Project 7 Sprint 1 year 2 2020 - 2031

Project 7 - Sprint 1
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMBOStudiejaar 2

This lesson contains 18 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 30 min

Items in this lesson

Project 7 - Sprint 1

Slide 1 - Slide

Slide 2 - Link

Eventueel nog toevoegen
WARRMING UP uit DOorENgels Task 1
Presentation uitleg opdracht 7
Recap conditionals + conjunctions

Slide 3 - Slide

Prefixes & Suffixes
They both change the meaning of the word.

Prefixes are letters you can place BEFORE a word. 

Suffixes are letters that go at THE END of a word. 

Slide 4 - Slide

Prefixes (examples)



 (Non)sense                 (Im)possible              (Un)used              
  (Il)legal                         (In)compatible         (Ir)responsible
 (Dis)appear                 (Re)play                       (Mis)behave

Slide 5 - Slide

Prefixes
The following examples prefixes  meaning ‘not’ or ‘the opposite’: 
 anti - /  dis- /  il- / im- /  in- / ir- / non-  / un-


bacterial -  antibacterial
appear - disappear
legal - illegal
possible -  impossible
compatible - incompatible
responsible - irresponsible
sense - nonsense
used - unused




appear disappear
, ,, , , ,

Slide 6 - Slide

Prefixes
While other prefixes mean something else: 
co- / de- / over- / pro- / re-

co- = together                 ==> operate - cooperate
de- = back                         ==> increase - decrease (in is also a prefix here)
over- = too much            ==> pay - overpay

pro- = for                             ==> anti-government - pro-government
re- = again                          ==> read - reread


Slide 7 - Slide

Suffixes
Added at the end of a word...

...to change the meaning!

Slide 8 - Slide

Suffixes


  From verb to adjective:               careful (from to care)

    From verb to noun:                             treatment (from to treat)

    From adjective to adverb:       happily (from happy)


Slide 9 - Slide

Suffixes
Some prefixes and suffixes have a clear positive or negative meaning... but not always. So look for context!

For example: the suffix -less means ‘without’.

Words with this suffix usually have negative meaning (jobless, friendless, homeless).
But if you say somebody is fearless, it can have a positive meaning: they are without fear.

Slide 10 - Slide

disbelief
dis =
A
impolite
B
rude
C
tasty
D
not

Slide 11 - Quiz

interrupt
inter =
A
inside
B
between
C
not
D
break

Slide 12 - Quiz

Complete the sentence with the correct prefix.

I don't trust that boy anymore. He was ...honest about his age.
A
re
B
dis
C
mis
D
im

Slide 13 - Quiz

Choose the suffix that changes the verb 'buy' into a person that does the action.
A
-ing
B
-ment
C
-er

Slide 14 - Quiz

Change the noun 'respect'. Add the prefix that gives it the opposite meaning.

Slide 15 - Open question

Change the adjective 'responsible'. Add the prefix that gives it the opposite meaning.

Slide 16 - Open question

Change the verb 'disappoint' into a noun. Choose the correct suffix: -ment or -ness.

Slide 17 - Open question

Choose the suffix that changes the verb 'develop' into a person that does the action.
A
-ment
B
-ness
C
-er

Slide 18 - Quiz