Wednesday, 13 May 2026

P2 EF71011 Class 15

 

Wednesday-  Hump Day- midweek

 

luggage, carry-on- goes in the overhead bin

make-up case,

compact in your purse

suitcase

 

briefcase- business person

laptop case-

backpack

totebag

She has her books in a tote.

 

gym bag

 

wallet

purse

clutch

change purse

card holder

Do you carry cash?

grocery bag

vacuum-seal storage bag

sling

 

It is a cash-only store.

Cash is king.

etrans

 

Do people still write cheques?

paycheque, automatic deposit

He gets paid in cash, under the table.

 

 

 

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Continue sentence work: compound sentences

Quiz soon, probably Friday

·      Finish vocabulary from Friday

·      New article “Diaspora”

·      IF TIME Continue persuasive writing

·       

 

Thursday

·      Continue sentence work: compound sentences

Quiz soon, probably Friday

·      Continue article “Diaspora”

·      Continue persuasive writing

 

 

 

Friday

·      Quiz

 

 

 

**

Simple sentences

SV   SSV   SVV   SSVV   Imperative   Interrogative

 

word stress, syllable stress- louder, stronger sounding

Canada   What syllable do we stress?

 

 

 

Three types of sentences: SIMPLE   COMPOUND   COMPLEX

4th kind- mix COMPOUND COMPLEX

 

Sentence types:

SIMPLE SENTENCES –  SV   SSV   SVV   SSVV   SSSV   SVVV   Imperative   Interrogative

 

Next kind of sentence:

COMPOUND SENTENCES

 

Most teachers teach FANBOYS

Seven (7) coordinating conjunctions in English

FANBOYS for and nor but or yet so

e.g. Mei brought her umbrella, for it is raining.

 

Some of these are used often- low-frequency words for compound sentences

 

HIGH-FREQUENCY WORDS very often used

LOW-FREQUENCY WORDS rarely used

 

FANBOYS for and nor but or yet so

 

EXAMPLES OF for, nor, yet- low-frequency, grammar book

*for

Maria brought an umbrella today, for it is raining.

-low-frequency usage, grammar-book style of English

AUTHENTIC

Maria brought an umbrella today because it is raining. COMPLEX SENT

high-frequency usage-

 

 

 

‘for’ preposition phrases- high frequency

for example

She got some coffee for you.

He brought a cake for the birthday party.

Thanks for your help.

 

SV, for SV. low frequency

She got you a present, for it is your birthday. Unusual, grammar-book,

not authentic English

She got you a present because it is your birthday. authentic

 

She got a present for you.

VOCAB authentic – real, not fake, the real deal

I bought you a coffee. I bought a coffee for you.

 

I stayed at home, for I was feeling sick. XXX

AUTHENTIC, REAL ENGLISH I stayed at home because I was feeling sick.

 

FANBOYS for and nor but or yet so

 

*nor

either or   neither nor low-frequency

Neither Maria nor Sarah is going to the theatre. grammar-book

 

AUTHENTIC

They aren’t going to the theatre. authentic

Neither of them is/are going to the theatre. authentic

Maria isn’t going. Neither is Sarah.

 

Me neither. CASUAL- negative  

PRONUNCIATION knee-thur   nie-thur

ee-thur   eye-thur

 

Me either.

Me too. CASUAL- positive   So do I.

 

I don’t like coffee. Neither do I. Me neither.

 

I bought neither a pen nor a pencil. grammar-book

I didn’t buy (either) a pen or a pencil. authentic

 

compound sentence with ‘nor’

We didn’t go to the museum, nor did we go to the art gallery. grammar-book English

AUTHENTIC

We didn’t go to the museum or the art gallery. SIMPLE SENT

 

I am looking for students who are speaking (either) English or their mother tongue.

 

She is going to get (either) an ice cream or an iced coffee.

 

 

FANBOYS for and nor but or yet so

*yet

SIMPLE SENTENCES- yet

Not, yet.

I didn’t have my supper/dinner, yet.

He didn’t finish his homework, yet. SIMPLE SENT

I don’t know yet.

I didn’t buy it yet. I’m waiting for a sale.

CONTRACTION I am – I’m   ‘ apostrophe

 

 

 

 

‘yet’ for compound sentences

It is a sunny day, yet it is chilly. low-frequency, grammar book

AUTHENTIC

It is a sunny day, but it is chilly.

It is a sunny day; however, it is chilly.

 

VOCAB She has a chilly personality. She is not overly friendly.

He was a bit cold when I first met him, but then he warmed up.

 

Use ‘but’ ‘however’ instead of ‘yet’.

 

VOCAB pathologist- a doctor who figures why somebody died

dark humour-

 

It is a sunny day. However, it is chilly. 2 SIMPLE SENT

It is a sunny day; however, it is chilly. 1 COMPOUND SENT

 

FANBOYS for and nor but or yet so

SOBA- so or but and

These are the high-frequency coordinating conjunctions: SOBA

 

Soba are Japanese buckwheat noodles.

