Monday, 6 July 2026

Summer EF710 Class 1

 

Summer English Foundations 7/ Composition and Literary Studies 10 Period 1, Class 1

  

Good morning.

 

This is the Summer Period 1 (P1) (8:30-12) class for these courses:

English Foundations 7

Literary Studies and Composition 10

 

Are you in the right class?

We will get started at 8:30

 

 

Today’s Agenda

·               Attendance

·               Welcome

·               Parking

·               Wi-fi for students

·               Class blog

·               Communication via email

·               Covid protocols

·               Dates, times for our class

·               Course overview- handouts

·               Small group chatting- icebreaker

·               Sentence writing work

·               IF TIME Student Questionnaire

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

My name is Allan Haley.

You can call me Allan.

 

**

Attendance

 

 

**Parking**

Scan the QR code on the white piece of paper. You will need a cell phone.

Put it your licence plate of your car.

Put in your full name.

You will be able to park in the SHEC parking lot until August 31st, 2026.

If you did last term, you are ok.

 

Enter your licence plate on your car.

Not your DL- Drivers Licence

 

Names- confusing

First name- given name

Last name – family name, surname

 

Allan Haley

Allan – given name

Haley – family name, surname

sir

surname

 

legal name – name on your passport

 

 

 

 

Cultural- Chinese, Korean, Vietnamese- reverse of English

 

Mary Wong- English

Wong, Mei- Chinese

 

People make this mistake all the time.

quite confusing

filling out forms, applications- be cautious

 

 

The website will send you an email receipt if you tell it to. Keep that email as a record, as proof that you signed up for parking.

You may want to sign up again if you don’t a receipt.

The email receipt will act as proof if there is a problem.

 

 

**Wifi*

SHEC students can use SHEC wifi.

Wifi: VSB-Commons

Wifi password: It’s on the white piece of paper on the wall. Check it.

 

 

*** Class Blog ***

Everything that you see on this screen, I will put on our class blog.

Blog- website

 

CLASS BLOG: haleyshec.blogspot.com

 

It’s on the course handout which you get in a few minutes.

 

I publish these notes on our blog every day at the end of each class.

 

You do not have to write every off the screen as we go.

 

Nevertheless, making notes during class is an excellent way to improve retention.

 

VOCAB retention(noun) – retain(verb), remember(verb)

Making notes helps you to retain information.

It’s hard to retain new vocabulary.

 

NEW VOCAB? blog – weblog- keep a written record on the internet, online diary, publish your thoughts

older version of Substack -paid

 

Some people are bloggers. They write about their interests.

for examples: movies, travel, family, food, sports, politics, music, etc

 

blog = web+log

portmanteau- two words put together

smog = smoke + fog – dirty air hanging over a city, pollution

Mexico City has a lot of smog.

 

brunch= breakfast + lunch, 11am

 

web- the web, World Wide Web (www), internet

log- written record

 

log- piece of a cut down tree

log- written record

keep a log-  nurse in a hospital, truck driver, Uber/Lyft driver- record events as they occur

important notes, written record

 

Some people keep a workout log.

Your smartwatch keeps a log of your steps, heartrate, BP, amount of oxygen in your blood?, etc.

The pilot kept a flight log.

The daycare attendants keep a log of the kids’ activities.

People who want to lose weight keep a food log.

 

We have a blog for the class.

 

I will update my blog every day after class. You can check it and review what we did in class.

 

You can check the blog as much as you like. There is no sign-in or no password. There’s no credit card. It’s all free. It’s all public and accessible.

 

Our blog is a tremendous resource that you can use forever.

You can use it this quarter. You can keep using it after you finish this course. You can use it forever, until the end of time. I will keep it up forever.

 

My blog is searchable. You can search for something specific that you are looking for.

The search bar is in the upper lefthand corner of the main blog screen. Search for whatever you want to learn more about.

The search bar may not appear on your phone. I will appear on a laptop, ipad, or PC.

