Today’s agenda
·
Attendance
·
Return Quiz2 – compound sentences
Go over
Optional RW for one point
·
Continue adverb clauses
·
Paragraph writing. Start “The Topic Sentence”
·
HW Read over
“The Topic Sentence”
Thursday
·
Friday
·
“Self-Assessment Reflection” Week 4
·
Vocabulary exercises
·
New kind of paragraph
Distribute “Opinion Paragraphs” HANDOUT
·
Listening fun
·
Prepare for Quiz3 on adverb clauses on Monday
Choose 10 adverb clause words and 10 vocabulary
words to review.
I will choose six of each for the quiz
Week 5
Monday
·
Quiz3
Quiz 2
Phones and notes away.
Write a compound sentence for each.
Pass in by 12:35
1. so question
I had a question,
so I asked the teacher.
2. or money
You can go to school, or you can work at KFC to earn money.
3. however friend
I wanted to see my friend; however, she was working.
I wanted to hang out with my friend last night; however, she
was working
I wanted to hang out with my friend last night. However, she
was working. Two simples
*Punctuation is an area for improvement.
4. also dance
Maris likes to sing; also, she loves to dance.
5. as a result manager
The manager is excellent; as a result, everybody
likes working with her.
6. in addition project
They finished/completed their project on time; in addition,
they came in under budget.
They completed their project three months late; in addition,
they went over budget by $6,000,000.
I overspent on Purdy’s chocolate.
vt
She reviews her math;
she has a test tomorrow.
reviews- simple present- always, usually
She is reviewing her math;
she has a test tomorrow.
vt
My brother buys a car.
XXX every day
FIXES
My brother bought a car
last week.
My brother is buying a
car.
My brother wants to buy
a car.
My brother will buy a
car. (later, next week)
The car was bought by
my brother. passive voice –
passive voice- the subject is passive, does nothing, the
subject doesn’t do the verb
ACTIVE VOICE She
ate an apple. the subject does the verb
PASSIVE VOICE The apple was
eaten by her. the subject does nothing
passive voice verbs- at least two words, use participle
present past participle
eat eat ate eaten
drink drink drank drunk
drunk(v, adj) He was drunk
at the party. adj
All
of the milk was drunk.
MY ADVICE: Passive voice is not very important. We don’t it
very much.
Do you want to make money, or would you rather be broke?
rather V
I would rather stay home.
He would rather go out.
She would rather rent than buy.
prefer to V
I would prefer to stay
home. He would prefer to go out.
She would prefer to rent than buy.
I would rather not say anything.
I would prefer not to not say anything. I
would prefer to say nothing.
She would prefer not to see her ex-husband.
She would rather not.
The plane was late. That meant that we needed to wait for
two hours.
noun clause- next week
The plane is late. That means that we need to wait for two hours.
I need to go. You need to eat. The baby needs to sleep.
I want to go. You want to eat. The baby wants to sleep.
She plans to see a movie.
We plan to eat at 7. You plan to get a
good job.
ALTERNATIVE VERB TENSE
She is planning to see a
movie. We are planning to eat at 7. You are
planning to get a good job.
I plan to cook tonight. I am planning to cook tonight.
He plans to go to work later. He is planning to go to work.
I plan to pick my friend from the airport.
VOCAB reward / bonus
bonus- extra money you earn from your work
She got a nice Xmas bonus.
reward- a prize for doing something nice for another person
I gave the man a reward for returning my phone.
**
“The Topic Sentence” HANDOUTS 3 sheets
We will start on this tomorrow. You can read it over.
**
Adverb clauses
You should
know of these by the end of the course:
time- after, before, since, ever
since, until, when, while, whenever
place- wherever
condition - if,
even if, provided that, unless
manner- as,
as if, though, although, even though, so ... that
cause- because,
since
purpose- in
order that, in order to, so that
*after/before
The kids do
their homework after dinner. SIMPLE SV
After dinner, the kids do their homework. SIMPLE
The kids do
their homework after SV dinner. COMPLEX SENT-ADV CL
The kids do
their homework after they finish/have/eat
dinner. COMPLEX SENT-ADV CL
Before school, she does her homework. SIMPLE
Before she goes to school, she does her homework. COMPLEX
She does her homework before she goes to school. COMPLEX
*since- time
Mei has lived in BC since 2019. SIMPLE
Mei has lived in BC since she moved here in 2019. COMPLEX
since- reason, because
Mei has her umbrella since/because it is raining.
*ever since- seems like a long time
We have been waiting for the bus ever since we got here at
1:10.
Sarah and Michelle have been friends ever since they were
little.
*until-waiting
The mother waited patiently until her son tied his own
shoes.
til- casual talking, not for writing
I will wait until you call me.
because- cuz, cause
casual talking or texting, not for school writing
She waited at home until her daughter got back.
I will not leave until I get my money back.
*while- two things happening at the same time
Mei was cooking dinner while her husband was doing
nothing.
Sarah was texting while she was driving.
Mei was cooking dinner; meanwhile, her husband was doing
nothing.
While you sweep, I’ll mop.
I’ll mop while you sweep.
Can you pick up the kids while I make supper?
Can you shut up while I am talking?
Can you let me finish while I am talking?
Call me when you get home.
We talked while she was cleaning up.
I’ll mop when/after you sweep. argument
*whenever- every time
Whenever she feels homesick, she looks at old pictures.
Come over whenever you have time.
In self-paced, you can do the tests whenever you are
available/ whenever you want.
CASUAL What time do
you want to go?
Whenever you
want.
TEENAGER SLANG Whenevs.
Whatevs.
*even if- doesn’t matter, conditional
I will buy a new iphone if I have the money.
I will not buy a new iphone even if I have the money.
We will go to the park if it is sunny.
We will go to the park even if it is raining.
I will go on a trip even if I don’t have enough money.
She will perform a song even if she feels nervous.
*even though-
I will not buy a new iphone even if I have the money. Do I
have enough money? not determined
I will not buy a new iphone even though I have the money. I have enough money.
We will go to the park even if it is raining. Will it be raining?
not sure
We will go to the park even if it is raining. Is it raining?
Yes.
ALTERATIVE- harder
I will not buy a new iphone no matter if I have the money
or not.
We will go to the park no matter if it is raining or not.
I am going to go to the party no matter if you like it or
not.
*provided that – if – important things
You can go to the park if you finish your homework.
You can marry that boy provided that he is a good guy.
She can become a citizen provided that she meets the
criteria/conditions.
Mei can get a mortgage provided that you qualify.
She will go to UBC provided that she gets accepted.
I got accepted to Langara. Langara offers me a spot.
*unless – opposite of ‘if’
We will go to the beach if it is nice Saturday.
We will go to the beach unless it is miserable Saturday.
We will not go to the beach unless it is nice Saturday.
You will get a fine unless
you put your dog on a leash.
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