 

Italian explorer- Marco Polo went to China.

Chinese noodles- Italian spaghetti?

rice noodles, semolina noodles

Japan – buckwheat noodles

 

We will focus on:  , so   , or   , but   , and

 

 

EXAMPLES of SOBA   , so   , or   , but   , and

 

, so- give a reason, result, cause and effect

My friend was sick. I went to visit her. 2 SIMPLES

My friend was sick, so I went to visit her. 1 COMPOUND

 

I went to visit her, so my friend was sick. XXX

cause and effect XXX

 

 

It is raining. You brought an umbrella. 2 SIMPLES

It is raining, so you brought an umbrella. 1 COMPOUND

 

It is going to rain, so don’t forget your umbrella.

Don’t forget your umbrella. IMPERATIVE no ‘you’

 

She is hungry, so she needs to eat something.

SLANG hungry + angry = hangry

I am hangry. I need a snack.

I am hangry, so I need a snack.

snack  snake

 

 

The weather was rainy, so we decided to stay (at) home.

 

 

*, or – choice, A or B

You can go to school, or you can go to work.

 

Would you like pizza, or would you prefer pasta? COMPOUND

Would you like pizza or pasta? SIMPLE

 

 

 

 

Would you like coffee or tea? SIMPLE SENT

Would you like coffee, or would you prefer/like tea? COMPOUND

SV, or SV.

I’m happy with either.

It doesn’t matter to me.

Both are ok. Both would be fine.

Either one would be fine.

Whichever/Whatever is easiest for you. What are you having?

 

*but- opposite, shows difference, against expectation

We wanted to see Project Hail Mary, but it already left the theatres.

 

*and- addition, give extra information

She made breakfast today for the first time, and it was delicious.

 

 

REVIEW OF COMPOUND SENTENCES

 

COMPOUND SENT= SIMPLE SENT + , SOBA + SIMPLE SENTENCE

SOBA so or but and    High-frequency words

high-frequency- use them all the time, all day long

low-frequency- not used as much

 

FANBOYS- not great

for nor yet - low-frequency words in compound sentences

She speaks neither French nor German. GRAMMAR BOOK ENGLISH

 

Stick to SOBA.

 

SV, SOBA SV.

Two simple sentences:

You like dogs. Shira likes cats.

 

JOIN THEM TOGETHER

You like dogs, and/but Shira likes cats.

 

, or – two different options

You can have an apple, or you can have some candy.

 

, so- give a reason, explain why

You drove too fast, so you got a ticket.

 

LEVEL 1 of compound sentences:  SV, SOBA SV.

 

Let’s try some practice sentences. Write a few compound sentences using SOBA from our imagination.

 

YOUR EXAMPLES:

You can have coffee, or you can have tea.

You can have coffee or tea. SIMPLE SENT no ,

 

I can buy an SUV or a sedan. SIMPLE SENT

I can buy an SUV, or I can choose a sedan.

SUV- sport-utility vehicle

sedan- four-door car with a trunk

hatchback- the back open into the body of the car

pickup truck- open bed on the back

convertible- the roof comes off

 

You have to slow down, or you will get a ticket.

 

She is late today because her bus didn’t come.  COMPOUND

COMPLEX- because her bus didn’t come  ADVERB CLAUSE

NEXT WEEK

RW- FIX

Her bus didn’t come, so she is late today.

 

Verb tenses don’t to be same within a sentence.

You can change verb tenses within a sentence if it is appropriate.

 

Maria cancelled the trip, so we will stay home.

Maria cancelled the trip, so we stayed home.

 

IDIOM What she says, goes.

What he says, goes.

She wears the pants in the family.

Who has the last word?

 

IDIOM breadwinner- a person who earns money for the family

Both of them are breadwinners.

 

bread- staple- main food in the west

potato- staple

Rice is a staple in Asia.

 

IDIOM bread- money

SLANG- used by a small group in society, e.g. teenagers

Your drip is on point.

 

SV, SOBA SV.

 

She studied hard last week, but she still got a lower mark.

 

 

VOCAB hard / hardly

hard- with great effort

hardly- almost nothing

 

You work hard. -lots of effort, industrious, hardworking

He hardly works. – little effort, lazy

 

Flaggers are the sign people.

TCP- traffic control personnel

 

VOCAB personnel(noun)- the people who work in a company

personal(adjective)- private, secret, just for you

Don’t give out your personal information.

The company is hiring new personnel.

personnel, staff – non-count noun, uncountable nouns

 

 

 

REVIEW:

SV, SOBA SV.

soba- , so , or , but , and

You can stay home with mom, or you can go downtown with me.

 

NEXT LEVEL OF COMPOUND SENTENCES

; semicolon

semicomma

: colon

 

semi-half

They live in a semi-detached house. a duplex

They painted the trim with semi-gloss paint.

paint store- finishes:

matte

satin

eggshell

semigloss

gloss

 

The team won the semi-finals.

