English Alive 4 TG
English Alive 4 TG
English Alive 4 TG
English Alive!
Teacher’s Guide
for CSEC
Alan Etherton
Thelma Baker
Joyce Jonas
Judith Pereira
Text © Alan Etherton 2004
The right of Alan Etherton to be identified as author of this work has been asserted
by him in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
Any person who commits any unauthorised act in relation to this publication may
be liable to criminal prosecution and civil claims for damages.
08 / 10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.
ii
3
English Alive! for CSEC Teacher’s Guide
Contents
Answers to English Alive! for CSEC
iii
English
English Alive!Alive!
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2, 3, 4 Teacher’s Guide : Book 4
Unit 1 Grandma
1.3. Exercise 2. p9
1. B 4. B 7. D 10. A
Understanding p2
2. A 5. D 8. C 11. B
A 1. C 3. D 5. C
3. B 6. C 9. A 12. D
2. B 4. A
4.1
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reasoning is faulty because Jamaicans are to delete. In line 4 above, delete ‘over’. The draft
allowed to have dual citizenship. summary is now the final summary.)
7. He should provide inspiration for Jamaicans 2. Target: 50 words
living in Canada and other overseas countries, Key words: advice to Jamaicans who live
especially those who have not yet become overseas
citizens of the country to which they have Notes: becm fully integr
emigrated. becm citz
reg as vot
play act part in comm.
2.4.
Vocabulary: meaning in context p16 Draft summary:
A 1. C 4. D 7. A 10. C Jamaicans living overseas should seek to become
2. A 5. C 8. B 11. B fully integrated in their new country. They
3. B 6. A 9. D 12. B should become citizens and register as voters.
B 1. h 4. b 7. e 9. d (Stop and count: 21 words, so we can use another 29
2. j 5. c 8. g 10. f words.)
3. a 6. i In this way they can play an active part in the
community, while retaining Jamaican citizenship
and the ability to settle here later. (44 words, so
2.5. the draft summary becomes the final summary.)
Paragraphing (review) Exercise 3
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
1. As soon as Deena entered the room, we all 2. does 6. does 10. do 14. do
began to sing, “Happy birthday! Happy birthday, 3. does 7. does 11. does 15. do
dear Deena!” 4. does 8. do 12. do
She was very surprised but very happy. “Thank
you very much,” she said.
2. Deena showed us a lovely gold bracelet. 2.10.
“Where did you get that?” Nataya asked her. Enjoying poetry
Deena said, “My mother gave me it. She bought
it in Trinidad several months ago.” The tone of the poem is gentle and mocking.
“It’s beautiful,” Natalie said. “You are very
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
4.3
4.3
English
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6. The expression means ‘upset’. The poet used be amused by the woman and the society she
this expression because it is the type of lives in – but tolerant. He mocks but he does not
expression which some women use and suggests bite.
that the narrator was not particularly upset by 8. I think he set out to make gentle fun of people
somebody’s death but was somewhat annoyed who treat a funeral as an outing or a social
when she discovered that she had gone to the occasion and go to one even if they did not know
wrong funeral. the dead person well or at all. I think he is
7. We cannot be sure what his real attitude is. extremely successful and certainly achieves his
If we judge solely by the poem, he seems to aim without being bitter or antagonistic.
2. A 4. A 6. A 8. B 2. A 5. A 8. C 11. D
B 1. The reports vary considerably in their 3. B 6. C 9. C 12. B
treatment of police casualties. The first report
is hostile to the police, so it does not mention
police casualties at all. The second report 3.5.
mentions that five policemen were injured and
Vocabulary: antonyms
that one policeman was attacked by people
armed with knives and iron pipes. Exercise 1 p32
2. I would need a post mortem investigation to
1. D 4. D 7. D 9. C
recover the bullet from the body of Mary Blank
and try to confirm that it came from the gun of 2. D 5. B 8. D 10. D
a police officer. I would want an expert to 3. A 6. A
show the angle at which the bullet entered her
body (to see whether or not it came from
above). I would need to examine the light 3.6.
fittings to see if there is any sign that a bullet Writing: making summaries p33
glanced off one of them. I would look for the
hole made by the other bullet – the police 1. (According to the report, some students were
officer said that he fired two shots in the air. I protesting against proposed cuts in social
would need to interview the police officer and welfare benefits.) Police attacked the
any witnesses, including Jack Williams. demonstrators , injuring 32 of them and fatally
3. The first report claims that the police made an shooting Mary Blank.
unprovoked attack on a group of peaceful 2. Angered by a poster supporting a football team,
demonstrators. The second report claims that half-drunk students and hooligans started to
the police were trying to stop looting by half- loot a shop in Market Street. The owner was
drunk hooligans who resented a poster slashed with a knife but managed to phone the
supporting a rival football team. police. Eight policemen arrived and arrested
4. I think the second report is the more truthful. some of the hundreds of looters. When a
The evidence of Jack Williams seems policeman was attacked by men and women
convincing and some of the looters were armed with knives and iron pipes, he fired two
caught carrying away stolen goods. shots in the air. (Stop and count: 66 words, so we
can use another 14 words only.)
A shot glanced off a light fitting and accidentally
killed one of the attackers. (Total: 80 words. But
that is not satisfactory because we are told to
4.4
4.4
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A 1. A 3. B 5. A 7. A
they might have moved from the addresses
2. D 4. C 6. B 8. A
which the marshals had.
4. They thought that it was all part of their
B 1. The Marshals’ Service in Washington paid for welcome and that they had not really been
the drinks and food. arrested.
2. It is used as a meeting-place for organisations
which have hundreds or thousands of
4.5
4.5
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B 1. g 4. h 7. f 9. a
party next month,’ Police Inspector Smith
2. i 5. j 8. d 10. c
said to a very surprised detective in his
3. e 6. b
Washington DC Marshals’ Service.
b) ‘Mr Peter Jones?’ a happy official said to a
wanted arsonist. ‘Good. Yes, your name is on
4.6. my list. Welcome to the party!’
Writing: making a summary p47 3. a) Police Sgt Paul Williams carefully fastened a
revolver under his left wing and looked at
Target: 100 words himself in the mirror. ‘That’s the weirdest
Key words: summary of passage about the sting chicken I’ve ever seen,’ he thought.
b) Safe in his home on the outskirts of
Notes: provided, as in textbook
Washington, John Blank, expert in armed
robbery and burglary, strolled out to check his
Draft summary: mailbox.
Police in the Marshals’ Service of Washington, DC
Exercise 1 p49
recently set out to catch some wanted criminals.
a) Starting with a statement:
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
chicken for the Bengals. Now we need a volunteer for 5. He appears to love her very much and is anxious
the Redskins.” that his death should not disturb her.
Inspector Evans glanced at the assembled detectives 6. The stressed syllables are shown in bold type:
and fixed his eyes on me. I knew that trouble was And mock you with me after I am gone.
coming.
Questions on ‘I Shall Return’
“That’s good, Johnson,” he said to me. “Thank you.
1. I think he was overseas, a long way from his
You can be a Red Indian. I’m sure Stella will help you
Caribbean home.
with details of the costume.” Stella nodded.
2. We cannot be sure exactly where the poet wanted
“Who me?” I started to say. “But I didn’t say a
to go but it is to a place with forests, mountains,
word.”
streams and villages. The reference to sapphire
“Don’t be so modest,” Inspector Evans said with a skies suggests clear skies and perhaps sunny days.
grin. “I saw you nod your head. I take it you did mean The reference to ‘fiddle and fife’ could suggest
to volunteer, didn’t you?” Scotland or a place in the Caribbean.
I was trapped. I had been a detective for two months 3. a) The sounds are /l/ and /w/.
only. My career was on the line. b) The sound is /b/.
“Eh, yes,” I said a little reluctantly. c) The sound is /d/.
“Well, that’s settled then,” Inspector Evans said. 4. It means ‘bring to reality’.
“Now I’ll just run through the arrangements for 5. He has apparently been separated from a
checking the identity of our ‘guests’ …” country or place for a long time.
6. McKay’s poem is descriptive and showing a
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
Unit 5 Tourism
5.1. kinds of manipulative writing that are widespread
today.
Writing: straight and crooked
thinking p55 Exercise 1 p56
1. This is illogical. We cannot say that all things act
This is probably one of the most important pages in
in the same way as two things.
the book. Students may be able to give further
examples from newspapers, radio reports or the 2. In the first sentence, we have to define ‘weaker’
news on television. It is important that they should in terms of physical strength to make it true. In
be able to defend themselves against the various some spheres, especially moral ones, women are
4.7
4.7
English
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the stronger sex. Thus the generalisation in the If that were the case, we should all be walking or
first sentence makes it false. In the second riding a horse to work – and visiting a foreign
sentence, we would have to define ‘good’ as country by clinging to a floating log.
meaning ‘victorious over males’ to make it true. 11. We cannot compare people with land, i.e. we
Within their own sex, some women are good cannot compare unlike things. Change to ‘The
professional wrestlers. The third sentence is population of Trinidad is greater than that of
wrong. A team of females aged 16–21 would Guyana’.
certainly beat teams of males aged 4–6 or 85–90.
