Lesson 4 - Articles, personal & possessive pronouns

WELCOME
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Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMiddelbare schoolmavoLeerjaar 1

This lesson contains 29 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

WELCOME

Slide 1 - Slide

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Today
1. Goals
2. Check homework
3. Repeat to be
4. Articles (a/an)
5. Personal & possessive pronouns
6. Checkbook
7. Homework

Slide 2 - Slide

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Goals
At the end of this lesson...
  • You know how the difference between a and an
  • You know personal and possessive pronouns

Slide 3 - Slide

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Exercise 11, 12, 13, 14

Slide 4 - Slide

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Last week
The verb to be

Slide 5 - Slide

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1. I am studying English.
2. He are walking the dog.
3. We is in the classroom.
4. She is good at football.
5. They are my parents.
Correct
Incorrect
(not correct)
1
2
3
4
5

Slide 6 - Drag question

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The verb (werkwoord) to be
Personal Pronoun
Form of to be
Shorter version
I
am
I'm
You
are
You're
He/she/it
is
He's/she's/it's
We
are
We're
You
are
You're (=plural)
They
are
They're
Take notes

Slide 7 - Slide

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The difference

Slide 8 - Slide

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A vs AN
  • We use a and an to talk about things in a general way
  • There is a police car outside.
  • My aunt lives in an old house.
  • We're having a lovely evening.
We decide whether we use a or an based on the pronunciation of the word that follows.

Slide 9 - Slide

We use a/an to talk about things in a general way, without saying precisely which people or items we are referring to
We decide whether we use a or an based on the pronunciation of the word following the article. 

When to use a
In front of any word that begins with a consonant (not a vowel):
A book
A dog bone
A town
A cup of coffee
A diary

Slide 10 - Slide

what is a consonant?
what is a vowel?
When to use an
In front of any word that begins with a vowel
A (an apple)
E (an egg)
I (an Ipad)
O (an oven)
U (an umbrella)

Slide 11 - Slide

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Exceptions
Words that start with u or eu pronounced with a /j/ sound
  • University, euro, useful = a
Words that start with a "silent" h
  • Hour, honest, honour = an
Words that start with o  pronounced with a /w/ sound
  • Once, one, onesie = a

Slide 12 - Slide

What does "exceptions" mean? - uitzonderingen
/j/ sound: (a) - unicorn, university, euro, useful, uniform, universe, Europe
silent /h/: (an) - hour, honour, honest
/w/ sound: (a) - onesie, once, one
a of an?
..... dog
A
a
B
an

Slide 13 - Quiz

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a of an?
..... banana
A
a
B
an

Slide 14 - Quiz

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a of an?
.... artwork
A
a
B
an

Slide 15 - Quiz

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a of an?
.... uniform
A
a
B
an

Slide 16 - Quiz

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a of an?
.... commercial
A
a
B
an

Slide 17 - Quiz

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a of an?
.... hour
A
a
B
an

Slide 18 - Quiz

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a of an?
.... university
A
a
B
an

Slide 19 - Quiz

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A of AN?
.... president
A
a
B
an

Slide 20 - Quiz

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A
AN
table
house
egg
chicken
island
phone
orange

Slide 21 - Drag question

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What are Possessive Pronouns? Give an example

Slide 22 - Open question

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Possessive Pronouns
My birthday
His birthday is after mine.
Your dog
Is that dog yours?
His CDs
Those CDs are his.
Her money
The money is all hers.
Its legs
Difference between its and it's
Our laptop
You can borrow ours.
Their friends
They introduced some friends of theirs.

Slide 23 - Slide

We use the first row with possessive pronouns at the beginning of a noun phrase.
We use the second row without a noun following:
That is my coat. (coat is a noun)
That coat is mine. (no noun following)
The meaning is similar, but the words that follow (or don't) are different
Possessive Pronouns
Possessives often tell us who things belong to or a relationship between two people/things
His birthday is two days after mine
That's my diary.
Isn't that your brother?

Slide 24 - Slide

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I
You
He
She
It
We
They
Our
Her
Its
My
Their
His
Your

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Coursebook
Personal and possessive  pronouns: Grammar 1.1
To be: Grammar 1.2
A vs an: Grammar 1.3

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Goals
At the end of this lesson...
  • You know how the difference between a and an
  • You know personal and possessive pronouns

Slide 27 - Slide

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What have you learned in this lesson?
Can you give me an example?

Slide 28 - Open question

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Homework
Workbook: Ex. 15, 16, 17

Slide 29 - Slide

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