On a phone, click on “View web version” on the bottom of the page. It should refresh with a search bar. The search bar will be very small.

 

 

 

 

 

**

ACTION

I will post our notes so far.

Go to the blog now. Make sure you can open it.

 

haleyshec.blogspot.com

 

Let me know if you are having trouble opening my blog.

Did it load?

If yes? Good!

If no? Let me know or ask a classmate.

 

Good job! Excellent job!

 

 

**Daily Agenda***

 

Every day I will post an ‘agenda’.

 

VOCAB agenda- used for meetings, business or professional meeting,

list of items to talk about, schedule, plan for the meeting or class

 

committee meeting- business, official

You can tell the Chair, “I want to put an item on the agenda.”

MEANING There is something that I want to talk about with the group.

 

VOCAB chair- leader of a meeting, keeps the meeting on-track and moving along

 

 

 

 

 

-chairman, chairperson

non-gendered language- chair, not male or female

He is the chair. She is the chair of the committee. 

 

Western approach to naming jobs- non-gendered, not male or female

e.g. councilman - councillor

 

Examples of non-gendered job titles:

policeman – police officer

fireman – firefighter

stewardess/steward- flight attendant

flight crew- the whole group of attendants and pilots

 

waitress/waiter- server

I will be your server tonight.

postman- letter carrier

Junko is a letter carrier with Canada Post.

 

handyman?

VOCAB handy(ADJ)- good at fixing things around the house

She is very handy.

I am not very handy.

 

Mei is the chair of the meeting. noun, person

Mei will chair the meeting today. verb- run, organize, lead, manage the conversation between the people

helps to keep the meeting on track, organized

lets everyone know what to expect, what is coming

 

He hosted a retirement party.

She hosted a Zoom meeting.

She is the hostess at the restaurant. gendered language

 

He is a maitre d’.  fancy host, French restaurant

 

IDIOM on track- organized, no digression, keep on the path

 

Sue is on track to finish high school next year.

Sue is in the process of finishing high school next year. in the middle

 

The little boy gets off track with his homework. He is distracted by his phone.

She tries hard to stay on track with going to the gym three times a week.

 

We have limited self-control.

IDIOM His plan went out the window.

 

Everyday, we will have an agenda.

 

 

 

**Emails***

 

I sent you an email a few days ago.

Did you get it?

 

If you received that email from me, that means we can communicate via email.

If you did not receive an email from me, that means I do not have your correct email in the computer system. We will have to fix that.

Check your JUNK folder.

If you did not get the email, the office may have your incorrect email address. You can change it with the office in the next few days. I can’t change your email through my computer. The office has to do it.

 

I asked you to respond to ahaley@vsb.bc.ca with your full name and class in the subject line of your email. Many of you responded to the email as I requested.

 

I responded “Thanks, Allan”

 

Thank you for that. I want email communication to be seamless between us.

 

VOCAB seamless(adj)- smooth, no problems, no confusion

 

seam – where two pieces of cloth are sewed, joined, rough area, bumpy

seamless- not rough, smooth

 

Registering for this class was seamless. adjective

Taking the Skytrain using a credit card is seamless.

Raising teenagers is rarely seamless.

Immigrating to Canada was not seamless. It can be a rocky road.

 

Is learning English seamless? It is very challenging. It is also rewarding.

 

IMPORTANT REMINDER

When you send an email to me or any teacher, please put your full name and class in the subject line of the email.

Then I will know who you are and what class you are in.

e.g. Joe Ahmed, EF7, P2

Sarah Wong, Comp10, P2

 

 

 

 

 

 

***Covid Protocols***

VOCAB protocol- accepted ways to act or talk

1.    Use sanitizer.

Two bottles of sanitizer at the front

2. Wash your hands many times a day.

Use moisturizer/hand lotion.

You can get eczema.

3. Feel free to wear a mask if you want.

I will not wear a mask while I am teaching.

We lose the facial expressions. We lose the lip reading.