 

colon- list

She has three kids: two boys and a girl.

He has visited four provinces: BC, Alberta, Nova Scotia, and Ontario.

I am taking two classes: Math 11 and EF6.

 

; semicolon

Mei likes cats. Jun likes dogs.

Mei likes cats, and Jun likes dogs.

Mei likes cats, and ; Jun likes dogs. substitute a semicolon

Mei likes cats; Jun likes dogs.

 

It is cold today, so she has a scarf on.

scarf- neck

headscarf – around your head and hair

bandana-

sweatband-

toque- knitted winter hat

kerchief

handkerchief

ketchup- tomato condiment for fries

He got ketchup on his handkerchief.

 

It is cold today. She has a scarf on. 2 SIMPLE SENT

It is cold today, so she has a scarf on. I COMPOUND SENT

It is cold today; she has a scarf on. 1 COMPOUND SENT

 

 

 

 

 

 

HIGHEST LEVEL FOR COMPOUND SENTENCES

It is cold today; TRANS, she has a scarf on.

transitional term- go between independent clauses

 

It is cold today; TRANS, she has a scarf on.

 

*consequence- reason why, result

It is cold today; therefore, she has a scarf on.

She had a lot of chocolate bars; as a result, her blood sugar is high.

 

*contrast

Mei likes cats; however, Jun likes dogs.

Mei likes cats; on the other hand, Jun likes dogs.

On one hand, Mei likes cats; on the other hand, Jun likes dogs.

On one hand, I like living in Vancouver; on the other hand, my family lives in Prince George.

on the other hand – contrasting two things

IDIOM – give someone a hand- help someone

give a hand- applause

 

Mei loves hiking. She loves skiing.

Mei loves hiking, and she loves skiing.

Mei loves hiking; she loves skiing.

Mei loves hiking; also, she loves skiing.

HIGH LEVEL WRITING Mei loves hiking; in addition, she loves skiing.

Mei loves hiking; additionally, she loves skiing.

 

IDIOM It went down the wrong pipe.

 

There are hundreds of transitional terms.

happily sadly

He asked her to marry him; happily, she said “Yes.”

He asked her to marry him; sadly, she turned him down.

IDIOM turn someone down-

surprisingly  The old man fell down the stairs; surprisingly, he was fine.

I found the English 11 class really hard; surprisingly, I passed with a good mark/grade.

SV ; TRAN, SV

 

eventually She ran a little bit each day for two weeks; eventually, she was able to run 2 km without stopping.

 

literally(adv)- very popular in the past 10 years

 

SIMPLE. TRANS, SIMPLE.

There are many steps to becoming a Canadian citizen. First, you have to fill out the forms.

There are many steps to becoming a Canadian citizen; first, you have to fill out the forms.

*Semicolons are not high-frequency. You can still use the transitional terms between sentences.

 

Mei likes dogs. Jun likes cats.

Mei likes dogs; however, Jun likes cats.

Mei likes dogs. However, Jun likes cats. VERY COMMON USAGE

 

SO FAR

Mei likes dogs. Jun likes cats. two simples

Mei likes dogs, but Jun likes cats. compound

Mei likes dogs; Jun likes cats. compound

Mei likes dogs; however, Jun likes cats. compound

Mei likes dogs. However, Jun likes cats. two simples

 

 

Transitional Terms

 

Examples:

particularly- in particular – especially

He likes lots of things about Vancouver; in particular, he likes that it is close to the ocean.

 

special(adj) especially(adv)

 

particular(adj)  specific, one example

Both of these cameras are really good. This particular one has better in-camera effects.

 

**

Let’s change gears. Let’s do something different.

“Diaspora communities”

The article might resonate with you.

resonate- vibrate, have deep meaning for you

 

Crosswords

abroad- overseas

 

foreign- not polite word in English

foreigner- sounds negative

immigrant, newcomer

 

migrant-

status- situation

legal status, immigration status-

marriage status- single, married, common-law, separated, divorced, widowed

common-law- cohabitate, not married- BC two years

 

economic status- how much money you have

 

social status- position in society, Da Shan

He is a big deal in China.

She is a big wheel. famous, $$$

 

cognitive(adj)- thinking, brain, mind, mental power

cognition(n)

President Trump has taken many cognitive tests.

Doctors are worried he has signs of dementia.

dementia- Alzheimer’s, cognitive decline, memory loss

 

p2, paragraph 8

anchor- foundation, base

 

embedded(v)-

hybrid(adj)- mixed

 

biracial – a person with parents from different ethnicities, races

 

 

P1 EF6 Class 15

 

 

Wednesday- Hump Day

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Quiz 3- compound sentences

·      NEW READING “The Cost of Living”

·      DISTRIBUTE “Top 100 Most Used Verbs in English”

·      Continue “Simple Present Verb Tense EF56 TEACH”

Verb tense- simple present, past, future

·      Continue new dialogue “Going to a Dental Specialist”

 

Thursday

·      NEW READING “The Cost of Living”

·      DISTRIBUTE “Top 100 Most Used Verbs in English”

·      Continue “Simple Present Verb Tense EF56 TEACH”

Verb tense- simple present, past, future

·      Begin complex sentences- adverb clauses

·      Continue new dialogue “Going to a Dental Specialist”

 

 

Monday

NO SCHOOL

Victoria Day

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

compound sentences

SV, SOBA SV.

