Headway Academic Skills Reading, Writing, and Study Skills IN TRO D U CTO RY LEVEL Student’s Book OXFORD Sarah Philpot and Lesley Curnick Series Editors: Liz and John Soars Headway Academic Skills Reading, Writing, and Study Skills IN T R O D U C T O R Y L E V E L Student’s Book Sarah Philpot and Lesley Curnick Series Editors: Liz and John Soars O XFO RD CONTENTS 1 M eeting people REA D IN G New people p4-5 W R IT IN G S u r v e y i n g s u r v e y i n g a t e x t to f i n d o u t w h a t i t is a b o u t RULES P r e s e n t S i m p l e ( 1 ) t h e P r e s e n t S i m p l e w i t h fee a n d o t h e r v e r b s KEY LAN G UAG E The alphabet p6 T h e a l p h a b e t c o n s o n a n t s a n d v o w e ls Introductions p7 RULES A r t i c l e s : a a n d a n P u n c t u a t i o n (1 ) c a p it a l le tte r s C h e c k in g y o u r w r itin g (1 ) c h e c k in g fo r m is ta k e s w ith s u b j e c t a n d v e rb , a n d a r tic le s 2 Countries REA D IN G Mountains, seas, and rivers p i0-11 W R IT IN G Mycountry P r e d i c t i n g u s i n g p i c t u r e s a n d th e ti tl e t o p r e d i c t t h e s u b j e c t o f a t e x t RULES th e r e i s / th e r e a r e p l2 - 1 3 L i n k i n g i d e a s (1) a n d a n d b u t P u n c t u a t i o n (2 ) u s i n g c o m m a s i n lis ts 3 Your studies REA D IN G Everyday pl6-17 W R IT IN G Your day S k im m in g r e a d in g a te x t q u ic k ly f o r g e n e r a l m e a n in g KEY LA N G U A G E Time p lS RULES P r e p o s i t i o n s o f t i m e i n i a t I o n p l9 W r i t i n g s e n t e n c e s w r i t i n g s e n te n c e s w i t h a s u b je c t, a v e rb , a n d a n o b je c t C h e c k i n g y o u r w r i t i n g ( 2 ) c h e c k i n g f o r s p e llin g m is t a k e s A W h ere w e work REA D IN G Where do they work? p22-23 W R IT IN G A good place to work F i n d i n g i m p o r t a n t w o r d s u s i n g i m p o r t a n t w o r d s in q u e s t i o n s to h e lp f i n d in fo r m a tio n in a te x t S c a n n i n g r e a d i n g a t e x t q u i c k l y to f i n d s p e c ific i n f o r m a t i o n p 2 4 -2 5 L i n k i n g i d e a s (2 ) b e c a u s e 5 Signs and instructions REA D IN G Signs-an international language p28-29 U n d e r s t a n d i n g a t e x t REVIEW of Study Skills W R IT IN G Form s p 3 0 -3 1 C o m p l e t i n g a f o r m r e a d i n g i n s t r u c t i o n s c a r e fu lly , c o m p le ti n g a f o r m c o r r e c tly 6 Health and m edicine REA D IN G Good health p34-35 W R IT IN G Medical discoveries U n d e r s t a n d i n g p r o n o u n s u n d e r s t a n d i n g p r o n o u n r e fe r e n c in g i n a t e x t RULES P a s t S im p le r e g u l a r a n d ir r e g u la r p a s t s i m p l e f o r m s p 3 6 -3 7 A v o i d i n g r e p e t i t i o n u s i n g p r o n o u n s to a v o i d r e p e t it io n in a te x t 7 The history o f transport REA D IN G Important first flights p40-41 W R IT IN G Trains M a k i n g n o t e s ( 1 ) l o o k i n g f o r i m p o r t a n t w o r d s , n a m e s , n u m b e r s , a n d d a te s K EY LA N G U A G E Ordinal numbers p42 p43 W r i t i n g f r o m n o t e s o r d e r in g n o te s to in c l u d e p o i n t s in a lo g ic a l o r d e r O r d i n a l n u m b e r s r e c o g n i z in g o r d i n a l n u m b e r s D a t e s w r i t i n g d a te s i n d if fe r e n t w a y s 8 Doing business REA D IN G The business of sport p46-47 W R IT IN G Polite emails M a k i n g n o t e s ( 2 ) m a k i n g n o te s u n d e r d i f f e r e n t h e a d in g s p48-49 W r i t i n g p o l i t e e m a i l s u s i n g p o l i t e p h r a s e s i n e m a ils 9 W ater REA D IN G Using water p52-53 W R IT IN G More or less U n d e r s t a n d i n g t a b l e s a n d c h a r t s (1 ) u s i n g ta b le s a n d b a r c h a r t s to h e lp y o u u n d e r s ta n d a te x t U n d e r s t a n d i n g t a b l e s a n d c h a r t s (2 ) c h e c k i n g n u m b e r s i n a ta b l e o r b a r c h a r t a g a in s t i n f o r m a t i o n i n a t e x t p 5 5 -5 6 D e s c r i b i n g s t a t i s t i c s d e s c r ib in g s ta tis tic s u s i n g p h r a s e s to c o m p a re a m o u n ts 10 Am bition and success REA D IN G Great ideas p58-59 W R IT IN G Success U n d e r s t a n d i n g t h e o r g a n i z a t i o n o f a t e x t u s i n g to p i c s e n te n c e s t o h e lp u n d e r s t a n d w h a t a t e x t is a b o u t W O R D LIST p64 PH O N ETIC SY M B O LS p71 p60-61 W r i t i n g a p a r a g r a p h u s i n g a to p i c s e n te n c e , o r g a n i z i n g i n f o r m a t i o n lo g ic a lly i n a p a r a g r a p h C h e c k i n g y o u r w r i t i n g ( 3 ) c h e c k i n g g r a m m a r , sp e llin g , a n d p u n c tu a tio n in a te x t V O C A BU LA R Y D EVELO PM EN T Instructions R E V IE W p8 p9 F o l l o w i n g i n s t r u c t i o n s : c irc le , c o m p le te , c o r r e c t, m a t c h , e tc . R e a d in g a w e b p a g e , w ritin g a p a ra g r a p h a b o u t a m c m n c r o f y o u r fa m ily V O C A BU LA R Y D EVELO PM EN T A lphabetical o rd e r R E V IE W p l4 p l5 U s i n g a d i c t i o n a r y (1 ) f i n d i n g th e p a r t o f sp e e c h , m e a n i n g a n d e x a m p l e s in a d ic tio n a r y R e a d in g a te x t a b o u t a c o u n tr y , w r itin g a p a ra g r a p h a b o u t a c o u n tr y V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T W ords th a t go to g e th e r R E V IE W p20 p21 R e c o r d i n g v o c a b u l a r y ( 1 ) r e c o r d in g v e r b + n o u n c o llo c a tio n s R e a d i n g a b o u t d a i l y r o u t i n e s , w r i t i n g a b o u t s o m e o n e ’s d a ily r o u tin e RESEARCH R E V IE W Search engines p26 U s i n g a s e a r c h e n g i n e (1 ) c h o o s in g w o r d s to s e a r c h f o r i n f o r m a t i o n V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T V ocabulary records p26 p27 R e a d i n g a b o u t s o m e o n e ’s jo b , c o m p l e t i n g a t e x t w i t h th e c o rr e c t lin k in g w o rd s R e c o r d i n g v o c a b u l a r y ( 2 ) c r e a t in g v o c a b u la r y r e c o r d s V O C A BU LA R Y D EVELO PM EN T Topic areas R E V IE W p32 p33 R e c o r d i n g v o c a b u l a r y ( 3 ) r e c o r d in g v o c a b u la r y i n to p i c s e ts R e a d i n g u s i n g a ll s t u d y s k i ll s , c o m p l e t i n g a f o r m V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T N o u n sa n d verbs R E V IE W p38 p39 R e c o g n i z i n g p a r t s o f s p e e c h r e c o g n i z in g d if fe r e n t p a r t s o f s p e e c h a n d r e la te d n o u n s a n d verbs R e a d in g a te x t a b o u t c h e m ic a ls a n d h e a lth , u s in g p ro n o u n s in a p a ra g ra p h V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T Verbs in th e Past Simple R E V IE W p44 p45 U s i n g a d i c t i o n a r y (2 ) u s i n g a d i c t i o n a r y t o f i n d ir r e g u la r v e r b f o r m s R e c o r d i n g v o c a b u l a r y ( 4 ) r e c o r d in g v e r b s w i t h p r e p o s i t i o n s t h a t f o l l o w t h e m R e a d in g a te x t a b o u t s o m e s a ilin g firs ts , w r itin g a p a r a g r a p h a b o u t s o m e i m p o r t a n t r a c i n g f irs ts V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T W ords w ith m ore th a n o n e m eaning R E V IE W p5() p51 U s i n g a d i c t i o n a r y (3 ) l o o k i n g u p w o r d s w i t h m o r e t h a n o n e m e a n in g , f i n d i n g th e c o rr e c t m e a n in g R e a d in g a te x t a b o u t s p o r ts a n d te le v is io n , w r itin g a p o lite e m a il V O C A BU LA RY D EVELO PM EN T O p p o site adjectives R E V IE W p56 p57 R e c o r d i n g v o c a b u l a r y ( 5 ) r e c o r d in g o p p o s i te a d je c t iv e s to g e t h e r R e a d i n g a t e x t a b o u t w a te r , u s i n g i n f o r m a t i o n i n a b a r c h a r t to w rite a d e s c r ip tio n o f w a te r u s e RESEARCH R E V IE W Finding th e right inform ation p 6 1 -6 2 U s i n g a s e a r c h e n g i n e (2 ) u s i n g th e I n t e r n e t to f i n d f a c t s , im a g e s , m a p s , a n d tr a n s la t io n s o f w o r d s C h e c k i n g i n f o r m a t i o n u s i n g m o r e t h a n o n e w e b s ite to c h e c k in f o r m a t i o n p63 R e a d in g a te x t a b o u t th e w e ll-k n o w n c lo th in g b ra n d , w ritin g a p a ra g r a p h a b o u t a s u c c e s s fu l p e rs o n 1 Meeting people READING SKILLS Surveying KEY LANGUAGE The alphabet WRITING SKILLS Punctuation (1) • Checking your writing (1) VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Following instructions READING New people STUDY SKILL Work with a partner. Look at the webpage and the photos. Answer the questions. Read STUDY SKILL 1 What is the club? 2 How many photos of people are there? 3 How many men are there in the photos? 4 How many paragraphs are there? S u rv e y in g Before you read a text, look at the page quickly. Ask: ■ W hat is the title? ■ W hat do the pictures show? ■ How many paragraphs are there? The answers help you understand what a text is about. University Internet Chess Club AB O U T THE CLUB New Members Hi N EW M E M B E R S klX M y name is Miguel Sousa. I come from Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, and I am a lecturer. I play chess with my son. M y name is M ona Patel. I come from Delhi, in India. I’m a medical student. I like chess very much. I am Jane Day. I come from Sydney, in Australia. I am an I am Deniz Osman. I live in m English Language teacher. I am a beginner. Ankara, in Turkey. I am a student. I play chess with my friends. 2 Read the webpage. Write the names under the photos. Check your answers with a partner. 3 Read the webpage again. Answer the questions. 1 Which country does Miguel come from? 2 What does he do? 3 Which city does Jane come from? 4 What does she do? 5 Which city does Deniz come from? 6 What does he do? 7 Which country does Mona come from? 8 What does she do? 4 U n it 1 • M eeting people i 4 Survey the webpage below. Answer the questions. 1 What is the club? 2 How many people are there in the photos? 3 How many paragraphs are there? www.onlinebookclub.com O N LIN E Book Club A B O U T US BO O KS N E W M EM BERS New Members Peter Blake com es fro m N ew York. H e @ an engineer. H e is m arried and has one daughter. H e likes reading very much. Ada and Ninoy Manlapaz co m e from M anila, in th e Philippines. T hey are teachers. T h ey are m arried and th e y have tw o children. T hey read a lo t o f books. 5 Read about the new members. Answer the questions. 1 Which paragraph is about people from the Philippines? 2 Which paragraph is about a person from the USA? 6 Write the names of the people under the photos. Check your answers with a partner. 7 Read the rules. Work with a partner. Read the webpage again. 1 (^ i^ lg ) forms of the verb be. 2 Underline the other verbs. RU LES P re s e n t S im p le (1) Use the Present Simple to give facts (true information). The verb be 1 am He/She lit is We / You / They are a teacher. students. Other verbs 1/ You / We / They come He / She / It comes from Delhi. U n itl • M eeting people 5 K EY LA N G U A G E The alphabet 1 Write the correct small letter next to the capital letter. Check your answers with a partner. c s y e Ic V u p X i d g b q w t cr t' m f c D E F G H 1 J K L M N O P Q R S T u V W X Y z « _ (^ I r d ^ the five vowels in exercise 1. Check your answers with a partner. STUDY SKILL The alphabet The alphabet has 26 letters. There are 21 consonants, for example, b, c, n, t. There are five vowels, for example, a. o. Knowing the alphabet helps you: ■ find words in a dictionary ■ record vocabulary in a notebook or computer file 3 Work with a partner. Write the words in alphabetical order. 1 lecturer 2 student 3 teacher 4 doctor 5 dentist engineer 6 4 Look at the registration desk for a conference. Where do these people go to register? 6 h z j 1 B A 2 n 0 1 Heinz Ehrhardt 2 3 4 5 6 Corelli Stella Roberts Gabriella Vancak Abdul Osman Hussein Ibrahim E-H Franco Unit 1 • Meeting people WRITING Introductions 1 Read the rules. Complete the sentences about you. RU LES M y name is . . . I A rtic le s a an d an Use a before a word beginning with a consonant; come fr o m . . . a doctor (a m a (n }... a student Use an before a word beginning with a 2 Work with a partner. Ask and answer the questions. Make notes. 1 What is your name? 2 Where do you come from? 3 What do you do? vowel sound: an engineer an accountant 3 Write a paragraph about your partner. M y p a rtn e r’s name Is . . . S h e /H e . . . letters. Read STUDY SKILL S T U D Y S K IL L P u n c tu a tio n (1} Use CAPITAL LEHERS for: 1 ■ the start o f sentences: He is a doctor. r m names o f people and places:jone, Brazil. m the pronoun /:Jane and 1come from Australia. ■ End sentences with a full stop {.). Adul Suttikul and Boonwat Mookjai come from Bangkok, in Thailand. They are computer engineering students. Adul is 20 and Boonwat is 21. 5 Read the student’s paragraph about Max. Add six capital letters, three full stops, and a question mark. kvcflx cokwes -frokw Is m-flrried uia- he ls doctor he has three chlidret^ Check your answers with a partner. Read about the Hussein family. Correct the mistakes. Read STUDY SKILL S T U D Y S K IL L C h e ck in g y o u r w ritin g (!) it is important to check your writing for mistakes. Check: ■ the subject and the verb: He go to university. / He goes to university, y ■ articles; She is a engineer X M y hw.sboiiA.d She is an engineer. / I ookvie frokw v>u.bal. I ctkvc a koustwl-fe, flkvd kwy hixsbcikvol awe a c-om-ptcterprogrAkvckvcer. He worle Iw a office. W t has two ohc-ldrew. Akvwed is fo u r awd L ay la ar^zix.. LM ^ia go to a Iwterveatlowai school. U n itl • M eeting people 7 VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Instructions 1 Label the pictures and examples 1-10 with instruction words from the box. STUDY SKILL circle complete underline F o llo w in g in s tru c tio n s write correct label match number 1 L rU U add It is necessary to read and follow instructions carefully. Make sure you know the important words, e.g. underline. 2 engineer doctor 2 Work with a partner. Follow the instructions. 1 Underline the verb. teacher 3 2 read She works at a school. I 2 (^irc^ the country. Spain He comes from New Zealand. 3 Label the picture with the correct words. keyboard screen She is ^ 3 engineer. 4 My wflkKC ts come from 4 Match the capital letters with the small letters, 1 [G h 2 E i teacher, engineer, g doctor,_________ 3 IT 5 Number the countries in alphabetical order. □ Japan n Thailand n India Letters, words, and sentences consonants verbs 4 8 letters- vowels nouns a sentence a word 1 tetters 2 ______ a. e,i 3 ________ I, m. n 4 ___ a, b, c, d international 5 _____ students, doctors 6 _______ write, read, understand 7 I come from London. ________ Look at exercise 3 again. Add one more example for 1-7. U n it 1 • M eeting people 8 7 1 l Al a l 2 I BI 1 3 |C| 1 3 Write the words from the box next to examples 1-7. S h e Ls ^ t&achtr. She is a teaclier. 9 b c She is an engineer a 10 in REVIEW 1 Survey the webpage and answer the questions. 1 What is the club? 2 How many paragraphs are there? 3 How many new members are there? University Backgammon Club M y nam e is Karim Mansour. I com e from Rabat, in M o ro cco . I study engineering at university. I play backgam m on w ith m y friends. I am Anna Costa. I live in Rio de Jan eiro, in Brazil. I am a nurse. I w ork in a hospital. I am m arried, and I play backgam m on w ith m y husband. 2 Read the webpage and answer the questions. 1 What country does Karim come from? 2 What city does he come from? 3 What does he study? 4 Where does he study? 5 Where does Anna live? 6 What does she do? 7 Where does she work? 3 Read the webpage again. Circle forms of the verb be and underline the other verbs. Check your answers with a partner. 4 Read the student’s paragraph below and find; • three mistakes with verbs • two mistakes with punctuation • two mistakes with articles M y kvcy I tokwes -f-roku. L-okvdokv M y -fathtr t-s a architect ar^d toother am- a bu.slkvesswokRflkv. I has okve brother, he is, ± s «kvd he iz av\, stu-dekvt. 5 Write a paragraph about a member of your family. Write about where they live and their occupation. My uncle's/father’s/sister’s name is ... He/She... 6 Check your writing for: • Present Simple verbs capital letters and full stops articles (a/an) U n itl • M eeting people 9 2 Countries READING SKILLS Predicting WRITING SKILLS Linking ideas (1j • Punctuation (2) VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Using a dictionary (1) READING Mountains, seas, and rivers 1 Label the map (1-4) with words from the box. Check your answers with a partner. coastline 2 mountains river East Survey the pictures and the title of the text. What is the text about? a) the weather in Spain b) the land in Spain c) the people in Spain STUDY SKILL Predicting Before you read a text, look at the pictures and title, and predict what it is about. This: ■ prepares you for reading ■ helps you understand the text Spain The geography o f Spain Spain is a large country in the south o f Europe. It has borders w ith France, Andorra, and Portugal. It has a long coastline on th e M editerranean Sea. and a short coastline on th e A tlantic O cean. There are m ountains in Spain, but there is a lo t o f fla t land, to o . There are tw o im portant rivers, th e Tajo and th e Ebro. The capital city is M adrid, in th e centre o f th e country. Barcelona is th e second city o f Spain, and it is on the M editerranean coast. 3 Read the text quickly. Check your answer to exercise 2. 10 Unit 2 • Countries Location 4 Read the text about Spain again. Answer the questions. 1 Where is Spain? 2 How many countries does Spain border? 