12. This is untrue. There are some differences of
To make the third sentence true, we have to
usage but ‘totally different’ is a gross
define ‘Any’ as referring only to a team of
exaggeration and does not give us a very
comparable age and experience.
favourable impression of the writer’s
3. Some people might agree with the underlying intelligence.
idea in this sentence but it is poorly expressed. If
men do not have a code of ethics, they cannot
adhere to it. The idea is better expressed by 5.3.
saying ‘Most men do not adhere to any code of
ethics’. That sentence will be untrue because Understanding p58
most men do adhere to some sort of code of A 1. C 3. C 5. D 7. A
ethics. 2. A 4. B 6. D
4. Untrue. The statement that ‘the people … B 1. She noticed that her friend was waiting for a
consisted of women’ implies that no men were bus.
involved in the task of producing descendants, 2. Nadia was in favour of tourism but Donna
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
3. two clauses
4. a clause
5.8.
5. either: ‘left lying around’ – a phrase; ‘at the Making comparisons: using pie charts
airport’ – a phrase; ‘with suspicion’ – phrase
Exercise 4 p64
or: ‘left lying around at the airport’ – a phrase;
‘with suspicion’ – a phrase 1. a) This is a fact.
b) This is a fact.
6. a clause
c) This is an opinion.
7. a clause (which contains a phrase ) d) This is a fact. (The use of ‘may’ makes the
8. a clause, a phrase statement a fact. If we change ‘may’ to ‘will’
we will have an opinion.)
9. a clause, a clause, a phrase
e) This seems to be untrue because 20% of the
10. a phrase economy is based on agriculture.
Exercise 3 p62 f) This is untrue. (The use of ‘it is certain’
makes the statement untrue.)
1. Although tourism is extremely important to the
g) This is untrue. (It is untrue in Country A.)
economy of our country, it is not the only source
h) This is untrue.
of revenue for the Government.
i) This is an opinion (and is probably true).
2. In the opinion of one expert, tourism is the j) This is an opinion (and may be untrue).
driver of economic activity across all sectors of
2. a) It is the least important in Country A.
the economy: agriculture, manufacturing,
b) Agriculture may become less important if
transportation and entertainment, as well as
there is a major increase in tourism revenue
other important areas of Jamaican life.
and if people leave agriculture to work in the
3. The Tourism Minister, Aloun Assamba, stressed tourist sector.
the importance of tourism. ‘We are not doing c) I would not try to reduce the number of
well simply because others are doing badly,’ she tourists because there is no sign that they are
said. ‘We are reaping the benefits of the hard harmful to the country.
work done by people involved in the industry.’ d) An IT specialist, an electrician, a plumber.
4. At the moment, seven to eight vessels visit Ocho e) Tourism and manufacturing are the two most
Rios every week. This figure will be increased by important sectors.
4.9
4.9
English
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2, 3, 4 Teacher’s Guide : Book 4
harm was done to the Colonel. 12. loquacious – talkative (spend most of your time
4. He deceived him by making him think that listening)
there had been a snake in his stomach and by
confessing that he had been wrong although
he had been right. 6.7.
Writing skills: telling a story
6.4. Exercise 2 p81
Vocabulary: meaning in context p76 One of the Colonel’s men is telling the story in the
A 1. B 4. B 7. B 9. C
form of a letter to a friend:
2. A 5. A 8. B 10. B Dear Rahim,
3. A 6. D Great news! The Colonel was right after all. He has
B 1. h 6. b 11. s 16. l had an operation and the doctor pulled out a snake
2. j 7. c 12. q 17. o as thick as my arm. The Colonel is resting in bed but
3. a 8. g 13. r 18. m he is delighted …
4. f 9. d 14. k 19. n
Exercise 3 p82
5. i 10. e 15. t 20. p
Assume that the doctor is the narrator, as in 6.2.
Then:
6.5. Two servants led the way silently across the marble
Comprehension: hall to the room where Colonel O’Reilly was resting
looking for clues to meaning after his operation. One of them tapped quietly on
the door and listened attentively.
Exercise 1 p78
‘Please go in,’ he whispered to me. ‘The Colonel is
Clues are given in brackets. expecting you.’
1. how – in what way (the cause) The servants opened the door and followed me into a
2. belong to – are members of (membership) spacious room in the middle of which was an ornate
bed large enough for several people.
3. belong to – are owned by (plans to build several
more) Exercise 4 p83
4. jargon – (some of the words mean nothing a) I am going to be a third person narrator, as on
unless you are an IT expert) page 81.
5. ambiguous – capable of having more than one b) I will start at point E on the timeline, i.e. at the
meaning (we still don’t know) operation.
4.11
4.11
English
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was complementary to the other. The two lines e) The expression means ‘bones that, after her
which later refer to the landscape are lines 27 death, would become part of the earth’. The idea
and 28. is repeated in line 36.
d) He was impressed by the tenderness of her f) The meeting is ‘sure’ because the old woman
eyes. has to die eventually.
Unit 7 Drama
7.3.
2. He can use conflict and a plot to arouse and
Understanding p90 maintain the interest of the audience.
A 1. B 4. A 7. C 9. D 3. The answer depends on the location of the
2. A 5. A 8. A 10. B
school.
4. I would probably choose (e). More people will
3. D 6. D
see the play and I will probably be paid more.
B 1. He wanted him to give him access to water for 5. There are numerous examples. The choice will
his farm. depend on the individual.
2. She had been married to Crew for 30 years
whereas Brigit was only a daughter-in-
law who had no great affection for Crew.
3. She probably implied that Sonson was annoyed
because Brigit had rebuffed his attempts to
become too familiar with her .
4. “Rachel is preparing to hold the Nine-Night
Ceremony for her dead husband, Crew. Her
eldest son and her daughter-in-law (the wife
of her younger son) are not helpful.”
5. I think that a medium or spirit will reveal 7.6.
some surprising news about Crew or his spirit.
Grammar:
7.4. the Present Continuous tense (revision)
Vocabulary: meaning in context p92
Exercise 1 p93
1. j 5. h 9. g 1. Is 4. Is 7. Am 9. Are
2. i 6. b 10. c
2. Is 5. Are 8. Is 10. Is
3. e 7. d
4. f 8. a 3. Is 6. Are
Exercise 2 p94
7.5. 1. are being taken, are being escorted
4.13
4.13
English
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7.7. 7.8.
Punctuation (1): using a full stop Punctuation (2): review exercises
Exercise 3 p95 Exercise 4 p96
1. Ethanol is an important chemical compound. It 1. ‘Its’ has an apostrophe when it is the short form
is useful in many ways. of ‘It is’ or ‘It has’. ‘Its’ never has an apostrophe
2. Since it was first diagnosed in the 1980s, AIDS
when it is used to show possession as in ‘That
has spread across the world, killing an dog has hurt one of its legs’.
increasing number of people each year. It has 2. We never put an apostrophe on ‘hers’, ‘ours’,
become the main danger to health in many ‘yours’, ‘theirs’ or ‘his’.
countries. There is no cure for it at present. 3. We can use a semicolon at the end of a
3. The prisoners alleged that they were treated statement sometimes.
badly. They suffered from hunger and the cold 4. B and D (a semicolon and a full stop)
climate. Therefore their health began to 5. a) No colon is needed.
deteriorate and their human rights were abused. b) Put a colon after ‘things’.
4. When the police first entered the house and c) Put a colon after ‘events’.
commenced their search, it appeared that there d) No colon is needed.
was nobody on the ground floor or upstairs. e) Put a colon after ‘careers’.
Then a detective discovered a trapdoor. It led 6. A full stop.
down to a cellar.
7. We normally use inverted commas (in written
5. This tyre is not the same as the other one. That work) for the following: the title of a book,
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
was a Dunlop tyre, as far as I remember. direct speech, the name of a magazine, the name
Therefore this tyre did not come from the of a newspaper, a word from another language.
suspect’s truck.
8. a) She watched the door. It opened suddenly.
6. The survivor’s expression told us nothing. Her Her father came in, carrying a large parcel and
voice revealed a lot, showing that she was still looking very pleased with himself.
under a lot of stress from being buried by the b) She watched the door. It opened suddenly and
earthquake. her father entered. He was carrying a large
7. Yes, you’ll have to stop him from leaving the parcel and looked very pleased about
country, I suppose. Fix it with the stations, ports something.
and airports. Then let me know if there is any c) He was exhausted; he would not surrender;
trace of him. help would arrive eventually. (Or use a full
8. The key witness has disappeared, leaving the
stop instead of each semicolon.)
d) He was exhausted but he would not
prosecution uncertain whether or not to proceed
with the case. Therefore the suspect has not yet surrender. Help would arrive eventually. Then
been formally charged. he would be a free man again.
4.14
4.14
English
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7.10.
Grammar: using prepositions
Exercise 7 p99
1. B 4. A 7. D 9. C
2. C 5. C 8. A 10. B
3. D 6. B
Unit 8 Gold!
8.3. 8.4.
Understanding (1) p105 Understanding (2) p108
1. C 5. B 9. A 13. A 1. a) You will have to make a long and arduous
4.15
4.15
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c) Working conditions are primitive and very because he preferred to go out with his friends
tough. The ground is frozen all the time, and in the evenings. At one time, he wanted to
you have to thaw it before you can dig into it. become a musician. He joined a band but was
2. He did this to attract men into a hall where he not good enough, so he left and became a
charged each man a dollar to listen to the rest of member of a local gang.
the news. 2. The gang leader made Dave sell drugs and twice
3. A man took advantage of a drunken companion the police nearly caught him. Dave stole from
by selling him a claim which the seller thought shops and found a girl-friend. Then one day, a
was of little value. The next day, he refused to member of a rival gang shot him and nearly
return the buyer’s money. However, the claim killed him. The police took him to a hospital,
later proved to be valuable, so the seller had where he needed an urgent operation to save his
harmed himself by taking advantage of a life.
drunken man. In this way, justice was done. 3. Meanwhile, Mark worked hard at school and had
good results. He went to a university in Jamaica
and then emigrated to the USA, where he
8.5.
entered medical school. When he graduated as a
Vocabulary: meaning in context p108 doctor, Mark decided not to stay in the USA. He
wanted to return to Jamaica and help people
A 1. C 3. B 5. A 7. D
there.