SV; TRANS, SV.

 

 

Quiz 3

Devices and notes put away.

Dividers

Take out a few pieces of paper.

Pen

Doublespace

Margins

Full name, class, and date top right corner

Write a compound sentence for each.

Pass in by 10:00.

Title: Quiz 3


1.    so                buy

2.    and              over

3.    also             tasty

4.    however    expensive      

5.    on the other hand       calm   

6.    then            shopping


 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**

NEW READING “The Cost of Living”

Let’s get into our chat groups (4-6 people).

Discuss Pre-Reading

A Warm-Up Questions

1.    Are you a spender? Are you a saver?

 

2.    groceries-meat, gas, rent?, transportation,

The price stays the same, but the size is smaller.

inflation(n)- prices going up

annual inflation- how much prices go up in a year

utilities- electricity/Hydro, natural gas/Fortis, internet, cell phone plans, no water bill in Vancouver

 

water restrictions in summer

phone calls in Canada- free

pay by the minute- Iran, Spain, ?

 

3.    ways to save money

-save in a bank account

-buy gold

-buy Mutual Funds

-buy stocks

 

ways to save money when prices increase

-buy wisely

-look for deals, discounts

-buy clothes out-of-season, especially kids clothes

-eat less meat

-eat leaves from trees

-more veggies

-fasting (don’t eat for the whole day)

-don’t go to restaurants, don’t eat out

-buy in bulk

-reduce trips, travel

-buy second-hand stuff

-get free stuff on FB Marketplace

-rent out a room for FIFA World Cup

-use tea bags three times

-make coffee at home

-wear clothes for 20 years, until they fall apart

-wear hand-me-down clothes

-no jewelry, no luxuries, no brand-name clothes

-use public transportation

-ride your bike or walk

 

B Vocabulary Preview

1.    median(n)- middle number, the divided middle of a street

sounds like ‘medium’

 

2.    milestone(n)- an important achievement, reaching a goal

Graduating from SHEC will be a milestone in her life.

 

3.    out of reach-

Buying a detached house in Vancouver is out of reach for most people.

detached house- a single-family house

duplex- two houses put together with a shared wall

townhouse-

condos / condominiums-

apartments-

laneway house- a second smaller house in your back yard

 

4.scarce- not a lot, not enough, rare, hard to find

Jobs are scarce. Money is scarce.

 

5.consumer- a person who buys goods or services

good(n)- something that you can buy, products

service(n)- some job that you can pay somebody to do for you

customer- patron of a store, somebody who spends money

IDIOM “The customer is always right.”

 

6.demand- ask for something in a strong way

The strikers demanded higher pay.

 

supply and demand- making enough product to sell to consumers

When demand is high and supply is low, prices increase.

With increased supply, prices will decrease.

 

He has a demanding personality.

 

7.loan(v) – lend money

loan(n) – money that is borrowed

She got a car loan from the bank. She financed her car.

finance(v)- to borrow money and pay it back on a schedule

 

I loaned my sister $100. She never paid me back.

 

loan for a house or condo- mortgage

He got a 25-year mortgage.

Most people have mortgage insurance or life insurance.

 

car loan, student loan, personal loan

scholarship – money gift for school

debt(n)- the money that you owe

He has a $500 debt to his brother.

 

 

 

8.stable- She has a stable income.

It is hard to budget with an unstable income.

He has an unstable personality.

emotional roller-coaster

very moody

She takes medication to balance her unstable personality.

It is difficult to deal with people with unstable personailities.

 

personality disorders

-depression

-bipolar

-schizophrenia

  

Medication can help, but it can take a long time to get a meds right.

 

hallucination- seeing or hearing something that is not there

 

Tuesday, 12 May 2026

P2 EF71011 Class 14

 

Today’s AgendaToday’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Sentence work

Simple sentences

Quiz soon

·      Continue persuasive writing

·      Finish vocabulary from Friday

·      New article “Diaspora”

 

Wednesday

·      New article

·      Continue sentence work: compound sentences

Quiz soon

 

Thursday

 

Friday

·      Quiz

 

 

 

 

Capital letters: proper nouns

days of the week

months of the year

company names

languages

country, city and town names, street names, areas of a city, neighborhoods

“She takes a badminton class at Mount Pleasant Community Centre.”

“She goes to UBC. She goes to The University of British Columbia.”

