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Communication activities

 

Unit 1, Grammar Ex. 3 (p.12)

 

Student A: Annette’s story

 

My husband and I were working as cook and waiter at a hotel in the south of England, and living with our six-month-old baby in a cottage nearby. For once we (1) …………… (manage) to get an evening off together, and one of the hotel staff had volunteered to babysit for us so that we could go out to the cinema together.

We caught the bus to the nearest town, about ten kilometres away, but we (2) …………… (not watch) the film for more than a few minutes before I (3) …………… (start) to feel terribly uneasy. I could distinctly smell burning. I told my husband, but he couldn’t smell anything and told me I (4) …………… (imagine) things. But the smell persisted, and eventually I told him I was leaving. He (5) …………… (follow) me reluctantly, muttering something under his breath.

As we made the journey home on the bus I prayed for it to go faster. At each stop I almost died. At last we (6) …………… (rush) down the lane leading to the cottage. The smell of burning was now very definite to me, though my husband still couldn’t smell anything. We reached the door and burst in. As we did, dense smoke (7) …………… (pour) out and a chair by the fire burst into flames. I rushed through to the bedroom and got the baby, while my husband dragged out the unconscious babysitter. She (8) …………… (smoke) and had fallen asleep and (9) …………… (drop) her lighted cigarette onto the chair. We later worked out that it must have happened just as I first (10)…………… (smell) smoke in the cinema.

 

Unit 6, Exam Focus Ex. 2 (p. 83)

 

Extract 1

In the following extract from the tapescript, single underlining relates to the wrong answers (distractors) and double underlining indicates the section which gives the correct answer. Read Question 1 below and circle the words which have been changed.

 

Woman: Yeah … there were big changes going on, it was all developing very fast and … well, when I first went, I lived quite near to the city centre, and in the centre there, in the old town, it was all … mostly old, narrow streets, at all really, but they managed to edge their way through anyway (B) and there were these high old buildings on either side (D) – with windows with lovely carved wooden shutters, all rather falling to bits, and children playing and things like cats and goats along the streets as well, even whole herds of cattle occasionally.

Interviewer: Was it like that where you lived?

Woman: More or less … though I lived in a new block of flats, (C) but there weren’t any big office blocks around (A) then, or things like international hotels. And another thing … although it was a port and it was built by the sea, you weren’t actually all that conscious of it, of the sea.

 

1 When the speaker first went to Jeddah, there were no

A large commercial buildings.

B cars in the city centre.

C modern buildings.

D tall buildings.

 

Extract 2



Use underlining in the same way to highlight the distractors and the correct answer in the following extract from the tapescript. Match the options A-D to each section you have underlined and decide exactly why each of the distractors is wrong.

 

Interviewer: So when did it start to change?

Woman: Oh it was already changing fast, before long there were office blocks and multi-storey hotels shooting up all over the place … a lot of the old town was pulled down, and for a time it seemed as if all the history was going to be lost, but then just at the last moment they started doing up some of the old houses and some of the streets were pedestrianised so you could walk around there without being mown down by traffic. But they kept the old souq, the big covered market, where you could buy things like spices and gold … and cassettes and electrical equipment too, of course.

Interviewer: So it became more of a tourist centre then?

Woman: No, tourism doesn’t exist at all – it was done for the people who lived there.

 

2 The speaker was relieved that

A more goods were available in the market.

B unsafe buildings were pulled down.

C some buildings were restored.

D there were no tourists.

 

Woman: But it wasn’t just a matter of preservation – I mean the whole infrastructure was developed: roads, services like telephones and public transport, shopping malls, a huge new airport … and the whole city just expanded outwards at an amazing rate. You’d go out one morning and there’d be a whole new road where there hadn’t been one before … at least that’s what it felt like … and a lot of the roads didn’t have names yet … so if you were looking for a friend’s apartment or something , out in the new suburbs, tempers could get quite frayed.

Interviewer: What about social life – did you go out much?

Woman: Yes … although it is a very family – orientated society … life is quite private. And then it’s so hot for a lot of the year that people tend to stay inside where it’s air-conditioned.

