Final Test Basic 5

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COUNTABLE A drink , a restaurant

ANY NEGATIVE AND QUESTION


Examples:
 Is there any bread?
 Would you like any drinks?
 We don’t have any bottles of lemonade.
 We don’t have any bread.
 Do you have any beef?
 Do you have any yoghurt?
 Do you have any rice?
 Do you have any lemons?
 We don’t have any fruit or vegetables, I’m afraid.
SOMEPOSITIVE AND ASK FOR THINGS OR TO OFTER SOMETHING,
INVITASHION
 We have some rice.
 It comes with some noodles.
 Id like some beef, please
 Can I have some sweetcorn?
 Can I have some beef cubes?
 Would you like some noodles?
Questions
 What dish or food can you cook?
 How often do you cook?
 Why do you think cooking more often is good for our health?
 Who does the most cooking in your home?
HOME MADE FOOD  READY- MADE MEALS/ TAKEAWAY FOOD
MANY C
MUCH U
UNCOUNTABLE
How much water do you drink every day?

A lot/ Lots. I drink a lot of milk/water.


Quite a lot. There are quite a lot of milk. I eat quite a lot of pasta in my
soup.
Not much. I don’t eat much cheese.
None. I don’t drink any soda.
COUNTABLE
How many eggs do you eat for breakfast/ a week/ in the morning/ every day/ in your
soup/ are there?

A lot/ Lots. I eat a lot of eggs. There are a lot of eggs.


Quite a lot. There are quite a lot of eggs
Not much. I don’t eat many fish. There aren’t many books.
None. I don’t eat any carrots.
 How many glasses of water do you drink a day?
 How many times did you go back to the same café?
In the kitchen
 Oven
 Food- processor
 Bowls
 Frying pan
 Saucepan
 Microwave
 Kettle
 Fork
 Knife
 Spoon
 Plates
Cooking verbs
 Bake
 Boil
 Chop
 Fry
 Mix
 Roast
 You can boil potatoes in a saucepan.
 You boil water in a kettle to make tea.
 I often fry eggs in a big frying pan.
 To roast meat.
 Mix the water and flour
 Chop the onion.
NUMBERS
 100- a hundred / one hundred
 200 – two hundred
 3,420 – three thousand, four hundred and twenty
 4,000,000- four million
 1998- nineteen ninety-eight
 2018 – two thousand and eighteen / twenty eighteen
 160- one hundred sixty
 10% – ten per cent
 3/4 – three quarters
 1965- nineteen and sixty-five
 19.4°C- nineteen point four degrees Celsius
 1/4 – a quarter
 6000- six thousand
 18,110 – eighteen, one hundred and ten.
 60% – sixty per cent.
 9.6- nine point six.
 2.7– two point seven.
 49- forty-nine
 500- five hundred
 70 – seventy
 82 – eighty-two
 1945- nineteen and forty-five
 240- two hundred forty
 5 ,120- five thousand, one hundred and twenty
 1,760– one thousand, seven hundred and sixty
 3,175 – three thousand, one hundred and seventy-five
Month
 January
 February
 March
 April
 May
 June
 July
 August
 September
 October
 November
 December
Fractions
 ¼ – a quarter
 1/3 – a third
 ½ – a half
 ¾ – three-quarters
 2/3 – two-thirds
 2/5 – two-fifths
 1 ¾ – one and three-quarters
 4/5 -four- fifths
Percentages
 15%– fifteen per cent
 4.7%- four point seven per cent
Decimals
 2.89– two point eighty nine
 0.3 – nought point three
Temperatures
 22°C – twenty-two degrees Celsius
 - 7°C– minus seven degrees Celsius
Dates
 01/09 – the first of September
 26/03 – the twenty- sixth of March
 03/10/16 – the third of October twenty sixteen
 12/05/86 – the twelfth of May nineteen eighty-six
1st- first
2nd – second
3rd- third
4th – fourth
10th – tenth
29th- twenty ninth
Recommending a place to eat
 Where did you last eat out?
 Where did you go?
 Who did you go with?
 Was it good?
 We’re looking for a Thai restaurant.
 You can sit outside on the roof?
 What’s your favourite café for lunch?
 Do I need to book online?
 Where’s a good place to have some cake?
 It has a wonderful menu
 You don’t need to call them and book.
 Do you know anywhere that has a garden?
 There’s a place called the Riverside with a nice view.
 My favourite place is Café Blanc.
Customer
 Could I have the grilled chicken, please?
 Can I have some roast potatoes?
 Can we pay by credit card?
 Can I see the menu, please?
 Can I order, please?
 Can I sit outside?
 Can I have some vegetables?
Waiter
 Would you like to order?
 Would you like any side diches with that?
 Would you like something to drink?
 Would you like some dessert?
 Would you like a starter?
 Would you like another cup of coffee?
Making Pizza
 Aubergine
 Base
 Basil
 Cheese
 Courgetti
 Dough
 Flour
 Ingredients
 Recipe
 Restaurant
 Topping
 Yeast
Review unit 9
 There is some rice
 There is a bottle of lemonade
 There is an apple
 There are some pears
 There aren’t any mushrooms
 There isn’t any salad
 There is some meat
 There isn’t any jam
Question
 How many types of tomato are there in the world?
 How many calories are there in a lemon?
 How much sugar is there in a cup of 2% fat milk?
 How much food did the average American ear in 2011?
 How many cups of coffee do Italians drink each year?
He has a dinner party
 He’s boiling some potatoes-
 He’s mixing the egg with the flour in the bowl.
 He’s chopping the onion with the knife.
 He’s frying mushrooms in the frying pan
 He’s baking the chicken in the oven.
Numbers
21°C  twenty-one degrees Celsius.
2/3  two thirds
45.5% forty-five point five per cent
2,478,000 two million, four hundred and seventy eight thousand
Order
W: Would you like to order?
C: Could I have the baked fish, please?
W: Would you like something to drink?
C: Do you have any apple juice?
W: No, we don’t.
C: OK, just a bottle of water, please.
The Weather Unit 10
1. Do you like the weather where you live?
2. What was the weather like in the morning?
3. What is the weather like now?
4. What is the weather like in winter and summer in your city?

