Speakout, Elementary, BBC Interviews extra, Worksheets, 2015.
Фрагмент из книги. Write your answers to Finn’s questions. 1 What do you do? 2 What’s your daily routine? 3 What do you like about your daily routine? 4 What don’t you like about your daily routine?
Speakout, Elementary, DVD extra, BBC, Clips Worksheets, 2016.
Фрагмент из книги. Watch the DVD and tick the things which happen. 1 Tanya watches the sharks from the boat. 2 Some dolphins arrive. 3 She wears a shiny suit. 4 She wears a black suit. 5 She wears a green suit. 6 A shark follows her back to the boat. 7 A shark attacks her. 8 She feels comfortable with the sharks.
Speakout, Elementary, Vocabulary extra, With key, 2016.
Фрагмент из книги. Underline the incorrect alternative. 1 My car/The alarm clock/The bus broke down. 2 I lost my keys/ticket/bus. 3 The tra c was uncomfortable/terrible/bad. 4 My car didn’t start/missed/broke down. 5 I didn’t hear my keys/my phone/the alarm clock. 6 I missed my ticket/the bus/the train.
Speakout extra, Elementary, Grammar, With key, 2015.
Фрагмент из книги. My name is James and I am from Bedford, in the UK. I live in Holland now – I’m a student at the University of Utrecht. I’m a science student. These are my friends Ali and Jess. They’re scientists too – they’re also at my University but they’re not from Britain. They’re French. We’re in the same year – the second year of University.
Фрагмент из книги. A hangi is a traditional Maori barbecue. It’s an old, old tradition and people in New Zealand prepare hangis on special family occasions. It takes fi ve to six hours to prepare a hangi. The fi rst step is to dig a large hole in the ground. Then you build a big fi re in the hole and put some special volcanic stones** in the fi re. The stones stay in the fi re for two to three hours. The stones need to be very, very hot to cook the food.
Speakout, Pronunciation extra, Elementary, With key, 2016.
Фрагмент из книги. Phonemics are useful in English. They are good when: – the spelling and sounds are di erent, e.g. watch es /ɪz/ . – two, three or more letters are only one sound. For example, in sw ea ter we pronounce ‘ea’ as /e/.
Solutions Third Edition has benefited from collaboration with teachers with extensive experience of teaching and preparing students for exams. We would like to thank Helen Halliwell for sharing her expertise in writing the procedural notes in the Teacher’s Guide. We are confident that the result is a forward-thinking and modern course that will prepare your students for the future and provide you with all the support that you need. We hope that you and your students enjoy using it!
Keynote Pre Intermediate, Workbook, Yeates E., Bohlke D., 2017.
Фрагмент из книги. Without modem technology, Michael Chorost wouldn’t be able to hear a thing. Chorost became deaf in 2001, after suffering from hearing problems his whole life. He now has an implant in his brain that allows him to hear. This experience inspired him to write his first book, Rebuilt: How Becoming Part Computer Made Me More Human. He is now a widely known technology theorist.