 

3 One problem she had was that

A her friends lived far out of town.

B most social life was family-based.

C it was difficult to find her way around.

D there was no telephone or public transport service.

 

Unit 5, Language Focus: Grammar ex. 3.3 (p. 74)

 

Agatha Christie was found nine days after her disappearance. She had been staying in a hotel in the town of Harrogate, in the North England. She claimed to have lost her memory: ‘For 24 hours I wandered in a dream and then found myself in Harrogate as a well-contented and perfectly happy woman who believed she had just come from South Africa.’ The truth was only discovered half a century later, when secret documents were at last made available. Agatha Christie in fact staged her own disappearance, not as a publicity stunt, as many believed, but because she wanted to ruin a weekend that her husband was planning to spend with his mistress. To avoid public disgrace, she and her husband stuck to the story that a blow to her head had resulted in amnesia. But it was the end of their marriage. However, the affair did make Christie the most famous crime writer in Britain.

 

Unit 8, Exam Focus Ex. 1 (p. 114)

 

wear2 n 1 [U] damage caused by continuous use over a long period: The carpet is showing signs of wear. 2 [U] the amount of use an object, piece of clothing etc has had, or the use you can expect to get from it: Considering the wear it’s had, your coat’s in good condition. | have/get a lot of wear out of sth You’ll get a lot of wear out of a canvas tent. | a lot of wear is left in sth (= it is still useful or can still be worn) 3 sportswear/evening wear/children’s wear etc the clothes worn for a particular occasion or activity, or by a particular group of people: a new range of casual wear | the menswear department | footwear (= shoes) 4 wear and tear the amount of damage you expect to be caused to furniture, cars, equipment etc when they are used for a long period of time: normal/everyday wear and tear The washer should last for ten years allowing for normal wear and tear. –see also the worse for wear (WORSE1 (8))

 

Unit 8, Exam Focus Ex. 4 (p. 114)

 

Student A

 

You are going to make up three gapped sentences for your partner. The word gapped in each case is the adjective heavy. Look at the dictionary extract below and choose three different uses of the word. Remember that the word should be in exactly the same form each time but should have a different meaning. Then make up three sentences but leave a gap for the word heavy each time. You can use or adapt the examples given or make up ones of your own, but remember that you need to write complete sentences. (Note: The uses listed are in order of frequency – so you may find that the first ones are too easy and the last ones may be too difficult.) The dictionary extract gives you information about collocations and idioms – try to include some of these.

 

heav-y1 /’hevi/ adj heavier, heaviest 1 WEIGHT weighing a lot: I can’t lift this case – it’s too heavy. |The baby seemed to be getting heavier and heavier in her arms. | how heavy? (= how much does it weigh) How heavy is the parcel? – opposite LIGHT3 (4) 2 A LOT a) a lot or in very large amounts: The traffic was heavier than normal, and I was late for work. | heavy rain/snow flooding caused by heavy rain over the weekend | heavy use/consumption the film’s heavy use of special effects 3 heavy smoker/drinker someone who smokes a lot or drinks a lot of alcohol 4 SERIOUS/SEVERE serious or severe: heavy winter storms | a heavy burden of responsibility |heavy fine/penalty heavy fines for possession of hard drugs| a heavy cold (= a very bad cold) She’s in bed with a heavy cold. | heavy losses Most insurance companies suffered heavy losses last year. 5 NEEDING PHYSICAL EFFORT needing a lot of physical strength and effort: heavy manual work 6 NEEDING MENTAL EFFORT not easy or entertaining and needing a lot of mental effort: I want something to read on holiday – nothing too heavy. 7 heavy going difficult to understand or deal with: find sth heavy going I found Balzac’s books pretty heavy going. 8 be heavy on informal to use a lot or too much of something: The car’s rather heavy on oil. 9 heavy schedule/timetable/day etc one in which you have a lot to do in a short time: I’d had a heavy day at the office. 10 heavy sleeper someone who does not wake easily

 

Unit 9, Exam Focus Ex. 3 (p. 128)

 

Look at the extracts from the tapescript and at questions 1-5 on page 128. For which question do you have to:

 

a) choose the correct adjective from two with similar meanings?

b) understand who is referred to by a pronoun in the tapescript?

c) match a general verb in the tapescript to an earlier more specific verb?

d) match a noun in the tapescript to an earlier more specific noun?

e) give someone’s opinion?

