Keep on Winning - Blank Fill Cartoon Worksheet - Students fill in the missing words in the cartoon caption. Good for elementary grammar practice for young learners or ESL, EFL [...]
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Keep on Winning - Blank Fill Cartoon Worksheet - Students fill in the missing words in the cartoon caption. Good for elementary grammar practice for young learners or ESL, EFL [...] Cartoon worksheet for use in classroom. For English teaching or any suitable subject or lesson. Students fill in the blank spaces to guess the correct missing word. Ideal excercise for young learners, or adults at the beginner level of English as a second language ESL, [...] Cartoon worksheet with blank captions for teaching. [...] Welcome to the new site of resultsinenglish.com. This site will be fully up and running in a few days, so please visit us later if you can’t find what you are looking for. This new site features a search box and category grouping to easily find material matching your criteria. It also allows you to [...] Grammar Points: Use of present perfect continuous for an activity that is repeated which started in the past and continues up to today. In this case, the activity is repeated with some sort of regularity, but not necessarily at exact intervals. Vocabulary and Phrases: phrasal verb “luck out”, fortune, wishing well. Caption: Dexter: “I wish for a small fortune” “I’ve been wishing here for years and never lucked out.” [...] Grammar Points: 1. Making wishes in the present using {I wish + verb in past tense} eg. I wish you were here, I wish I knew that before, I wish I had more time. 2. Use of will for on the spot “spontaneous” decisions, intentions or predictions. In the cartoon, Pierre makes a prediction, saying to Dexter that “he will have one”. Vocabulary and Phases: Low-rider, flames, “voila” borrowed from French meaning “Here you are” or “There you go”. Caption: Dexter: “I wish I had a low-rider with flames on the side.” Pierre: “You will have one. Voila!” [...] Grammar Points: Making suggestions with use of “it’s time” + past simple and “let’s” + bare infinitive. While used to express a relatively short amount of time (as opposed to a subordinating conjunction). Vocabulary and Phases: Take a break, work, alley, homeless person, worn out clothing, push cart, for a little while. Caption: Homeless Person 1: “It’s time we took a break.” Homeless Person 2: “You’re right, let’s go work for a little while.” [...] |
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