2. B 4. D 6. C 8. C
4. Mark became a surgeon and started work at a
B 1. i 6. b 11. q 16. t
well-known hospital in Jamaica. He liked to help
2. f 7. c 12. n 17. l
people and always did his best to save lives.
3. e 8. j 13. k 18. o
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
5. The men drifted from one claim to another, 4. Dave did not live …
showing everybody what they had found. 5. Dave did not become …
6. The ground had to be thawed before it could be 6. Mary did not waste …
dug. 7. My brother did not see …
7. Food had to be brought by river or across the
8. The policemen did not stop …
mountains.
9. Nadia did not buy …
8. The shelf was too high for Anne to reach.
10. The Government did not increase …
9. The ground was too hard for us to dig.
11. The storm did not affect …
10. I doubt whether he is telling the truth.
12. The fire did not destroy …
8.7. Exercise 4
Grammar: 1. Did you remember
using the Simple Past tense (1) (revision) 2. did you get
1. Some years ago, Mark and Dave were in the 4. Did anybody phone
same class at school. Dave did not work hard 5. Did it rain
4.16
4.16
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A l. A 4. A 7. B 9. D
acting responsibly. They would be able to act
2. C 5. C 8. C 10. A
with happy irresponsibility (by buying things
3. B 6. A
they do not need) in keeping with the spirit of
a fairyland.
B 1. It would be a utopia for marketing people and 5. He is not in favour of the idea of setting death
business companies because it would not be dates and feels strongly that this technique is
too difficult to persuade people to buy things wasteful and grossly irresponsible.
(which they do not need).
2. Cars would deteriorate quite swiftly after 6000
km, so motorists would be glad to change to a 9.4.
new car. If an owner disposed of a car on one Vocabulary p120
of the regular turn-in dates, he would be given
a bond. 1. A paradise is a (mythical or figurative) place
3. They would be happy to dispose of a surplus where everything is perfect for you. A fool’s
ship full of surplus products, knowing that paradise is a place which appears perfect or very
4.17
4.17
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good but which proves to be not at all what was 2. We encouraged her to apply for the job.
expected. A utopia is a place (originally 3. Wooden houses are easily rebuilt.
visualised as an island) where everything is
4. They will be rewarded provided (that) they work
ideal, especially as far as laws and living
hard.
conditions are concerned.
5. The accused man surrendered his passport to
2. It may crack and cause the plane to crash.
the police.
3. The parts of a product (such as a car) are put
6. You should not have borrowed my bicycle
together to produce something.
without first asking me.
4. If there is a big surplus of goods, it will not be
7. There are no jangling cash registers to disrupt
possible for manufacturers to demand a
reasonable price for their goods. Consumers will the holiday mood.
look for cheaper and cheaper products, and 8. The electrician spent nearly an hour repairing
manufacturers will be forced out of business the faulty switch.
because they will be unable to make a profit. 9. Each child is given a name at birth or soon
5. Wheels, brakes and lights are components of a afterwards.
car. 10. That shop is open all the time, including (on)
6. A contractor employs a sub-contractor. If a new Sundays.
hotel is being built, sub-contractors may be used
to (a) supply the windows, (b) do all the electrical
work, (c) paint and decorate the hotel, etc. 9.8.
7. It is a very large store of some commodity and is Vocabulary: what’s the difference? p125
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
9. ‘Morale’ refers to the confidence of people, An elderly person in a hotel is smoking in bed
especially in times of trouble or emergency. We when he falls asleep.
can say that the morale of some soldiers was low • Two examples of somebody who is in conflict
after a series of defeats in war. with himself or herself:
‘Morals’ are standards or principles which A beautiful and talented singer becomes very
people follow through life. popular and wealthy but destroys himself/
herself by becoming a drug addict.
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
4. The reaction was favourable because ‘soca’ had …; There is more than one factor …)
more action and was easier for people to dance Exercise 2 p139
to. Thus ‘soca’ lasted longer than ‘spouge’.
1. Thank you for your letter which was received on
4 August. (or which we/I received)
10.4. 2. Members of the gang will be prosecuted if their
crimes are discovered and somebody is able to
Vocabulary: meaning in context p134
identify them.
A 1. B 3. D 5. A 7. D 3. When Miss Stewart had obtained what she
2. A 4. C 6. A 8. C wanted at the market, she went home by bus.
B 1. i 4. g 7. c 9. d 4. It was about 5 p.m. when we reached Tanya’s
2. j 5. h 8. f 10. b home. She was alone at home because her
3. a 6. e mother had gone out. (And perhaps omit ‘at home’
after ‘alone’.)
5. In parts of Canada it is so cold that only white
10.7.
people live there. (The temperature has no bearing
Grammar: common errors on the colour of the people.)
6. Oxygen is a gas which makes it possible for
Exercise 1 p138
people to live on Earth. Without it, there would
1. My brother, who is working in a bank, is be no people living here.
studying to be an accountant.
7. When we were waiting for a bus, a lorry came by
2. It’s late and Uncle hasn’t come yet. Maybe he’s and splashed us when it went through a puddle.
not coming this evening.
8. Francine was so tired that she fell asleep on the
3. We have been best friends for at least five years. bus and did not wake up until the bus reached
4. My nephew has been living in this country for a the terminus.
long time and is very happy here. 9. My mother told me that her parents had been
5. Michael has written to us to tell us about his life married for fifty years before they died.
in London. 10. Why didn’t you write and tell me that you were
6. We are all very grateful to Mrs Wilson for coming?
everything she has done to help us recover from 11. Does your brother want to come to the party on
the fire. Saturday or does he have too much work to do?
7. (The subject is ‘pollution’.) Pollution from 12. You can eat this fruit now. It has all been washed
factories and vehicles increases the heat in the very thoroughly.
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10.8. Exercise 6
Suggested theme and plan for ‘The importance of
Grammar: reflexive and emphatic
water in the life of man’ in (3):
pronouns (revision)
I will give an account of the importance of water in
Exercise 3 p140 the life of man.
1. herself 9. ourselves drinking – can’t survive without it
2. yourselves 10. herself farming and food – water essential
3. yourself 11. himself water as an early means of transport, migration,
4. myself 12. himself fishing
8. themselves
10.12.
10.9.
Enjoying poetry
Writing a factual account (1)
Possible answers to the questions in the introduction
Exercise 4 p143 on page 147:
1. I will give a friend advice on how to choose and • It means something like ‘It is in rural areas that
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
3. I will give an account of the ways in which • He admires rural life and perhaps he has become
climate influences the occupations and habits of disgusted or disenchanted with urban life.
people in my country. • Yes, I do. One of the values of poetry is that it
4. I will describe my hobby, stamp-collecting, and leads the reader to use his/her imagination and
give my reasons for thinking that it is useful. to think about life and the way we live. Ask the
students to think about the idea expressed in
5. I will give an account of a sports meeting in lines 12–13, for example.
which I competed months ago.
6. I will give an account of farming in my country. Questions on ‘Country’ p147
or I will describe the part which farming has 1. He wants us to understand ‘basically good or
always played in the life of humans. pure and not tarnished by the acts and way of
life of town-dwellers’.
10.10. 2. He is criticising people who no longer follow the
ideals of a religion.
Writing a factual account (2)
3. Perhaps they wriggle their toes to show their
Exercise 5 p145 enjoyment. He is trying to tell us that the people
are satisfied with what they are doing or are
Suggested theme and plan for ‘The value of learning
going to do.
a foreign language’ in (5):
4. He is using the word sarcastically and perhaps
I will explain the value of learning a foreign
bitterly.
language.
5. He means that laws are made and you must obey
learning English as a foreign language
them. He could also mean that people write bad
read and understand communications: notices, things about you.
books, email etc
6. It means ‘unspoilt by town life’.
communicate with others: travel, job, emigration,
7. In rural areas you will find genuine people who
social
live by standards higher than those in an urban
provides wider opportunities for jobs, travel area.
can also enjoy films and TV programmes 8. I agree to some extent but the theme is a
This is probably long enough for a CXC composition. generalisation and there are exceptions to it.
4.21
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Questions on ‘The Death of Lancelot, 5. She had been crying and the tears prevented her
as Told by Gwenivere’ p149 from seeing normally.
1. The lame rider and horse serve as an 6. The dropped ears indicate peace and safety. The
introduction to the pathetic situation which the rabbit feels no need to be alert to danger because
poem will reveal. They also indicate the passage there is no danger there.
of time; the major characters have grown very 7. shine (faintly) (Line 42: Surely my love will burn
old and are approaching death. within me still.)
2. It is aaa, bbb, ccc, etc. 8. I think he wanted to depict the love which
3. The prayer was not answered. Gwenivere was Gwenivere held (tragically) for Lancelot and to
punished for adultery (with Lancelot) and for show that, despite its sad consequences, she
breaking her vows as a nun and abbess. remained true to him.
4. The repetition shows the effect of the idea of old Yes, I think he has achieved it. This is a very sad
age on the narrator, Gwenivere. It also contrasts and moving poem. The more you read it and
with the previous two lines and the mental think about it, the more powerful it will be seen
image which Gwenivere cherishes of her lover. It to be.
helps to show the depth of her feeling.