 

A few months after my accident I had an idea for a short film about a quadriplegic. During the day, lying in his hospital bed, he can’t move. But at night he dreams that he’s whole again. This is someone who had been a lifelong sailor, and he had a beautiful sailing yacht. In his dream he sails down the path of a full moon – the kind of romantic night-sailing anyone can imagine. But in the morning, he’s back in his bed and everything is frozen again. The dream is very vivid. At first it’s just a dream, and he recognizes it as such. But one night he finds himself getting out of bed and walking down the corridor and out the door and then into the boat, which, magically, is anchored not far away. Soon these voyages become so real to him that when he wakes up in his bed, his hair is wet. And the nurse comes in and says, ‘Oh, I’m sorry. I didn’t dry your hair enough last night when I gave you a shampoo. You slept with wet hair.’ He says nothing but he’s thinking that his hair is wet from the spray when he was out on the water. …

 

Up to this time his wife and children have been very distressed because, since he became paralysed, he has not been able to pull out of a very serious depression. His children are afraid of him because he is not himself and they don’t know how to be with him. But as he continues to go sailing in his dreams, this begins to improve. His wife notices the change…

Well, There comes a time when our protagonist realizes that these voyages offer a way of escaping from his paralysed condition, that he could just sail on happily – it’s what he loves most in the world – until one night he would go out into the middle of the ocean and he wouldn’t take supplies. He would just sail. And he would die happy that way, just sailing down the path of the moon. And one night he starts to do that …

 

Unit 1, Grammar Ex. 3 (p. 12)

 

Student B: Judi’s story

 

It was in May 1989, about two weeks before the end of the school year. My son Corey, along with many of his classmates, had decided to skip school that day to have a party at the country home of a friend who (1) …………… (graduate) the previous year. Corey had borrowed a motorbike from his older brother for the day. I (2) …………… (know) nothing about any of this and just assumed that he was at school as usual.

Around noon as I (3) …………… (stand) in my kitchen looking out of the window, I (4) …………… (was) suddenly (5) …………… (fill) with intense fear and immediately thought of Corey. I (6) …………… (tell) myself that this was ridiculous because I knew Corey was in school and was just fine. But the feeling grew stronger and I (7) …………… (start) shaking and crying uncontrollably – all I could do was to think of Corey and to pray that he was alright. When I was able to calm myself I went and sat on the sofa, trying to understand what (8) …………… (happen) to me.

Ten minutes later the telephone rang. It was Corey’s best friend.

‘Mrs Gradey, it’s about Corey. He’s been involved in an accident. You mustn’t worry, he’s OK. But he’s been taken to hospital.’

I rushed to the hospital and found Corey had miraculously escaped with only a few scratches. Later I found that as he (9) …………… (go) round a curve in the highway, he (10) …………… (lose) control of the motorbike and been thrown off into a small ditch at the side of the road. He had skidded along the ditch on his stomach, passing directly between a cement post and a pile of rocks. If he had gone a couple of inches in either direction, he would have been killed.

As far as I can work out, I (11) …………… (have) my experience just as Corey was involved in the accident.

 

Unit 4, Writing Ex. 2 (p. 63)

 

British Nuclear Fuels plc

Adjudication:

 

1. Complaint not upheld.

The advertisers said they had decommissioned the sites of old nuclear reactors and made this land available for general commercial use. […] The Nuclear Installations Inspectorate had declared there was no longer any danger from ionizing radiation on a site they had decommissioned. They also said they had the expertise to transform former commercial sites into reusable land, and cited an example of an old nuclear site that would be re-used in Colorado, USA. The ASA considered that, because of the context of the advertisement – it was addressed to the nuclear industry in the trade press - it was unlikely to mislead.

