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?

 

 

 

P1 EF6 Class 14

 

Today’s Agenda

·      Attendance

·      Pronouns- someone, anyone, everyone

·      Continue compound sentences with ; TRANS,

Quiz Wednesday   SOBA and ; TRANS,

Choose vocab to review

·      Continue New dialogue “Going to a Dental Specialist”

 

Wednesday

·      Quiz 3- compound sentences

·      Continue “Simple Present Verb Tense EF56 TEACH”

Verb tense- simple present, past, future

 

Thursday

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

**

Pronouns-

someone, anyone, everyone, no one

somebody, anybody, everybody, nobody

something, anything, everything, nothing

 

All singular- 1

Everybody is going to the party tonight.

Everyone is going to the party tonight.

No one is going to the party tonight.

Nobody is going to the party tonight.

 

All of us are going to party tonight.

We are going to the party tonight.

 

Something smells good.

The cookies smell good.

 

Someone doesn’t like orange juice. STRANGE SOUNDING

Jun doesn’t like orange juice.

 

Anyone never doesn’t. XXX

No one does that.

No one plays Pokemon Go any more.

 

No one wants to stay late.

No one wants to work on the weekend.

 

I can eat no one. STRANGE MEANING

I can eat nothing. XXX Not authentic English.

I can’t eat anything. My stomach is upset. Authentic English

 

No one can eat anything right now. We’ll eat later.

 

Anybody / Everybody

Anybody can talk in the class. – focusses on one person (singular)

Everybody can talk in the class.  -focusses on the group (singular)

 

Does anybody know where the phone is?

Is everybody ready to go?

 

No one – not one of the people

No one in the class can speak Italian.

Nobody can speak Italian.

 

#1 ADVICE:

Don’t wait. Talk with people in English.

 

Sometimes, intermediate students want to understand English through prescriptive grammar rules. This is not an effective way to learn a language.

Language is social.

The people who I know who learned English well learned it by using it socially.

-         feel more confident

-         feel less nervous

-         feel less shy

 

Mix of class-learning and daily usage.

socially- talking with people

 

 

 

 

 

 

**

Quiz 3

compound sentences

Six sentences

SOBA

AND

Transitional terms:

Let’s choose transitional terms to review for the quiz:


1.    also

I go to school everyday; also, I see my friend.

I like ice cream; also, I like popsicles.

I bought some ice creams for the kids.  cones

I bought some ice cream for the kids. container

ice creams- separate ice cream cones

McDonalds soft-serve ice cream

Rain and Shine ice cream

Ikea frozen yoghurt, fro-yo

Costco ice cream soft-serve

Dulce Amore- ice cream cakes

Earnest Ice Cream

 

Flavours

salted caramel

vanilla

chocolate

garlic?

green tea

lemon

strawberry

durian

maple walnut

hazelnut

 

Italian ice cream- gelato

2.    therefore

I didn’t turn off the pot/stove in time; therefore, my food got burned.

3.    as a result

My supper/dinner was ruined; as result, I had to make instant noodles.

 however

4.    for example

5.    instead

6.    on the other hand

7.    furthermore

8.    in addition

9.    then

Let’s try some. Work together- it’s more fun. I will walk around and help.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Let’s choose transitional terms to review for the quiz:


1.    also

2.    therefore

3.    as a result

4.    however

5.    for example

6.    instead

7.    on the other hand

8.    furthermore

9.    in addition

10.                       then

Let’s try some. Work together- it’s more fun. I will walk around and help.

Vancouver is beautiful; however, it is expensive.

Vancouver is a beautiful city in the world; however, it is expensive. XXX

Vancouver is one of the most beautiful cities in the world; however, it is expensive.

Clara is one of the nicest people I have ever met; however, she is shy until you get to know her.

 

Vancouver is one of the most beautiful cities best city in the world; however, it is expensive.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

REVIEW FOR QUIZ


1.    so     ,

2.    or     ,

3.    but     ,

4.    and      ,

5.    also       ;   ,

6.    as a result      ;    ,

7.    however       ;     ,

8.    instead       ;     ,

9.    on the other hand      ;    ,

10.                       then (no comma)     ;


We saw a movie; then we went for a drink.

We saw a movie; after that, we went for a drink.


 

 

She loves sports; for example, she plays soccer, volleyball, and tennis.

She is someone who loves sports. BIT OVERWRITTEN

I like chatting with my daughter; for example, we talk about things that happen in her work.

 

VOCABULARY

1.    regular

2.    calm

3.    eye

4.    sport

5.    tasty

6.    buy

7.    drive

8.    over

9.    expensive

10.     shopping

 

 

 

 

 

REVIEW FOR QUIZ


1.    so   

2.    or   

3.    but      

4.    and     

5.    also      

6.    as a result     

7.    however      

8.    instead      

9.    on the other hand        

10.                       then


 

VOCABULARY


1.    regular

2.    calm

3.    eye

4.    sport

5.    tasty

6.    buy

7.    drive

8.    over

9.    expensive

10.     shopping


 

**

“Going to a Dental Specialist”

4.numb(adj)-

My hand is numb.

My hand is asleep. I have pins and needles.

She feels numb.(emotional)

7. You seal an envelope. The envelope is sealed/open.

8. The donut has cream filling.

9. post- after  post-secondary, pos-toperative

 

decay- fall apart or go bad, rot

 

The food has gone bad.

10.at ease- relaxed, taking it easy

 

Way of saying goodbye- Take it easy. Have a good one.

 

Take it easy. Don’t get angry.

 

She is taking it easy today.