Project 7 Sprint 1 year 2 2020 - 2021

Project 7 - Sprint 1
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EngelsMBOStudiejaar 2

This lesson contains 29 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

Recap: Conditionals
Zero conditional
First conditional
Second conditional


What are these things?

Slide 3 - Slide

Zero Conditional
We use the zero conditional to talk about things that are generally true, especially for laws and rules.

EX: Ice melts if you heat it.

if/when + present simple >> present simple.

Slide 4 - Slide

First conditional
We use the first conditional when we talk about future situations we believe are real or possible.

EX: If it doesn't rain tomorrow, we'll go to the beach.

if/when + present simple >> will + infinitive

Slide 5 - Slide

Second conditional
The second conditional is used to imagine present or future situations that are impossible or unlikely in reality.

EX: If I won a lot of money, I'd buy a big house in the country.

The structure is usually: if + past simple >> + would + infinitive. 

Slide 6 - Slide

In which conditional is this following sentence written?

If you don't hurry you will miss your train
A
Zero
B
First
C
Second

Slide 7 - Quiz

In which conditional is this following sentence written?

If you went to bed earlier you would not be so tired.
A
Zero
B
First
C
Second

Slide 8 - Quiz

In which conditional is this following sentence written?

If it rains the grass gets wet.
A
Zero
B
First
C
Second

Slide 9 - Quiz

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 10 - Slide

Prefixes (examples)



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

Slide 11 - 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 12 - 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 13 - Slide

Suffixes
Added at the end of a word...

...to change the meaning!

Slide 14 - 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 15 - 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 16 - Slide

disbelief
dis =
A
impolite
B
rude
C
tasty
D
not

Slide 17 - Quiz

interrupt
inter =
A
inside
B
between
C
not
D
break

Slide 18 - 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 19 - Quiz

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

Slide 20 - Quiz

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

Slide 21 - Open question

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

Slide 22 - Open question

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

Slide 23 - Open question

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

Slide 24 - Quiz

DoorEngels assignments in Teams
Ex 7 and ex 10

Slide 25 - Slide

Task 1 Exercise 7: Writing a short essay about study habits

See DoorEngels for the exact details. 

Slide 26 - Slide

Task 1 exercise 10: Giving a presentation
Prepare your presentation. Include the following points:

  • what your skill is and why you picked it;
  • where you first learnt it and how you found out you were very good at it;
  • what you do regularly to practise or get better at it;
  • what the secret is to becoming very good at your chosen skill.

Pair up with another student.
Present your skill to the other person and let them ask questions if they have any.






Slide 27 - Slide

Presentation part 2
Work in duos, hand it in individually. (two people hand in the same video)

Remember: this is all for a grade

Slide 28 - Slide

Slide 29 - Slide