4. In general, if you’re sick, stay home.

 

 

Talking on the phone is challenging.

EUPHEMISM – a word that we use instead of the less polite word

challenging- difficult, hard

BUSINESS TALK  The business has experienced some challenges this quarter.

 

She is a very challenging person. She is a challenging person to work with. 

 

euphemisms- bathroom, restroom, washroom

UK toilet, lav, lavatory

French – salle de ban

 

EUPHEMISM teacher- Interesting.

 

 

**

Breaks – two ten-minute breaks

9:30 and 10:50

 

 

 

** Course Outlines**

 

English Foundations 7

Composition 10/Literary Studies 10

 

We will go over these today. 

 

 

*** Course dates and times***

M-F 8:30-12:00

Monday, July 6th- Friday, August 7th, 2026

 

Holidays- no school

Monday, August 3rd- BC Day

 

**

Absences-

If you miss more a couple classes, it will be a challenge.

The school is flexible to a point.

 

**

Ice-Breaker Exercise

 

IDIOM ice-breaker – warm up technique, social game

e.g. party, don’t know anybody- basic icebreaker nametag, invite to talk

*shy(adj)- afraid of being judged by others

*introverted- don’t like social contact, tires them out, drains their battery

*extraverted- love to be social, love being around people, social interaction charges their battery

 

 

 

 

Small groups (5-6 people, lots of energy in the group)

Choose people who do not speak your language.

Reason #1- easy to fall into mother language, forced to stick to English

Reason #2- getting used to different accents among English users

 

chat- casual talking, relaxed, pleasant

 

A.      Topics for chatting with your partner(s)

1.    Name

2.    Home

3.    Family

4.    Job

5.    Hobbies- things you do for fun, like to do, free time habits

6.    Special skills

7.    Travel

8.    Future plans What’s the dream?

 

Let’s do some introductions. Choose one of your partners to introduce to the class.

 

unemployed(adj)- between jobs, job hunting

I am job hunting.

 

soccer- football

Canada and US – football-

Football is related to rugby.

The big sports in Canada are hockey and soccer.

 

 

corrupt(adj)- dishonest, stealing money, taking bribes

corruption(n)

getting money under the table – secret money

 

engineer- computer engineer, electrical engineer, structural engineer, civil engineer, etc

FUNNY domestic engineer-

domestic- house, home

 

journalist-writing for newspaper, magazine, radio

“writing copy”

broadcaster- on screen on TV, on radio

 

entrepreneur(n)(French)- business person, business owner

She is an entrepreneur.

He has an entrepreneurial / business spirit.

She likes to be her own boss.

 

tattoo artist

She has a full sleeve of tattoos.

 

nurse- LPN- licenced practical nurse

          -RN- registered nurse

 

Canadian Armed Forces

She will enlist in the Canadian Armed Forces.

VOCAB enlist- join the army, navy, etc.

 

draft(v,n)- your country forces you to join the army, navy, air force

He was drafted into the army.

Korea has mandatory service.

I came to Canada because I didn’t want to get drafted.

 

Canada is well-known for Peacekeeping missions.

 

rowing-

drawing with a pencil

Artists have different mediums.

VOCAB medium- the way an artist expresses themselves

 

mediums- painting, drawing. sculpture, pottery, dance, music, writing, singing, calligraphy, etc.

 

font- style of letters

 

health care- e.g. phlebotomist- taking blood, medical lab assistant

 

skilled trades- electrician, plumber, carpenter, hairdresser, makeup artist, tailor, seamstress,

Trades in Canada are in high demand.

 

dentist- profession, doctors

 

doctor- MD, medical doctor

 

BCIT- British Columbia Institute of Technology

 

**

Questionaire- pass in by the end of the class today

 

**

HW Sentence writing exercise. We will go over this tomorrow.

Please don’t use Chat GPT to do these.

