Unit 30: Towards Advanced
Grammar, news, vocabulary and pronunciation
Select a unit
- 1 Towards advanced
- 2 Towards advanced
- 3 Towards advanced
- 4 Towards advanced
- 5 Towards advanced
- 6 Towards advanced
- 7 Towards advanced
- 8 Towards advanced
- 9 Towards Advanced
- 10 Towards Advanced
- 11 Towards Advanced
- 12 Towards Advanced
- 13 Towards Advanced
- 14 Towards Advanced
- 15 Towards Advanced
- 16 Towards Advanced
- 17 Towards Advanced
- 18 Towards Advanced
- 19 Towards Advanced
- 20 Towards Advanced
- 21 Towards Advanced
- 22 Towards Advanced
- 23 Towards Advanced
- 24 Towards Advanced
- 25 Towards Advanced
- 26 Towards Advanced
- 27 Towards Advanced
- 28 Towards Advanced
- 29 Towards Advanced
- 30 Towards Advanced
መወከስ ማህደረ-ቃላት
Session 2 - News Review
sack / fire
remove from a job
defying
refusing to obey
betrayal
act of not being loyal
Session 4 - Macbeth
out (C1)
a long way from home
set out (C1)
begin an attempt
out of (B1)
from an amount or number
out of his mind (C2)
unable to deal with things normally because of something bad
get out (B1)
become known
find out (A1)
discover
out (A1)
not at home
out (B1)
determined
out (B1)
available to everyone
sets out (C2)
begins (a journey)
gives out (B2)
makes; produces
left out (B2)
not included
KEY
A1 = Beginner
A2 = Elementary
B1 = Lower Intermediate
B2 = Higher Intermediate
C1 = Towards Advanced
C2 = Advanced
Session 5 - Tim's Pronunciation Workshop
Summary
Over this series, we've looked at how:
/t/ and /d/ sounds disappear between consonants
'Mashed potato' becomes /mæʃpəˈteɪtəʊ/
Consonant sounds can link with vowel sounds
'An egg' becomes 'anegg'
Certain vowel sounds can link with certain other vowel sounds by adding sounds
'The shoe is…' becomes 'the shoe /w/ is…'
Two consonant sounds can join together, or twin
'It takes two' becomes /ɪteɪks tuː/.
Some sounds can change completely
'Green Park' /griːn pɑːk/ becomes /griːmpɑːk/.
Unstressed grammar words are often weak
'I'd have been late' becomes /aɪdəv bɪn leɪt/
Schwa is important to the rhythm of natural spoken English
'A piece of cake' /ə piːsə keɪk/