2. Complaint upheld.

The advertisers believed the claim was justified because they were the most experienced company in the industry. They said they had perfected their knowledge and expertise to solve customers’ waste problems in ways that complied with international regulations and were unsurpassed in the industry. They believed that in the context of a trade magazine most readers would understand what they meant by the claim. The ASA was satisfied that the advertisers dealt with waste to within UK standards but was concerned that the readers would interpret the claim to mean the advertisers had advanced their methods significantly beyond those standards. The Authority asked the advertisers not to repeat the claim.

 

Unit 13, Improving your writing Ex. 4 (p. 186)

 

Look at the two rewritten versions of the extract. Which version do you think is better? Why?

 

A

Happiness is related to many things which we consider to be the ones that give us happiness. Therefore, if money could help us to improve health, family and career and if we had the money to do so, this would mean that money could help us attain happiness. However, how far is this actually true?

 

B

Happiness is related to many such as health, family and career. If money could help us in any of these areas, then this would mean that money too could bring us happiness. However, how far is this actually true?

 

Unit 14, Exam Focus Ex. 2 (p. 199)

 

1 Look at the tapescript extract below and discuss the meaning of the underlined words and phrases.

 

Philip: But by temperament I’m usually in for the long haul, even though it’s a considerable investment in all sorts of ways …

Interviewer: Angela?

Angela: Well, in this context people often talk about sprinters and marathoners, and I think by nature and metabolism I’m a marathoner. We mostly – those of us who end up being professional writers – cut our teeth on the short form. They’re a good teaching tool, whether or not people do their apprenticeship in an actual writing programme …

Philip: … and then they get the hang of it and begin to write novels and I suppose the typical pattern is that they never go back to the short story …

Angela: That’s been true for me, certainly … but I suppose sometimes the form chooses the writer, rather than the other way round.

Philip: Absolutely … it’s happened to me twice, twice in my four decades or so of writing fiction I’ve been seized, possessed by the muse of short-windedness …

 

2 Now look back at Exercise 1 questions 1-3 on page 199. For which question do you have to understand that:

 

a) one speaker implies agreement with the other speaker by continuing that speaker’s sentence?

b) both speakers agree about one point, but this is not the subject of the statement?

c) both speakers make the same point by using different metaphors?

 

Unit 8 Exam Focus Ex. 4 (p. 114)

 

Student B

 

You are going to make up three gapped sentences for your partner. The word gapped in each case is the adjective patch. Look at the dictionary extract below and choose three different uses of the word. Remember that the word should be in exactly the same form each time but should have a different meaning. Then make up three sentences but leave a gap for the word patch each time. You can use or adapt the examples given or make up ones of your own, but remember that you need to write complete sentences. (Note: The uses listed are in order of frequency – so you may find that the first ones are too easy and the last ones may be too difficult.) The dictionary extract gives you information about collocations and idioms – try to include some of these.

 

patch1 /’pæt∫/ n [C] 1 PART OF AN AREA a part of an area that is different or looks different from the parts that surround it: Lost: a small dog, while with brown patches. | patch of dirt/grease/damp etc Watch out for icy patches on the roads. | patch of light/sky etc Patches of blue sky peeked through the clouds. 2 OVER A HOLE a small piece of material used to cover a hole in something: a jacket with leather patches at the elbows. 3 FOR GROWING STH a small area of ground for growing fruit or vegetables: a strawberry patch 4 ON YOUR EYE a piece of material that you wear over your eye to protect it when it has been hurt 5 DECORATION a small piece of cloth with words or pictures on it that you can stitch onto clothes 6 a bad/difficult/sticky patch informal especially BrE a period of time when you are having a lot of difficulty: Gemma’s going through a bad patch right now. 7 sb’s patch BrE informal an area that someone knows very well because they work or live there; TURF1 (4) AmE: The boss knows everything that’s going on in our patch. 8 not be a patch on BrE informal to be much less attractive, good etc than something or someone else: She’s on great beauty – not a patch on Maria. 9 good/interesting/boring etc in patches especially BrE good etc in some parts, but not all he time.

 


Date: 2015-01-12; view: 1247


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