 

 

Thursday, 25 June 2026

P1 EF6 Adjective class stuff from Tuesday

 

Adjective Clauses

 

Sentence types:

*simple sentences       SV   SSV   SVV   SSVV   Imperative    Interrogative

*compound sentence SV, SOBA SV.    SV; TRANS, SV.

*complex sentence     -adverb clauses            because if when since as

                                         -noun clauses               

                                         -adjective clauses

*Adverb clauses, noun clauses, and adjective clause are the three types of subordinate clauses/dependent clauses.

 

Adjective clauses describe nouns. Adjective clauses have subjects and verbs like all clauses.

Adjective clauses usually use these three words: who, that, which.  90% of the time you will be using who, that, which.

There are other words such as whom, whose, where which are not used as often. In fact, whom is very rarely used except in the most formal English.

 

* ‘who’ is used for people

Examples of adjective clauses with ‘who’

Mei’s sister who is a nurse lives in Burnaby. COMPLEX adjective clause

 

Two pieces of information, two clauses in the sentence

1 Mei’s sister 2 who is a nurse lives in Burnaby.

1 Mei’s sister lives in Burnaby.

2 who is a nurse

 

OPTIONS

Mei’s sister who is a nurse lives in Burnaby.

Mei’s sister who lives in Burnaby is a nurse.

 

What is a doctor? question- simple sentence

A doctor is a person who helps patients.

 

Sarah quit her job. SIMPLE SENT

Sarah who was working as a cashier quit her job. COMPLEX SENT

who was working as a cashier   adjective clause

 

Michelle is my friend. SIMPLE SENT

Michelle who has a red car is my friend. COMPLEX SENT

who has a red car   adjective clause

Michelle who is my best friend has a red car.

*’that’ for a person, sounds not as nice, not as respectful

 

*’that’ is used for things and animals.

Examples of adjective clauses with ‘that’

Jun’s new phone that he got for his birthday has a great camera.

Jun’s new phone has a great camera that can shoot 4K video.

Mary has a dog that is very obedient.

The cat that has white paws and brown ears is very cute.

*An adjective clause comes after a noun.

The water bottle that** is on the table was a gift from my son.

**’that’ is used a lot in English for many different purposes

 

We planted some pumpkins that grew really big.

The pumpkins that he planted grew really big.

**I teach this extensively in WI567.

 

My teacher, whose name is Ellen, is old. adj cl

My teacher, who is Ellen, is old. an appositive (EF7)

**Commas sometimes go around adjective clauses. (EF7)

 

*’Which’ is used for special or unique things.

She loves her diamond earrings which she inherited from her grandmother.

She likes the earrings that she got from Amazon.

The Mona Lisa, which is in the Louvre, is the one of the most famous paintings in the world.

She is from Dongguan, which is in south China.

The Eiffel Tower, which is in Paris, was the tallest iron building in the world when it was completed in 1889.

 

**

These are some less used words for adjective clauses.

-where

Mei visited the city where she was born.

 

-whose- possessive, own something, belongs to

The boy whose dog ran away was happy when he came back.

 

-whom (formal, not often used)

The elderly woman whom you met last night was a famous broadcaster.

 

 

This is a good EF56-level understanding of adjective clauses. In Writing Improvement 567 and EF7, I will go into much more detail including comma usage, subject and object pronouns, and restrictive and non-restrictive clauses.

Wednesday, 24 June 2026

P1 EF6 Class 44

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Non-instruction day

·      Final marks and comments

One-on-one meetings to discuss how things went and what is next, the same as the midterm recommendation meetings.

 

Summer school will begin Monday, July 6th and end Friday, August 7th.

 

Title: Replace Quiz #?

Write an appropriate sentence for each:

SIMPLE SENTENCE

1.    SSV                   figure out

Sarah and I figured out how to fix the car.

         

COMPOUND SENTENCES

2. reason              and

She returned the dress, and she had a good reason.