11 O’Hare
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
Unit
11.1. 8. He had to protect a known criminal and prevent
justice from being done, so this was an immoral
Pre-reading p150 (and thus sordid) way of life.
Two links are mentioned. We learn from the two 9. On the one hand, he wanted to cleanse the
stories that Easy Eddie was the father of Butch family name for the sake of his son. On the
O’Hare. A second link lies in the fact that both men other hand, he knew that if he told the
lost their lives as a result of a sacrifice made authorities the truth about Al Capone he would
voluntarily. Butch died while defending his country. be killed. In the end, he had to choose between
His father died while trying to give his son ‘some his son and himself.
semblance of integrity’. 10. Here, ‘the greatest gift’ was a clean family name
or a father of whom the son could be proud and
not ashamed.
11.3.
Understanding p151
1. He intended to fly on a reconnaissance mission 11.4.
to find out about the enemy. Vocabulary: meaning in context p152
2. Somebody forgot to make sure that the fuel tank
1. D 4. A 7. A 10. C
in his plane was full.
2. C 5. D 8. D 11. B
3. It had no planes left to defend it against an
attack from the air. 3. C 6. B 9. A 12. A
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2. What was the name of the actor who played the 9. which make a poem more striking and effective
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
4. Put a comma after ‘Wilson’ and ‘herself ’. The husband continued, “Do you remember when he
shoved his shotgun in my face and said, ‘Either you
5. No commas are needed. marry my daughter or I’ll send you to jail for 20
6. Put a comma after ‘brother’ and after years’?”
‘accountant’. “Yes, I remember that too,” the woman said quietly.
7. No commas are needed. The man wiped another tear from his cheek. “I
8. Put a comma after ‘sister’ and after ‘bank’. would have got out today.”
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11.15. 6. They tell us that the dead man lived sensibly and
made a monthly budget. They also tell us that –
Enjoying poetry in a good sense – the dead man was proud of his
achievements or that the son is proud of his
Questions on ‘Too Soon It Was My
father and his achievements. In line 26, we
Allotted Task’ p164
cannot be sure whether the adjective ‘proud’
1. He did not want his father to die. is meant to apply to the father or to the son
2. He was not happy to have to go through his (in the handwriting of a man of whom I am
father’s possessions. He was sad and did what proud).
he had to with a heavy heart. 7. The meaning is not entirely clear but lines 27
3. He had to set about the task efficiently and not and 28 may mean: ‘Memories of a dead person
stop to think about each item that he came will last for ever but they come to life for a
across. moment on such little things as the ones
mentioned’ (in lines 21–6).
4. This means ‘the things left behind by somebody
who lived simply and prudently’. 8. The silver links are cuff-links, worn at the wrists
of a shirt. When the poet’s son wears the silver
5. His father had fought in a foreign war, so the son
cuff-links, they will link him with his father and
thought that the clothes might be useful to
his father’s father.
surviving veterans.
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5. studying/examining/investigating/researching that they don’t like each other and show it.
6. reforms/improvements/changes g) This means ‘on the quiet; without anybody
else knowing’. It is sometimes claimed that in
7. carried
some countries officials make a lot of money
8. proposed/believed/suggested/thought/ on the QT, i.e. through bribery or corruption.
considered/recommended h) This means ‘to be in a good position’. Cows
9. be like to eat clover, so if they are put in a field
containing clover, they will be happy.
10. weight
i) This means ‘to do something which annoys
11. rather somebody or to break a regulation’.
12. lowest/minimum/cheapest/basic j) This means ‘do something wrong but not be
detected or punished’.
13. afford/manage/contrive
2. a) to reform and lead a better life
14. experiment/investigation
b) to be greedy and eat too much
15. found/noticed/discovered/observed c) to bribe somebody
16. deliver/handle d) to do something which very nearly breaks a
law
17. used/followed/employed
e) to be suspicious (that there is something
18. attitude/approach wrong with a plan)
19. aroused/brought/met/encountered/provoked f) to think (wrongly) that you are living in some
20. approved/implemented/adopted/accepted/ kind of a paradise
agreed g) to withdraw (from an agreement)
h) to be at the end of your resources (material or
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
emotional)
12.6. i) to speak frankly and bluntly
j) to see somebody breaking the law or doing
Vocabulary: idioms p170
something bad
1. a) The expression comes from boxing. If a boxer
is losing badly and/or looks liable to be hurt,
a second in his corner can throw a towel into 12.7.
the ring as a sign that the boxer will now stop
fighting and acknowledge defeat. The Grammar: inversion of subject and verb
expression can simply mean ‘give up’ or
‘admit failure and stop trying to do
Exercise 1 p172
something’. If a farmer throws in the towel, 1. I had never heard such an incredible story.
he may sell his farm and look for another 2. Leela had never seen such a magnificent display.
occupation.
3. Nobody before has ever run as fast as he did.
b) This means ‘to take whatever is available and
not choose’. You may decide to go to the 4. I will never again agree to lend him money.
cinema but cannot decide which one to go to. or I will never agree to lend him money again.
You may decide to take pot luck and go to the 5. Paul not only scored two goals but he helped the
nearest one without knowing what film is defence as well.
being shown there.
6. She is not only related to the managing director
c) This means ‘to do something to deflate
but (she) has a share in the firm as well.
somebody’s pride or reduce his power/
influence’. A conceited or arrogant person 7. Miss Smith not only owns this house but (she)
may annoy others. Then they may try to find owns two shops as well.
a way of taking the offender down a peg. 8. The game had no sooner started than it poured
d) This means ‘to postpone’. Sometimes a sports with rain.
meeting has to be put off because of a storm. or As soon as the game started, it poured with
e) This means ‘to tolerate (something which we rain.
may not like)’. If you can’t afford to buy a car, 9. The two sides had no sooner reached agreement
you may have to put up with walking or than a fresh dispute arose.
riding a bicycle.
f) This means ‘to be very hostile to somebody 10. We had hardly reached home when the
8. What was wrong with the player whose place • Theme: I will describe some of the common
you took in the second half of the game? problems in learning to swim and then I will
9. The girl whose costume was the most original give an account of one method.
and striking won the first prize. • Starting – method D (Dialogue):
10. One group whose players were half-drunk was “You won’t let go of me, will you?” my sister
barred from performing. Tracy asked me anxiously.
Her question illustrates a key problem when you
11. My friend, whose ambition is to be a doctor, is
learn to swim. You need to have somebody with
extremely good at science subjects.
you who can be trusted completely.
12. I got these stamps from a relative whose job
• Starting – method S (State your theme):
frequently involves travelling to foreign
There are a number of problems involved in
countries.
teaching somebody to swim. The first thing a
learner has to do is find somebody whom he or
12.11. she can trust completely.
• Starting – method A (Action):
Grammar: synthesis
My young brother held on to my hand and tried
Exercise 5 p175 to sit on the bottom of the swimming-pool. He
soon discovered that this was nearly impossible.
Many alternatives are possible.
His body tended to float to the surface each
1. We won the game despite the injury to our time.
centre-back.
5. The contribution which a religion can make to
or We won the game despite the fact that our
the life of an ordinary person.
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2, 3, 4 Teacher’s Guide : Book 4
Exercise 3 p191 5. –, in/at, on, in, of, by, in 12. In, at, in, from, in
This is some suggested advice for (a) a baby-sitter: 6. in/during, with, – 13. at, of, –, in, in, by, in
11. If the baby or child is awake, try to keep it 7. have been sitting, have not been talking
amused or occupied but watch it all the time. 8. has your sister been working
Keep small objects away. Make sure it cannot 9. has been travelling
reach anything dangerous. Don’t slack off. Be
10. have been working
watchful all the time. Its life may be in your
hands. Exercise 7
12. If the phone rings, take messages but don’t be 1. Two new factories have been opened by our
distracted – watch the baby/child even while you company recently.
are using the phone. 2. Our fence has been damaged by an old tree.
13. Make a note of anything odd, troublesome or
3. The price of petrol and kerosene has been
bad, e.g. the baby vomits a lot, the child has a increased by all the suppliers.
high temperature or breathing problems. Inform
the parents when they come home. 4. One of the robbers has been arrested by the
police.
5. Tanya has been offered a job in a lawyer’s office
by Miss Warren.
13.7.
6. Those plants have been watered by somebody
Prepositions already.
or Those plants have already been watered by
Exercise 4 p191 somebody.
1. in, in 3. in, on, of 7. This material has been tested by experts to make
2. of, in, in, for, to 4. in, of, – sure that it will not break.
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8. The lock on this door has been changed by 3. The poet may be thinking of homeless people
somebody recently. who sleep in large empty buildings. Or she may
9. This car has been checked carefully by a skilled be thinking that the homeless people have to
and very reliable mechanic. sleep in the streets and, since they will probably
die there, the streets can be called their ‘tombs’.
10. The price of this necklace has already been
reduced by 20% by the manager. 4. It deepens the sense of hopelessness and misery
which surrounds the homeless people.
5. Stanza five is addressed to a different group of
13.9. people – to those who tell homeless people to
make an effort to improve but who do not
Enjoying poetry
provide genuine help.