Quite cold Warm hot


Freezing= very cold

Boiling = very hot


cold Quite hot

OPOSITE
Wet  Dry
Cloudy  Sunny
Freezing  Boiling
The Weather
 Cloudy
 Snow
 Dry
 Storms
 Foggy
 Sunny
 Freezing
 Thunder
 Icy
 Warm
 Lightning
 Wet
 Rain
 Windy
Comparative Adjectives
er/ two things/ than
 High higher
 Cool cooler
 Wet  wetter
 Hot  hotter
 Big  bigger
 Windy windier
 Dry drier
 Famous more famous
 Good  better
 Bad worse
 Much, many more
 Little less
 Nice nicer
 Safesafer
 Foggyfoggier
 Far further/farther
Canada is bigger than the UK.
Cooking is more difficult than eating.
Planes are faster than trains.
Vegetables are healthier than sweet.
The sun is brighter than the moon.
Are Indian elephants heavier than African elephants?
Is Tokyo more expensive than Singapore?
Are giraffes faster than humans?
Natural wonders
 Beaches
 Coast
 Desert
 Islands
 Lake
 Mountain
 Rainforest
 River
 Waterfall
In the north- east of my island there is a lake
In the south-west of my island there is a dessert.
Superlatives
Est/ the world
Tall  tallest
Famousmost famous
Cloudy cloudiest
Wet wettest
Hot hottest
Dry driest
Coldcoldest
Safe safest
Nicenicest
Good best
Bad worst
Far furthest / farthest
Much, manymost
Littleleast
Largest
Deepest
Hottest
Easiest
(good) The best
(busy) The busiest
(interesting) The most interesting
Mount Everest is the highest mountain in the world.
The beaches on the north coast are the most beautiful beaches in my country.
My notebook is the neatest notebook in the class.
My house is the smallest house in my street.
Which river’s the longest in the world?
I think the Nile’s the longest.
Maybe, but I think the Amazon is longer than the Mississippi.

Comparison
The same / similar/ different/ more/ less

Adjective + Noun
Reasons and Preferences

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