I don’t know the reason why she quit her job, and the other coworkers don’t know either.

quit   quit   quit

put    put    put

cut    cut    cut

set     set     set

hurt  hurt  hurt

fit      fit      fit

let     let     let

hit     hit     hit

 

3. beside              however

A student sat beside me everyday for nine weeks; however, he never said a word to me.

 

 

COMPLEX SENTENCES

4. customer         because

The customer was happy because we gave her a 30% discount.

because he got a refund/full refund/partial refund and a store credit.

 

She has done/gotten three refunds in the last week. employee doing refunds OR customer getting refunds

They bend the rules for VIP customers.

 

5. successful       when

I will feel successful when I graduate from SHEC.

when I open a business.

when I marry a rich very very old bachelor.

 

6. understand     why

I don’t understand why you always drink coffee late at night.

He doesn’t understand why oil price price of oil is still high.

The price of tomatoes right now is astronomical.

 

 

Tuesday, 23 June 2026

P1 EF6 Class 43

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Quick overview of adjective clauses

·      Opportunity to do a replacement quiz and/or replacement test. (90m)

You can choose to do a replacement quiz or a replacement test.

You can choose to do a replacement quiz and a replacement test.

You can choose to do neither.

The replacement quiz will be a mix of all of the sentence styles: simple, compound, and complex- adverb clauses, noun clauses, no adjective clauses

The replacement test will be a paragraph on a new topic.

Title: Replace Quiz#

Title: Replace Test#

 

Wednesday- LAST DAY

·      Non-instruction day

·      Final marks and comments

One-on-one meetings to discuss how things went and what is next, the same as the midterm recommendation meetings.

 

Summer school will begin Monday, July 6th and end Friday, August 7th.

 

 

Monday, 22 June 2026

P2 EF71011 Class 42

 

IDIOM Fishing for compliments

You are fishing for compliments.

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Essay RWs, 1 pt

·      Talk about replacement quiz, test, essay

Check marks

·      Sentence combining

·      Something fun

·      Leftovers

 

Tuesday, June 23rd

·      Opportunity to replace one quiz and/or one test, or essay. (about 2 hrs)

Replacement quiz will be a mix of simple, compound , and complex.

Choose vocab to review:

 

Replacement test will be a new topic. everyday opinion topic

Replacement essay will be a new topic.

Test and Essay will be the same topic.

 

Wednesday, June 24th

Final day

Final reports and comments

One-on-one meetings, if you want, the same as midterm recs.

 

 

 

**

slipped and fell

bruise(n,v) bruised(adj) I bruised my arm.

 

***

Sentence Combining

-         dense sentences, lots of meaning in a short amount of words

college level

Sheet #5

1.    I like Italian cooking, and I like Chinese cooking. REP- repetitive

I like Italian cooking and Chinese cooking even though they are very different.

 

I like Italian cooking, and I like Chinese cooking, but they are very different. not the best choice

AVOID   SV, SOBA SV, SOBA SV.

 

I like Italian and Chinese cooking because they are very different. Meaning?

 

Stylistic choices – style- higher level, not grammar

style- beauty, elegance, smoothness, beautiful, elegant, smooth

 

High-level style book: changed the way that I write, university

Style: Ten Lessons in Clarity and Grace

 

2.    Although they are both spicy, Italian cooks use garlic and oregano while Chinese cooks use ginger and hot pepper.

Italian cooks use garlic and oregano while Chinese cooks use ginger and hot pepper, so they they are both spicy.

Although they are both spicy, Italian cooks use garlic and oregano, but Chinese cooks use ginger and hot pepper. How much contrast do you want?

 

3.    The Italians use a lot of tomato sauce unlike the Chinese who use bean, soy, and duck sauces.

 

4.    An Italian meal is usually served with wine while a Chinese meal is usually served with tea.

An Italian meal is usually served with wine; however, a Chinese meal is usually served with tea.

 

5.    No Italian meal is complete without a loaf of delicious Italian bread whereas the Chinese never serve bread of any kind.