Questions on ‘This is a Hymn’ p196 6. They are people who urge very poor and
Sometimes there is no completely ‘right’ answer to a homeless people to improve their lives but who
question about a poem. In many cases, there are do not provide material help. The poet chides
alternative answers. As long as the students’ answers them as being heartless.
are plausible and reasonable, they are as acceptable 7. In stanza five, the tone becomes accusatory but
as any answers given here. changes back in stanza six to one of pity and
1. I suspect that at one time he was a homeless sympathy for people who are ‘the victims of the
man because the poem is full of sympathy for world’.
homeless people. 8. Perhaps we can use ‘poverty’ or ‘humiliation’
2. The alliterating sound is /b/. It slows down the here. It depends upon which meaning of ‘salt’
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
reader and helps to create a serious atmosphere the poet had in mind.
when the reader picks his/her way carefully 9. She feels deeply sympathetic towards homeless
through lines 3, 4 and 5. and disadvantaged people.
Unit 14 AIDS
14.3. 4. The disease is spreading all the time and there
is no way of stopping it. Eventually the
Understanding p199 growing number of people who are becoming
A 1. B 4. B 7. B 9. B
infected with HIV will develop AIDS.
5. At present the number of people with HIV in
2. C 5. A 8. D 10. A
3. B 6. D
Africa is much greater than the number who
have it in Europe or North America. It follows
B 1. ‘Impaired’ means ‘injured or weakened’ that – when these people move on from HIV to
whereas ‘destroyed’ means ‘eliminated or AIDS – the number of deaths from AIDS will
wiped out’. Thus ‘destroyed’ indicates much be far higher in Africa than in Europe or North
greater damage than ‘impaired’. America. In addition, drugs which can retard
2. Pneumonia is a potentially fatal infection of
the development of AIDS are available in
the lungs. If it affects a person with AIDS, his Europe and North America but are too
immune system will be unable to give him the expensive for people in Africa to buy.
protection which he would otherwise have
had, and he will die. The disease is called
opportunistic because the bacterium that 14.4.
causes it has an opportunity to develop in the
Vocabulary: meaning in context p201
absence of antibodies.
3. It is a decision or verdict reached by a doctor 1. B 4. A 7. A 9. B
after examining a patient and involves telling
2. B 5. D 8. C 10. D
the patient what appears to be wrong with
him, e.g. what disease or ailment he is 3. C 6. A
suffering from.
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14.5.
aims. We would be most grateful if we might
Vocabulary practice please have permission to use school premises as
set out below. All the money raised by these
Exercise 1 p202
events will go to AIDS Relief in Johannesburg for
1. D 4. C 7. B 9. D use in South Africa and countries in the East
2. A 5. A 8. D 10. D Africa region.
3. D 6. C 1. The events would be: (i) an indoor concert at
which voluntary singers and bands would
perform. There would be an admission fee; (ii)
14.6. an outdoor fun fair with stalls designed to
Vocabulary: problem words provide fun for visitors but also to make a
profit.
Exercise 2 p203 For the concert we would like to use the
1. adapt 5. ensure 9. borrow, lend school hall and any two adjacent classrooms.
2. affect 6. awards 10. breath, breathe
For the fun fair we would like to use the
school grounds but have access to any six
3. altogether 7. Besides
classrooms in case it rains on the day on which
4. alternately 8. borne we hope to have the fun fair.
Exercise 3 2. We are uncertain about the dates for these
events and would be happy to be guided by
1. clothes, them 5. confidence, 9. damage,
you. The concert would probably last from
positive trail
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
7. When we had eaten the food, we washed the 3. They might be injured or killed by sharks or the
dishes and put them away. propellers of the ship.
8. When the men had repaired our telephone, I 4. The movement of the penny was like the swift
rang my cousin to tell him that the phone was movement of a mouse. Also, the boys watched
working again. as attentively as a cat watches a mouse or birds.
9. After Wayne had told us about the accident, we 5. It seems more poetical at line 9 and again at line
realised that it was not his fault. 14.
10. We felt sad when the plane had left. 6. Only the poet can answer this question but
‘downwards’ would seem to be a better word
11. After we had driven for about half an hour, we
here.
reached the beach.
7. The alliterating sound is /d/.
12. When she had finished the painting, she left it
to dry. 8. This is a matter of opinion but some
punctuation would help.
13. After we had followed a path through the forest
for nearly an hour, we sat down to have a rest. 9. The main feature is the movement of the
pennies through the water and the boys
14. Our home seemed much quieter but less
watching them to retrieve them.
cheerful after Uncle and Auntie had left on the
long flight home.
15. When Mother had washed the fish thoroughly,
she showed us the best way to cook it.
Unit 15 Moving On
15.3. 2. It implies that their work had not been very
successful. It could also imply that their efforts
Understanding p214 had been amateurish and even crude.
3. It probably means ‘thus’ or ‘in that way’ but it
A 1. C 3. B 5. C 7. B
2. C 4. D 6. B
can also mean ‘true’.
4. It won’t work for the bank because it does not
B 1. They have come to tell the tenant farmers that produce an adequate return on the capital
they must leave. employed. As a result, the tenant farmers must
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leave and make way for a more profitable use 4. Peter reminded his sister to tell him when she
of the land. was ready to use the computer.
5. The tenants realised that the bank’s method 5. Miss Johnson asked Suresh to explain why he
would ruin the land – line 41. This does not was/had been absent on Friday.
bother the owner men. They propose to take a
6. Mrs Taylor told Francine not to forget to post
quick profit and then get rid of the land.
her letter when she went out.
7. Grandma told Howard not to start smoking. It
15.4. could kill him.
Vocabulary: meaning in context p216 8. Mrs Blake told her son not to leave his clothes
on his bed.
1. D 4. B 7. D 9. C
9. The guide told Ian not to dive down to the wreck
2. C 5. D 8. A 10. D
without taking a companion with him. He said
3. B 6. B the currents were dangerous down there. (at
that spot)
15.6. 10. The security guard warned us not to leave
luggage unattended in the airport.
Vocabulary practice p218
11. Noel asked his sister not to forget to tell their
1. C 4. D 7. D 10. D mother that he had gone fishing.
2. A 5. A 8. C 11. D 12. The woman told Tanya to read the form carefully
3. C 6. D 9. B 12. A before she signed it. She told her to check the
small print and make sure that she understood
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
it.
15.7.
Vocabulary: problem words 15.9.
Exercise 1 p220 Grammar: reporting statements
1. in spite 5. economic 9. eligible (indirect speech) (revision)
2. discovered 6. interesting, 10. imminent Exercise 4 p223
bored
1. Nadia told her friend that she would bring her
3. disinterested 7. elder, older 11. exhaustive bicycle back the next day. She said she was
4. duel 8. elicit 12. Infamous, grateful to her friend for letting her use it.
famous 2. The dentist told Stacy to open her mouth wide.
Exercise 2 He told her not to worry. It would not hurt her.
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8. When he was 22, Delroy told his mother that he 6. The police sergeant asked Maria if she had seen
had made up his mind. He was going to London the accident happen.
the following week. A friend had offered him a 7. The tourist enquired if the Carnival was held at
good job over there. the same time every year in Trinidad.
9. Delroy’s mother told him that she had lived in 8. A neighbour asked Samantha if her young
London when she had been a little girl. She said brother had started school yet.
it was crowded and noisy over there but it would
9. Miss Simms asked the mechanic if it would take
be easier for him to get a decent job.
long to repair her car.
10. The television announcer said that Hurricane
10. Paul asked his brother if he could (please) use
Andrew had changed course and was unlikely to
the computer when his brother had finished.
come/go their way. It had taken a more westerly
route and would have little effect on them. 11. Nadia asked Peter if she was as tall as his sister.
2. Stacy asked us when the procession • The bank has decided to foreclose on the land
starts/started. (Use ‘starts’ if the procession has not and force the tenants to leave.
started when the question is reported. Use ‘started’ if • The fertility of the land was damaged by
the procession had already started.) growing the same (cotton) crop on the land
3. Daljit asked me what the record for the 100 and not rotating the crops.
metres is/was. b) In the second summary, lines 3 to 6 are taken
4. Inspector Daley asked the suspect where the rest from 15.1.
of the money was. c) The sentence ‘At this time, there was a demand
5. Miss Dosman asked Victor why he had not done for cotton because it was needed to make
his homework. explosives and uniforms’ introduces a point
which was not in the original material. This
6. The man asked us how many tickets we wanted.
occurs in the second summary.
7. Pathma’s aunt asked her which ring she
d) There is repetition in the second summary
preferred.
because much of the information in the first
8. Miss Reid asked a builder how much it would sentence is repeated in the second sentence.
cost to extend their house.
9. We asked the stranger what he wanted.
15.13.
10. Colin asked me what the score was.
Enjoying poetry
15.11. Questions on ‘The Woman Speaks to the Man
Grammar: indirect questions (2) Who Has Employed Her Son’ p229
1. The tone changes at line 21. In the previous line,
Exercise 6 p225 the narrator was writing about the time when
1. Natoya asked me if I had seen Nnke recently. she was bringing up her son (under difficult
2. One of the tourists asked the guide if there were conditions). Then in line 21 she moves to attack
alligators in the river. the gangster who had taken her son into his
gang, armed him and set him on the path to a
3. Alicia asked her new friend, Francine, if she violent death.
liked coffee.
2. There is grim humour in line 16 which partly
4. The sales assistant asked me if she could help masks considerable anger directed to the father of
me. her son. The words ‘unbiased indifference’ have
5. Donna asked her mother if her father was going to be pronounced carefully and slowly, so they
to Florida again the following month. carry extra emphasis and suggest controlled fury.