 

 

 

the United States

the US, the States

America

the UAE

the Gambia

Canada

Chad

the Philippines

the Bahamas

the UK

Brazil

the Netherlands

Iran

the Ukraine

Syria

Vietnam

Singapore

Hong Kong

the Vatican

the Vancouver

 

 

SIMPLE SENTENCES- most basic kind, easiest

 

 

SIMPLE

 

Subject and verb. 

Begin with a capital letter.

End with a period or question mark.

Exclamation points are not commonly used in school or business writing. They are often used in casual writing, texting, etc.   !

ADVICE: Avoid using !  Looks teenagery.

 

.   period / full stop – dot

 

email@gmail.com dot

 

 

-SV Subject Verb

S  NOUN/PRONOUN  +  ACTION WORD/STATE OF BEING (verb)

 

The dog is sleeping on the bed. SV

We are learning English.

 

Mei gets up at 7 o’clock in the morning. simple present- habit, usual action

Mei got up at 7 o’clock in the morning. past simple- one time

 

verb + prep= phrasal verb

get + up

 

VERB TENSE- had worked  Mei had worked worked at the store for six months.

past perfect usually substitute simple past

 

PHRASAL VERB get up  verb+preposition

get up- get out of bed

wake up-

get out-

get down- dance(slang)  We all got down at the party. You like to get down.

get along- act friendly, be peaceful with each other  He gets along with his mother-in-law. The dog does not get along with the cat.

get away- IDIOM go on vacation  We got away for the weekend.

get off- finish work

talk to- I had to talk to my daughter.

talk with- conversation, dialogue

chat(v)-casual talking IDIOM chew the fat, chit chat, small talk

 

speak loudly- big voice, speak up

speak aloud-speak out loud  I will read this aloud.

 

We get out of the car. We got off the plane/ferry/bus/Skytrain.

The phone is switched/turned off.

GOOD FREE ADVICE: Start to learn as many phrasal verbs as you can. Phrasal verbs are the heart of English.

-SV

 

-SVV

Jun walks in the park and listens to a podcast.

The kids are laughing and playing. verbs

I go to the gym and do exercises.

 

I go to the gym in order to do exercises. COMPLEX SENT- ADVERB CL

 

The kids are tired and hungry. SV adjectives

VOCAB SLANG hungry + angry = hangry

I’m just hangry. I need to eat something.

 

*Words in an order should be the same type of word. This is called parallelism. We will learn this in a few weeks.

 

He likes sports, skiing, and to hike. XXX

FIX

Parallelism  noun, noun, and noun

He likes running, skiing, and hiking.

Parallelism  verb, verb, and verb

He likes to run, to ski, and to hike.

He likes to run, and ski, and hike. He likes to run, ski, and hike.

 

YOUR CHOICE

He likes to run, ski, and hike.   The Oxford Comma- old-fashioned

He likes to run, ski and hike.   modern looking

 

She likes to run. She likes running.

 

-SVVV (probably the maximum)

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, and checking her phone.

Junko is writing notes and listening to  music and checking her phone. XXX

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, checking her phone. XXX

 

Junko is writing notes, listening to the radio, and checking her phone.

She is going to the mall. She is going to the Metrotown Mall. She is going to Metrotown. He is going to (the) Crystal Mall.

 

I have to go to the grocery store.

She goes to the gym everyday.

 

 

Oxford comma- optional comma

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, and checking her phone.

Junko is writing notes, listening to music and checking her phone.

 

She likes spaghetti, pizza, and hamburgers.

She likes spaghetti, pizza and hamburgers.

Your choice. The Oxford comma looks a little old-fashioned. No comma looks a bit more modern.

 

 

She likes hot dogs and green tea.

He likes hot dogs and bubble drinks.

He drinks pop every day. He drinks two cans of pop every day.

I bought some pop for you.

Canada- pop

US- soda

 

 

COMMON ERROR

Junko is writing, listening, checking her phone.

FIX

Junko is writing, listening, and checking her phone.

 

Your choice:

A, B and C. -more modern

A, B, and C. -a little old-fashioned

 

COMMON ERROR

I am writing, checking my phone.

A, B

FIX

I am writing and checking my phone.

 

-SSSV

Jun, Sarah, and Shira went for a hike yesterday. more common

Jun, Sarah, and Shira went hiking yesterday.

We went for a walk. She went for a run. He went for a drive.

She went for a ride. bike or motorcycle

They went for a drink. beer, wine at a bar

Let’s go for a coffee.

Let’s go for a walk.

Do you want to go for a walk?

Do you wanna go for a walk? CASUAL TALKING, NOT FOR WRITING

wanna=want to

gonna= going to

 

Let’s dance!

Let’s sing. Everybody sing!

Let’s have fun.

 

The pens, books and papers are on the table.

 

 

-SSVV

Mohamad and Joseph went downtown and bought some business clothes.