Bread is a staple in Italy. Rice is a staple in the south of China.

flatbread-

Tanour Bakery- Coquitlam

 

6.    Another difference between Italian and Chinese cooking is that most Italian dishes are baked while most Chinese dishes are cooked in hot oil.

7.    Also, Italians eat a lot of pasta while Chinese people eat a lot of vegetables.

pasta- linguini, spaghetti, lasagna, macaroni, ravioli, gnocchi, spaghettini, etc.  

 

8.    Although they are not alike, I enjoy both Italian food/cuisine and Chinese food/cuisine.

She loves Szechuan cuisine.

I enjoy both Italian food/cuisine and Chinese food/cuisine although they are not alike.

I enjoy both Italian food/cuisine and Chinese food/cuisine; however, they are not alike.

 

 

Proofreading

When comparing / When we compare

similiarities

during conversations

 

eye contact – noun modifying a noun, no ‘s’  eyes contact

 

a person’s eyes  ‘ apostrophe

looks away, and then looks back again.

 

: but XXX

, but

. However,

; however,

*Avoid overly long sentences.

 

looks directly

Don’t look directly at the sun.

 

considers

he does not / they do not- avoid gendered language

 

while speaking / while they speak

 

uses them only occasionally

 

IDIOM He talks with his hands.

 

He talks without thinking.

She bites her tongue.

 

from the other person

 

**

IDIOM Like water off a duck’s back. things don’t bother you

thin-skinned(adj) – easily hurt emotionally, very sensitive

thick-skinned- not easily hurt emotionally

 

**

Presentation

Email x/1

Check x/2

Organization x/3

Talking x/4

x/10

 

 

**

Vocabulary Activities 5

1.    UK maths  Canada math

5.PE – sports class compulsary- necessary, must do

Korea has compulsory service.

He is an anchor baby.

 

6.resolve(v) resolution(n)

7.prone to – usually does, negative

I am prone to making spelling mistakes.

 

8.brush up – review, practice

I have to brush up on my algebra.

x(x+y)=

CO2 carbon dioxide

9.break it down- explain in a very simple way

She broke it down without being reductive.

 

10.notorious(adj)- famous for doing bad things

infamous(adj)

famous

 

6.

2.outcome=result

3.disruptive-

interruptive-

disrupt(v)

interrupt(v)

Sorry for interrupting, but …

4.good condition, good shape(person, thing)

5. He will attempt a freekick.

7.HD- high definition, UHD- ultra high definition

The picture is clear and crisp.

She always looks crisp.

He looks sharp.

He looks put-together.

8.distinguised guest- high-level, special, special achievement, VIP

9.

10.underpaid

underemployed-

P1 EF6 Class 42

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Return presentations and RW

·      Talk about Replacement Quiz/Test tomorrow

·      Continue new verb tense- present perfect verb tense- final verb tense

·      Preview adjective clauses- last kind of clause

·      Continue dialogue “Handling a Medical Emergency”

·      FUN Listening exercise-

 

Tuesday, June 23

·      Opportunity to do a replacement quiz and/or replacement test. (90m)

You can choose to do a replacement quiz or a replacement test.

You can choose to do a replacement quiz and a replacement test.

You can choose to do neither.

The replacement quiz will be a mix of all of the sentence styles: simple, compound, and complex- adverb clauses, noun clauses, no adjective clauses

The replacement test will be a paragraph on a new topic.

Title: Replace Quiz#

Title: Replace Test#

 

Quiz- specific sentences

Test- paragraph – Write whatever sentences you want.

 

Wednesday- LAST DAY

·      Final marks and comments

One-on-one meetings to discuss how things went and what is next, the same as the midterm recommendation meetings.

 

Summer school will begin Monday, July 6th and end Friday, August 7th.