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3. She hates him for condemning her son to death. 6. Unfortunately, it is indeed relevant in some
4. They could mean that she is playing an families where:
imaginary game for the life or soul of her son. a) the father has disappeared, leaving the
Since she acts as both mother and father of her mother to bring up the children unaided
son, she has an additional chance of saving him. b) a son lacks the influence of a father and falls
into bad company
5. She is prepared for her son’s death. c) the son may die by violent means as a result
of the influence of a gang leader.
Unit 16 People
16.3. 16.6.
Writing: starting a story p231 Vocabulary practice p234
The author starts 16.2 using S = a statement. 1. D 4. B 7. C 9. A
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A 1. C 3. D 5. A 7. C 3. lying 13. is
2. A 4. C 6. C 8. A 4. lain 14. Mother
B 1. This is one way of showing Miss Cleothilda’s 5. liable 15. necessity
status: she did not buy cheap food.
6. looked 16. noisy, violence
2. They had to suffer as a result of Miss
Cleothilda’s behaviour. 7. lose 17. can Jamaica, curb
3. She believed that she was superior to most 8. is, much, are, many 18. out, being
other people, so she would not give way to
9. have, has 19. overtake, crest
other people and compromise with them. She
insisted on having her own way. 10. maybe, may be, are 20. past
4. Her obvious pride, her unaccommodating
nature, and her habit of lecturing customers
16.9.
are some of the many reasons why she made
enemies. Descriptions of people in a short story
Exercise 2 p236
16.5. 1. The answer depends very much on how
Vocabulary: meaning in context p233 important Miss Cleothilda will be in the plot. I
can use perhaps 2–5 lines to describe her.
1. A 4. A 7. D 10. D
2. Even in middle-age, Miss Cleothilda ruled the
2. B 5. A 8. C 11. A yard around her home with all the hauteur of a
3. C 6. B 9. B 12. B long-serving Queen of the Band.
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6. The lines seemed slightly forced, as if the poet 7. Perhaps at that time he was leading a very busy
was determined to make a poetic mountain (4 life, so he welcomed the brief moment of
lines) out of a very slight mole-hill (the act of peacefulness and the opportunity for prayer and
breathing). The lines seem rather different from reflection. It is not easy to say why he wished it
the tone in the rest of the poem. could be a ‘global phenomenon’ unless he
wished the whole world could have a similar
time of peace.
Unit 17 Rebecca
2. C 5. D 8. D 10. C
3. B 6. A 17.5.
B 1. I think she was very fond of it and had very Vocabulary: meaning in context p249
moving memories of events which occurred at
the house. A 1. B 4. C 7. B 9. B
2. She had forgotten or was not aware (in her 2. D 5. D 8. C 10. C
dream) that many years had passed since she 3. B 6. A
had last seen the house. Thus the neglected B 1. g 4. b 7. f 9. e
state of the drive puzzled her because the drive 2. j 5. h 8. c 10. a
had been well maintained in previous years. 3. i 6. d
3. The expression means ‘it stood there
undamaged’.
4. ‘the vanguard of ’ and/or ‘made indifferent
sentinels’
17.6.
5. It implies that the house had been badly A writer’s skill (2) p250
damaged by a fire some years previously or
had become a ruin somehow. What will happen next in the book? The writer will
describe what happened at Manderley and how the
house became ‘an empty shell’.
17.4. More examples of balance within a sentence include:
A writer’s skill (1) p249 • it was narrow and unkempt; not the drive that
we had known (lines 10–11)
Her aim was to introduce the main setting for her
story: the house called Manderley. She also wanted • The drive was a ribbon now, a thread of its
to show what had happened to the drive as a way of former self (line 23)
stressing that many years had passed by since the • with gravel surface gone, and choked with grass
events which she is going to unfold in the book. She and moss (lines 23–4)
achieves her aim by describing the drive in detail
• No hand had checked their progress, and they
before leading the reader to the house. I would say
had gone native now (lines 28–9)
that she was very successful in showing the passage
of time. • the grey stone shining in the moonlight of my
dream, the mullioned windows reflecting
Get the students to find words, phrases and ideas
that support this idea, such as ‘rusted’, ‘unkempt’, • the green lawns and the terrace (lines 41–2)
(nature) ‘uncontrolled’, ‘skeleton’, the writer not • Nettles were everywhere, the vanguard of an
recognising some trees – some now look like army. (line 51)
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17.7. 17.10.
Writing: describing places Punctuation:
using a question mark (revision)
Exercise 1 p252
Three suggested answers are: Exercise 3 p254
a) a market: Students should put a question mark after 4, 8, 10,
sight – the people and the things for sale 12, 14 and 15 and a full stop at the end of each of the
smell – the smells of the things for sale other sentences.
touch – the feel of some of the things for sale,
e.g. fruit and fish
taste – perhaps the taste of some of the things 17.11.
for sale
hearing – the noise of the people and perhaps of
Grammar: giving advice
chickens and animals Exercise 4 p255
b) a ship at sea: 1. You’d better go to the dentist.
sight – the passengers, other ships, land, flying-
2. One of us had better take it back and pay for it.
fish, the sea, the sky
hearing – the noise of the ship’s engines, people 3. We’d better go down to the shops this afternoon
talking or evening.
smell – the smell of food at meal times 4. You’d better make sure you wear your seat belt
taste – This depends upon how good a sailor you in future.
are!
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17.13. 17.14.
Is it similar? Enjoying poetry
Exercise 7 p259 Questions on ‘The Castle’ p260
1. A similar; B and C not similar 1. We can’t be sure of the answer to this question.
2. B similar; A and C not similar I think he is amusing himself and his readers but
there may be a moral lurking beneath the story.
3. A, B, C not similar
(See answer (4) below.)
4. A similar; B and C not similar 2. Yes, they strongly suggest that he is not very
serious.
3. The king might be Fear itself.
4. The poet may be mocking traditional tales of
knights who slew monsters and set free
beautiful maidens. He may also be mocking
people who sacrifice themselves pointlessly. If
the knight set out to kill King Fear he was bound
to fail, and there was some truth in the writing
on the castle wall: LIVING IS FEARING.
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would have seen and heard the sieve before 4. D 9. B 14. D 19. D
the water became discoloured. 5. D 10. A 15. D 20. A
3. The land on which the sieve is standing may
get eaten away and the sieve may fall into the
river. 18.6.
4. She feels that the noise and discolouration of Vocabulary: problem words p267
the water spoil the river for visitors to the
area. 1. own, owns 5. respectable,
respectful
2. personnel, trained 6. running
3. principles, thorough 7. septic
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9. for 14. me
10. source 15. started, already of the victim was offensive and details of the
injuries which she received at the hands of a
11. consists 16. wake, got
drunken madman were shocking. There was no
12. sports 17. you’re, your need at all to print such sickening details and I
13. teems 18. abundance, until, it am sure that all parents will join me in deploring
the lack of taste shown by your news editor.
I hope you will reprimand the reporters and
18.7. editor concerned and require them to be more
Answering comprehension p269 considerate of their readers in future. I hope your
questions advertisers will also object to the way in which
this murder was reported.
1. a) 0 b) 0 c) 0 d) 11/2 e) 2
2. a) 0 b) 2 c) 0 d) 1 e) 0 Yours sincerely,
3. a) 0 b) 1 /2
1
c) 2 d) 1 /2
1
e) 2 (name)
4. a) 11/2 b) 1 c) 11/2 d) 0 e) 1
5. a) 1 b) 11/2 c) 11/2 d) 1/2 e) 11/2
6. a) 2 b) 1 /2
1
c) 0 d) 2 e) 0
18.11.
18.8. Is it similar?
Writing: making a summary Exercise 3 p273
A similar; B similar; C not similar (‘Jamaica’
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Exercise 1 p271 1.
omitted)
A summary of the letter in 18.2:
2. A and B not similar; C similar
A lady is complaining that the authorities allow very
noisy machinery to be used on the Rio Grande at 3. A not similar; B and C similar
Portland to mine sand. She feels that it spoils the 4. A not similar; B similar; C border-line – partly
atmosphere and natural beauty of the place, so it similar
should not be permitted. (42 words) 5. A and B not similar; C similar
A summary of the letter in 18.7: 6. A similar; B and C not similar
A reader is worried about the increase in the amount
of crime. He thinks that much of it is caused by
unemployed youth, so he suggests that unemployed
18.12.
boys aged 15–25 should be drafted into the Army if
they are not studying. They will be trained for a year. Enjoying poetry
(49 words)
Questions on ‘The Fringe of the Sea’ p276
1. He uses alliteration, using the sound /f/.
18.10.
2. It applies to the poet and other people. The early
Making a complaint morning makes people agile.
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Unit 19 In Court
19.3. 19.6.
Understanding p278 Conditional sentences (1)
A 1. C 4. A 7. B 9. C Exercise 3 p283
2. D 5. D 8. B 10. D
1. c 4. b 7. a 9. g
3. C 6. D
2. j 5. h 8. e 10. d
B 1. This statement means ‘We are certain that the
youth did not take a knife with him to use as a 3. f 6. i
weapon when he went out.’ Exercise 4 p284
2. He should not use any type of weapon in a fight. 1. a) ii d) iii g) i i) v
3. He felt that the system of education at b) ix e) x h) vi j) vii
Greenslade was badly thought out because c) viii f) iv
pupils from the school often appeared before
the Juvenile courts as offenders and because
although the system had been in operation for
19.7.
some years it had not been successful.