3 Are there mountains in Spain? 4 What are the names of the rivers? 5 What is the capital city of Spain? Check your answers with a partner. 5 Work with a partner. Survey the pictures and the title of the text below. What is the text about? 6 Read the text to check your ideas. Algeria: a large country r \ Algiers Algerian desert Algeria is a very large country in North Africa. It has borders with Morocco, Mauritania, Western Sahara, Mali, Niger, Libya, and Tunisia. In the north, it has a long coastline on the Mediterranean Sea. Most o f Algeria is mountains and desert, but ’ an area of flat land along the coast. two important rivers in Algeria, the Chelif and the Seybouse. The capital o f Algeria is Algiers, and it is in the north, on the Mediterranean Sea. 7 Read the rules. Complete the text about Algeria with there is or there are. Check your answers with a partner. Location RU LES there is / there are there is with one thing. For example: There is a lot of flat land Use 8 Read the text about Algeria again. Are the sentences true (T ) or false (F )? 1 Algeria is in East Africa. F Use there are with tw o or more things. 2 It has borders with eight other countries. For example: 3 It is on the Mediterranean Sea. There are mountains in Spain. 4 Algeria has tw o important rivers. 5 The capital city is in the south o f the country. 9 Work with a partner. Correct the false sentences. I Algeria is in North Africa. U n it 2 • Countries 11 W R IT IN G My country 1 Look at the pairs of sentences. Is a) or b) better? 1 a) Turkey is in Europe. It is also in Asia. b) 2 a) Turkey is in Europe, and it is also in Asia. Switzerland has borders with five countries, but it does not have a coastline, b) Switzerland has borders with five countries. It does not have a coastline. Compare your answers with a partner. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL Linking ideas (1} Linking ideas makes your writing clearer. ■ Use and to link similar ideas. For example: Barcelona is the second city of Spain. b) It is on the Mediterranean coast Barcelona is the second city of Spain, and it is on the Mediterranean coast a) m Use butto link different ideas. For example: There are mountains in Spain. b) There is a lot of flat land, too. There are mountains in Spain, but there is a lot of flat land, too. a) 2 Complete the sentences with and or but. 1 South Africa is a large country, hut Mali, Chad, and Angola are larger. 2 There are mountains in the east,___in the north it is flat. 3 Brasilia is the capital of Brazil,___Sao Paolo is bigger. 4 Adelaide is a state capital,___Canberra is the national capital. 5 Riyadh is the capital of Saudi Arabia,___it has a population of about five million people. Riyadh Read STUDY SKILL Put commas in the student’s sentences. 1 M y c o u tiv try Is h o t d r y sw.iA.kvy. C.fliA.berrn S y d k v e y cu^d M cib ow rkve a re c it ie s I ia. A w s t r a ila . 2 3 SpaliA. exports cars kweoilcliA.es akvoi oil. 4 A r 0 ekvtln.a h a s b o rd ers w ith P a r O 0 w a y B r a z i l B o liv ia lA rw 0 w a y akvol C-hlle. STUDY SKILL Punctuation (2) Use commas (,) after words in a list. For example: ■ m It has borders with France, Andorra, and Portugal. The capital city has many universities, technical institutes, colleges, and schools. Using commas makes your writing easier to understand. 12 Unit 2 • Countries Canberra 4 Read the text. Complete it with and, but, and two commas. Compare your answers with a partner. My country My country is Malaysia. It is in South-East Asia. It has borders with Thailand Brunei and Indonesia. It has coastlines on the South China Sea ^ the Strait of Malacca. There is flat land around the coastline, ^____ there are mountains in the centre of the country. Over half the country has rainforests. The capital of Malaysia is Kuala Lumpur, . it is a very modem city. South China Sea 5 Answer the questions about your country. 1 What is the name of your country? 2 Where is your country? 3 What countries does it border? 4 Where are the coastlines? 5 Are there any mountains and rivers? 6 Is there a desert? 7 What is the capital city? 6 Write a paragraph about your country. Use your answers from exercise 5. My coMWtry is ... (name), and It is in ... (part of the world) 7 Work with a partner. Check your partner s paragraph for: • punctuation (capital letters, full stops, and commas) • grammar (subject and verb agreement, articles) • linking {and, but) Unit 2 • Countries 13 VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Alphabetical order 1 Work with a partner. Write the words in alphabetical order. Write the groups of words in alphabetical order. a) c) b) coastline river mountains country Riyadh Morocco capital Rome Mediterranean climate rainforest Malaysia 1 2 1 2 1 2 3 3 4 3 4 4 Parts of speech Read STUDY SKILL Look at the dictionary entry and label: the meaning the part o f speech STUDY SKILL Using a dictionary (1) • the example A dictionary gives you information about words. For example: ■ the part o f speech (noun, verb, or adjective) ■ the meaning ■ an example [a very high hill[T Kilim anjaro is the highest m ou n tain in Africa. 4 Look at the sentences. Underline the nouns and circle the adjectives. 1 Spain is a large country. 2 It is dry in Mexico. 3 In my country, the land is flat. Work with a partner. What part of speech are the underlined words? Use a dictionary to check your answers. 1 There are a lot of tourists in Paris, noun 2 It is a long river. 3 The city is in the north. 4 Do you like travelling? 5 What countries does Italy border? 14 Unit 2 • Countries Good dictionary skills help your reading and writing. R E V IE W 1 Work with a partner. Survey the pictures and the title. What is the text about? a) the USA b) Canada c) Alaska Location A big country Canada is a big country in North America. It has coastlines on the Atlantic Ocean, the Pacific Ocean, ’ the Arctic Ocean, a border with the USA. M ost o f the land is flat, ^_______ there are mountains in the w e s t . . a lot of rivers in Canada. The capital o f Canada is Ottawa. Toronto, Montreal, ^____________ Vancouver are very important cities, too. 2 Read the text quickly. Check your answer to exercise 1. 3 Read the text again. Complete it with words from the box. and and but There are There is 4 Write the student’s sentences with capital letters, commas, and full stops. 1 O tta w a U th e oa-pltai o f cakvad a 2 brazt-i is, okv th e atiakvtuo ooeatA3 Ukvdla h a s b o rd ers wt-th ■patelstan- ohlkca kvepai b u .rm a ban/0 (ad esh a w d bhkctakv 4 kw y oow.kvtry h a s kvtou.kvtai.kvs rtv e rs avvd fo re s ts 5 Match questions 1-5 about New Zealand with answers a)-e). 1 Q W here is New Zealand? a) the South Pacific Ocean 2 W hat countries does it border? b) in Oceania 3 n W hat seas or oceans is it on? c) Wellington 4 Are there any mountains and rivers? d) it has no borders W hat is the capital city? e) a lot o f mountains / some flat land / n n 5 n a lot o f rivers 6 Write a paragraph about New Zealand. Use the information in exercise 5. New Zealand is in Oceania. It doesn’t have a n y ... U n it 2 • Countries 15 3 Your studies READING SKILLS Skimming KEY LANGUAGE Time expressions • Days o f the week WRITING SKILLS W riting sentences • Checking your writing (2) VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Recording vocabulary (1) READING Everyday 1 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 Do you have lectures every day? 2 Do you study every day? 3 Which days do you see your friends? 2 Work with a partner. Answer the questions. 1 How many photos are there? 2 How many people are there in the photos? Read STUDY SKILL Skim the text. Which paragraph is about... ? a) a chemistry student b) a maths student c) medical students STUDY SKILL Skimming Skimming is reading a text quickly to find general information, for example who the text is about. University of South London COURSES DEPARTMENT CONTACT M e e t o u r s tu d e n ts n Conrad Delzer is 19. He is a chemistry student. He goes to the university every day. In the mornings, he works in the lab. At 12.30, he has lunch in the cafeteria. In the afternoons, he has lectures. He goes home at 5.00. In the evenings, he works on his computer and checks his emails. Q Malika Fahri and Yasmin Hamdi study medicine. They have lectures in the mornings. They work in the lab in the afternoons. They go home at 6.00. In the evenings, they study at home. At the weekend, they see their friends. n Martino Basti gets up at 7.45. He leaves home and goes to the university at 8.15. Martino studies maths. He has lectures in the mornings, and he works on his computer in the afternoons. He does his homework and goes on the Internet in the evenings. 4 Write the names of the people under the photos. 16 Units • Your studies 5 Read the text on page 16. Work with a partner and answer the questions. Conrad 1 How old is he? 2 Where does he have lunch? 3 What does he do in the afternoons? Malika and Yasmin 4 When do they have lectures? 5 What do they do in the afternoons? 6 When do they see their friends? Martino 7 When does he get up? 8 What does he do in the mornings? 9 When does he do his homework? 6 Work with a partner. Look at the two photos below. Answer the questions. 1 Where are the people? 2 What do they do? 7 Skim the text and look at the photos above. Which photo matches the text? Dr Sudhir Mahoob is a lecturer in business studies. He gives lectures at 9.00 on Mondays and 11.30 on Thursdays. He works in his office in the afternoons. He does research. He uses his computer, and he reads books. He has seminars on Friday mornings. At the weekend, he plays with his children, and he goes to football matches. 8 Read the text. Are the sentences true (T) or false (F)? Check your answers with a partner. 1 Dr Mahoob gives lectures on Mondays. 2 He works in the library in the afternoons. 3 On Friday mornings, he does research. 4 At the weekend, he goes to football matches. Unit 3 • Your studies 17 K EY LA N G U A G E Time 1 Write the times in the box under the clocks. Compare your answers with a partner. 4.00 3.15 10.30 2.45 Time expressions 2 Read the rules. Circle five more time expressions with at, in, on in the text. Compare your answers with a partner. RULES Prepositions of time W e use different prepositions o f tim e with different time expressions. (^ n S aturda^^ Martino gets up at 8.00. He goes to the gym in the mornings and in the afternoons, he watches TV. He likes sports programmes. He visits his friends in the evenings. He doesn’t work at the weekend. In a part o f the day: He watches television in the evenings. At a time / the weekend: At the weekend, he gets up at 8.30. On a day, and a part o f the day: On Mondays, he teaches. On Monday mornings, he gives a lecture. Complete the sentences with in, on, and at. 1 Conrad gets u p ___8.30 on Sundays. He doesn’t have lectures___Monday mornings. the weekend, Malika and Yasmin go on the Internet, the afternoons, the students have lectures. Yasmin works in the library___Wednesdays. Days of the week 4 Write the days of the week in the correct order. Use a capital letter at the beginning of each day. Which days are the weekend in your country? Friday Monday- Saturday Sunday Thursday Tuesday Monday, 5 Find and underline four days of the week in exercises 2 and 3. 18 Units • Your studies in, at on Wednesday W R IT IN G Your day Complete the table with sentences 1-3. Compare your answers with a partner. STUDY SKILL W riting sentences 1 Malika and Yasmin study medicine. A simple sentence has a subject, a verb, and an object. 2 They use a computer. A sentence starts with a capital letter and ends with 3 Dr Mahoob reads books. a full stop. Read STUDY SKILL Martino studies maths. subject 1 verb / t subject verb object \ object 1 2 3 2 Write the words in the correct order to make sentences. Remember to start with a capital letter and end with a full stop. 1 studies / she / physics 2 football / plays / he She studies physics. 3 do / their homework / they 4 his computer / he / uses 5 sh e/co ffee/d rin ks 3 Complete the text with the verbs in the box. 1 study nursing. 1 ^________ at 7.00 in the morning and I breakfast. I the university at 8.00.1 have lectures in the mornings. I have lunch in the cafeteria at 12.00. In the afternoons, 1 __________ in the lab. In the evenings, I work in the library. I ^ the computers. I go home at 8.00 and have dinner. I ®__________ television, and I ^__________ the Internet. 4 Answer the questions about you. Compare your answers with a partner. 1 What do you study? 2 When do you get up? 3 When is your first lecture? 4 Do you work in the library? 5 When do you have lunch? 6 What do you do in the evenings? 7 When do you go to bed? 5 Write a paragraph about your normal day. I study_i get up a t... 6 Work with a partner. Correct the student’s spelling mistake underlined in each sentence. 1 I 00 to worte otA. vygdekv^olfl^s. 2 He watches television. In. the evn/ln.0 s . 3 Mailtea worfes In. the ilbry,. 4 She has iw,n.ch In. the cafetlrla. 5 Martln .0 0 os to the 9 yn.c at the weeteen.d. STUDY SKILL Checking your writing (2) Check your writing for spelling mistakes. howwork / homework / if you use a computer, use the spell check tool: ■ Choose English as the language. ■ Look for words that are underlined in colour. 7 Work with a partner. Check your partner’s paragraph from exercise 5 for spelling and punctuation mistakes. Unit 3 • Your studies 19 V O C A B U L A R Y D E V E LO P M E N T Words that go together 1 Look at the pictures. Match the verbs with the nouns. Write the correct words under the pictures. STUDY SKILL Recording vocabulary (1} Some verbs and nouns go together, for example; verbs nouns give lunch watch + 7Y ■ study * medicine have a lecture When you record vocabulary, make a note of read a computer words that go together. use a book ■ a b c 2 Circle the correct verb. 1 Tania does / makes her homework in the afternoons. 2 The students have / do some research in the library in the mornings. 3 Dr Miners makes / gives a seminar at 2.00. 4 Yann reads / gives articles on his computer. 5 Mario does / has dinner at 7.00. 6 Lara visits / goes friends at weekends. 3 Work in small groups. Add the verbs from the box to the nouns. check give go to have read send write Complete the sentences with words from exercises 2 and 3 and a time expression. Compare your answers with a partner. 1 I check my emails mthe mornmgs. 2 I send ... 3 I read ... 4 I do ... 5 I have... 6 I write ... 20 Units • Your studies d R E V IE W 1 Work with a partner. Look at the photos and answer the questions. 1 Where are the people? 2 Are they students or lecturers? 2 Skim the texts and match them to the photos. What do Paul and Tania study? Q Paul studies engineering. Every day he gets up at 7.30 and goes to the university. He has lectures in the mornings. He has lunch at 1.00 and in the afternoons, he works in the computer centre. He goes home at 5.30. In the evenings, he works on his computer. il Tania is 20 years old. She studies Spanish and French. She works in the multimedia centre on Monday and Wednesday mornings. In the afternoons, she works in the library. She has lectures on Tuesday and Thursday afternoons. On Fridays, she visits her friends. 3 Work with a partner. Complete the questions with the correct preposition. 1 What does Paul d o _____1.00? 2 What does he do the afternoons? 3 What does Tania do Wednesday mornings? 4 What does she do Fridays? 4 Read the texts and answer the questions in exercise 3. 5 Look at the pictures. Match the verbs with the nouns. Write the correct words under the pictures. verbs nouns drives television gives to work has lunch uses a lecture watches his computer W hat does Robert do on Wednesdays? 6 Write a paragraph about what Robert does on Wednesdays. On Wednesdays, Robert works a t the university. He drives to work a t ?.0 0 an d ... 7 Work with a partner. Check your partner s writing in exercise 6 for spelling and grammar mistakes. Unit 3 • Your studies 21 4 Where we work READING SKILLS Finding important words • Scanning WRITING SKILLS Linking ideas (2j RESEARCH Using a search engine (1) VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Recording vocabulary (2} R EA D IN G Where do they work? 1 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 Do you work a) in the library b) at home c) in the cafeteria 2 Do you w o rk-..? a) alone b) with a friend c) with a group o f friends 3 Do you w o rk...? a) in silence b) with music c) with the TV on Read STUDY SKILL _____________ Read the sentences. Underline the important words. 1 When does he arrive at the library? 2 What is her job? 3 He studies engineering. 4 They work in a big office. 5 Where does she work? Check your answers with a partner. STUDY SKILL Finding important words in texts, underline the important words. These are usually: ■ nouns, for example/ob ■ verbs, for example studies m adjectives, for example big In questions, also underline the question word and think about what it means. For example; 3 Read the title of the text on page 23. What is the text about? a) work b) study c) free time 4 Read paragraph 1 of the text on page 23, and look at the photos below. Which photo matches the text? 22 Unit 4 • Where we work Where tells you to look for a place. ■ Why tells you to look for a reason (because). ■ This helps you to find the information you need. 5 Read the questions and underline the important words. Compare your answers with a partner. 1 Where is the new research from? 2 Why are open-plan offices good? 3 What are the disadvantages of open-plan offices? 4 Why do people get ill more easily? 