 

Mohamad and Joseph went downtown, and they  bought some business clothes. COMPOUND SENTENCE

 

formal clothes- formal wear, a suit and tie, business attire

VOCAB dress code- uniform, level of formality in your clothing

The office dress code is business attire.

casual attire

formal attire- wedding clothes

“Gym attire is mandatory”

uniform- everybody dressed exactly the same- McDonalds, air hostess stewardess flight attendants, Ikea-same top, sports team(jersey), police, fireman fire fighter, mail man a letter carrier, security guard

 

-Imperative sentence- command, tell somebody to do something

ENGLISH IDIOM What’s the magic word?

 

(You) Open the window, please. You – implied subject

Watch out!

Go to bed. Brush your teeth.

Sit down. Have some coffee.

Try again. Take a break.

Help yourself. Stay calm.

Relax.

Take it easy. – casual way to say goodbye

Take it easy. – don’t get angry, upset

SLANGY Chill.

Don’t worry. It’s nothing to worry about.

 

CASUAL No worries. Australian slang You’re welcome.

US Uh-huh

 

Of course. Don’t mention it. A pleasure. Happy to. Any time. You’re welcome.

NEW IDIOM from US    I appreciate you. Thank you.

OLD I appreciate it/that.

 

IDIOM CASUAL Hold your horses. Wait a second. No need to rush.

CUSTOMER Just one moment. Wait a moment, please. Give me one minute. Let me finish this.

Hold on for one second. Hang on for a second.

 

Take your time. -don’t rush

Take care.- casual way to say goodbye

Have a good one.- casual goodbye

Open the window, please.

Please open the window.

Open wide.

Please be careful of black ice.

 

Are you going to the party?

Yes, I am. No, I am not.

 

-Interrogative sentences- questions

interrogate(v)- to ask questions in an aggressive, serious way

The police interrogated a suspect.

 

Do you like ice cream?

Yes, I do. Sure. Love it! Defiinitely. Of course. Certainly.(formal)

Do you want to go for a hike?

Sure. Why not?

 

Did you like Hawaii?

It was beautiful.

I bet.

IDIOM I bet. I’m sure you are right. I agree with you even though don’t know.

 

The best noodles in China come from ABC City.

I bet.

 

CASUAL IDIOM You bet. You’re welcome. It’s ok. No problem.

SLANG No probs. texting- NP

 

contextual usage- time and place, and to who

 

 

 

 

 

Math 12 is hard.

I bet.

She bets on the horses.

He made on a small bet on hockey game.

VOCAB bet- gambling, casino

 

What time is it?

Where are you from?

What is your nationality?

What time does the class finish?

What time/When does the movie start?

Have you ever been to Paris?

How is the weather? What’s the weather like?

How long does it take you to get to school?

How often do you go to the gym every week?

 

Shall we take a break?

 

SIMPLE SENTENCES

SV

SSV

SVV

SSSV

SVVV

Imperative

Interrogative

 

Simple Sentence Exercises Hobby Vocabulary

 

Write a simple sentence for each. Write your sentences on your own

paper.

e.g.         SVV   drive   kids

Marin drives the kids to school and picks them up afterward.

               Interrogative       use   chopsticks

     Can you show us how to use chopsticks properly?

SSVV look buy

     Michelle and Carmen looked at several formal dresses but didn’t buy anything.

 

1.    SV      hobby   rewarding

2.    SSV    Jun   surprisingly

Jun and Tom surprisingly found that they took the wrong bus.

Jun and Tom are surprisingly tall.

Surprisingly, Jun and Tom threw a surprisingly well-organized/thought-out party, surprisingly.

Surprisingly, Sarah and Jon surprisingly bumped into each other, surprisingly.

The phone was surprisingly inexpensive.

Garlic and chocolate go surprisingly well together.

airpods- Apple product

earbuds- generic term

earphones/headphones- over your head

 

Generic medication is usually cheaper.

 

3.    SVV   intimidating   dog

An intimidating dog growled and scared the kids.

4.    SV      beginner   yoga

5.    SSV    busy   research

6.    SVV   postpone   meeting

7.    SSSV  play   together

8.    SSVV talk   bond

9.    SVVV children   park

10.                       Imperative           brave   fear

Don’t be afraid/scared/fearful.

Have no fear.

Be brave.

Face your fears bravely.

Show a brave fearless face.

 

11.                       SSVV                     worry

12.                       Imperative           lazy

Don’t be lazy.

Stop being so lazy.

workaholic-

alcoholic

cbocoholic

shopaholic

 

13.                       Interrogative       possible

Is it possible to be on time?

Is it possible for me to get that chance?

Would it be possible for me to talk to/see her?

Is it possible to pay by etrans/crypto?

 

 

 

·      Attendance

·      Sentence work

Simple sentences

Quiz soon

·      Continue persuasive writing

·      Finish vocabulary from Friday

·      New article “Diaspora”

 

Wednesday

·      New article

·      Continue sentence work: compound sentences

Quiz soon

 

Thursday

 

Friday

·      Quiz

 

 

 

 

Capital letters: proper nouns

days of the week

months of the year

company names

languages

country, city and town names, street names, areas of a city, neighborhoods

“She takes a badminton class at Mount Pleasant Community Centre.”