4. The expression means ‘offences which Grammar: what’s wrong?
somebody else has committed but for which
Exercise 5 p285
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A 1. B 4. D 7. C 9. A 3. C 7. C 11. D 15. A
2. A 5. A 8. B 10. C 4. A 8. D 12. B 16. C
3. B 6. D
B 1. h 4. j 7. c 9. f
2. a 5. d 8. b 10. e 19.9.
3. g 6. i
Grammar: conditional sentences (2)
d) The goods are banned and cannot be bought, belongs to the purchaser; the seller has no
sold, imported, etc. further rights in it.
e) The duty on goods imported or exported is c) A consignor sends something; the consignee
increased or lowered. receives it.
f) A decision is made by somebody without d) A deposit account is one in which money is
consulting others affected by the decision. put to earn interest. Usually the account-
g) This is an agreement by two parties – usually holder has no cheque book and cannot draw
two sides in a trade dispute or similar matter. money out whenever he likes. If somebody
h) The machine is checked to see that it is in has a current account, he can put money in,
good working-order. and take money out, at any time.
i) A promise (or guarantee) is said to be no 2. a) A trade mark is a sign or word which
good any longer. somebody has formally registered with a
j) This implies that the person who signed the government office. It cannot be used by other
cheque does not have enough money in people without permission.
his/her bank account for the cheque to be b) If Firm X infringes the trademark of Firm Z,
cashed. Then ‘refer to drawer’ means ‘Sorry. Firm X uses the trade mark of Firm Z without
We can’t cash this cheque. See the person permission and may be sued by Firm Z.
who signed the cheque and try and get your
3. a) an agenda: the business to be done at a
money from him.’
meeting
k) This happens when a person seeks the
b) the minutes: a record of what happened and
permission of a bank to take out more money
was agreed or considered at a meeting
than he has in his bank account. In effect, the
c) a motion: a formal proposal at a meeting
bank then lends him money and charges a
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Draft summary:
Exercise 2 p302
Grandpa Blake found out about bribery in the
company by reading letters in a file. £300 a month Suggested text for the body of the letter for (2):
(in cash) was sent to some of the company’s depots.
The money was used to bribe ship’s officers so that
Dear Miss Buchanan
they would not report adversely on the fuel supplied.
(Stop and count: 47 words, so we can safely add another Order: tables and chairs
50 words = about 3 lines) Thank you for your help when I visited your
If the officers were not bribed, they might (falsely) factory two days ago. I am now happy to confirm
claim that the ship had been delayed by poor quality the verbal order given at the end of my visit.
coal. A delay would be costly for the ship-owners, who Please supply the following:
expected Blake’s company to pay for it. (83 words) 12 steel and plastic tables (model K6)
Note: If there is time in an examination, we could at $320 each $3840.00
slightly expand the summary to be nearer 100 words. 60 metal chairs (model D4) at
For example, we could change the second sentence to $120 each $7200.00
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20.12.
Writing business letters: layout p300 20.14.
• See the notes which follow the specimen letter. Asking for further information
• There are several different (and acceptable) ways
Exercise 3 p303
of setting out a business letter.
Suggested text for the body of the letter for (2):
• The writer could have included his email address
and/or fax number at the top of his letter.
• A business letter may become part of legal Dear Sir or Madam
action, so three rules apply: Travel Club
1. Keep it simple.
Please send details of your travel club and two
2. Keep it short.
application forms to:
3. Keep it accurate. (Look again at the fourth
point of 20.11.) Francine Warren
248 Any Street
Exercise 1 p301
Anytown
The body of the letter might be:
Thank you.
Dear Mr Lall Yours sincerely
Alterations to 26 Fifth Avenue (signed)
Thank you for your letter of 1 April.
Note: The letter is set out as shown above for the
I confirm our telephone conversation of 3 April.
convenience of whoever will send the details and
Mr Jagjit Singh will visit you at 10 a.m. on 10
application forms. It is not necessary to repeat
April to collect all the necessary information and
the sender’s name and address in the body of the
agree with you as to the type of equipment to be
letter but the above method makes it more likely
installed.
that the sender will receive what she wants.
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The report could then contain suggestions about such 8. It’s no good trying to follow fashion blindly.
matters as: Fashions are always changing. Then the
hours when open to students designers and businessmen make money.
non-food items, e.g. tables, chairs, lighting, 9. The woman asked me how far it is from Trinidad
ventilation, etc. to Tobago. I told her it is about 21 miles.
food to be available: types, quantity, prices, drinks 10. She wanted to know how long it would take to
speed of serving sail to Tobago. We told her that that depended
cleanliness and hygiene. on the type of boat she used and,of course, on
the weather at the time.
21.8.
Punctuation practice 21.9.
Enjoying poetry
Exercise 6 p318
1. Smith’s, Kissoon’s 7. hour’s Questions on ‘The Despairing Lover’ p320
2. one’s 8. – 1. It is gently mocking, satirical and anti-romantic.
Exercise 7
1. We stopped to watch some men repairing a 4. cliff top
burst water pipe not far from our school. 5. He thought of committing suicide.
2. Those men make many souvenirs for tourists, or Maybe he thought Phyllis was watching.
e.g. dolls, statues, small boats, etc. 6. He realised that it was possible to get a new love
3. The price was too high. Therefore Miss Walker but not a new neck.
decided not to buy the car. It was several years or Maybe he had to walk a long way to reach the
old already. precipice and by the time he arrived, he had
4. We must buy enough food this afternoon. Then thought over his situation.
we won’t have to try to get some tomorrow 7. It refers to ‘torment’ in line 27 which, in turn,
when the hurricane is getting nearer. refers to his unrequited love for Phyllis.
5. The bus service is being improved, thus enabling 8. It did not prove to be fatal. It was not too deep.
people to travel more easily. 9. Don’t take love affairs too seriously. There is
6. I haven’t seen your sister for months. How is always as good a fish in the sea as ever came out
she now? of it – although you may not feel that at the
time.
7. Oh, she’s fine. She’s got a job in an insurance
company in town. 10. Students can have fun answering this question.
Unit 22 History
22.3. b) He is trying to present the cause of the
uprising as accidental and trivial.
Understanding p323 2. a) He is trying to make it appear that the
A 1. C 4. B 7. D 10. C
Indian troops were provoked and insulted
2. D 5. B 8. D 11. C
by British officers. This would help to
3. C 6. A 9. A 12. B
justify the uprising.
b) He is trying to show that the British were
B 1. a) He is trying to undermine the prestige of desperate to get help.
the emperor.
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3. This seems to have been a move to placate to kill whereas manslaughter is a lesser crime in
Indian soldiers by offering them a better career which somebody does not intend to kill a person
in exchange for their loyalty. but the person dies.
22.4. 22.6.
Vocabulary: meaning in context p325 Vocabulary: definitions
A 1. D 4. C 7. C 9. D Exercise 1 p327
2. B 5. A 8. B 10. C
1. a) a place where a doctor interviews his patients
3. A 6. D
and examines them
B 1. i 4. j 7. e 10. g b) a person who looks after the teeth of his or
2. l 5. a 8. k 11. b her patients
3. f 6. c 9. d 12. h c) current, up-to-date, in accordance with
contemporary thinking
d) a political system in which the politicians
22.5. (and thus the government) are chosen by the
Vocabulary: what’s the difference? p326 free votes of all the electorate
e) style, that which is thought suitable
1. Both places provide shelter and food for people.
f) somebody who advocates one course of action
A house normally belongs to a person or family
but takes another
and is not used for strangers. A hotel is open to g) somebody visiting a region or country other
visiting strangers who pay to stay in it. than his or her own
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2. Both words show displeasure but ‘furious’ h) whatever finds favour in the eye of the
denotes greater resentment than ‘annoyed’ does. beholder
3. Both words refer to people we have met, but a 2. Some suggested humorous definitions:
friend is somebody we like and feel close to a) somebody who can stitch you up
whereas we may not like an acquaintance c) a device to stop you from studying or working
particularly. happily
4. Both words denote a slight movement of the d) a place where people who have little to offer
body. We use ‘shivering’ when somebody is cold show as much of it as they dare
but ‘trembling’ when somebody is afraid or very h) men being boys again.
nervous.
5. Both words refer to a desire to eat food but 22.7.
‘greedy’ shows a wish to eat more food than is
reasonable. ‘Hungry’ does not have this Grammar: future actions (revision) p328
connotation. Further examples of the use of the:
6. Both a stream and a river contain water but a • Simple future:
river is bigger than a stream and therefore If you drop those dishes, most of them will
contains more water. break.
7. Both words refer to a person whom we do not My sister will be 15 next month.
know, but a foreigner has come from a foreign • Simple present:
country whereas a stranger may be from one’s The next train leaves in half an hour’s time.
own country. We leave for Barbados in three days’ time.
8. ‘Uncommon’ refers to frequency of occurrence • Present Continuous:
whereas ‘abnormal’ refers to the normality of I’m going shopping in a few minutes. Would
something. Both words show that something is you like to come?
different from ordinary things. Next Saturday we’re playing a team from
9. Both people are law officers. A magistrate’s Antigua.
powers of punishment are less than those of a • ‘Going to’ to show an intention or something
judge, so a magistrate officiates in courts where likely to happen:
the crime is not as serious as in a court where a Be careful! That shelf is going to break at any
judge officiates. minute!
10. Both words refer to the unlawful death of a What are you going to wear to Anna-Marie’s
person. Murder involves a deliberate intention party on Saturday?