5 Do many companies think open-plan offices are good or bad? 6 Scan the text. Find and underline the important words from the questions in exercise 5. Check your answers with a partner. 7 Read the text and answer the questions in exercise 5. | STUDY SKILL Scanning Scanning is reading quickly to find information. Before you read, ask: ■ W hat information do you need? ■ W hat words in the text give you the information? Scan the text to find these words and underline them. Open-plan offices: new research The research People all around th e w orld w ork in offices. Som e people w ork in small o ffices fo r one o r tw o people, but a lo t o f p eople now w ork in open-plan offices. In these offices, people w ork to g eth er in one big room . N e w research fro m A ustralia shows th a t th ere are advantages and disadvantages to these offices. W hat’s good? The research shows th ree reasons to have open-plan offices. Firstly, in open-plan o ffices a lo t o f people can w ork in a small area. Secondly, it is easy fo r people to talk to w ork colleagues because th e y are in th e sam e room . Finally, open-plan o ffices are cheaper fo r com panies because th e y use less electricity. W hat’s bad? The research also shows som e disadvantages. Som e people do not w ork w ell in open-plan o ffices because th e y are noisy. It is also d ifficu lt to talk p rivately in open-plan offices. Finally, researchers think th a t people get ill m ore easily because th e y w ork near each other. Open-plan offices - good or bad? The research concludes th a t th ere are advantages and disadvantages to open-plan offices, but m any com panies think th a t th e advantages o f having open-plan o ffices are greater than th e disadvantages. U nit 4 • W h ere w e w ork 23 W R IT IN G A good place to work Look at the pairs of sentences. Is a) or b) better? 1 a) I like going to class. I meet my friends there. b) I like going to class because I meet my friends there. 2 a) it is difficult to work in open-plan offices because they are noisy, b) It is difficult to work in open-plan offices. They are noisy. Compare your answers with a partner. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL Linking ideas (2) because to link ideas, it answers the question Whyl m Why are Open-plan offices cheaper? m Open-plan offices are cheaper because they use less electricity. Use Linking ideas makes your writing clearer. 2 Match the start of a sentence with the correct ending. Link the sentences with because. 1 0 Learning English is important a) it is quiet. 2 CH The library is a good place to work 3 CH Internet shopping is good b) they want good jobs. because c) it is good for your health. 4 CH Many people go to university d) it is a world language. 5 □ e} you can shop from home. Taking exercise is important Learning English Is Important because It Is a world language. 3 Work with a partner. Link the sentences using because. 1 I like working in the library. It is quiet. I like working In the library because It Is quiet. 2 I travel by car. I like driving. 3 I study biology and chemistry. I want to be a doctor. 4 I play squash and tennis. I like sport. 5 The course is interesting. The teachers are good. 4 Complete the sentences with information about you. Compare your sentences with a partner. 1 I like / don’t like learning English because ... 2 I go / don’t go to the library because ... 3 I like / don’t like watching TV because ... 4 I get up early / don’t get up early because ... 5 I study__________ (subject) because ... 24 Unit 4 • Where we work m 5 Work with a partner. Complete the text with words and phrases from the box. a lot evenings law lecture theatre library quiet My name is David Leow and I am a ^__________ student. I study in three places. I have classes in the \ ______________ .in the mornings. In the afternoons, I work in the ^ and in the ^__________ , I study at home. I don’t like studying in the library because there are of people. I like studying at home because it is Make notes about you in the chart. 1 W here do you study? 2 When do you study? 3 Which places do you like? W hy? 4 Which places don’t you like? W hy not? W h ere? W hen? Places 1like Places 1don't like 7 Write a short paragraph about where you study. Use your notes from exercise 6. Link your ideas with and, but, and because. My name is ... and I am a . . . . I ... 8 Work with a partner. Check your partner’s work for mistakes in: • grammar (articles, tim e prepositions, subject and verb agreement) • punctuation (full stops, commas, capital letters) • spelling • linking words (ond.buf, because) Unit 4 • Where we work 25 RESEA RCH Search engines Work with a partner. Underline the important words. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL Using a search engine (1) Use a search engine on your computer, for example 1 Where is the Euphrates? Google or Yahoo, to find information you need. 2 Which countries border Thailand? 3 W hat is the population o f Japan? 4 W hat does ‘career’ mean? ■ Use ‘define;’ to find the meaning o f the word. For example, ‘define: profession’, 5 W hat types o f engineering are there? m Use first names and family names for people, for example Alexander Bell. ■ Choose important words (question words, nouns, and verbs). ■ Spell the words carefully. 6 W hat is Karl Benz famous for? 2 Write the underlined words from exercise 1 to put in a search engine. Check your answers with a partner. 1 where Euphrates_________ 2 ________________________ _ 3 ______________________________ 4 ______________________________ 5 ____________________ 6 _________________________ 3 Use a search engine on your computer to answer the questions in exercise 1. V O C A B U L A R Y D E V E LO P M E N T Vocabulary records 1 Put the words into alphabetical order. Check your answers with a partner. cheap drawing 1 2 know 3 4 5 career 6 health spell STUDY SKILL Recording vocabulary (2) It is important to keep a record o f new vocabulary. 2 Use a dictionary and make vocabulary records for three words in exercise 1. W rite the new words in a notebook or computer file. Write: ■ the word ■ the part o f speech, e.g. noun, verb, adverb, adjective ■ the meaning ■ an example sentence ■ a translation word career 1 part of speech 1 meaning NOUN a Job you learn to do and then do for years 3 Compare your records with a partner. 26 Unit 4 • Where we work 1 example sentence Medicine is a good career. translation carriere R E V IE W 1 Look at the pictures. Who is the text about? a) doctors b) engineers c) teachers A n im p o r t a n t j o b Civil engineers do important work. They design and build bridges, roads, railways, and airports. Some of the time they work in offices. They use computers to plan their work. They can also work outside in a lot of different places, for example, in deserts, on the sea, and in our cities. Sometimes, working outside is difficult because of the weather. Civil engineers also work long hours and weekends, but they like their work because it is important and useful. 2 Skim the text and check your answer to exercise 1. 3 Underline the important words in the questions. 1 W hat do civil engineers build? 2 W hat do they use to plan their work? 3 W hat are the three examples o f outside work places? 4 W hy is working outside difficult? 5 W hy do civil engineers like their work? 4 Scan the text in exercise 1. Find and underline the important words from the questions in exercise 3. 5 Read the text and answer the questions in exercise 3. 6 Complete the text below with and, but, and because. Check your answers with a partner. My nam e’s Liu Yang, I’m a civil engineer. Civil engineering is a good career ^______ _______you can go to a lot of different places. I work in an office in the city most of the time, ^__________ I also work outside on building sites sometimes. I like working in both places ____ they are the building site different. My office is clean ^ quiet. is dirty noisy. Unit 4 • Where we work 27 5 Signs and instructions READING SKILLS Understanding a text WRITING SKILLS Completing a form VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Recording vocabulary (3) R EA D IN G Signs - an international language 1 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 What signs are there in the streets in your town? 2 What signs do you have in your university or college? 2 Work with a partner. Survey the pictures and the text Signs around the world. Answer the questions. 1 What is the text about? 2 What do the signs in pictures a-c mean? 3 How many paragraphs are there in the text? STUDY SKILLS REVIEW Understanding a text Use different reading skills to get the information you need from a text: ■ ■ ■ ■ surveying (see Study Skill p4) predicting (see Study Skill p10) skimming (see Study Skill p16] scanning (see Study Skill p23) S ig n s a ro u n d th e w o r ld 0 Signs give us information or instructions. They have writing or pictures on them. Today, many countries around the world use the same signs. It is important that these signs are easy and clear for everyone to understand. There are rules about the shape and colour. A circle is an instruction or order, for example ‘no entry’. A triangle tells you about a danger, for example ‘large animals crossing the road’. A rectangle gives you information, for example ‘exit’, or ‘leave here’. The colour of a sign is also important. For example, red is for danger and green is for safety. 0 Signs are a kind of international language, and everyone can understand them because they are the same in many countries. 3 Skim the text Signs around the world. Which topics does the text discuss? a) the size o f signs b) the colour o f signs c) the shape o f signs 4 Read the questions and underline the important words. 1 W hat does a circle mean? 2 W hat does a triangle mean? 3 W hat does a rectangle mean? 4 W hat do the colours red and green mean? 5 Scan the text and answer the questions in exercise 4. 28 Unit 5 • Signs and instructions E 6 Work with a partner. Survey the notice below. What is it about? a) a lecture b) a library c) a cafeteria RULES 1 Do not bring your bags into the library. Leave them in the lockers. 2 Show your student ID card to the librarian, 3 Do not eat or drink in the library. 4 Do not smoke in the library. 5 Turn off your mobile phone. 6 Talk quietly. 7 Use a memory stick to save documents on the library computers. 7 Work with a partner. Look at the signs. What do they mean? 8 Skim the notice in exercise 6. Match signs a-e with rules 1-7. Which rules do not have a sign? 9 Scan the notice and answer the questions. 1 Where do you leave your bags? 2 Who wants to see your student identity card? 3 Can you talk? 4 Why do you need a memory stick? Unit 5 • Signs and instructions 29 W R IT IN G 1 Forms Match the words and short phrases 1-8 with the meanings a)-h). STUDY SKILL Completing a form 1 [H First name{s) a) W hat is your nationality? To complete a form correctly, read and follow the instructions 2 Family name b) W hat do you do? 3 n Address c) Sign your name here. 4 n Date o f birth d) W here do you live? 5 n Place o f birth e) When were you born? For example; 6 n Occupation f) W here were you born? ■ Place o f birth (= Where were you born?) 7 n Nationality g) W hat are your first name(s)? 8 n Signature h) W hat is your family name? Read STUDY SKILL n carefully. For example: ■ Use CAPITAL LEHERS. ■ Tick the box \7\ Forms often use short phrases, not questions or sentences. 2 Complete the form about Hiroko with words and phrases from exercise 1. Compare your answers with a partner. Landing card for the UK P le a s e c o m p le te c le a rly in C A P I T A L letters. F a m ily n a m e ^T O F irs t nam e(s) H im o D a te o f b irth 1 Kyoro, TAPAN 2 3 ^TUP&NT rAPAN5f>6 A d d r e s s in th e U K 12^ 4 30 v ic ro m Unit 5 • Signs and instructions po ap, m 3 Work with a partner. Look at the completed form. Find three mistakes. Tanbury Sports Club Tsc Registration form Please use CAPITAL letters and black ink. First name(s) Family name Date of birth Occupation Hiroko SATO ^TUP5NT Tick the sports you are interested in Football n Basketball [X] Swimming CH Running D Volleyball CH 4 Complete the form with information about you. Highfield University L ibrary A pplication Form Use black ink and CAPITAL letters. First name Family name Date of birth Address Telephone number Course title Please tick Year of study Q 1st year Q 2nd year O 3rd year 5 Work with a partner. Check your partner s form. Unit 5 • Signs and instructions 31 V O C A B U L A R Y D E V E LO P M E N T Topic areas 1 Work with a partner. Write the words from the box in the table. STUDY SKILL Recording vocabulary (3) You can record vocabulary by topic. For example: black blue circle red- square green triangle rectangle lecturer student librarian white colours shapes 2 Work with a partner. Add three words to each topic. Use your own ideas. subjects at university geographical features engineering mountains law deserts 3 Put the words into two groups. Choose a heading for each group. Compare your answers with a partner. running bus swimming car football taxi train plane volleyball 4 In 60 seconds, write words for the topic ‘jobs’. Compare your answers with a partner. Jobs a doctor 32 Unit 5 • Signs and instructions Places: lab library multimedia centre Add to the topic groups in your notebooks when you learn new words. red basketball People at university: R E V IE W 1 Work with a partner. Survey the text below. What is it? a) an advertisement b) a notice c) an essay Fire action If you hear the fire alarm, follow the instructions: 1 2 3 4 5 6 Stay calm. Leave the building. Do not run. Do not use the lift. Go to the assembly point. Do not go back into the building until it Is safe. 2 Look at the signs. What do they mean? 3 Skim the text in exercise 1. Match signs a-c with three of the instructions 1-6. 4 Scan the text. Answer the questions. 1 What does it tell you to do? 2 What does it tell you not to do? 5 Work with a partner. Ask questions and complete the form with information about your partner. Check your partner’s form is correct. S tu d e n t c a rd University of South Lonckm Use CAPITAL letters. Write in blue or black ink only. First name{s) Family name Address Date of birth Mobile phone number Course title Unit 5 • Signs and instructions 33 6 Health and medicine READING SKILLS Understanding pronouns WRITING SKILLS Avoiding repetition VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Recognizing parts o f speech READING Good health 1 Look at the photos. Work in small groups. What do people do to stay healthy? Think about: • sport • food • work / free time 2 Work with a partner. Survey the picture and text. Answer the questions. 1 Where is the text from? a) a textbook b) an online encyclopedia 2 What does the picture show? 3 What is the text about? Doing exercise A fruit and vegetable market C hapter 3 Health and hygiene Health and hygiene are important all over the world today, and they were important in the past. People from different parts of the world made useful discoveries about health and hygiene. These discoveries are still important today. Medicine developed in the ancient world first. The Egyptians made many medical discoveries. For example, they used surgery to treat people. Later, the Greeks thought a healthy life was important. They wanted people to eat good food, to take exercise, and to sleep well. For the Romans, hygiene was important. They built public baths. They also had pipes to carry away dirty water because it causes disease. E .' ■ ■ In the Middle East, medicine was also important. In Baghdad, people built the first important hospital in the world. It opened in 850 CE. Later, more hospitals opened in the Middle East, and doctors studied medicine and took exams. Europeans used the information from these early doctors, and made more developments in the next 1,000 years. For example, in the 19th century, Florence Nightingale saved many people’s lives because she made hospitals clean and safe. Good public health today is a result of the work of people from around the world. All these people in the past helped jt to develop and improve. An Egyptian priest pouring medicine 145 34 Unit 6 • Medicine 3 Skim the text. Match topics a)-e) with paragraphs 1-5. a) [1 ] Egyptians, Greeks, and Romans b} CH the first hospital c) n public health today d) O a European woman e) n the importance o f health and hygiene 4 Scan the text and answer the questions. 1 What three things did the Greeks want people to do? 2 What did the Romans build? 3 Where was the first important hospital? 4 What did Florence Nightingale do? 5 Look at the underlined pronouns in the text. Choose the noun that each pronoun replaces. W riters sometimes use pronouns, for example, he, she, it, they, in place o f nouns, because they do not want to repeat the noun. For example: Florence Nightingale m the Romans 1 They a) healthy life 2 Understanding pronouns ■ Paragraph! c) S T U D Y S K IL L b) the Greeks she they The pronoun refers to a noun that comes before. For example. international history The Egyptians made many medical discoveries. They used surgery to treat people. it a) pipes b) hygiene c) dirty water Paragraph 4 m In Baghdad people built the first important hospital in the world. It opened in 850 CE. 3 Understanding pronouns helps you understand a text. She a) Florence Nightingale b) hospitals c) the 19th century Paragraph 5 4 it a) the world b) public health c) people 6 Read the rules. Circle three regular Past Simple verbs and five irregular Past Simple verbs in paragraph 2 of the text. RU LES P a st Sim p le To talk about events in the past, use the Past Simple, -ed or -d. want —► wanted They wanted people to eat good food. use —► used They used surgery to treat people. m W ith verbs ending replace the -y with -ied. study —► studied People studied medicine. m Many common verbs are irregular. build - ► built They built public baths. write —► wrote He wrote a book. be —► was! were Medicine was important for the Romans. There were many different discoveries. ■ W ith regular verbs, add Unit 6 • Medicine 35 W R IT IN G Medical discoveries 1 Work with a partner. Look at the pair of sentences. Is a) or b) better? Why? a) In Baghdad, people built the first important hospital in the world. It opened in 850 CE. b) In Baghdad, people built the first important hospital in the world. The first important hospital opened in 850 CE. 2 Read the rules. Underline the subject pronouns and circle the object pronouns in the sentences. 