“She goes to UBC. She goes to The University of British Columbia.”

 

 

 

the United States

the US, the States

America

the UAE

the Gambia

Canada

Chad

the Philippines

the Bahamas

the UK

Brazil

the Netherlands

Iran

the Ukraine

Syria

Vietnam

Singapore

Hong Kong

the Vatican

the Vancouver

 

 

SIMPLE SENTENCES- most basic kind, easiest

 

 

SIMPLE

 

Subject and verb. 

Begin with a capital letter.

End with a period or question mark.

Exclamation points are not commonly used in school or business writing. They are often used in casual writing, texting, etc.   !

ADVICE: Avoid using !  Looks teenagery.

 

.   period / full stop – dot

 

email@gmail.com dot

 

 

-SV Subject Verb

S  NOUN/PRONOUN  +  ACTION WORD/STATE OF BEING (verb)

 

The dog is sleeping on the bed. SV

We are learning English.

 

Mei gets up at 7 o’clock in the morning. simple present- habit, usual action

Mei got up at 7 o’clock in the morning. past simple- one time

 

verb + prep= phrasal verb

get + up

 

VERB TENSE- had worked  Mei had worked worked at the store for six months.

past perfect usually substitute simple past

 

PHRASAL VERB get up  verb+preposition

get up- get out of bed

wake up-

get out-

get down- dance(slang)  We all got down at the party. You like to get down.

get along- act friendly, be peaceful with each other  He gets along with his mother-in-law. The dog does not get along with the cat.

get away- IDIOM go on vacation  We got away for the weekend.

get off- finish work

talk to- I had to talk to my daughter.

talk with- conversation, dialogue

chat(v)-casual talking IDIOM chew the fat, chit chat, small talk

 

speak loudly- big voice, speak up

speak aloud-speak out loud  I will read this aloud.

 

We get out of the car. We got off the plane/ferry/bus/Skytrain.

The phone is switched/turned off.

GOOD FREE ADVICE: Start to learn as many phrasal verbs as you can. Phrasal verbs are the heart of English.

-SV

 

-SVV

Jun walks in the park and listens to a podcast.

The kids are laughing and playing. verbs

I go to the gym and do exercises.

 

I go to the gym in order to do exercises. COMPLEX SENT- ADVERB CL

 

The kids are tired and hungry. SV adjectives

VOCAB SLANG hungry + angry = hangry

I’m just hangry. I need to eat something.

 

*Words in an order should be the same type of word. This is called parallelism. We will learn this in a few weeks.

 

He likes sports, skiing, and to hike. XXX

FIX

Parallelism  noun, noun, and noun

He likes running, skiing, and hiking.

Parallelism  verb, verb, and verb

He likes to run, to ski, and to hike.

He likes to run, and ski, and hike. He likes to run, ski, and hike.

 

YOUR CHOICE

He likes to run, ski, and hike.   The Oxford Comma- old-fashioned

He likes to run, ski and hike.   modern looking

 

She likes to run. She likes running.

 

-SVVV (probably the maximum)

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, and checking her phone.

Junko is writing notes and listening to  music and checking her phone. XXX

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, checking her phone. XXX

 

Junko is writing notes, listening to the radio, and checking her phone.

She is going to the mall. She is going to the Metrotown Mall. She is going to Metrotown. He is going to (the) Crystal Mall.

 

I have to go to the grocery store.

She goes to the gym everyday.

 

 

Oxford comma- optional comma

Junko is writing notes, listening to music, and checking her phone.

Junko is writing notes, listening to music and checking her phone.

 

She likes spaghetti, pizza, and hamburgers.

She likes spaghetti, pizza and hamburgers.

Your choice. The Oxford comma looks a little old-fashioned. No comma looks a bit more modern.

 

 

She likes hot dogs and green tea.

He likes hot dogs and bubble drinks.

He drinks pop every day. He drinks two cans of pop every day.

I bought some pop for you.

Canada- pop

US- soda

 

 

COMMON ERROR

Junko is writing, listening, checking her phone.

FIX

Junko is writing, listening, and checking her phone.

 

Your choice:

A, B and C. -more modern

A, B, and C. -a little old-fashioned

 

COMMON ERROR

I am writing, checking my phone.

A, B

FIX

I am writing and checking my phone.

 

-SSSV

Jun, Sarah, and Shira went for a hike yesterday. more common

Jun, Sarah, and Shira went hiking yesterday.

We went for a walk. She went for a run. He went for a drive.

She went for a ride. bike or motorcycle

They went for a drink. beer, wine at a bar

Let’s go for a coffee.

Let’s go for a walk.

Do you want to go for a walk?

Do you wanna go for a walk? CASUAL TALKING, NOT FOR WRITING

wanna=want to

gonna= going to

 

Let’s dance!