 

 

 

**

Presentations

Email          x/1

Check in     x/2

Written      x/3

Spoken       x/4

x/10

 

**

PLOs Oral Language

“speaker is clear and audible” – clear- clear voice

audible – loud enough to hear, project our voice

-learn to speak louder, singing lessons

-use a microphone- handheld mic, lav mic

lav mic – lavalier mic

handheld mic-

 

**

Present perfect verb tense

6. I am reading books. present progressive

7. Doris has had / has raised/ has kept / has loved / has hated / has been afraid of  cats her whole life.

Doris has been lived/has talked with cats her whole life.

Doris has talked with cats. odd meaning

Doris has talked to cats.

 

8. Thi has worked at the store since July.

Thi has been retired from the store since July. present perfect, passive voice

Thi has retired from the store since July.

Thi has retired from the store since July. clear enough

 

Joe has been retired for two years. most authentic

Mary has been married for one month.

Taka has been dead for ten years.

Sarah has been sick for two weeks.

 

9. She has not talked/spoken to/with him since the argument.

She has never talked to him since the argument. sounds stronger

talk- every day, high-frequency

speak- formal, sounds serious

 

10. I have lost / have forgotten/ have misplaced my keys again.

I have left my keys in the office again.

lost – they are gone

misplaced- not lost, put them somewhere

He misplaces his cell phone all the time.

 

I just had it! Where could it have gone? Did it grow legs and walk away?

 

11. Have you ever gone/been/travelled to Paris?

Have you been to the new IKEA?

 

Have you ever visited Paris?

 

12. He has broken his leg three times in his life.

break   broke   broken

 

tibia and fibula

CASUAL shin bone

She hit her shin on the chair.

He has a cramp in his calf.

He pulled a calf muscle.

She twisted/strained her ankle.

 

13. We have known each other since childhood.

We have been close to each other since childhood. emotional connection, best friends,

BFF- best friend forever, besties

best man- wedding

groomsmen- group of friends at a wedding ceremony

bridesmaids-

 

Can a boy and girl be best friends?

a platonic relationship – just friends, no romance

 

14. They have lived/been in that apartment for six months.

They stayed in a hotel for a week. very temporary

I will stay at work until 8pm.

 

15. I have forgotten her name already.

I have heard her name already.

*Is remembering names a talent or a skill?

Laurie Anderson, my former boss

 

16. The little girl has had a high fever since yesterday.

He has had a cold for two days.

 

The little girl has got a fever. CASUAL TALKING

 

favour- “fay ver” a nice thing to do to help somebody

fever “fee ver”

 

17. We have planned/decided where to go for vacation.

We have not decided where to go.

have not decided = haven’t decided

We will have a staycation.

It’s a once-in-a-lifetime experience.

 

18. He has read that book twice already

read  read  read

get    got    gotten

 

The little girl has gotten a book. GRAMMAR BOOK

The little girl got a book. easier

 

19. The weather has been unusually warm lately.

 

 

**

Adjective clause

Choose vocab for the quiz tomorrow:

1.    customer

2.    figure out

3.    talk

4.    work

5.    understand

6.    successful

7.    reason

8.    beside

9.    difficulty

10.                       unclear

 

Replacement Quiz

Simple SV   SSV   SVV   Imperative   Interrogatve

1. SVV  tomorrow

2. Interrogative   store

Compound

3. so   hire

4. therefore  game

Complex

5. since    job

6. that    try

 

Listening

 

 

 

 

Is it clear?

It is clear. There are no cars coming.

The road is clear/empty.

 

Driving instructor: Change lanes when it is safe to do so.

 

I did all the work except/besides that.

 

Test: paragraph of at least 150 words, every day topic, opinion

 

**

Listening Fun

1.    Are most people under two meters tall or over two meters tall?

2.    Does the moon revolve around the earth?

3.    What do you mix with black paint to get grey paint? US gray

4.    Which continent lies directly west of Asia? Europe

5.    How many grams are in a kilogram?

6.    When you estimate, is your answer exact or approximate?

7.    How many holes do golfers play in a regular game of golf?

8.    Name two kinds of precipitation.

9.    What living things absorb carbon dioxide from the air and replace it with oxygen?

10.                       What is 2/5 of 25?