1 2 3 4 5 She wrote many books. She wrote (^ le i^ in English. I read about the Romans. They built many cities. Jamil sent me an email. He wrote it on his phone. Please give us your address. They told her about the lecture. RULES Pronouns Use subject and object pronouns in place o f nouns. An early doctor seeing a patient Subject pronouns / you he she it we they O bject pronouns me you him her it us them Work with a partner. Complete the sentences with a subject pronoun from the rules box. Health was important for the Egyptians._____ used surgery to treat diseases. Read STUDY SKILL John is a scientist________ does research at a hospital. STUDY SKILL Avoiding repetition W e use pronouns to avoid repeating a noun. For example: ■ Florence Nightingale worked in hospitals. Florence Nightingale She made hospitals them clean and safe. Use pronouns to improve your writing. 3 We read an article on the Internet. was very interesting. 4 My sister is a dentist._______ works in the city. 5 My brother and I are medical students________ study at the same university. 4 Complete the sentences with an object pronoun from the rules box. 1 Paul finished his homework yesterday and gave_______ to the teacher this morning. 2 The student read about the Greeks and he wrote an essay about 3 Anna is a medical researcher. I m et____ 4 We saw Adam yesterday. We spoke t o _ 5 I didn’t go to the lecture. Could you give please? at a conference. __after the lecture. ____ your notes, A medical researcher 36 Unit 6 • Medicine 5 Read the paragraph. Are the underlined words subjects (S) or objects (O)? Compare your answers with a partner. A s p ir in Aspirin has a long history. Many years ago the Greeks discovered an important tree. The Greeks used the tree to make a medicine. The medicine stopped pain. Years later, scientists studied the medicine and the scientists called the medicine ‘Aspirin’. People use Aspirin today to stop pain. 6 Replace the underlined words in exercise 5 with the correct pronouns. 7 Rewrite the student’s paragraph. Use pronouns to avoid repetition. A Brutish wouvniA/, M ary MoiA.ta0u., lived luv Tkrteey luvthe el0hteercth oeuctucry. M ary Mokvta0uc had two ohlidrcuv. Her ohlidrekv 0Ot III. M ary toote her ehlldreuv to see a Tucrtelsh doctor. The doctor helped the chlidrerc. M ary wcuvt bacte to Brltalrc. M ary told people abouct the m rte lsh doctor, years later; B ritish doctor ucsed the Tucrtelsh doctor'^ Ideas to m.atee a kvuedlcluve. The uvuedlcl^ve w as the f i r s t vaccine, vaccluves stop people 0ettl^v0 III. 8 Compare your answers with a partner. Answer the questions. 1 How many subject pronouns did you use? 2 How many object pronouns did you use? A doctor giving a vaccine to a child Unit 6 • Medicine 37 VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Nouns and verbs 1 Are the underlined words in each pair of sentences nouns or verbs? Read STUDY SKILL 1 a) Did she answer the question? b) Did she know the answer? 2 a) My father is a teacher. b) He teaches at a university. 3 a) W hat did he discover? b) He made an important discovery. begin STUDY SKILL Recognizing parts o f speech Some verbs and nouns are related. Some nouns have the same form as the verb. ■ to circle a circle Some nouns have a similar form to the verb, but have a noun ending. ■ m m to end to teach to introduce ending teacher introduction beginner beginning Some verbs have more than one noun. ■ to begin a beginner (the person) the beginning (the activity) Making a note o f nouns and verbs increases your vocabulary. 2 Work with a partner. Use a dictionary to find one or more nouns for each verb. Underline the noun endings. verbs 1 email 1 nouns teacher email 2 introduce 3 educate 4 meet 5 discuss 6 lecture 7 write 3 Look at the sentences. Are the missing words verbs or nouns? noun The scientist made an important d Dr Singh t maths at the university. Send me an e ______________if you have any questions. W e can discuss this at the m tomorrow. It’s important for students to get a good e 4 Complete the sentences in exercise 3 with words from exercises 1 and 2. 5 Work with a partner. Write sentences using the words in the box. introduce introduction mean ’d (ike to introduce you to Dr Ahmed. 38 teach Unit 6 • Medicine meaning write writer R E V IE W 1 Work with a partner. Survey the photo and the text. Answer the questions. 1 What does the photo show? 2 Where does the text come from? 2 Skim the text. Match topics a)-c) to paragraphs 1-3. a) O chemicals in our food b) O chemicals to stop malaria c) D the importance o f chemicals www.science-encyclopedia.com Search C h e m ic a ls a n d h e a lth Q Many chemicals are important for our health. People started using chemicals years ago. They keep us healthy in different ways. Q In tropical countries, malaria is a serious problem. People had ]t more than 4,000 years ago. In South America, people used a substance from a tree to treat malaria. They called it quinine. In China, they used a substance called artemisinin. Both quinine and artemisinin helped stop malaria, and people still use them today. n Food also stops disease. In the past, scientists studied food and its effect on disease. In 1912, a Polish scientist, Casimir Funk, did experiments on fruit and a type of rice. He found some chemicals in the food, and he called them vitamins. Vitamins are necessary in our food because they keep us healthy. Quinine leaves and bark 3 Work with a partner. Scan the text and answer the questions. 1 Where is malaria a serious problem? 2 Where does quinine come from? 3 Why do people use quinine? 4 What did Casimir Funk call the chemicals in food? 5 Why are they important? 4 Look at the underlined pronouns in the text. Choose the noun that each pronoun replaces. Paragraph 1 1 They a) people b) chemicals c) years Paragraph 2 2 it a) people b) tropical countries c) malaria 3 them a) people b) malaria c) quinine and artemisin 4 a) food b) diseases c) a Polish scientist Paragraph 3 He 5 Rewrite the student’s paragraph. Use pronouns to avoid repetition. Akvother sct-cn-tlst did cm- ex-perliacetvt w ith food avui dl&ease Li/v the I 2 th cei^tuty. For a loiA-g tim ^, sailors ocv bocits got t-K on- Ion-0 trip s because sailors bad n-o fru it arui \/e0etflbies at sea. In- ± y ^ y - cm- Bvu^iish doctor,javues L-ln-d, decided to do av^ experlrvcen-t on- sailors.jarues Lcn-ol 0C?ve the sailors lem-on-Ji-cloe, c?n-o( the sailors sta y ed healthy a t sea. The ien-ton-ju.toe had Vitavuiu, c In- it. vitavuiu, c t-s 0ood for our stec^v an^d bon-es avui feeeps ics healthy. 6 Work with a partner. Compare your answers. 1 How many subject pronouns did you use? 2 How many object pronouns did you use? Unit 6 • Medicine 39 7 The history of transport READING SKILLS Making notes (1) KEY LANGUAGE Ordinal numbers • Dates WRITING SKILLS W riting from notes VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Using a dictionary (2) R EA D IN G Important first flights 1 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 What do scientists do in space? 2 Is space research a good thing? 3 Would you like to travel in space? Why (not)? 2 Work with a partner. Survey the photos and text. Answer the questions. 1 What do the photos show? 2 What is the title? 3 How many paragraphs are there? 4 What is the text about? Three steps into space Three people, Yuri Gagarin, Valentina Tereshkova, and Neil Armstrong, all achieved important firsts in space. Yuri Gagarin, a Russian, was always interested in space. He learned to fly at college, and in 1960 he becam e a pilot. A year later, on 12th April 1961, he was the first person to travel into space, in the spaceship Vostok. Two years later, a young Russian, Valentina Tereshkova, becam e the first woman in space. Tereshkova was a twenty-six year old factory worker. Then she joined the Russian space programme, and on 16th June 1963 she left Earth in Vostok 6. Six years later, three Americans left Earth in Apollo 11. On 20th July 1969, they landed on the moon. Neil Armstrong left the spaceship and became the first person to walk on the moon. 3 Skim the text. Match photos a-c with paragraphs 2-4. 4 Scan the text. Complete the sentences with the correct number or date. Check your answers with a partner. 1 Gagarin became a pilot in April 2 He went into space on 3 Tereshkova left Earth on _ _June 4 She travelled in Vostok. 5 years later, the Americans left Earth in Apollo . landed on the moon on 20th July 6 Apollo 40 U nit? • The history of transport 5 Read the text on page 40 again and complete the notes in the table. Compare your answers with a partner. STUDY SKILL Making notes (1) When you read, make notes o f useful name Yuri Gagarin information. Look for: nationality American ■ important words ■ names spaceship Vostok 6 date IZth April m ■ numbers and dates i first 6 Survey the photos and the text below. What is the text about? Cornu's helicopter The Montgolfier balloon In th e history o f flying, there are three im portant inventions, th e hot-air balloon, the plane, and th e helicopter. In th e eighteenth century, th e M ontgolfier brothers from France designed and made a hot-air balloon. The first flight w ith people was on th e 21st N ovem ber 1783. The balloon flew fo r four minutes. Tw o Am erican brothers, O rville and W ilbu r W right, designed and built a plane. They called it the Kitty Hawk. On th e 17th Decem ber 1903, th e y flew th e plane fo r the first tim e. They flew fo r 12 seconds. Four years later, another Frenchman, Paul Cornu, built a helicopter. On th e 13th N ovem ber 1907, Cornu left the ground in his helicopter and flew fo r 20 seconds. 7 Skim the text. Match photos a-c with paragraphs 2-4. 8 Read the text. Complete the notes in the table. Compare your answers with a partner. inventions hot-air balloon inventors nationality American date of first flight time of first flight 20 seconds U nit 7 • The history o f tran sport 41 K EY LA N G U A G E 1 Ordinal numbers Write the words in the box next to the ordinal numbers. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL O rd in a l n um b ers Ordinal numbers are used for: eighth fifth seventh sixth Ml J l tenth fourth ninth ■ dates, for example 7th September second m centuries (= 100 years), for example 19th century (= from 1800 to 1899) ■ the order o f something, for example first, second, third third 6th It is important to understand how to read and write them. 7nd 7th 1 first 1st 3rd 8th Most other ordinal numbers use th. For example: 4th 9th 4 fourth 4th, 5th 10th ht firs t 2 second 2nd 3 third 3rd 5 fifth 5th Write the words as ordinal numbers. Check your answers with a partner. I?th eighteenth nineteenth twentieth twenty-first twenty-third 3 Match years 1-4 with centuries a)-d). 1 O 1969 a) 21st century 2 1783 b) nineteenth century n 3 n 2001 c) 20th century 4 1830 d) eighteenth century n 4 In 60 seconds, answer the questions. Compare your answers with a partner. 1 What is the 12th letter of the alphabet? 2 What is the 3rd letter of the alphabet? 3 What is the 24th letter of the alphabet? 4 What is the 16th letter of the alphabet? 5 What is the 20th letter of the alphabet? Dates 5 Write the months of the year in the correct order. January, April August June March December May February November January October July September STUDY SKILL Compare your answers with a partner. Dates in British English are written: Write the dates. Use an ordinal number, the name of the month, and the year. a) 11/10/2012 Ilth October 2012 c) 21/2/2011 b) 30/11/2010 D ates d) 23/4/2013 day / month / year In academic writing, use ordinals and the name o f the month: ■ 26th February 2011 In notes, use numbers: 7 Write the following dates in two ways: notes 1 your date o f birth 42 26/2/2011 Start days o f the week and months o f the year with a capital letter. 2 an important date for your country ______ 3 an important date for your family ______ U n ity • The history o f transport ■ academic writing ■ Monday, Tuesday. January, February WRITING Trains 1 Label the photos with the words in the box. passenger train underground train 2 Skim paragraph 1 of the text below. What is the text about? a) the speed o f trains b) the price o f trains c) the history o f trains R a ilw a y firsts There were two important developments in railway history in England in the nineteenth century. One was the development of a long-distance train service for people. The second development was the introduction of the first underground train service. The first long-distance train service started on 15* September 1830. It went a distance of 56 kilometres from Liverpool to Manchester. The engineer was George Stephenson. After a few weeks, it was very successful and carried thousands of people. The other development was the first... Read paragraph 2 of the text. Number the notes 1-5 in the order they are in the text. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL W r itin g fro m n o tes When you are writing from your notes: ■ Decide what the first point, and what the date \s/o<i/m o □ where Liverpool to Manchester □ what first long-distance passenger train □ distance □ Read the notes for paragraph 3 of the text. Decide the order of the notes 1-5. Compare your ideas with a partner. ■ Number your notes. m engineer George Stephenson 56 km second point is. ■ W rite your text in order. where London □ distance 6.2 km □ engineer John Fowler □ date I0/0I/i?63 □ what first underground train 5 Write paragraph 3 of the text about railway firsts. Use the notes in your order 1-5 in exercise 4. 6 Work with a partner. Check your partner’s paragraph for mistakes with: • dates • verbs and prepositions • punctuation (capital letters, commas, full stops) U n it? • The history o f tran sport 43 V O C A B U L A R Y D E V E LO P M E N T Verbs in the Past Simple 1 Work with a partner. Write the regular and irregular verbs in the table. arrived called became did learned paid left regular irregular arrived became started travelled went Use a dictionary to find the Past Simple of the verbs. Compare your answers with a partner. Read STU D Y S K ILL begin STUDY SKILL U sing a d ic tio n a ry (2) Good dictionaries give the irregular forms / b r g m / ve rb (b e g in s , b e g in n in g , b e g a n / b i 'g s n / , h a s b e g u n b e g in o f verbs. Many dictionaries also have a list o f began teach irregular verbs. see Use a dictionary (book, online, electronic) drive to check the spelling o f the Past Simple know o f verbs. Complete the sentences with the verb in brackets in the Past Simple. Use a dictionary to help. In f in it iv e P a st te n se 1 The teacher (write) beat beat the new words on the board. becom e became b e g in began My tu to r__________ (send) me an email about my homework. 3 I __________ (have) an English exam yesterday. 4 W e_______ (read) a story in English in class. 5 Yousef and I _______ (do) the exercise together. /br'gAn/) 1 to start to do som ething or start to happen o s a m e m e a n i n g s ta r t: I'm b e g in n in g to feel cold, o The film b e gin s at 7 .3 0 . 2 to start in a particular way; The n a m e lo h n b e g in s w ith a o o p p o s it e end t o b e g i n w i t h at first; at the beginning: To b e g in w ith th e y were very happy. P P a s t p a r tic ip le beaten becom e begun W HICH W ORD ? B e g in or s t a r t ? B e g in and s t a r t both mean the same thing, but s t a r t is more often used in speaking: S h a ll w e eat n o w ? I 'm starting to feel hungry. Definitions from the O xford Essential Diollonary e O xford University Pre» Verb + preposition 4 Work with a partner. Circle the correct preposition. Use a dictionary to help. 1 Work(^fn)/ by a partner. 2 Look in / at the board. 3 Listen to / of your partner’s presentation. 4 Turn in / to page 60. 5 Ask/or t from help if you don’t understand. 6 Talk in / to your partners and ask them the questions. Work with a partner. Complete the sentences with the correct prepositions. Use a dictionary to help. 1 My homework is to write _ ____ the history of ships. 2 Yesterday we talked_____ the history of transport. 