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• ‘About to’ to show something will happen very • I would say, ‘Of course not! She was wearing a
soon: new pair of shoes with leather soles and she
Hurry up! The film is about to start. slipped on something.’
The bus was about to start when the driver • I might:
noticed two women running towards it. – say that I have heard there was an earthquake
• Passive Infinitive: tremor shortly before the building collapsed
This parcel is to be taken to the airport before – stress that all materials used in construction
3 p.m. and handed to somebody on the were of high quality and in accordance with
United Airlines desk. safety regulations
How many of the refugees are to be deported – mention that a security firm is investigating
next month? the possibility of sabotage by terrorists or a
• Present Perfect: drug-related gang
Can I use the computer when you have – have simply told the truth and have said that
repaired it? all possibilities were being investigated. (Then
You can’t watch the television until you’ve I suspect that I would have lost my job.)
washed all the dishes and put them away. Exercise 4 p331
• Future Perfect: Some possible statements:
You can’t phone Michael in London now. He
1. I would:
will have gone to bed already.
• express deep regret for the deaths of the
On the 3 August my grandparents will have
workers
been married for exactly 50 years.
• say that arson is suspected and being
Exercise 2 p329 investigated
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Most of the answers depend on the individual. • stress that the premises had been inspected
and approved recently by Fire Services
1. I’ll probably wake up at about 6 a.m. personnel
2. I’ll have breakfast at 6.30 tomorrow morning. • say that the company was urgently looking
3. I’ll leave home at 7.15 a.m. I’ll go to school. for new premises to provide jobs for its
employees.
4. It will probably take them three to four days.
2. I would:
5. I haven’t decided what I’m going to do after the
• admit that there had been a mild outbreak of
examinations.
some type of gastric flu which was prevalent
6. No, I don’t think the Olympic Games will ever in the region, perhaps brought in by migrants
be held in a Caribbean country. There are many • mention the splendid health record which the
countries with better facilities which want to company has had for many years at its hotels
hold the Games. • mention that the hotel is now nearly full (but
7. I’ll be 21 in five years’ time. I’m not going to say what it’s full of).
8. I’m not sure. Perhaps I’ll be working in my own 3. I would:
country or overseas. • say that the pollution was caused by a
misunderstanding on the part of a new
Exercise 3 employee and that steps have been taken to
1. will/should have 6. will be waiting, will prevent it happening again
reached look • stress the wonderful record which the
2. will soon be caught 7. have lost, will have, company has in its efforts to protect the
will lend environment
• mention some of the schemes which the
3. are going 8. will find, has been
company has financed to improve
eaten
conservation of the environment
4. Are … taking 9. will be increased • minimise the quantity or type of material to
5. to be sent 10. to start, does, will win make the pollution appear much less
significant than it was.
4. I would:
22.8.
• quote analyses by other scientists showing
Public relations work p330 the beneficial effects of the tonic or of some
of the constituents of the tonic
Possible responses to the first two fictitious
• cast doubt on the veracity and accuracy of the
examples:
overseas reports and carefully suggest that
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they were linked with jealousy on the part of 6. The current was so strong that we couldn’t swim
competitors across the river.
• give examples of the way in which some 7. When the humidity is high, people feel tired.
named people have been helped by the tonic
or The humidity makes people feel tired.
• drink some of the tonic while answering
queries from the press. 8. We are very pleased to welcome you.
A cloze passage p332 10. Victor asked me whether I had seen his brother
anywhere.
1. B 6. B 11. B 16. A
2. D 7. D 12. D 17. C
22.11.
3. B 8. B 13. A 18. A
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4. A 9. D 14. C 19. D
5. C 10. A 15. B 20. C Questions on ‘How Could We?’ and
‘I Ain’t Turnin’ Back’ p335
1. How could we choose to let Satan control us?
22.10.
2. I think it refers to her Christian (or other
Say it another way religious) beliefs. Line 1 of the first poem
mentions Satan. In line 25 of the second poem,
Exercise 5 p333
the poet refers to ‘God our creator’.
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15. a) Don’t hurry. Spend as much time (on the job) 8. the gallows: being hanged
as you like. arson: deliberately and illegally setting fire to
b) When you’re free, please check these property
invoices. Take your time. The work is not commuted: reduced
urgent. 9. footloose: prepared to wander or emigrate
16. a) first started to play or do something 10. to act up: to go wrong; to behave in an odd way;
b) When Grandpa grew older, he gave up to break down
football and took up gardening.
Exercise 1 p342
23.6.
1. take no notice 7. took offence
Writing: making a summary p343
2. taken an interest 8. takes pity
4. take precautions 10. take it for granted Key words: main features (consumer magazine)
Notes: no adverts, so obj reports
5. takes a pride 11. take your time
best buys – wide range of goods
6. take the trouble 12. take the trouble results of ext testing
faults exposed, website support re reports
warnings of dish by indiv and coys
23.5. helpful letters from readers – more
Vocabulary: from the newspapers warnings
guidance re legal position and rights
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3. Make a draft summary based on your notes. Stop 8. Instead of going to the fire, he made up a false
somewhere between halfway and near the end. report about it.
Check the number of words. Shorten or 9. A solution suddenly occurred to me.
lengthen accordingly.
10. No advertisements are accepted by the
magazine.
23.7. or No advertising is allowed in the magazine.
Writing
23.9.
Exercise 3 p345
Grammar: ‘a’, ‘an’ and ‘the’ (revision)
Suggested answers:
1. Mitzie, You need both physical and mental skills. Exercise 5 p346
You need to be fit enough to push a trolley up 1. There are a number of reasons why people write
and down the aisles and to stay on your feet for a letter to the editor of a newspaper. Sometimes
long periods of time. You need to have an they want to make a complaint or draw the
attractive appearance and a friendly personality. attention of the government to the need for
You need language skills, tact, a sense of action.
humour, and a (controlled) liking for all the
2. People are beginning to think about landing on
weirdos who fly these days.
Mars in much the same way as the landings
2. Sorry, A.P., but I can’t agree with you on this already made on the Moon.
one. You know what they say about the human
3. When astronauts first landed on the Moon, a
body: ‘Use it or lose it!’ Young bodies need the
few decades ago, some cynics suggested that the
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
A 1. B 4. A 7. B 9. A
language to suit the market they are aiming at.
4. The implied threat is that if you do not buy and
2. D 5. C 8. C 10. B
3. A 6. D
take this medicine, you will catch the flu.
5. They can influence people by exploiting the
B 1. They might approve of the way in which desires listed in 24.1.
efforts to persuade people are exposed. They
might say, ‘Yes, we knew about most of this
already.’
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Exercise 1 p357
1. anti-aircraft, anticyclone, anti-British, anti- 24.7.
immigration Meetings: convening a meeting
2. autograph, automotive, automatic,
autobiography, autocrat, autonomous Exercise 3 p361
3. benediction, beneficial, beneficiary, benefit The body of the letter could be:
4. diameter, diagonal, diagram, dialect, dialysis Please note that the next meeting of the Student
Council will be in the school library at 5.30 p.m. on
5. equivalent, equality, equivocal, equitable,
Thursday, 20 June. The agenda will be sent to you
equilibrium, equinox
later. I hope you will be able to attend.
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
24.5. 24.9.
Discussion: advertising p358 Meetings: the Minutes
3. Yes, it did.
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24.12.
18.3 Dr Warren made the following
announcements: Grammar: using gerunds
a) Arising from Minute 16.8, discussions were Exercise 7 p368
continuing with Ministry of Education officials
1. hitting 5. cooking, eating 9. repairing
concerning arrears of salary for some members
of staff. 2. writing 6. telling 10. going
Chair
Unit 25 Offences
25.3. 2. They were frightened of them and regarded
them as offences in the eyes of God, so they
Understanding p370 were hostile to them.
3. The Badlands were probably caused by the
A 1. A 4. A 7. D 9. D
2. B 5. C 8. A 10. B
explosion of nuclear weapons.
4. The people from the Badlands were probably
3. B 6. D
too ill to make the long journey to Waknuk
B 1. There had probably been a war involving the and they would have to go through the
use of nuclear weapons. Waknuk had not been Fringes, where they might be killed. The
greatly affected but other areas had been. people in the Fringes had the strength to
Mutants occurred sometimes even in the attack places in the Waknuk region.
Waknuk area. Others came from outlying
regions in search of food.
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B 1. h 4. a 7. c 9. g
2. j 5. i 8. b 10. e 25.7.
3. f 6. d Writing: setting out dialogue (revision)
Exercise 5 p379
25.5. A suggested answer for (c):
Vocabulary practice Sgt Blake glanced at his notebook and then looked
me in the eyes.
Exercise 1 p373
“Where were you at 9.30 p.m. on Tuesday night?” he
1. D 6. A 11. D 16. D
asked.
2. D 7. D 12. C 17. B
“Tuesday? Let’s see. I was at my friend’s home then,”
3. A 8. B 13. B 18. A
I replied. “We were watching a film on TV. I
4. D 9. D 14. A 19. B remember that it finished at ten.”
5. B 10. A 15. D 20. C “The name of your friend?” he asked, with his pencil
Exercise 2 p375 poised to make sure that he missed nothing.
English Alive! Teacher’s Guide © Alan Etherton, Nelson Thornes Ltd 2004
25.6. 25.8.
Grammar: infinitives (revision) Writing: plotting practice (revision)
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Exercise 4 p390 7. in, of, in, with 17. of, in, with
3. for 6. from 9. for 12. to 10. of, to, from 20. of, at, by
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