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Unit 12 Vocabulary Year 2 English
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Pirates
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What do you know about pirates? Were there pirates in China? Do pirates still exist today? How are they different from pirates in the past?
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Ching Shih Widow of Zheng Yi
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Read about Cocos Island and complete activities 1 & 2
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Answers Gold bars, gold and silver coins, life-sized gold statue No 1966 Pirate base A tail of trickery A failed attempt Success at last Death by greed
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Passive Review
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Has been used Can still be found Was Have been made Was Could be found WHY?
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Rewrite in passive voice A priceless hoard of 3000 Saxon coins were found yesterday as a women was digging in her back garden. The coins had been packed into a wooden box which broke as it was dug out of the ground. The coins are in the care of the local museum where they are being clean in a special laboratory. They will be taken to a museum in York for further examination. A legal expert said that even though Mrs Barrett found the coins on her property, they could still be ruled property of the state.
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12B Money Idioms What do the following proverbs mean? *Money is the root of all evil *Money makes the world go round *There’s one law for the rich, another for the poor Can you think of a story that illustrate these?
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Money Idioms Hard up In the red In the lap of luxury Live hand to mouth On the breadline Worth a fortune Without a penny to your name Money to burn
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Idioms meaning POOR Hard up: you don’t have much money and have difficulty paying for basics like food and housing. In the red: your bank account is overdrawn Live hand to mouth/ on the breadline: you are desperately poor and have trouble finding food. Without a penny to your name: you have no money at all. Idioms meaning RICH Money to burn: you have more money than you need and can afford to waste it. In the black: you earn more money then you are spending. In the lap of luxury: you are living in a very rich and luxurious way. Worth a fortune: something is worth a lot of money.
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Phrasal Verbs Hand something back Ripped off Turned away Fall for Get your own back Get away with Make up something Give away
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Phrasal Verbs 1. If you hand something back, you return it, probably to its owner. 2. If you are ripped off, someone cheats you out of money. We normally use it when we are overcharged for something. 3. If you are turned away from somewhere, a person at the door of a place (restaurant/nightclub) refuses to let you in and asks you to go away. 4. If you fall for something, you are successfully tricked or believe an untrue story.
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Phrasal Verbs 5. If you get your own back on someone, you get revenge. 6. If you get away with something, no one discovers that you have done something bad or wrong. 7. If you make up something, you invent it even though it isn’t true. 8. If you give away information, you allow other people to find out information that should be kept private.
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Match 1-8 with A-H 1. G 2. B 3. F 4. A 5. E 6. C 7. D 8. H
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Generalising Generally speaking, people are thinking more about their coffee than the money in their hand. They mostly last less than 2 years. As a rule, it can be sold for 4 time its face value. For the most part, the work was done by Jefferson. By and large, the stories are more entertaining than probable. Americans generally prefer dollar bills to dollar coins. On the whole, most British people can most Americans. Broadly speaking, the dollar has remained strong. I think that, in general, it’s best to travel with dollars in your pocket. Generally speaking, people are thinking more about their coffee than the money in their hand. They mostly last less than 2 years. As a rule, it can be sold for 4 time its face value. For the most part, the work was done by Jefferson. By and large, the stories are more entertaining than probable. Americans generally prefer dollar bills to dollar coins. On the whole, most British people can most Americans. Broadly speaking, the dollar has remained strong. I think that, in general, it’s best to travel with dollars in your pocket.
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British vs. American English What is the British word? 1. Football 2. Tap 3. Subway 4. Bill 5. Aubergine 6. Pavement 7. Chips Other Words
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1. Toilet 2. Bill 3. Aubergine 4. Tap 5. Crisps 6. Dustbin 7. Petrol station 8. Trousers 9. Pavement 10. Football 11. Cooker 12. Underground a) Faucet b) Pants c) Stove d) Subway e) Bathroom f) Gas station g) Soccer h) Garbage can i) Check j) Chips k) Eggplant l) Sidewalk British English American English Different meanings
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U.K. or U.S.A? Petrol Station U.K.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Eggplant U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Check U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Trousers U.K.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Stove U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Chips U.K.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Bathroom U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Faucet U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Dustbin U.K.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Sidewalk U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Soccer U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Underpass U.S.A.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Underground U.K.
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U.K. or U.S.A? Undershirt U.S.A.
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