3 Last night I prepared____ _ the maths test. 4 That bag belongs_______ _ Professor Lopez, STUDY SKILL 5 Give your essay your teacher. Make a vocabulary record for the verbs and prepositions below. Write your own example sentences. Read STU D Y S K ILL 1 come from come from 2 look for verb + prep + place/couHtry of birtli 44 3 talk about 4 arrive in Past: came from Example: I come from Rio de Janeiro U n it ? • The history o f transport R e co rd in g v o c a b u la ry (4) To help you use a verb correctly, record the prepositions that follow it. W rite example sentences for the verb and each o f its prepositions. For example: w rite I wrote an email to my teacher, m I wrote about electric trains for my homework. ■ REVIEW 1 Survey the pictures from a text. Is the text about... ? a) sailing in the Mediterranean b) sailing across the Atlantic c) sailing around the world 2 Skim the text. Match the person in the photo with one of the paragraphs 2-4. Sailing firsts Who was the first person to sail around the world? We don’t know for sure, but in the history of round-the-world sailing, three people achieved important firsts. Francis Chichester, from England, was a great sailor. On 27th August 1966, he sailed his boat Gypsy Moth around the world. He returned to England on 28th May 1967 after 226 days sailing. He was the first person to sail single-handed around the world from west to east. Twenty-one years later, Kay Cottee became the first woman to sail around the world without stopping. Kay, an Australian, left her country on 29th November 1987 in her boat First Lady, and returned to Sydney on 5th June 1988. She was at sea for 189 days. Another Australian, David Dicks, also achieved an important first. He became the youngest person to sail non-stop around the world. In February 1996, at the age of seventeen, David left Australia in his boat, Seaflight. He returned to Australia in November 1996, after nine months at sea. 3 Read the text. Complete the notes in the table. Compare your answers with a partner. what who when how long name o f boat Francis Chichester 2^/11/87 - 5 / 6 / 8 ? youngest person to sail around world non-stop Months 4 Read the notes for a paragraph about important firsts in car racing. Number the notes 1-3. what where when winning car speed km/h 1st Formula 1grand prix (take place) Silverstone, England 13/5/W SO Alfa Romeo (win) 1st car race (be) France 22/7/I8< ?4 Peugeot (win) (b e )N 1st ‘grand prix’ race (be) Le Mans, France 2 7 /6 /N 0 6 Renault (win) (be) 101 (be) 146 5 Write a paragraph about car racing. Use the notes in exercise 4. Use the verbs in brackets. Car racing-, some Iwportant firsts The firs t car race was in France on 22nd Ju ly was I<7 km/h. Title: A Peugeot won the race. Its speed 6 Check your paragraph for mistakes with; • dates • verbs and prepositions • punctuation (capital letters, commas, full stops) U n it? • The history o f tran sport 45 8 Doing business READING SKILLS Making notes (2) WRITING SKILLS Writing polite emails VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Using a dictionary (3) R EA D IN G The business of sport 1 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 Are there big sports competitions in your country? Which sports? 2 Why do countries have big sports competitions? 3 Why do business students study sports? 2 Skim the emails. Which email asks the students to ... ? a) prepare a talk b) read some texts and make notes l ooo 1 From: ■ To: Subject: Date: ooo Hil3rv.Bales@sw3nton.3c.uk Econ 2 12 Business as sport homework 23/03/12 From: To: Subject: Date: Philip,Stanlev@swanton.ac.uk Business Studies Group 4B Marketing course 21/03/12 Dear all, Dearstudents, Please read the text on the website www.businessassport/ football.org and make notes on it, Bring your notes to the next class, Please prepare a short talk on online marketing. Use different sources to find your information. The talk is for next week. Best wishes, Philip Stanley Hilary Bales Lecturer In Business Studies Best wishes, Senior Lecturer In Marketing 3 Work with a partner. Survey the webpage The Business of Sport on page 47. What is it about? Skim the webpage. Match headings a)-e) with paragraphs 1-7. Which two paragraphs do not have a heading? To make notes: a) n Money from TV ■ Skim the text and write a heading for each paragraph. b) O The business o f football ■ Scan each paragraph and underline the most important words. c) D Selling players d) O Advertising e) O Conclusion Read STUDY SKILL S T U D Y S K IL L ■ W rite the underlined words under the paragraph headings. 5 Work with a partner. Choose the best headings for the other two paragraphs. CH Selling tickets d ! Football on TV d Selling products d Football shirts 6 Write all the headings above the correct paragraphs on the web page. 46 M ak in g n o te s (2) U n it 8 • Doing business G § LG §LG The Business of Sport Today, sport is a business, and football is a good example. Football dubs need money to pay the players. There are five ways for the clubs to make money. Firstly, dubs sell tickets for the matches. A ticket for a match can be very expensive The clubs also sell season tickets. These are tickets for all the matches in one year. Secondly, companies pay clubs to advertise. For example, there are signs for their products at the stadium and their logo is on the players’ shirts. Some clubs make money from TV companies. This is usually only the big clubs, but it can be a lot of money for them. Clubs also sell products, for example, football shirts or hats. They sell their products in their shops and on the Internet. A lot of people buy them. Finally, a football club can sell a player to another club for a lot of money. Clubs can only do this twice a year. All clubs do these things, but only the top clubs get rich from them. Other sports also have to make money and they use the same ways. 7 Scan the text and underline the important words in each paragraph. 8 Make notes. Write the heading and important words for each paragraph. Compare your answers with a partner. The business of football dubs heed money - pay players 5 ways 9 Use your notes in exercise 8 to answer the questions. 1 How many ways do football clubs make money? 2 What is the name for a ticket for all the matches in a year? 3 How do companies advertise at a football club? 4 What do clubs sell on the Internet? 5 What can clubs do twice a year? U n it 8 • Doing business 47 W R IT IN G 1 Polite emails Skim the emails and answer the questions. 1 Who are the emails to? 2 Who are they from? 3 Which one is polite? [ O O O 1 From: * To: Subject: Date: jack.carter@tmail.com diana.stuart@wellington.ac.nz the effect of money on sport 12.10,2012 Hello, Here is my homework. Sorry I didn't go to your lecture yesterday. I was ill. Can you send me the handouts? Also, want to talk to you about my studies. Email me. Bye, Jack Carter ooo .£ From: To: Subject: Date: ana.g0 n2 alez@interdub.com diana.stuart@wellington.ac.nz the effect of money on sport 12.10,2012 Dear Dr Stuart, Please find attached my homework. I am sorry that I missed your lecture yesterday on 'The effect of money on sport'. 1was ill. Please could you send me the handouts? Also, I would like to talk to you about my studies. I look forward to hearing from you. Best wishes, Ana Gonzalez 2 Scan email b and answer the questions. 1 Did Ana do her homework? 2 When was the lecture? 3 What was the lecture on? 4 Why didn’t Ana go to the lecture? 5 What does she want the lecturer to send her? 3 Look at these phrases from email a. Read email b and underline the polite phrases with the same meanings. 1 Hello 2 Here is my homework. 3 Sorry 1 didn’t go to your lecture. 4 Can you send me the handouts? 5 I want to talk to you. 6 Email me. 7 Bye 48 Unit 8 • Doing business 4 Match polite phrases 1-5 with endings a)-e) to make polite sentences. 1 CH Please could a) my essay. 2 n 1am sorry that b) we meet tomorrow? 3 n Please find attached c) talk to you about the course. 4 n 1look forward to d) it is late. 1would like to e) meeting you next week. 5 O S T U D Y S K IL L W r itin g p o lite em ails Learn and use polite phrases to write emails. For example: ■ Dear Dr Stuart m m m m m m Please find attached the PowerPoint for my presentation, lam sorry that it is late, Please could you send me the handouts? I would like to talk to you about my essay, I look forward to seeing you tomorrow, Best wishes, Ana Gonzalez 5 Read the email from Dr Brown. What does she want students to do? [OOP From: To: Subject: Date: Mona.Brown@swanton.ac.uk Business Studies Group 46 Date for essays 15/04/12 Dearall, Please send your essays by 22nd April. There is a new reading list for this term. Best wishes, Mona Brown Senior Lecturer in Business Studies Write an email to Dr Brown. • Start the email correctly. • Say that you are attaching your essay. • Say it is late and you are sorry. • Say you want a copy o f the reading list. • End the email correctly. Work with a partner. Read your partner’s email and check it for: • polite phrases • spelling • capital letters • punctuation U n it 8 • Doing business 49 V O C A B U L A R Y D EV ELO PM EN T Words with more than one meaning 1 Look at the pairs of sentences 1-4. Write the part of speech for the underlined words. Compare your answers with a partner. Read STUDY SKILL STUDY SKILL Using a dictionary (3) Some words have more than one meaning. For example, kind can be a noun or an part of speech meaning noun 1 a) Dr Stuart wrote a book about marketing, b) Did you book a room for the meeting? 2 you look it up in a dictionary. meaning. a) The table shows the results o f the study, kind^ On /kamd/ n o u n a g ro u p o f th in g s or people that are the sam e in s o m e w a y o s a m e m e a n i n g s o r t or a) Connect the mouse to the computer, t y p e ; W h a t k i n d o f m u s ic d o y o u lik e ? o The s h o p sells ten different k in d s o f bread. b) A mouse ran across the floor. 4 ■ Look at all the entries for a word when ■ Choose the correct part o f speech and b) He left his computer on the table. 3 adjective with tw o different meanings. k in d ^ On /kamd/ od/ectiVe( k in d e r , a) Underline the correct answer. k in d e s t ) b) The teacher is going to correct the exercise. friendly and good to other people: ‘C a n I c a rr y y o u r b a g ? ’ ‘ T h a n k s. T h a t ’s v e ry k i n d o f Work with a partner. Look at the dictionary entries for the words in exercise 1. Complete the table in exercise 1 with the number of the correct meaning for each word. book'* On /buk/ n o u n a thing that you read or write in, that has a lot of pieces of paper joined together inside a cover: T m r e a d in g a b o o k b y C e o r g e Orwell. 0 a n exe rcise b o o k (= a book that you write in at school) m ouse (H* /maus/ n o u n {p lu ra l m ice /mars/) 1 a small animal with a long tail: O u r ca t y o u .’ o B e k i n d t o a n im a ls. O O PPO SIT E u n k in d c o r r e c t ^ CHr /ka'rekt/ a d je ctiv e right or true; with no mistakes: W h a t is th e correct time, p le a s e ? o A ll y o u r a n s w e r s were c a u g h t a m ou se. correct. O O PP O S IT E in c o r r e c t 2 a thing that you move with your hand to ► c o r r e c t l y /ke'rektli/ a d v e r b : H a v e I spelt y o u r n a m e co rre c tly ? tell a computer what to do C O PP O S IT E in c o r r e c t iy b o o k ^ /buk/ verb ( b o o k s , b o o k i n g , b o o k e d /bukt/) c o r r e c t ^ 0-w /ka'rekt/ verb ( c o r r e c t s , to arrange to have or do something later: W e c o r r e c t in g , c o r r e c t e d ) b o o k e d a tab le for s ix a t the re sta uran t, o T h e h o te l is fu lly b o o k e d (= all the rooms are full). to show where the mistakes are in something and make it right: T h e c la ss d id the exe rcises a n d th e te a ch e r co rre cte d them , o ta b le o-m /'teibl/ n o u n 1 a piece of furniture with a flat top on legs: Look at Picture Dictionary page P10. 2 a list of facts or numbers: There is a t a b le o f a coffee tab le o Ple a se co rrect m e if I m a k e a m istake. 4 mice irre g u la r v e rb s a t th e b a c k o f this dictionary. Definitions from ttie Oxford Essential Dictionary €> Oxford University Press 3 Work with a partner. Use a dictionary to find two meanings for the words. hard virus park match 4 Write an example sentence for each meaning of the words in exercise 3. 50 U n it 8 • Doing business REVIEW 1 Work with a partner. Survey the text and the picture. What is the text about? Sports and television Television shows a lot of sports programmes. Sport on TV is a big business and many people benefit from it. When TV started in the 1940s, it showed sports. They were very popular because, for the first time, many people could watch important games. More people bought televisions and watched more sport. The TV companies paid the sports clubs and organizations a lot of money, and this is still true today. For example, in 1985 they paid $45 million to show the top basketball games in the USA. European TV companies paid 760 million euros to show the summer and winter Olympics of 2010 and 2012. How do the TV companies make money from sport? They sell time on television to other companies. These companies advertise their products at sports matches and competitions. Millions of people watch the sport and see the advertisements. Showing sports on TV has advantages for the top sports clubs and TV companies. Also, people around the world can watch their favourite sports at home. 2 Skim the text. Match headings a)-b) with two of the paragraphs 1-5. a) [ U The business o f sport and TV b) n How TV companies make money 3 Write headings for the other paragraphs. Write all the headings above the correct paragraphs in the text. Compare your answers with a partner. 4 Scan the text and underline the important words in each paragraph. 5 Make notes. Write the heading and important words for each paragraph. 6 Use your notes in exercise 5 to answer the questions. 1 2 3 4 Why was TV popular with sports fans in the 1940s? Who makes money from sport on TV? How do TV companies make money from sport? Why do companies advertise at sports matches and competitions? 7 Write an email to your teacher. • Start the email correctly. • Say that you are sorry you did not go to his / her lecture last week. • Ask for the handouts from the lecture. • Say that you are attaching the homework on sport and TV. • End the email correctly. 8 Work with a partner. Read your partner’s email and check it for: • polite phrases • spelling • capital letters • punctuation U n it 8 • Doing business 51 9 Water READING SKILLS Understanding tables and charts (1) and (2) WRITING SKILLS Describing statistics VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT Recording vocabulary (5) R EA D IN G Using water STUDY SKILL Understanding tables and charts (1) 1 Work with a partner. What do you use water for? Make a list in 30 seconds. Read STUDY SKILL Tables and bar charts show statistics. They are often used to compare numbers. Look at: ■ the title Survey the table and answer the ■ the headings and topics questions. 1 What is the title of the table? 2 What are the headings in the table? 3 How many products are there in the table? ■ the numbers Use the tables and charts to help you understand a text. Litres of water necessary to produc e one kilo of food product apples potatoes bread sugar rice chicken beef chocolate litres of water 700 900 1,800 1,800 2,500 3,600 15,500 16,000 3 Scan the table and answer the questions. 1 How much water do we use to produce a kilo of potatoes? 2 Which product needs 3,600 litres of water? 3 Which product needs the most water? 4 Read the text and scan the table again. Correct mistakes 1-5 in the text. Water for food W e need w ater to grow plants and to produce food. The table shows the number o f litres o f w ater necessary to produce 'seven gight_______ kinds o f food. The numbers are very different. For example, it takes ^9 00 ____________ litres to produce a kilo o f apples, but 15,500 litres for a kilo o f ^chicken . W e use the same number o f litres o f w ater to produce a kilo o f bread as a kilo o f “^rlce about ^26,000 ,. For chocolate it takes litres. W h y are these numbers so different? Som e foods, such as b eef and chocolate, use more w ater because they take a long tim e to produce. 52 Unit 9 • Water 5 Work with a partner. Survey the bar chart and answer the questions. 1 What is the title of the chart? 2 How many countries are there? The use of water in different countries Countries use water for three main reasons; in the home, for farming, and in industry. The bar chart shows the number o f litres o f water that people use in six countries. It is very different around the world. In the USA it is more than 550 litres a day, and in Australia the number is about the same as in the USA. In Japan it is 375 litres, and in China the number is less than in Japan, at 100 litres. W ater is cheap in many countries and we use a lot o f it in our homes, but we use more to produce food and other goods. There is a problem in many countries nowadays because we don’t have much water. In the future, we need to find more, or use less. How many litres of water do people use a day? U SA H Australia Japan Brazil UK Washing a car China litres of water Read STU D Y SK IL L _____________ Read the text and scan the bar chart to answer the questions. 1 What are the three main uses of water? 2 How much water do people in Australia use? 3 Which country uses only 100 litres per day? 4 How much water do people in Brazil use? 5 Do we use more water in the home or in industry? 6 What is the problem in many countries? 7 What do we need to do? STU D Y SK ILL Understanding tables and charts (2) When you read a table or bar chart: ■ use a pencil or your finger to help you read the numbers. ■ check the numbers in the text with the table or bar chart. U nit 9 • W a te r 53 W R IT IN G 1 More or less Look at the pictures and write sentences. Use the phrases more than / less than / the same as. Compare your answers with a partner. STUDY SKILL Describing statistics Learn phrases to describe statistics. For example: ■ The bar chart shows the number of litres of water necessary to produce some food, m In China the number is less than inJapan. m Some foods use more water because they take a long time to produce, m In Australia, the number is (about) the same as in the USA. people / Thailand / eat / more / rice / people / Japan people / Germany / eat / more / bread / people / °eop\e in Thailand eat more rice than people In Japan. the UK -----------------------------------------% 3 people / Argentina / eat / less / fish / people / China 4 people / Pakistan / drink / the same number / cups o f tea / people / India 2 Survey the table and answer the questions. 