” he said to her.
He said that her nose was cold.
Have you been out?” he asked her.
He asked if she had been out.
“What did you buy?” he asked her.
He asked her what she had bought.

SPEAKING
Expressing preferences
Expressing necessity and obligation
Expressing purpose
Expressing frequency
Describing what people wear

YOU CAN TALK ABOUT
SPORT: ‘A sport I enjoy’
FASHION: ‘What is fashion?’
·         What it is and reasons why I enjoy it.
·         How I started to play this sport.
·         Differences between playing and watching.
·         The equipment I need and its purpose.
·         How good I am at this sport.
·         What I hope to do in the future.

·         Who influences what we buy?
·         How fashion changes.
·         What the best / worst fashions have been.
·         A description of the latest fashions.
·         Which fashion designers are best, and why?
·         Why designer clothes are so expensive (and, are they worth the money?)



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