Let’s sing. Everybody sing!

Let’s have fun.

 

The pens, books and papers are on the table.

 

 

-SSVV

Mohamad and Joseph went downtown and bought some business clothes.

 

Mohamad and Joseph went downtown, and they  bought some business clothes. COMPOUND SENTENCE

 

formal clothes- formal wear, a suit and tie, business attire

VOCAB dress code- uniform, level of formality in your clothing

The office dress code is business attire.

casual attire

formal attire- wedding clothes

“Gym attire is mandatory”

uniform- everybody dressed exactly the same- McDonalds, air hostess stewardess flight attendants, Ikea-same top, sports team(jersey), police, fireman fire fighter, mail man a letter carrier, security guard

 

-Imperative sentence- command, tell somebody to do something

ENGLISH IDIOM What’s the magic word?

 

(You) Open the window, please. You – implied subject

Watch out!

Go to bed. Brush your teeth.

Sit down. Have some coffee.

Try again. Take a break.

Help yourself. Stay calm.

Relax.

Take it easy. – casual way to say goodbye

Take it easy. – don’t get angry, upset

SLANGY Chill.

Don’t worry. It’s nothing to worry about.

 

CASUAL No worries. Australian slang You’re welcome.

US Uh-huh

 

Of course. Don’t mention it. A pleasure. Happy to. Any time. You’re welcome.

NEW IDIOM from US    I appreciate you. Thank you.

OLD I appreciate it/that.

 

IDIOM CASUAL Hold your horses. Wait a second. No need to rush.

CUSTOMER Just one moment. Wait a moment, please. Give me one minute. Let me finish this.

Hold on for one second. Hang on for a second.

 

Take your time. -don’t rush

Take care.- casual way to say goodbye

Have a good one.- casual goodbye

Open the window, please.

Please open the window.

Open wide.

Please be careful of black ice.

 

Are you going to the party?

Yes, I am. No, I am not.

 

-Interrogative sentences- questions

interrogate(v)- to ask questions in an aggressive, serious way

The police interrogated a suspect.

 

Do you like ice cream?

Yes, I do. Sure. Love it! Defiinitely. Of course. Certainly.(formal)

Do you want to go for a hike?

Sure. Why not?

 

Did you like Hawaii?

It was beautiful.

I bet.

IDIOM I bet. I’m sure you are right. I agree with you even though don’t know.

 

The best noodles in China come from ABC City.

I bet.

 

CASUAL IDIOM You bet. You’re welcome. It’s ok. No problem.

SLANG No probs. texting- NP

 

contextual usage- time and place, and to who

 

 

 

 

 

Math 12 is hard.

I bet.

She bets on the horses.

He made on a small bet on hockey game.

VOCAB bet- gambling, casino

 

What time is it?

Where are you from?

What is your nationality?

What time does the class finish?

What time/When does the movie start?

Have you ever been to Paris?

How is the weather? What’s the weather like?

How long does it take you to get to school?

How often do you go to the gym every week?

 

Shall we take a break?

 

SIMPLE SENTENCES

SV

SSV

SVV

SSSV

SVVV

Imperative

Interrogative

 

Simple Sentence Exercises Hobby Vocabulary

 

Write a simple sentence for each. Write your sentences on your own

paper.

e.g.         SVV   drive   kids

Marin drives the kids to school and picks them up afterward.

               Interrogative       use   chopsticks

     Can you show us how to use chopsticks properly?

SSVV look buy

     Michelle and Carmen looked at several formal dresses but didn’t buy anything.

 

1.    SV      hobby   rewarding

2.    SSV    Jun   surprisingly

Jun and Tom surprisingly found that they took the wrong bus.

Jun and Tom are surprisingly tall.

Surprisingly, Jun and Tom threw a surprisingly well-organized/thought-out party, surprisingly.

Surprisingly, Sarah and Jon surprisingly bumped into each other, surprisingly.

The phone was surprisingly inexpensive.

Garlic and chocolate go surprisingly well together.

airpods- Apple product

earbuds- generic term

earphones/headphones- over your head

 

Generic medication is usually cheaper.

 

3.    SVV   intimidating   dog

An intimidating dog growled and scared the kids.

4.    SV      beginner   yoga

5.    SSV    busy   research

6.    SVV   postpone   meeting

7.    SSSV  play   together

8.    SSVV talk   bond

9.    SVVV children   park

10.                       Imperative           brave   fear

Don’t be afraid/scared/fearful.

Have no fear.

Be brave.

Face your fears bravely.

Show a brave fearless face.

 

11.                       SSVV                     worry

12.                       Imperative           lazy

Don’t be lazy.

Stop being so lazy.

workaholic-

alcoholic

cbocoholic

shopaholic

 

13.                       Interrogative       possible

Is it possible to be on time?

Is it possible for me to get that chance?

Would it be possible for me to talk to/see her?

Is it possible to pay by etrans/crypto?