1 What is the title of the table? 2 What are the headings? How many cups of coffee do people drink a day? country cups of coffee per day Finland 10 Germany 7 USA 5 Australia 2 Japan 2 Oman 1 Scan the table. Are the sentences true (T) or false (F)? 1 In Finland people drink less coffee than in Germany. 2 People drink more coffee in Germany than in the USA. 3 People in Australia and Japan drink the same amount of coffee. 4 People drink less coffee in Japan than in Oman. 54 Unit 9 • Water % 4 Scan the table on page 54 again and complete the text below. Use the words in the box. as less more more same shows than C o ffe e a ro u n d th e w o r ld Coffee is a very popular drink. The table ^__________how many cups of coffee people drink in a day. People drink coffee in Finland ^__________ in other countries. They drink about ten cups a day. In Australia people drink the ^__________ number ®__________ in Japan, but people in Oman drink coffee, only one cup a day. Do people drink __________ coffee in some countries because the weather is cold? 5 Survey the bar chart below and answer the questions. 1 What is the title? 2 How many countries are there? How many litres of bottled water did people drink in 2009? Mexico United Spain Thailand Saudi Arab Arabia Emirates Hong Kong litres of bottled water per person 6 Scan the bar chart and answer the questions. 1 2 3 4 Which country used more bottled water than the other countries? How much bottled water did people drink in Spain? Which two countries drank the same number of litres of bottled water? Which country used less bottled water than the other countries? 7 Write a description of the bar chart. Use your answers in exercise 6. The b a r chart shows how many litres of bottled water people drank around the world In 2004. People in Mexico used ... 8 Work with a partner. Check your partner s writing for: • spelling • punctuation • grammar U nit 9 • W a te r 55 V O C A B U L A R Y D E V E LO P M E N T Opposite adjectives Match adjectives 1-5 with their opposites a)-e). Read STUDY SKILL S T U D Y S K IL L R e co rd in g v o c a b u la ry (5) Many adjectives have an opposite. For example, the opposite o f large is small. 1 □ wet a) cold 2 □ noisy b) long 3 □ short c) bad 4 □ hot d) quiet good e) dry 5 □ Some adjectives use a prefix, such as un or in. to make an opposite. For example, important ^ unimportant. Some adjectives have 2 opposites; a different word, and the same word with a prefix. For example, expensive ^ m inexpensive, cheap, Use your dictionary to find the opposite(s) o f an adjective. ■ Record adjectives with their opposite(s) to increase your vocabulary. 2 Work with a partner. Write the opposite of the adjectives from the box. big difficult new rich right 1 easy 2 small 3 wrong 4 poor 5 old big Underline the adjectives in the sentences. Compare your answers with a partner. 1 2 3 4 In the 19th century, trains were very slow. Juan is always late for class. My email box is full. Aminta always gets high marks in maths. Work with a partner. Use a dictionary to find opposites for the adjectives in exercise 3. Write the opposite of the adjectives using a prefix un- or in-. Use your dictionary to help. UHlwportawt 1 important 2 popular 3 dependent 4 complete 5 successful 6 Work with a partner. Use a dictionary to find two opposites for each adjective. clean dirty unclean interesting safe healthy correct 7 Work in small groups. Answer the questions. 1 Which subject at school was easy for you? 2 Which subject at school was difficult for you? 3 Where is a cheap place to eat in your town? 4 Where is an expensive place to eat? 5 Where is a quiet place to work? 6 Where is a noisy place to live? 7 What foods are healthy? 8 What foods are unhealthy? 56 U n it 9 • W a te r small old new R E V IE W 1 Work with a partner. Look at the title of the text and the photo. What do you think the text is about? a) drinking water 2 b) water sports c) the oceans Survey the table and answer the questions. 1 What is the title of the table? 2 What are the headings? 3 How many oceans are there in the table? 3 A An important resource The oceans co ver about 70% o f the w orld’s surface and contain 97% o f th e Earth’s w ater. There are five oceans, and they are all connected. The table shows th e size o f th e oceans. The Pacific O cean is very big and covers an area o f about 150 million square kilom etres. The A tlantic O cean is half th e size o f th e Pacific O cean and The size of the oceans about th e same size as th e Indian O cean. Scientists named th e Southern O cean ocean size (million sq km) Pacific 155 The oceans are very im portant. They give us a lo t o f our food , and some Atlantic 77 countries now change sea w ater in to drinking w ater, too. W e can also use Indian 69 Southern 20 Arctic 14 fo r the first tim e in 2000. It surrounds Antarctica. The A rctic O cean is quite small and very cold. It is covered by ice in th e w inter. oceans to transport goods, and w e can find minerals in them . For all these reasons, w e need to take care o f th e oceans and keep them clean. 3 Read the text and scan the table. Answer the questions. 1 How much of the Earth’s water is in the oceans? 2 How big is the Atlantic Ocean? 3 When was the Southern Ocean named? 4 Which is the third ocean in size? 5 Which ocean is covered by ice in winter? 6 What do we use the oceans for? Global use of water between 1960 and 2010 2500 4 The bar chart on the right shows the use of water in 1960 and 2010. Scan the bar chart and answer the questions. 1 b) industry? c) the home? In 2010, did people use more or less water than 1960 for; a) agriculture? 3 1500 In 1960, how much water did people use for: a) agriculture? 2 2,000 2000 b) industry? c) the home? Which figures in 1960 are about the same as the figures for 2010? to "o 1000 E 650 500 5 Use your answers in exercise 4 to write a description of the use of water in 1960 and 2010. The bar chart shows the global use of water in 14*60 and 2010. In 1^60 6 Work with a partner. Check your partner’s writing for; • spelling • punctuation • grammar 1960 2010 I Agriculture I Industry Home U nit 9 • W a te r 57 10 Ambition and success READING SKILLS Understanding the organization o f a text WRITING SKILLS Writing a paragraph • Checking your writing (3) RESEARCH Using a search engine (2) • Checking information R EA D IN G Great ideas 1 Work in small groups. Discuss the questions. 1 Do you like shopping? Why (not)? 2 Where do you shop? 3 Do you shop on the Internet? Why (not)? 4 What do people buy on the Internet? 2 Work with a partner. Survey the photos on page 59. Predict the topic of the text. 3 Skim the text. Were your ideas in exercise 2 correct? 4 Underline the first sentence in each paragraph in the text. Match headings a)-d) with paragraphs 1-4. Write the headings in the text. a) Q ] An interesting start b) D Amazon today c) G Starting the business d) G A new idea S T U D Y S K IL L U n d e rsta n d in g th e o rg a n iz a tio n o f a te x t A topic sentence tells you what a paragraph is about, it is often the first sentence. Skim the text and underline the topic sentence in each paragraph. This helps you find information quickly. 5 Work with a partner. Decide which paragraph 1-4 has the answer to each question. G b) G c) G d) G e) G f) G g) G h) G a) How many countries did he sell books to? How richisBezos? W hat did big companies use computer sciences to do? W hat does Amazon sell now? When did he open his online shop? When did he have his new idea? w here was Bezos born? Which university did Bezos goto? 6 Go to the correct paragraph to answer the questions in exercise 5. Compare your answers with a partner. 58 U n it 10 • Am bition and success A success story 5amazon.com k , — ^ P r im e Je ff Bezos Ah iHterestmfl start Je f f Bezos was born in th e U SA in 1964. W h e n he was a child, he was very interested in science and com puters. A fte r school, he w e n t to Princeton University. H e planned to study physics, but changed to co m p u ter science and electrical engineering because he loved com puters. In th e early 1990s, Bezos had an idea fo r a new business. He w orked fo r big com panies on W a ll S tre e t in N e w York. He knew th a t these com panies used com puter sciences to study the business m arket. H e also noticed th a t m ore and m ore people used th e In tern et e ve ry year fo r business, but n o t fo r ordinary shopping. So, a fte r m ore research, he decid ed to start an online book shop. Goods in a warehouse O n 16th Ju ly 1995, Bezos started his new business. H e opened his online shop from his garage. H e called his business Am azon, and in one m onth he sold books in e ve ry state in th e U SA and in 45 d iffe re n t countries around th e w orld. By Septem ber, it had $20,000 o f sales e ve ry w eek. Today, Am azon.com is a huge success. It sells co m p u ter games, DVDs, electronics, and m any o th e r things, as w ell as books. In to tal, it sells m ore than 20 m illion d iffe re n t products. It has m ore than 10% o f all online sales in th e U SA, and its creator, Je ff Bezos, is a billionaire. Goods ready for delivery U nit 10 • Am bition and success 59 W R IT IN G 1 Success Sentences a)-f) are from a paragraph about Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw. Write number 1 next to the topic sentence and number 6 next to the final sentence. a} 0 At first, it was a very small company, b) n But she worked hard, and the company began to grow. c) 0 Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw is a successful businesswoman. d) 0 In 1978, she started a biotech company. Biocon, in a garage. e) n She was born in 1953 in Bangalore, in India. f) Q Today, Biocon is one o f the leading biotech companies in the world. STUDY SKILL W riting a paragraph Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw A good paragraph is well-organized. The topic sentence tells the reader what the paragraph is about. Middle sentences are: ■ on the same topic ■ organized logically The final sentence concludes the topic. 2 Look at the sentences in exercise 1 again. Number the middle sentences from 2 to 5. Compare your answers with a partner. 3 Use the notes below to write a paragraph about Tamara Mellon. Write full sentences in the same order as the headings. Start with the topic sentence. Topic Tamara Mellon - successful businesswoman Early life________ born England N67 worked for Vogue (fashion magazine) New idea liked shoes decided to sell expensive shoes Start of company opened 1st shop London l<T^6 with designer Jimmy Choo Success now - over 110shops worldwide Tamara Mellon Tamara Mellon is a successful businesswoman. She 60 Unit 10 • Ambition and success Read STU D Y SK IL L Read the students paragraph. S T U D Y S K IL L Find and correct: C h e ck in g y o u r w ritin g (3) • tw o punctuation mistakes Before you hand in an essay, it is important to check it Look for mistakes in; • tw o spelling mistakes ■ punctuation, for example capital letters, full stops, commas • one grammar mistake (article) ■ spelling, for example irregular plural nouns, and Past Simple verbs • one linking word mistake ■ grammar, for example subject and verb agreement, articles Compare your answers with a partner. ■ sentence structure, for example subject +verb +object ■ linking words, for example and, but, because s e r 0 e y B rlw aw d i_«rry oo-fouvcded <^oo0ie t-w 1 ^ 2 . T hey m.et at s>tavvford \Ayii\Jtys.it^, b u t d tc id td to (oote at search techw oio0ys, t h a t is,, how to ftwol u^vfbrm.att.ovv ow the iwteriA^t. T h is 0ave th e i^ a idta fo r a wew co^vtpa w y ovc y^V\ s e p t e w c b e r i ^ ? , th e y s ta r td th e ir buslvvess Ivc a 0 a ra 0 e , iltee Jfrff bezos. A t f ir s t. It 0 o t ab o u t ±0,000 searches a d a y , b u t vcow I t 0Cts over two bllllotA,. 5 Check your paragraph from exercise 3 on page 60 for mistakes. RESEA RC H Finding the right information Read STU D Y SK IL L Work with a partner. You need to find out the information in 1-8. Look at the search engine screen and write where you can find the information. Write Web, Images, Maps, or Translate. ■ W eb for facts, for example dates, capitals, names, etc. 1 a photograph o f Sebastian Vettel, the racing driver Images ■ Images for photographs, pictures, etc. 2 ■ Maps for countries, cities, etc. the countries that border Zambia 3 the word ‘efficient’ in your language 4 S T U D Y S K IL L U sin g a se a rch e n g in e (2) Use a search engine to find different types o f information. Go to: ■ Translate for changing a word from one language to another where Sabeer Bhatia was born 5 the capital city o f Morocco 6 the date o f the first supersonic flight by Concorde 7 where the shop ‘Harrods’ is in London 8 a picture o f the Ferrari 458 Italia IM A G E S Sebastian Vettel TR A N S LA TE Search 2 Use a search engine to find the information in exercise 1. Compare your answers with a partner. U nit 10 • Am bition and success 61 3 Read the information from websites 1 and 2. Find two differences. ST U D Y S K IL L C h e ck in g in fo rm a tio n Some websites are open. This means that the information B www.jsmith.blogs.com Search can be changed. Other websites are business or personal sites. This means [ack Smith's history o f Hotmail that the information is not always accurate. Always check your information on tw o or more websites. W elcom e to my history o f Hotmail. Today, Hotmail is the world’s largest email provider with 50 million users. Bhatia started the company in 1996 and sold it to M icrosoft in 1998. |j] busrnet. com Search BUSINESS FORUM Hotmail is the world’s largest web-based email service, with nearly 364 million users. Microsoft bought Hotmail in 1997. 4 Look at the information from website 3, an online encyclopedia. Compare the information with websites 1 and 2. Choose the correct answers a) or b). lo n g fo rd en c.ac.u k B Longford Encyclopedia 1 W hen did Microsoft buy Hotmail? a) 1997 b) 1998 Microsoft bought Hotmail in 1997. Today it has hundreds of millions of users around the world. 2 How many Hotmail users are there? a} 50 million people b) more than 360 million people 5 Look at the headings for notes about Sabeer Bhatia. Number the headings in the order you will write about them. □ new idea j Topic: Sabeer Bhatia, creator o f Hotmail □ start of company Sabeer Bhatia 6 Use a search engine to find two pieces of information to write under each heading. 7 Write a paragraph about Sabeer Bhatia. Use your notes from exercise 6. Remember to write: • a topic sentence • middle sentences in a logical order • a final sentence 8 Check your work for mistakes. 62 U n it 10 • Am bition and success Search REVIEW 1 Skim the text and underline the topic sentence in each paragraph. 2 Match headings a)-d) to the topic sentence of each paragraph 1-4. Write the headings in the text. a) b) c) d) □ In te rn a tio n a l success □ L earning □ S tartin g th e b u sin ess H ] T he b u sin essm an 3 Read the questions. Which paragraph (1-4) has the answer to each question? a) @ How many people work for Superdry today? b) D W hat did he do after school? c) D W hat was his new idea? d) O W hat parts o f the world have Superdry shops? e) O W here did he open his first shop? f) O W hy did Superdry become successful in 2005? g) O W hy didn’t he go to university to study medicine? 4 Read the text and answer the questions in exercise 3. 