Advanced ways of comparing
Advanced Conditionals
Reporting
Vocabulary: describing Attitudes
Vocabulary: food
100

Complete: “The city was ___ as vibrant as I remembered.”

Just as

100

“If it hadn’t been for your help, I wouldn’t have passed.” But for......

“But for your help, I wouldn’t have passed.”

100

Change to reported speech: “He said, ‘We’re hiring new staff.’”

He said they were hiring new staff.

100

Which expression means “to strongly relate to someone’s feelings or experience”?

Strike a Chord

100

What does unique cuisine mean?

A distinctive or special style of cooking.


200

What structure means “nothing could be more [adjective] than this”?

couldn’t + verb + any more + adjective/adverb

200

What’s an inverted form of “If I had known, I would have told you”?

“Had I known, I would have told you.”

200

What’s the reporting verb alternative to “say” that means to express strong belief?

Insist

200

What does “a sweeping statement” mean?

A generalization that oversimplifies or exaggerates.

200

Explain: “It’s an assault on my senses.”

It’s overwhelming in a strong or surprising way.

300

“The impact was strong.” → Make it more emphatic using comparison.

“The impact was nothing as strong as expected.”

300

Fill in: “___ you to arrive early, we would have missed the flight.”

“Were it not for”

300

Combine using the given word:

Direct: “We’ll finish on time,” said the manager. (CONFIDENT)

The manager was confident they would finish on time.

300

Choose the correct phrase:

“It’s a(n) ___ to say everyone should work nonstop.” (spot on / way too oversimplistic)

way too oversimplistic

300

Define “intriguing smells.”

Fascinating or mysterious aromas that attract attention.

400

“It’s not so much a lecture as a discussion” or “It’s not so many a lecture as a discussion”?

It’s not so much a lecture as a discussion.

400

What type of conditional mixes a past and present result? Give an example.

Mixed conditional — “If I had studied engineering, I would be working in a factory now.”

400

What is the advantage of using a variety of reporting verbs in business communication?

It adds nuance and precision (e.g., acknowledged, claimed, maintained convey attitude).

400

True or False: Saying something is “spot on” means you disagree with it.

False – it means you completely agree.

400

What does it mean to “fuse flavours”?

To combine tastes or cooking styles from different cultures.

500

Create your own sentence using “equally as” and explain the effect on meaning.

Example: “Her presentation was equally as impressive as the CEO’s.” It emphasizes equal quality between two things.

500

Rewrite using an alternative to “if”: “If the company had invested earlier, it would have succeeded.”

“Had the company invested earlier, it would have succeeded.” or “Without early investment, the company wouldn’t have succeeded.”

500

Paraphrase using “According to…” and an adjective:

“She said it was difficult to translate cultural ideas.”

According to her, translating cultural ideas is challenging.

500

Explain the difference: “element of truth” vs “complete fallacy.”

Element of truth = partially correct; Complete fallacy = totally false.

500

Explain “reinterpreting flavours.”

Using traditional ingredients or dishes in a new, creative way.

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