Cette leçon contient 37 diapositives, avec quiz interactifs, diapositives de texte et 3 vidéos.
Éléments de cette leçon
Grammar Unit 5: review
Past tenses:
- past simple
- past continuous
- present perfect
- past perfect
Slide 1 - Diapositive
Slide 2 - Diapositive
He …………………………… home late when the accident occurred.
A
drove
B
was driving
C
had driven
Slide 3 - Quiz
The guests had left before I ………………………… home.
A
arrived
B
had arrived
C
have arrived
Slide 4 - Quiz
I ………………………….. sleep well last night.
A
hadn't
B
didn't
C
wasn't
Slide 5 - Quiz
Every morning, he …………………………. for a walk.
A
had gone
B
was going
C
went
Slide 6 - Quiz
After she …………………………. her breakfast, she went to work.
A
ate
B
has eaten
C
had eaten
Slide 7 - Quiz
Our team ………………………… them yesterday.
A
had defeated
B
defeated
C
was defeating
Slide 8 - Quiz
By the time I reached the station, the train …………………………..
A
hadn't departed
B
didn't depart
C
hasn't departed
Slide 9 - Quiz
She ………………………… college last year.
A
left
B
has left
C
was leaving
Slide 10 - Quiz
I burned my finger while I .............. breakfast.
A
cooked
B
was cooking
C
had cooked
Slide 11 - Quiz
Yesterday I went to an interesting museum that I ............... before.
A
didn't visit
B
hadn't visited
C
wasn't visiting
Slide 12 - Quiz
Unit 6: What if?
- What if you suddenly became famous, how would you feel?
- What would be the advantages of achieving
instant success?
- Would there be any drawbacks?
Slide 13 - Diapositive
Slide 14 - Vidéo
Unit 6.1
- Do you agree with Will? Why?
- Would you think being famous has
more advantages than drawbacks?
- What about social media?
- Do you think you could cope with negative attention if you were famous?
Slide 15 - Diapositive
Unit 6.1: Reading
Read the text about Mary-Jess, the girl from the video above.
Pay attention to the words that are printed in red. These are the clues, which you normally have to be able to find yourself.
The FCE reading test consists of a number of different reading exercises of which this is Part 6 (see the Lesson Up on FCE Reading).
Do ex. 1-5
Slide 16 - Diapositive
Unit 6.1: Vocabulary- phrasal verbs with keep
keep away - not go somewhere or near something / (ergens) vandaan blijven
keep down - stop the number, level or size of something from increasing / laag houden
keep in - make someone stay in hospital / een nachtje (of langer) in het ziekenhuis blijven
keep to - stay with something such as a plan, subject, path / (je) houden aan
keep up with - understand something that is changing very fast / bijhouden van veranderingen
keep up with - move at the same speed as someone or something / bijhouden qua snelheid van iets of iemand
Do ex. 6-7 in which you use the words above!
Slide 17 - Diapositive
Unit 6.1: Word formation
You have to know the different parts of speech of the words used in the exercises.
Make a grid with : verb - noun - adjective - adverb (which is which again?)
Put the words of ex. 8 in the right box.
Now do exercise 8. Remember to look at the entire sentence and especially the words before and after the gap to determine what part of speech you need to fill in. Change the word to fit the part of speech. That means that the part of speech given is not the one you need to use!
Slide 18 - Diapositive
Lesson 2: Unit 6.2
Grammar: condtionals with if & unless
Vocabulary
Speaking
Slide 19 - Diapositive
Conditionals
Slide 20 - Diapositive
Conditionals = if-zinnen
A conditional sentence exists of 2 parts:
If it rains tomorrow, I will stay at home
the condition (voorwaarde/actie): If it rains tomorrow
the result (resultaat/gevolg): I will stay at home.
There are 4 different ways to construct conditional sentences in English. We will look at all of them.
Slide 21 - Diapositive
Zero conditional (100% sure):
This form is used for:
- facts / real (factual) situations in the present
- commands / the imperative form
How to make: use a present simple in both parts
If water freezes, it becomes ice.
If you want to be better at English, pay attention (imperative)
In this conditional, you can replace the word 'if' with 'when' without changing the meaning.
Slide 22 - Diapositive
First conditional (very likely, almost 100% sure)
The type 1 conditional is used to refer to:
- the present or future where a situation is real
- a possible condition and its probable result
How to make: use a present simple in the if-clause
and the future simple in the main clause.
Future simple: will + infinitive (full verb)
If you are late, she will be very angry.
Slide 23 - Diapositive
Second conditional (hypothetical)
The type 2 conditional is used to refer to:
- a hypothetical condition and its probable result (aka:
its unlikely to happen, but not impossible)
How to make: use a past simple in the if-clause
and would + infinitive in the main clause.
If I learned to play the guitar, I would be rock star.
If I were famous, I would poston Instagram every day!
In the if-clause, were is often used instead of was
Slide 24 - Diapositive
Third conditional (unchangeable, regret)
The type 3 conditional is used to refer to:
- a time in the past and a situation that is the opposite
of the present.
- an unreal past condition and its probable result
How to make: use a past perfect in the if-clause
and would/could/should have + past participle in
the main clause
If you had studied harder, you would have passed the exam.
(but you didnt study hard, so you failed)
Slide 25 - Diapositive
Slide 26 - Diapositive
Extra exercise: fill in the right tense
If you give him a hand he …( thank) you.
If I … (be) you, I would call home.
If he … (find) out the truth sooner, he would have reported you to the police himself.
If she lived in Amsterdam she … (go) to the Albert Cuyp every week.
If you mix blue and yellow you … (get) green.
If they take the 8 o’clock train in Amersfoort they … (arrive) in time for the meeting.
If she had not forgotten her purse she … ( buy) a new winter coat.
If you … (heat) up water to 100 degrees Celsius it …(boil).
If he won the lottery, he … (move) to a tropical island.
If the boys behave better, their parents … (allow) them to stay home alone.
timer
7:00
Slide 27 - Diapositive
Answers
If you give him a hand he will thank…( thank) you.
If I were… (be) you, I would call home.
If he had found… (find) out the truth sooner, he would have reported you to the police himself.
If she lived in Amsterdam she wouldgo… (go) to the Albert Cuyp every week.
If you mix blue and yellow you …get (get) green.
If they take the 8 o’clock train in Amersfoort they …will arrive (arrive) in time for the meeting.
If she had not forgotten her purse she would have bought… ( buy) a new winter coat.
If you heat up water to 100 degrees Celsius it …boils(boil).
If he won the lottery, he …would move(move) to a tropical island.
If the boys behave better, their parents …will allow(allow) them to stay home alone.
Slide 28 - Diapositive
Now do the exercises 1-6
Learn these conditional combinations
by heart:
Slide 29 - Diapositive
If + past simple, … would + infinitive is used when
A
something is always true
B
something becomes true when the condition is met
C
something is not true in the present
D
something was not true in the past
Slide 30 - Quiz
If + present simple, … present simple is used when
A
something is always true
B
something becomes true when the condition is met
C
something is not true in the present
D
something is not true in the past
Slide 31 - Quiz
If + past perfect, … would have + past participle
A
something is always true
B
something becomes true when the condition is met
C
something is not true in the present
D
something is not true in the past
Slide 32 - Quiz
If + present simple, … will + infinitive is used when