5 Choose a successful person from your country. Use a search engine to find information about the person. Write notes about: • early life and education • career The story of Superdry The busihessman Julian Dunkerton is a successful businessman. He is the founder of the clothing brand ‘Superdry’. He was bom in England in 1965. He wanted to be a doctor, but he did not get good exam results at school. So, when he left school, he Julian Dunkerton did not go to university, but started selling clothes in a market. • achievements 6 Write a paragraph about the person from exercise 5. • W rite a topic sentence. • Organize the middle sentences logically. • W rite a final sentence. • Check your work for mistakes. At the market, he learnt a lot about people. He learnt about what clothes they liked and what clothes they did not like. He realized that there were lots of people who wanted fashionable and cool clothes but did not want ‘strange’ clothing. He decided to design and sell clothes for these people. He started his new business with very little money. He called his business ‘Cult Clothing’. But when he opened his first shop in London in 2004, he called it ‘Superdry’. The company became very successful in 2005 because David Beckham, an English footballer, wore a Superdry T-shirt. Superdry today is a huge international success. It has shops in Europe, the Middle East, Asia, Australia, and the Americas, and it employs thousands of people. Julian Dunkerton started selling clothes in a market, but today he is a multi-millionaire. U nit 10 • Am bition and success 63 WORD LIST H e r e is a l i s t o f m o s t o f t h e n e w w o rd s in th e u n its o f N e w H e a d w a y A c a d e m ic S k ilb , I n t r o d u c t o r y L e v e l S t u d e n t 's B ook. a d j = a d je c tiv e a d v = a d v e rb co n j = c o n ju n c tio n n = noun p l - p lu ra l p r e p = p re p o s itio n v = v e rb Unit1 d o c to r n /ˈ d ɒ k tə (r) / p a ra g r a p h n /ˈ p æ r ə g rɑ ːf/ e n d V /e n d / p a r t n e r n / 'p o : t n o ( r ) / e n g in e e r n /ˌ e n d ʒ ɪˈ n ɪə { r)/ p e o p le n p l /ˈ p iːp l/ E n g lis h L a n g u a g e te a c h e r n P h ilip p in e s n /ˈ f ɪlɪp i:n z / / ˈ ɪ ŋ g l ɪ ʃ 'l æ ŋ g w ɪ d ʒ ˈ t i ː t ʃ ə ( r ) / e s p e c i a l l y fld v / t ' s p e j a l i / fa m ily n /ˈ fæ m ə li/ fa th e r n /ˈ fɑ :ð ə (r )/ fin d V /f a tn d / fo re x a m p le /f o :( r ) ɪg ˈ z ɑ ːm p l/ fo u r /f o t(r )/ fr ie n d s n p i /f r e n d z / a b o u tp r e p /ə ˈb a ʊ t/ a c c o u n ta n t n /ə ˈk a ʊ n tə n t/ a d d V /æ ð / a lp h a b e t n /ˈ æ lf ɔ b e t/ a lp h a b e tic a l o r d e r n /ˌ æ lf ə ˈ b e tɪk l ˈɔ ːd ə { r)/ a rc h ite c t n /ˈ ɑ ːk ɪte k t/ a rtic le n /ˈ ɑ ːtɪk l/ a sk V /ɑ ːs k / A u s tr a lia n /ɒ ˈ s tr e ɪ lɪ ə / b a c k g a tn m o n n /ˈb æ k g æ m ə rɪ/ b e V /b iː/ b e fo re p re p /b ɪˈfɔ ː(r)/ p i c t u r e n / 'p t k t , r o ( r ) / p la c e s n p l /p l e t s t z / p la y V /p le r/ p u n c tu a tio n n /ˌp ʌ ŋ k lʃ u ˈe ɪʃ n / A fric a n /ˈ æ f rɪk ə / a g re e m e n t n /ə ˈ g riːm ə n t/ A lg e r ia n /æ lˈd ʒ ɪə riə / A lg e ria n a d j /æ lˈ d ʒ ɪə r iə n / a lo n g p r e p /ə ˈ lɒ ŋ / a l s o a d v / 'o t l s o o / A n d o rra n /æ n ˈd ɔ ːrə / q u e s t i o n n / 'k w e s t j o n / A n g o l a n /f f ip 'g a u l o / q u e s tio n m a r k n A rc tic O c e a n n /ˌ ɑ ː k tɪ k ˈə ʊ ʃn / / 'k w e s t j a n m o :k / a r e a n / 'e o r i o / fro m p re p /fro m / q u i c k l y a d v / 'k w t k l i / A rg e n tin a n /ˌ ɑ :d ʒ ə n ˈtiːn ə / f u l l s t o p n / ˌ f ʊ l 's t o p / re a d V /r i:d / a r o u n d p r e p / o 'r a o n d / g o V /9 ɔ ʊ / r e g is te r v / 'r e d j t s t a f r ) / A tla n tic O c e a n n h a v e V /h æ v / h e lp V /h e lp / re g is tra tio n d e sk n /ˌ re d ʒ ɪˈs tre ɪʃ n d e s k / / ə t ˌ l æ n t ɪ k 'ə ʊ ʃ θ / B a n g la d e s h n /ˌ b æ ŋ g lə ˈ d e ʃ / ru le s n p l /r u tlz / B h u t a n n / b u t 't o : n / h o u s e w i f e n / 'h a o s w a t f / sc re e n n /s k ri:n / b ig a d j /b tg / h o w m a n y / h a u 'm e n i / s e n t e n c e n / 's e n t o n s / B o li v ia n / b ə ˈ l ɪ v i ə / h u s b a n d n /ˈ h ʌ z b ə n d / s is te r n /ˈ s ɪs tə ( r ) / b o rd e r V /ˈb ɔ ːd ə (r)/ six /s ɪk s / b o r d e r s n p / / 'b o : d o z / s m a l l l e t t e r s n p l / s m ɔ ː l 'l e t o z / B r u n e i n / b r u : 'n a t / h o s p ita l n /ˈ h ɒ s p ɪtl/ a l o t o f / ə 'l o t a v / p h o t o n / 'f o o t o u / Unit 2 i m p o r t a n t fld ; / ɪ m ˈ p ɔ : t n t / in p re p h n l in d e x n /ˈ ɪn d e k s / I n d i a n / 't n d i o / in s tru c tio n s « p i /ɪn ˈ s tr ʌ k ʃ n z / s o n n / 8 ʌ ɪı / B u r m a n / 'b o : m a / s ta r t n /S to tt/ b u t conj /h \t/ s t u d e n t n / 's t j u t d n t / C a n a d a n /ˈk æ n ə d ə / s tu d y V /ˈs tʌ d i/ c a p i t a l ( c i ty ) n / ˈ k æ p ɪ t l ˈ s ɪ t i / s u r v e y V / s o 'v e t / c a rs n p l /k o :z / In te rn e t n /ˈ ɪn tə n e t/ te x t n /te k s t/ c e n t r e w / 's e n t a ( r ) / in tro d u c tio n s M p/ /ˌ ɪn tr ə ˈ d ʌ k ʃ n z / t e x t b o o k n / 't e k s t b o k / C h a d n /tʃæ d / T h a ila n d n /ˈ ta ɪlæ n d / C h ile n /ˈ tʃ I li/ title n /ˈ ta ɪtl/ C h in a n /ˈ tʃa ɪn ə / c lim a te n /ˈ k la ɪm ə t/ in te rn a tio n a l sc h o o l n /ˌ ɪn tə ˈ ^ æ ʃ n ə l s k u ːl/ Ja p a n n /d ʒ ə ˈp æ n / b e g in n e r n /b ɪˈ g ɪn ə { r ) / k e y b o a rd n /ˈ k iːb ɔ ːd / T u rk e y V / ' t 3 :k i/ b e lo w p r e p /b ɪˈlə ʊ / k n o w V /θ ə ʊ / tw o / t u ː/ c o a s t n /k o o s t/ b o o k n lh u k.1 la b e l V / 'l e t b l / u n c le n /ˈ ʌ ŋ k l/ c o a s t l i n e n / 'k o o s t l a t n / B r a z il n / b r ə ˈ z ɪ l / le a r n V /la :n / u n d e r lin e V /ˌʌ n d ə ˈla ɪn / c o lle g e n /ˈ k ɒ lɪd ʒ / b r o th e r n /ˈb rʌ ð ə (r)/ le c tu re r n /ˈ le k tʃ ə r ə ( r ) / u n d e rs ta n d v /ˌʌ n d ə ˈs tæ n d / c o m m a n / 'k o m o / b u s in e s s w o m a n n l e t t e r s n p l / 'l e t o z / u n iv e r s ity n /,J u ːn ɪˈ v ɜ ːs ə ti/ d e s e r t n / 'd e z o t / li k e V / l a ɪ k / u s e V /J u ːz / d i f f e r e n t a d j / 'd ɪ f r ə n t / v e rb n /v ɜ ːb / d ry a d j /d ra t/ v e r y m u c h a d v / 'v e r i m M f / e a s i e r a d j / 'i : z i a { r ) / v o w e ls n p l / ' v a o s l z J e a s t n /1ː51/ /ˈ b ɪz n ə s w ʊ m ə n / c a p ita l le tte r s n p l /ˌ k æ p i tl ˈ le tə z / liv e V / l i v l c a r e f u l l y a d v / 'k e a f o l i / l o o k a t V / 'l o k æ t / check V /tʃe k / m a k e s u re v /m e tk ˈʃ ɔ ː(r )/ ch ess n l i j t s i m a r r ie d a d j / 'm s r i d / c h i l d r e n Mp i / ˈ t ʃ ɪ l d r ə r ɪ / m a tc h V /m æ tʃ/ c ir c le V /ˈ s ɜ :k l/ rn e d ic a l s tu d e n t n c ity n /ˈs ɪti/ / 'm e d t k l ' s t j u : d n t / c lu b n /k lʌ b / m e e t v /m iːt/ c o m e f r o m V /ˈ k ʌ m f r o m / m e m b e r s n p l / 'm e m b a z / c o m p le te V /k ə m ˈ p liːt/ m e n n p l /m e n / c o m p u te r e n g in e e rin g n /lc ə m ˈp ju ːtə (r) ˌe n d ʒ ɪˈn ɪə rɪŋ / c o m p u te r p ro g ra m m e r n /l^ ə m ˈp ju :tə ˈp rə ʊ g ræ m ə (r)/ c o n fe re n c e n /ˈk ɒ n fə rə n s / c o n s o n a n ts « p / /ˈk ɒ n s ə n ə n ts / c o r r e c t (v, a d j ) / k ə ˈ r e k t / c o u n tr y n /ˈ k ʌ n tri/ c o u rs e n /k o ts / m ista k e n /m ɪˈ s te ɪk / n a m e n /n e tm / n e c e s s a r y a d ) / 'n e s o s o r i / n e w a d j /n ju :/ n o u n n /n a o n / n u m b e r v / 'n A m b a ( r ) / n u rs e n /n a :s / o c c u p a tio n n /ˌ ɒ k ju ˈp e ɪʃn / o f f ic e n / 'o f t s / d a u g h te r n /ˈ d ɔ :tə ( r ) / d e n tis t n / 'd e n t t s t / d ic tio n a ry n /ˈ d ɪk ʃ ə n r i/ do 64 V /d u ː/ W ord list o n e /w ʌ n / o n li n e a d j /,ɒ n ˈ la ɪn / p a g e n /p e ɪd ʒ / w e b p a g e n /ˈ w e b p e ɪd ʒ / E a st A f r i c a n /i ːs t ˈæ fr ɪk ə / w h a t? /w o t/ e i g h t / 6 ɪ 1/ w h e re ? /w e o (r )/ E u r o p e n / 'j o o r o p / w h ic h ? / w ɪ t ʃ / e x a m p l e n / t g 'z o : m p l / w ith p re p /w i6 / e x p o rt V /ɪk ˈs p ɔ ːt/ w o rd n /w ɜ ːd / fiv e / f a t v / w o rk V /w ɜ ːk / fla g n / f l s g / w rite V /^ a ɪt/ fla t a d j / f læ t/ fo re st n I 'fo n s V F ra n c e n /frɑ ːn s / g e o g ra p h y n /d ʒ iˈɒ g rə fi/ g r a m m a r n /ˈ g r æ m ə { r ) / h a lf /h ɑ ːf/ h ig h a d j /h a ɪ/ h ill n /h r l/ h o t a d j /h o t/ id e a n /a ɪˈ d ɪə / In d o n e s ia n /ˌ ɪn d ə ˈn iːʒ ə / I t a ly w / ˈ ɪ t ə l i / land n /lænd/ large adj /laːdʒ/ Libya n /ˈlɪbiə/ link V /lɪŋk/ list n /lrst/ location n /ləʊˈkeɪʃn/ long adj /lɒŋ/ Malaysia n /məˈleɪʒə/ Malaysian adj /məˈleɪʒn/ Mali n /ˈmɑ:li/ many /ˈmeni/ map n /mæp/ Mauretanian /ˌmɒrɪˈteɪnɪə/ meaning n /ˈmi:nɪŋ/ medicines np/ /ˈmedɪsnz/ Mediterranean Sea n /ˌmedɪtəˈreɪniən siː/ Mexico n /ˈmeksɪk^ʊ/ million /'mɪljən/ modern n /ˈmɒdn/ Morocco n /məˈrɒkəʊ/ most /moost/ mountains np/ /ˈmaʊntənz/ national adj /ˈnæʃnəl/ Nepal n /nəˈpɔːl/ New Zealand n /ˌnjuː ˈziːlənd/ Niger n /niː'ʒeə{r)/ north n InoiQI North Africa n /no:0 ˈæfrɪkə/ North America n /ɒɔːθ əˈmerɪkə/ Oceania n /əʊ5ɪˈɑːɒɪə/ oceans npl psojnz! oil n /oil/ on prep loni other adj /ˈʌðə(r)/ over prep /ˈəʊvə(r)/ Paciflc Ocean n /pəˌsɪfɪk ˈəʊʃn/ Pakistan n /ˌpækɪˈstæn/ Paraguay n /ˈpærəgwaɪ/ part ofspeech n /ˌpɑ:t ov ˈspi:tJ■/ population n /,pɒpjuˈleɪʃn/ Portugal n /ˈpɔːtʃʊgl/ predict V /prɪˈdɪkt/ prepare V /prɪˈpeə(r)/ rainforest n /'reɪnfɒrɪst/ river n /ˈrɪvə(r)/ Saudi Arabian /ˌsaʊdi əˈreɪbiə/ school n /sku:l/ seas n pl /siːz/ second /ˈsekənd/ short adj /ʃɔ:ɪ/ similar adj /ˈsɪm^lə(r)/ south n /sao9/ South Africa n /saʊθˈæfrɪkə/ South China Sea n /sao6 ˈtʃaɪnə siː/ South East Asia n /saoO itst ˈɑɪʃə/ Spain n /spetn/ state capital n /steɪt ˈkæpɪtl/ Strait of Malacca n /streɪt nv mo'lako/ subject n /ˈsʌbdʒekt/ sunny adj /ˈsʌni/ Switzerland n /ˈswɪtsələnd/ technical institute n /ˈteknɪkl 'ɪnstɪtjuːt/ there are /deo(r) m(r)/ there is /deo(r) tz/ thing n /θɪŋ/ tourists n pl /'toonsts/ travelling n /ˈtrævəlɪŋ/ Tunisia n /tju'ntzio/ Uruguay n /'joorogwat/ USA n /,ju: es ˈɑɪ/ weather n /ˈweðə(r)/ west n /west/ Western Sahara n /ˈwestən sə'hɑːrə/ Unit ^ p re p o s itio n n /ˌ p re p ə ˈz ɪʃn / re c o rd V /rɪˈk ɔ ːd / afternoon n /ˌɑɪftəˈnuːn/ article n /ˈɑːtɪkl/ at prep /æt/ beginning n /bɪˈgɪnɪŋ/ box n /boks/ breakfast n /ˈbrekfəst/ business studies n /ˈbɪznəs ˌstʌdiz/ cafeteria n /ˌkæfəˈtɪəriə/ car n /kɑː(r)/ chemistry n /ˈkemɪstri/ choose v /tj utz/ clock n /klok/ coffee n /ˈkɒfi/ colour n /ˈkʌlə(r)/ compare v /kəmˈpeə(r)/ computer n /kəmˈpjuːtə(r)/ computer centre n /kəmˈpjuɪtə(r) ˈsentə(r)/ day n /det/ dinner n /ˈdɪnə(r)/ drink v /drɪŋk/ drive v /dratv/ each /ɪːʃı/ emails n pl /ˈiːmeɪlz/ evening n /ˈiːvnɪŋ/ every day adv /ˈevrideɪ/ false adj /fɔːls/ football match n /ˈfʊtbɔːl mætʃ/ Trench n /frentj / friday n /ˈfraɪdeɪ/ general Information n /ˈdʒenrəl ˌɪnfəˈmeɪʃn/ get up v /get ˈʌp/ give v /gɪv/ go on v /goo ˈɒn/ go to v /goo tut/ go together v /goo təˈgeðə(r)/ group n /gruːp/ gym n /dʒɪm/ home n /hoom/ homework n /ˈhəʊmwɜːk/ how oldf /hao oold/ lab n /1æð/ language n /ˈlæŋgwɪdʒ/ leave v /lɪːv/ lecture n /ˈlektʃə(r)/ library n /lmbrorl/ look for v /ˈlʊk fɔː(r)/ lunch n /lʌntʃ/ make v /meɪk/ maths n /mæ^s/ medicine n /ˈmedɪsn/ hfondayn /ˈmʌndeɪ/ morning n /ˈmɔːnɪŋ/ multimedia centre n /ˌmʌltɪˈmɪːdiə ˈsentə(r)/ note n /noot/ nursing n /ˈnɜːsɪŋ/ object n /ˈɒbdʒɪkt/ order n /ˈɔːdə(r)/ part n /pɑːt/ physics n /ˈfɪzɪks/ r e m e m b e r V /r ɪˈ m e m b ə ( r ) / re s e a rc h n / r ɪ 's ɜ ː t ʃ / S a tu rd a y n /ˈ s æ tə d e ɪ / s e e V /»1ː/ s e m in a r n /ˈ s e m ɪn ɑ ː(r )/ s e n d V /s e n d / s im p le a d ) /ˈs ɪm p l/ s k im m in g n /s k ɪm ɪŋ / so m e a d j /s ʌ m / S p a n is h n /ˈ s p æ n ɪʃ / s p e ll c h e c k to o l n /ˈ s p e l t ʃ e k tu t l/ s p e llin g n /ˈ s p c lɪŋ / s p o rts p ro g ra m m e s n p l /s p o :ts ˈp rə ʊ g ræ m z / s ta rt V /s tɑ ːt/ s tu d ie s n p l /ˈ s tʌ d iz / S u n d a y n /ˈ s ʌ n d e ɪ/ te le v is io n n /ˈ te l ɪv ɪ ʒ n / T h u rs d a y n /ˈ θ ɜ ːz d e ɪ/ tim e n /ta ɪm / tim e e x p re s s io n n /ˌta ɪm ɪk ˈs p re ʃn / tru e adj /tru :/ T u esd ay n /ˈ tju ːz d e ɪ/ TV « A ti: ˈ v iː/ u n d e r p re p /ˈ ʌ n d ə (r) / v is it V /ˈ v ɪz ɪ t/ v o c a b u la ry n /v ə ˈ k æ b jə lə r i/ w a tc h V /w ɒ tʃ / W e d n e sd a y n /ˈw e n z d e ɪ/ w e e k n /w i:k / w e e k e n d n /ˌ w i:k ˈe n d / w h e n ? /w e n / w o rk n /w ɜ ːk / w ritin g n /ˈ r a ɪt ɪŋ / Unit 4 a d je c tiv e n /ˈ æ d ʒ ɪk tɪv / a d v a n ta g e s /ə d ˈv ɑ ːn tɪd ʒ / a d v e r b n / 'æ d v ɜ ː b / a irp o rts n p i /ˈ e ə p ɔ ːts / a l o n e a d v /ə ˈ 1 ə ʊ θ / a rriv e v /ə ˈ ra ɪv / b a d a d j /b æ d / b e c a u se co n j /b ɪˈk ɒ z / b e c a u s e o f p r e p / b i 'k o z o v / b e tte r a d j r b e t o ( r ) / b i o l o g y M / b a ɪ ˈ ɒ l ə d 3 i/ b o th /b o o 0 / b rid g e s n p l /ˈb rɪd ʒ ɪz / b u ild V /b ɪld / b u il d in g s ite M /ˈ b ɪld ɪŋ s a ɪ t / c a n V /k æ n / c a r e e r n / k o 'r t o ( r ) / c h e a p a d j /tʃi:p / c iv il e n g i n e e r n /ˌs ɪv l e n d ʒ ɪˈ n ɪə ( r ) / c la s s n / k l o : s / c le a n a d j /k li:n / c le a re r a d ) /ˈ k lɪə r ə ( r ) / c o m p a n ie s t t p / /ˈk ʌ m p ə ^ iz / c o m p u t e r file n / k ə m ˈ p j u ː t ə f a i l / c o n d u d e V /k ə n ˈk lu :d / d e fin e V /d ɪˈfa ɪn / d e s ig n V /d ɪˈ z a ɪn / d iffic u lt a d j /ˈ d ɪf ɪ k ə lt / d irty a d ) /ˈd ɜ ːti/ d is a d v a n ta g e n /ˌ d ɪs ə d ˈ v ɑ : n tɪ d ʒ / d ra w in g n /ˈ d r ɔ ːɪŋ / e a c h o th e r / i : t ʃ ˈʌ ð ə (r)/ e a r l y fld v / ˈ ɜ ː l i / e a s ily a d v /ˈ iːz ə li/ e a s y a d j / ˈ iː z i/ e le c tric ity n /ɪˌ le k ˈ tr ɪs ə ti/ e n d in g n /ˈe n d ɪŋ / e n g in e e rin g n /ˌ e n d ʒ ɪˈ n ɪə r ɪŋ / E n g lis h n /ˈ ɪŋ g lɪʃ / e x e rc is e n /ˈ e k s ə s a ɪz / fa m ily n a m e s /ˈ fæ m ə li ˌn e ɪm / fa m o u s a d j /ˈ fe ɪm ə s / f i n a l l y fld v / ˈ f a ɪ n ə l i / f irs t n a m e / ˈ f ɜ ː s t ˌn e ɪm / f i r s t l y f ld v / ˈ f ɜ : s t l i / fre e tim e n /f r iː ta im / g e t ill / g e t ˈɪl/ g o o d a d j /g o d / g r e a t e r fld j / ˈ g r e ɪ l ə ( r ) / h e a lth n /h e l0 / notebook n /ˈnəʊtbʊk/ notes n p l /noots/ now fldv /nau/ open-plan fldj /,oopon ˈplæn/ outside fldv /ˌaʊtˈsaɪd/ pair n /peo(r)/ place s /piers/ plan V /plffin/ privately adv /ˈpraɪvətll/ profession n /p^əˈfeʃn/ put V /pot/ quiet fld) /ˈkwaɪət/ railways s p / /ˈreɪlweɪz/ reason s /ˈriːzn/ record n /ˈrekɔːd/ researchers s pi /rɪˈsɜ:tʃəz/ roads s pl /roodz/ rootn s /ru:tn/ scanning s /ˈskænɪŋ/ search engine s /ˌsɜːtʃ ˈendʒɪn/ secondly fldv /ˈsekəndli/ shop V /ʃɒp/ shopping s /ˈʃɒpɪŋ/ show V /ʃəʊ/ silence s /ˈsaɪləns/ small adj /smo:l/ sometimes fldv /ˈsʌmtaɪmz/ spell V /spel/ spoil s /spɔːt/ squash s /skwnf/ study s /ˈstʌdi/ take V /tetk/ talk V /to:k/ tennis n /ˈtenɪs/ the same /ðə ˈseɪm/ then /den/ think V /0ipk/ three /0rit/ together fldv /təˈgeðə(r)/ translation s /trænsˈleɪʃn/ travel V /ˈtrævl/ types n p l /tatps/ useful fldp /ˈjuːsfl/ want v /wont/ well fldv /wel/ why? /war/ work colleagues s pl /wa:k ˈkɒliːgz/ work long hours /wa:k lop ˈaʊəz/ world s /watld/ world language n /w ɜ ːld ˈlæ ŋ g w ɪd ʒ / years n p l /jtoz/ Unit 5 a c tio n s / 'æ k ʃ n / a d d re s s s /ə ˈ d re s / a d v e rtis e m e n ts /ə d ˈ v ɜ :tɪs m ə n t/ a n im a ls s p / /ˈ æ n ɪm lz / a p p lic a tio n fo rm /ˌ æ p lɪˈ k e ɪʃn fo tm / a s s e m b ly p o in t s b ^ s n p l /b æ g z / b a s k e tlia ll s /ˈ b ɑ ː s k ɪ tb ɔ ː l/ b la c k n, adj / b t e k / adj / b l u : / b lu e s , b o rn b rin g V /b o :rt/ V /b r ɪŋ / b u ild in g s /ˈ b ɪld ɪŋ / b u s s /b ʌ s / c a lm adj / k ɑ ː m / c ir c le s /ˈs ɜ :k l/ c l e a r fld ; / k l t o ( r ) / c l e a r l y fld v / ˈ k l ɪ ə l l / c ro ss V /k r o s / danger s / 'd e ɪ n d ʒ ə ( r ) / d a te o f b i r t h s d is c u s s / d e ɪ t n v ˈb 3 ːθ / V / d ɪ 's k ʌ s / d o c u m e n ts s p / /ˈ d ɒ k ju m e n ts / eat V /lːt/ e m a il a d d re s s s essay s e v e ry o n e /ˈe v riw ʌ n / e :d t s /ˈ e k s ɪt/ fire s /ˈ f a ɪə ( r ) / U K s /ˌ ju ː ˈk e ɪ/ fire a la r m n /ˈ f a ɪə r o lo :m / until conj /ənˈtɪl/ volleyball n /ˈvɒlibɔ:l/ white s /waɪt/ fo llo w V /ˈ ıɒ ıɔ ʊ / fo o tb a ll n /ˈ f ʊ tb ɔ :l/ fo r m s /f o :m / f o r m a l fld j / ˈ f ɔ ː m l / g e o g ra p h ic a l fe a tu re s s p l /ˌdʒiːəˈgræfɪkl ˈfiːtʃəz/ g o b a c k V /g o o ˈb æ k / g re e n s /g r iːn / h e a r v /h ro (r)/ h e r e fld v / h t o ( r ) / in k s /ɪŋ k / i n t e r e s t e d fld j / 't n t r o s t t d / in to p re p /ˈ ɪn tə / Japanese adj / ˌ d ʒ æ p ə 'n i ː z / la n d in g c a r d s /ˈ læ n d ɪŋ k u td / lib ra ria n n /la ɪˈ b ^ e ə riə n / lift s / l r f t / lo c k e r s n p l /ˈ lɒ k ə z / m e m o r y s t i c k s /ˈ m e m ə ri s tɪk / m o b ile p h o n e s jo b n /d s n b / n a tio n a lity s le c tu re th e a tr e n /ˈlcktʃə(r) '0toto(r)/ less /les/ more /mɔː(r)/ m usics /ˈmjuːzɪk/ near prep /nɪə(r)/ need V /ni:d/ noise s /notz/ noisy fld) /ˈnɔɪzi/ 66 W ord list / 'i ː m e ɪ l ə ˈ d r e s / /ˈ e s e ɪ/ in f o rm a tio n n /ˌ ɪn fə ˈ m e ɪʃn / la w n /lo t/ /ə ˈs e m b li p ɔ ɪn t/ road s /rəʊd/ run V /rʌn/ safety s /ˈseɪfti/ save V I s e i v l seconds s p / /ˈsekəndz/ September s /sepˈtembə(r)/ shape s /ʃeɪp/ sign V /satn/ signature s /ˈsɪgnətʃə(r)/ signs s p l /saɪnz/ size s / s a i z l smoke V /smook/ sports club s /ˈspɔːts klʌb/ stay V /stet/ streets n p l / s t r u t s / student ID card s / ˈ s tj u ːd n t 3ɪ ˈdi: k ɑ ːd / student identity card s /ˈstJuːdnt aɪˈdentəti kɑːd/ swimmings /'swɪmɪŋ/ table n /ˈteɪbl/ taxi s /ˈtæksi/ telephone number s /ˈtelɪfəʊn ˌnʌmbə(r)/ tell V /tel/ tickv /tɪk/ today fldv /təˈdeɪ/ topic n /ˈtɒpɪk/ town s /taon/ train s /trern/ triangle n /ˈtraɪæŋgl/ turn off V /ts:n 'of/ /ˌ m ə ʊ b a ɪl ˈfə ʊ n / /ˌ n æ ʃ ə ˈn æ lə ti/ n o e n tr y /n o u ˈe n tri/ n o t i c e s /ˈ n ə ʊ tɪs / o f t e n fld v /ˈ ɒ f r ı/ p h ra s e s s p / /ˈ fre ɪz ɪz / p la c e o f b i r t h s /p l e ɪs Dv ˈb ɜ :θ / p la n e s /p le ɪn / re c ta n g le s /ˈ r e k tæ ŋ g l/ re d s /r e d / re g is tr a tio n fo r tn s /ˌre d ʒ ɪˈs tre ɪʃ n fm m / Unit 6 a g o a d v I s 'g s u l a n /ɔ ːı/ a n o v e r th e w o rld m a la r ia n /m ə ˈle ə riə / m e d ic a l a d j /ˈ m e d ɪk l/ m e e t i n g n / 'm l t t t p / lV Iid d le E a s t n / , m t d l ˈ i : s t / m o d e r n a d j /ˈ m ɒ d n / Unity a fe w /ə 'f j u t / a c a d e m ic a d j /ˌæ k ə ˈd e m ɪk / a c h ie v e v /ə ˈ t ʃ i ː v / p a y V /p e !/ p e r s o n n / 'p a t s n / p i l o t / ! / 'p a t l a t / p io n e e r n /ˌ p a ɪə ˈ n ɪə (r )/ p o i n t n /p O ! n t/ p r e s e n t a t i o n / ! / ˌ p r e z n 't e ɪ ʃ n / n e x t ad j /n e k s t/ ag e n /e ɪd ʒ / a n c ie n t w o r ld n / ˈ e ɪ n ʃ ə n t ˈ w ɜ ːld / o p e n V /ˈə ʊ p ə n / A m e ric a n a d ; /ə ˈ m c r ɪk ə ɪı/ a n o th e r /ə ˈ n ʌ ð ə (r) / p a in n /p e tn / A m e ric a n s n p l /ə ˈ m e r ɪk ə n z / a rte m is in in n /ˌ a ːtɪˈ m iːs ɪn ɪn / p ast n /p o ts t/ A p r il n / ˈ e ɪ p r ə l / ra c e V /re ts / a s p ir in n /ˈ æ s p rɪn / p a tie n t n /ˈ p e ɪʃ n t/ A u g u st n /ˈɔ ːg ə s t/ ra ilw a y n /ˈ r e ɪlw e ɪ/ a t s e a / æ ı ˈ s i:/ p h o n e n /fo o n / b e c o m e v /b ɪˈk ʌ m / a v o id V /ə ˈ v ɔ ɪd / p ip e s n p l /p a ɪp s / b e l o n g t o V / b ɪ 'l ɒ ŋ t o / b a rk n /b u :k / p o u r V /p o t(r)/ b o a r d n /b o td / b e g in V /b ɪˈg ɪn / p rie s t n /p r lts t/ c a r r y v /ˈ k æ r i/ / ɔ ː l ˈ ə ʊ v ə ( r ) ð ə ˈ w 3 ːl d / b o a t n /b o u t/ p ro b le m n /ˈ p rɒ b lə m / b o n e s n p l Ih d o n zJ p r o n o u n n / 'p r o o n a u n / p ric e n /p ra ts / p r o f e s s o r n / p r a 'f e s o f r ) / r e t u r n V / n 't 3 ! n / R u s s ia n n /ˈ rʌ ʃɪı/ s a il V / s e t l / s e c o n d / 's e k a n d / S e p t e m b e r n / s e p 't e m b o ( r ) / d a te n /d e ɪt/ s e rv ic e n /ˈ s ɜ ː v ɪs / D e c e m b e r n /d ɪˈ s e m b ə ( r ) / s e v e n th /ˈ s e v ^ θ / d is ta n c e n /ˈ d ɪs tə n s / s h ip s n p l /ʃ ɪp s / E a rth n /ɜ ːθ / s in g le -h a n d e d a d v B ritis h a d j / ˈ b r ɪ t ɪ ʃ / p u b lic b a th s « /ˌ p ʌ b lɪk ˈ b ɑ ːð z / c a ll V / k ɔ ː l / p u b l i c h e a l t h n / ˌ p ʌ b l ɪ k ˈ h e lθ / c a r r y a w a y V / ˈ k æ r i ə 'w e ɪ / q u in in e « /k w ɪˈ n iːn / c a u s e V Ik o iz J re c o g n iz e V /ˈ re k ə g n a ɪz / C E / ˌ s l: ˈi:/ e ig h th /e ɪtθ / re fe r to v /r ɪˈ f ɜ ː( r ) to / c e n tu ry « /ˈ s e n tʃ ə ri/ e le c tric a d ; /ɪ ˈ l e k tr ɪ k / sp a c e n /s p e ɪs / re g u la r a d ; /ˈ re g j^ lə (r)/ c h a p t e r n / ˈ t J 'æ p t ə ( r ) / e l e c t r o n i c a d ; / t , l e k 't r o n t k / sp ace p ro g ra m m e n r e l a t e d a d ; / r t 'l e t t t d / c h e m ic a ls n p / /ˈ k e m ɪk lz / re p e a t v /rɪˈp i:t/ c h ild n /tʃ a ɪ ld / r e p e titio n /I /ˌre p ə ˈtɪʃn / c o m m o n a d j /ˈk ɒ m ə n / re p la c e v /r ɪˈp le ɪs / e ig h te e n th /ˌ e ɪˈtiːn θ / E n g la n d n /ˈ ɪŋ g lə n d / fa c to ry w o rk e r n / ˌ s ɪ ŋ g l 'h æ n d ɪ d / s ix th /s ɪk s θ / /ˌs p e ɪs ˈp rə ʊ g ræ m / s p a c e s h ip n / ˈ s p e ɪs ʃ ɪp / /ˈ f æ k tə r i ˈw ɜ ːk ə ( r)/ sp e e d n /s p i:d / F e b r u a r y /! /ˈ fe b ru ə r i/ s t o r y / ! / 's t O ! r i / fifth /f tf e / s u c c e s s f u l a d ; / s o k 's e s f l / firs t / f s ts t/ te n th /te n 6 / flig h t n /f la r t/ te s t n / t e s t / f ly V / f l a / / t h i r d /0 3 ! d / th o u s a n d s /ˈ θ a ʊ z n d z / c o u ld V /k n d / r e s u lt n /r ɪˈ z ʌ lt/ d e c i d e v / d ɪ 's a ɪ d / re w rite v /ˌ r iːˈ r a ɪt/ d e v e lo p V /d ɪˈ v e lə p / ric e n /r a r s / d e v e lo p m e n t n /d ɪˈ v e lə p m ə n t/ R o m a n s n p l /ˈrə ʊ m ə n z / d is c o v e r y /d ɪˈ s k ʌ v ə ( r ) / s a ilo r n /ˈ s e ɪlə ( r ) / d i s c o v e r i e s u p i / d ɪ 's k ʌ v ə r i z / fo r s u re /fo (r) ˈʃʊ ə (r)/ s c i e n t i s t n / 's a t o n t t s t / d is e a s e /! /d ɪˈz i:z / f o u r th /fo :0 / t r a n s p o i l n / 't r f f i n s p o : t / s e rio u s a d j /ˈ s ɪə r iə s / F re n c h m a n n /ˈfre n tʃm ə n / t u r n to V /ˈ ı ɜ ː θ ta / e a r l y a d j / ’3 ːl i/ e d u c a te v /ˈ e d ʒ u k e ɪt/ s k i n n / s lc t n / g r a n d p r i x n / ˌ g r ɑ : 'p r i : / t u t o r / ! / 't j u ! t o ( r ) / S o u th A m e ric a n /s a o 0 ə ˈm e rɪk ə / g re a t a d j /g r e tt/ t w e n t i e t h / 't w e n t i o S / e d u c a tio n n /ˌ e d ʒ u ˈk e ɪʃn / s t il l a d v / s t r l / g ro u n d n /g ra u n d / tw e n ty -firs t /.tw e n ti ˈ f ɜ ːs t/ e ffe c t n / t 'f e k t / E g y p tia n a d j /i ˈ d ʒ ɪ p ʃ n / s to p V /s to p / h e lic o p te r n /ˈh e !ɪk ɒ p t^ (^ )/ u n d e rg ro u n d tra in n E g y p tia n s n p l / i ˈ d ʒ ɪ p ʃ n z / s u b s ta n c e n /ˈ s ʌ b s tə n s / h o t- a ir b a llo o n n e ig h te e n th a d j /ˌ e ɪˈtiːn θ / s u r g e r y /ɪ / ˈ s ɜ ː d ʒ ə r i / e n c y c lo p e d ia n /ɪn ˌs a ɪk lə ˈ p iːd iə / E u ro p e a n a d j /ˌ jʊ ə rə ˈ p iːə n / sle e p V /s liːp / / ˌ h ɒ t ˈɑ ə b o 'l u t n / w h o ? /h u :/ tre a t y /tr i:t/ in tro d u c tio n /! /ˌɪn trə ˈd ʌ k ʃn / w in V /w tn / y o u n g e s t a d ; / 'j ʌ ŋ g ɪ s t / te a c h y / t i ː t ʃ / tre e n /tr i:/ e v e n ts /I p i /ɪˈv e n ts / tr ip n I t n p l in v e n to r n /ɪn ˈ v e n tə ( r ) / e x a m s n p i /ɪg ˈz æ m z / tr o p ic a l a d ; /ˈ tr ɒ p ɪk l/ Ja n u a ry n /ˈd ʒ æ n ju ə ri/ e x p e rim e n t n /ɪk ˈs p e r ɪm ə n t/ ty p e n /t a ɪp / j o i n V / d 3 0 !n / fin is h V /ˈ f ɪn ɪʃ / v a c c i n e n / 'v æ k s i ː n / Ju ly n /d ʒ u ˈ la ɪ/ first /f m s t/ v e g e ta b le s /I p i /ˈ v e d ʒ tə b lz / Ju n e n /d 3 u :n / fo o d n /fu ːd / v ita m in n /ˈ v ɪtə m ɪn / la n d y /læ n d / w a te r n /ˈ w ɔ ː tə ( r ) / l o n g - d i s t a n c e a d j /ˌ lɒ ŋ ˈ d ɪ s t ə n s / G re e k s n p l /g riːk s / w ay s n p l /w e tz / M a rc h n /m u !tf/ h e a l t h y fld ; / ˈ h e l θ i / w rite rs n p l /ˈ r a ɪtə z / M a y n /m e t/ h is to ry n /ˈ h ɪs tri/ y e s te rd a y a d v /ˈ je s tə d e ɪ/ fr u it n /f r u ːt/ m in u te s n p l /ˈ m ɪn ɪts / h y g ie n e n /ˈ h a ɪd ʒ iːn / m o n th s n p l /m ʌ n θ s / im p o r ta n c e n /ɪm ˈ p ɔ :tn s / m o o n n /m u tn / im p ro v e V /ɪm ˈ p r u ːv / n in e te e n th /ˌ n a ɪn ˈti:n θ / i n p la c e o f p r e p / t n 'p l e t s o v / n in th /n a tn 0 / in c r e a s e v /ɪn ˈ k r i:s / n o n - s t o p a d v / ˌ θ ɒ θ 's t o p / in tro d u c e V /ˌɪn trə ˈd ju ːs / N o v e m b e r n /n ə ʊ ˈ v e m b ə (r )/ ir re g u la r a d j /ɪˈ r e g jə lə ( r ) / n u m b e r n /ˈn ʌ m b ə (r)/ k e e p V /k i:p / O c t o b e r n / n k 't o o b o ( r ) / l a t e r fld v / ˈ l c ɪ t ə ( r ) / o rd in a l n u m b e rs n p l le a v e s n p l / l i t v z / le m o n ju ic e n /ˈle m ə n d 3 u :s / life n / l a ɪ f / w a lk v /w o :k / h o w lo n g ? / h a o 'l ɒ ŋ / in v e n tio n n /ɪn ˈ v e n ʃ n / E u r o p e a n s Mp i / j ʊ ə r ə ˈ p ^ ː ə n z / /ˈ ʌ n d ə g r a ʊ n d tr e /n / / ˌ ɔ ː d ɪ n l 'H A m b a z / p a sse n g e r tra in n / 'p s s ! n d 3 0 (r) tr e /n / W ord list 67 U n its a d v e rtis e v /ˈ æ d v ə ta ɪz / a d v e rtis in g n /ˈ æ d v ə ta ɪz ɪŋ / a tta c h V /ə ˈ tæ tʃ / b e n e fit fro m V /ˈ b e n ɪf ɪt fro m / B e s t w is h e s / b e s t w ɪ ʃ ɪ z / b o o k v /b o le / b re a d n /b re d / b u s in e s s n /ˈ b ɪz n ə s / b u y V /b a r / b y e /b a t/ c o m p e titio n s « p / /ˌ k ɒ m p ə ˈ tɪʃ n z / c o n c lu s io n n /k ə n ˈ k lu ːʒ n / c o n n e c t V /k ə ˈn e k t/ c o p y /j /ˈk ɒ p i/ D e a r /d r o (r) / e m a il V /ˈiːm e ɪl/ e n tr ie s n p l /ˈ e n triz / e u r o s n p l /ˈ jʊ ə ^ ə ʊ z / e x p e n s i v e fld j / ɪ k ˈ s p e n s ɪ v / fa n s n p l /fæ n z / fa v o u rite a d j / ˈ f e ɪv ə r ɪt / f r i e n d l y fld ) / ˈ f r e n d i i / g a m e s n p l /g e ɪm z / h a n d o u t s n p l / 'h æ n d a ʊ t s / h a rd adp a d v /h a td / h a ts n p l /h æ ts / h e a d in g n /ˈ h e d ɪŋ / h e llo /h ə ˈ lə ʊ / h o w ? /h a o / ill a d j / t l / k in d n, a d j /k a tn d / la te a d j /le ɪt/ l o g o n / ' 1ə ʊ 9 ə ʊ / lo o k fo r w a rd to ... /lo k ˈf ɔ ːw ə d to / m a rk e tin g n /ˈ m ɑ ːk ɪtɪŋ / m is s V /m ts / m o n e y n /ˈ m ʌ n i/ m o u s e n /m a u s / O ly m p ic s n p l /ə ˈ lɪm p ɪk s / o n ly a d v /ˈ ə ʊ ^ 1 / o rg a n iz a tio n s n p l /ˌɔ ːg ə n a ɪˈz e ɪʃn z / p a r k n , V /p ɑ ːl^ / p la y e r n /ˈ p le ɪə ( r ) / p le a s e f i n d a tta c h e d .. . /p liːz fa ɪn d ^ ˈ tæ tʃt/ p o l i t e a d j / p ə 'l a ɪ t / p o p u la r a d j /ˈ p ɒ p jə lə ( r)/ p r o d u c ts ? ! p i /ˈp rɒ d ʌ k ts / r e a d i n g l i s t n / 'r e d ɪ ŋ l t s t / s e a s o n tic k e t n /ˈ s iːz n t ɪ k ɪ t / s e ll V / s e l / S e n i o r L e c t u r e r ?! /ˈ s i:n iə ( r) ˈle k tʃ ə r ə ( r ) / s h irts n p l /ʃ ɜ : t s / s o r r y /ˈ s ɒ ri/ s o u rc e s ? !p i I s y .s iz / s ta d iu m n /ˈs te ɪd iə m / s u m m e r? ! /ˈ s ʌ m ə ( r)/ ta lk n /to tk / te r m n /t3 :m / tic k e ts ? ! / ˈ t ɪ k ɪ t s / to p a d j /to p / tw ic e a d v / t w a t s / u n k in d a d j /ˌʌ n ˈk a ɪn d / 68 W ord list u s u a lly a d v /ˈ ju ːʒ u ə li/ v i r u s ?! / ˈ v a ɪ r ə s / w in te r n /ˈw ɪn tə { r)/ w o u l d li k e t o V / w a d ˈ l a ɪk t o / tr a n s p o il V /træ n ˈs p ɔ ːt/ Unit 9 u n c l e a n a d j / ˌ ʌ n ˈ k li :r ɪ/ agriculture ?ı /'ægrɪkʌltʃə(r)/ Antarctica?! /ænˈta:ktɪkə/ apples n p l /ˈæplz/ barchart?! /ˈbɑː !ʃɑː^ beef?! /bitf/ bottled water n /ˈbɒtld ˈwɔːtə(r)/ change V /tfe?nd 3/ chart n /tʃɑːt/ chicken ?! /ˈtʃɪkm/ chocolate n /ˈtʃɒklət/ cold adj /kould/ complete adj /kəmˈpliːt/ connected adj /kəˈnektɪd/ contain v /kənˈteɪn/ cover V /ˈkʌvə(r)/ crops p l /krops/ cup n /lcAp/ dependent adj /dɪˈpendənt/ describe V /dɪˈskraɪb/ descriptiun ?! /dt'skrtpjn/ drinking water ?ı /ˈdrɪŋkɪŋ wo:ta(r)/ email box?! /ˈiːmeɪl boks/ farming n /ˈfɑːmɪŋ/ figures n p l /ˈfɪgəz/ finger n /ˈfɪŋgə(r)/ Finland n /ˈfɪnlənd/ future?! /ˈfjuːtʃə(r)/ Germany n /ˈdʒɜ:məni/ global adj /ˈgləʊbl/ goods n p l / g u d z l grow V /groo/ high marks /haɪ ˈmɑːks/ Hong Kong ?! /hog ˈkɒŋ/ how much? /hao ˈmʌtʃ/ ice n /ats/ incomplete adj /ˌɪnkəmˈpliːt/ independent adj /ˌɪndɪˈpendənt/ Indian Ocean n /ˌɪndiən ˈəʊʃn/ industry?! /'?ndostri/ inexpensive adj /ˌɪnɪkˈspensɪv/ kilo n /ˈkiːləʊ/ litres n p l /ˈliːtəz/ main adj /me?n/ minerals n p l /ˈmɪnərəlz/ name v /netm/ nowadays adv /'naoodetz/ old adj /oold/ Oman?! /əʊˈmɑːn/ pencil n /ˈpensl/ plants n p l /plotnts/ poor adj /pm{r)/ potatoes?!pi /pəˈteɪtəʊz/ produce V /prəˈdjuːs/ resource n /rɪˈsɔ:s/ rich adj /rttj/ right adj /ratt/ seawater?! /ˈ81ː wo!to(r)/ Southern Ocean ?! /ˈsʌ^ən ˈəʊʃɪı/ square kilometres n p l /skwe: ˈkɪləˌmiːtəz/ statistics ?! pi /stəˈtɪstɪks/ sugar n /ˈʃʊgə(r)/ surface n /ˈsɜ:fɪs/ surround V /səˈraʊnd/ take care of v /tetk ˈkeə(r) nv/ ? ! npl u n h e a lt h y a d j /ʌ n ˈ h e lθ i/ u n im p o r ta n t a d j /ˌ ʌ n ɪm ˈp ɔ ːtn t/ U n ite d A ra b E m ira te s n /juˌnaɪtɪd ˌærəb ˈemɪrəts/ u n p o p u la r a d j /ʌ n ˈ p ɒ p jə lə { r) / u n su c c e ssfu l a d j /ˌʌ ^ s ə k ˈs e s fl/ u s e ?! / j u i z J w a te r V /ˈ w ɔ :tə { r) / w a te r s p o r ts n p l /ˈw ɔ ːtə { r) s p o : ts / w e t a d j /w e t/ w ro n g a d j Ito q/ Unit 10 a c c u ra te a d j /ˈ æ k jə r ə t/ a c h ie v e m e n ts n p i / ə ˈ tʃ i ːv m ə n ts / A m e ric a s n p l /ə ˈ m e r ɪk ə z / A s ia n / ˈ e ɪ ʃ ə / b illio n /ˈ b ɪljə n / b illio n a ir e n /,b ɪ lj ə ˈ n e ə ( r ) / b io te c h c o m p a n y n /ˈ b a ɪə ʊ te k ˈk ʌ m p ə n i/ b ra n d n /b r s n d / b u s in e s s m a n n /ˈ b ɪz n ə s m æ n / c lo th in g n /ˈ k lə ʊ ð ɪŋ / c o - f o u n d V / ˈ k ə ʊ ˈ1ɑʊθ<^/ sh o p n /ʃɒ p / stra n g e a d j /s tre ɪn d ʒ / su c c e s s n /s ə k ˈs e s / s u p e r s o n ic a d j /ˌ s u :p ə ˈ s ɒ n ɪk / te c h n o lo g ie s n p i /te k ˈ n ɒ lə d ʒ iz / to p ic s e n te n c e n /ˈ tɒ p ɪk ˈ s e n tə n s / tr a n s la te v /tr æ n s ˈ le ɪt/ T - s h ir t n / 't l : f 3 : t / u se rs n p l /ˈju ːz ə z / w eb n /w e b / w e ll-o rg a n iz e d a d j /w e l ˈ ɔ :g ə n a ɪz d / w o rld w id e a d j /ˈ w ɜ ːld w a ɪd / Z a m b ia n /ˈz æ m b iə / c o m p u te r g a m e s n p l /k ə m ˈp ju ːtə { r ) g e ɪm z / c o m p u te r s c ie n c e s n p l /lc ə m ˈp ju ːtə (r) ˈs a ɪɔ n s ɪz / c o n c lu d e v /k ə n ˈ k lu ːd / c o o l a d ) /k u :l/ c re a to r n /k r iˈ e ɪtə ( r ) / d e s ig n e r n /d ɪˈz a ɪn ə (r)/ D V D s n p / /ˌ d i: v l t ˈ d i :z / e ffic ie n t a d ; /ɪ ˈ f ɪ ʃ n t / e le c tric a l e n g in e e rin g « /ɪˈle k tɪu k l ˌ e n d ʒ ɪˈn ɪə rɪŋ / e le c tro n ic s « p i /ɪˌ le k ˈ tr ɒ n ɪk s / e m a il p r o v id e r n /ˈ iːm e ɪl p r ə ˈ v a ɪd ə ( r ) / e m a i l s e iw ic e fi / ˈ i ː m e ɪ l ˈ s ə ː v ɪ s / e m p lo y V /ɪm ˈp lɔ ɪ/ e x a m re s u lts n p l /ɪg ˈz æ m r ɪˈ z ʌ lts / fa s h io n m a g a z in e n /ˈ f æ ʃ n ˌm æ g ə ˈz iːn / fa s h io n a b le a d j /ˈ f æ ʃ n ə b l/ fin a l s e n te n c e n /ˈ fa ɪn l ˈ s e n tə n s / fo o tb a lle r n /ˈ f ʊ tb ɔ ːlə ( r ) / fo u n d e r n /ˈfa ʊ n d ə (r)/ g a r a g e n / 'g æ r ɑ ː ʒ / h a n d i n V / h æ n d ˈɪn / h u g e a d ; /h ju ːd ʒ / h u n d re d s /ˈh ʌ n d rə d z / i m a g e s n p i / 'ɪ m ɪ d ʒ ɪ z / in to ta l /ɪŋ ˈtə ʊ tl/ in te r e s tin g a d ; / 'ɪ n t r ə s t ɪ ŋ / in te rn a tio n a l a d ; /ˌ ɪn tə ˈn æ ʃn ə l/ le a d in g a d j /ˈ li:d ɪŋ / little /ˈlɪtl/ logically adv /ˈlɒdʒɪkli/ love V /lʌv/ market n /ˈmɑ:kɪt/ middle sentence n /ˈ m ɪd l ˈ s e n tə n s / multi-millionaire n /ˌ m ʌ ltim ɪljə ˈ n e ə (r) / notice V /ˈθəʊıɪ8/ ordinary ad; /ˈɔ:dnri/ organize V /ˈɔːgənaɪz/ personal adj /ˈpɜːsənl/ photographs u pi /ˈf^ʊtəgrɑːfs/ racing driver « /ˈreɪsɪŋ ˈdraɪvə(r)/ realize v /ˈrɪəlaɪz/ sales n p l /setlz/ science n /ˈsaɪəns/ search n /sɜːtʃ/ search engine n / 8ɜː 1ʃ ˈendʒɪn/ shoes n p l /futz/ W ord list 69 NOTES 70 Notes PHONETIC SYMBOLS Consonants Vowels 1 /p/ as in pen / p e n / 25 /i:/ as in see /s i:/ 2 /b / as in 26 /:/ as in h is / h iz / 3 /t/ as in 27 m as in t w e n t y / 't w e n t i / 4 /d / as in 28 Id as in te n / t e n / 5 /k / as in big / b i g / tea / t i : / do /du:/ cat /k£6t/ 29 /æ / as in s ta m p /s t æ m p / 6 /g / as in 30 /a :/ as in f a t h e r / 'f a :ð ə / 7 /f / as in go /gou/ four / f o : / 31 /ŋ / as in h o t /h o t/ 8 /v / as in 32 h -J as in m o r n i n g / 'm o i n i o / 9 /s / as in 33 Id as in f o o tb a ll / 'f u t b o : ! / 10 /z / as in 34 /u ;/ as in y ou /ju :/ 11 /!/ as in very /'V e r i/ son / sad/ zoo / z u : / live /l i v / 35 /a/ as in s u n /sA n/ 12 /m / as in m y /m a i/ 36 /3 :/ as in le a r n /la m / 13 /n / as in 37 /ə / as in le tte r / 'l e t o / 14 /h / as in 15 /r / as in n e a r/n ia / h a p p y /'hæ pi/ red / r e d / 16 /j/ as in 17 /w / as in 18 /θ / 19 Diphthongs (two vowels together) 38 / e i/ as in n a m e / n e im / as in yes /je s/ w ant / w n n t / thanks /9aeoks/ 39 /o u / as in n o /n o u / /ð / a s in th e / ð ə / 40 /a i/ as in m y /m a i/ 20 /J / a s in 41 /a u / as in h o w /h a u / 21 /3 / a s in 42 h i! as in boy 22 / t; / a s in 43 /ıə / as in h e a r/h io / 23 /d s / a s in 44 /e o / as in w h e re /w e o / 24 /ŋ / a s in sh e /Ji:/ television / 't e l i v i 3 n / child / t J a i l d / G erm an /'d 3 3 :m a n / E nglish /'IŋglIJ‘/ 45 /u o / as in to u r /tu a / Pool! Phonetic sym bols 71 O X fO R D UNIVERSIT Y PRESS Great Clarendon Street, Oxford, 0 x 2 6 d p , United Kingdom Oxford University Press is a departm ent of the University o f Oxford. It furthers the University’s objective of excellence in research, scholarship, and education by publishing worldwide. Oxford is a registered trade mark o f Oxford University Press in the UK and in certain other countries © Oxford University Press 2013 The moral rights o f the author have been asserted First published in 2013 20-17 2016 2015 2014 2013 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 N o un au th o rize d photocopying All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any fom i or by any means, without the prior permission in writing o f Oxford University Press, or as expressly pem iitted by law, by licence or under terms agreed with the appropriate reprographics rights organization. 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Vrouenraths (Spain), 11 (deseil/Prisma Bildagentur AG), 11 (Algiers/Colin Matthieu/hemis,hr/Hemis), 12 (Canberra/travellinglight), 16 (1 /M Itani). 16(3/ YuriArcurs), 18(trainers/Helen Sessions), 21 (a/Mike Booth), 22 (a/Hufton-E Crow/VIEW Pictures Ltd), 23 (Vladislav Kochelaevskiy), 25 (lecture hall/Sabine Lubenow), 27 (bridge building/Iain Masterton), 30 (passport control/Gregory Wrona), 34 (running machine/Cultura Creative). 35 (Ancient Art & Architecture Collection Ltd). 36 (ancient medidne/The Art Archive), 37 (aspirin/South West Images Scotland), 40 (b/Dennis HaUinan), 40 (c/RlA Novosti), 41 (c/Pictorial Press Ltd). 41 (a/H. Armstrong Roberts/ClassicStock), 43 (a/Chris Hellier), 43 (b/World History Archive), 47 (stadiimi/Richard Wareham Fotografie (Nieuws), 48 (Jan Scherders/Tetra Images), 50 (White mouse/Redmond O’Durrell), 51 (screen/Brian Jackson), 51 (racing car/mark phillips), 52 (Radius Images), 54 (spoon and rice/ leeavison), 54 (single fish/Star Pix), 54(fish/Chassenet/Photoaiisine), 54 (tea/ Viktor Fischer), 54 (Viktor Fischer), 55 (coffee/Juliana Hoffinan), 59 (boxes/ Lux Igitur), 63 (shop front/Kumar Sriskandan); Corbis pp.4 (a/Darren Kemper/ Fancy), 19 (David Leahy/ailtura), 21 (b/Tini Pannell/Flanie), 30 (woman/Ned Frisk Photography/Spirit), 47 (boy and TV screens/Randy Faris/Crush); 4 (b/PhotoAlto/ Eric Audras). 4 (d/arabianEye). 5 (a/Sani Edwards/OJO Images), 5 (b/Confluence Pictures/The Image Bank), 9 (woman/Ghislain & Marie David de Lossy/The Image Bank), 12 (Riyadh/Ayman Aljammaz/Fhckr), 13 (Peter Lilja/Stone), 15 (Canadian plains/Chris Harris/First Light), 16(2/Westend61), 17 (a/Asia Images Group), 22 (b/Piurestock), 22 (c/Cultura/moodboard), 24 (Philip and Karen Smith/lconica), 25 (library/DAJ), 25 (study bedi'oom/thenakedsnail/Flickr Select), 27 (helipad/ James Wells/Stone), 34 (vegetable market/Bnmo Morand), 36 (modem laboratory/Assenibly/lconica). 37(vacdnation/Shashank Bengali/MCTvia Getty Images), 39(DorlingKindersley), 41 (b/Popperfoto), 47 (businessmen/ Photodisc/Digital Vision), 47 (buying tickets/Alexander Hassenstein/Bongarts), 53 (Symphonie/Photodisc), 54 (bowl of rice/Philip Wilkins/Photolibraiy), 54 (loaves/Foodcollection RF). 54 (loaf/Jules Frazier/Photodisc), 58 (PhotoAlto/ Milena Boniek), 60 (Thmai'a Mellon/Andy Shaw/Bloomberg via Getty Images), 62 (Dibyangshu Sarkar/AFP): iStockphoto pp.27 (woman engineer/Peter Close), 55 (water/subjug): Rex Features pp.9(man/Markku Ulander), 17(b/David Oxbeny/Mood Board), 40 (a/CSUAithives/Everett Collection), 45 (Brendan Beime). 59 (Jeff Bezos/Sipa Press). 59 (warehouse/Geoffrey Robinson), 60 (Kiran Mazumdar-Shaw/Gregory Pace/BEI), 63 (Julian Dunkerton/Adrian Sherratt Photography Ltd), 63 (woman/Sara Jaye Weiss): Royalty-free pp.8 (laptop/David Cook/www.blueshiftstudios.co.uk), 10 (flag/Graphi-Ogre). 11 (flag/Graphi-Ogre). 15(flag/Graphi-Ogre), 57 (Corbis/Digital Stock): Science Photo Library p.37 (Mary Montagu/NYPL): Shutterstock pp.4 (chess pieces/02creationz), 14 (Yganko) Headway Academic Skills Your bridge to academic success Headw ay A cadem ic Skills bridges the gap between Available at each level: general and academic English. Aimed at students in higher education, this two-strand course can be used either on its own, or alongside a general English course. • Features thought-provoking topics releVant to students in higher education • Student’s Book • Teacher’s Guide with Tests and Photocopiable Activities • Class Audio CDs for Listening, Spealcing, and Study Sitills • Develops skills required for academic study, including note-taking, essay-writing, and giving presentations • Includes strategies for undertaking research and dealing with unfamiliar academic Vocabulary Oxford H S S E N T IA L Dicti(Miar\’ Reading, W riting, and S tu d y Skills features guided writing models and reading strategies such as predicting, skimming, and scanning. 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