Grammar structure that follows can
can + bare infinitive
inexpensive
5 ways of getting around
on foot, by bike/car/train/subway bus
A job in which you make money
paid position
Opposite of increase
decrease
Different meanings of going to and will
Going to --> plans, predictions
Will --> decisions, predictions, informal request
Pronounce this: 1.46 million
one point four six million
Places to walk or cycle
sidewalk, bike lanes
When someone helps you by giving or lending money
financial support
People who walk or ride on bikes
Pedestrians, cyclists
4 modals of advice from strongest to weakest
had better (not)
ought to
should (not)
could
3 adjectives to describe someone's style
casual, stylish, unique
A trip that goes from your home to work
commute
verb --> noun
apply
arrange
choose
consider
decide
intend
plan
recommend
application
arrangement
choice
consideration
decision
intention
plan
recommendation
Something extra that you wear: bag, watch, hat, belt, etc
accessory
5 modal verbs for making requests. To request something, what structure follows them?
can + pronoun + bare infinitive
will + pronoun + bare infinitive
could + pronoun + bare infinitive
would + pronoun + bare infinitive
mind + verb + ing
Food items you buy at a store
groceries
Missing verbs
____ the dishes
____ laundry
____ grocery shopping
____ a reservation
____ an appointment
____ up
____ off
do the dishes
do laundry
go grocery shopping
make a reservation
make an appointment
pick up
drop off
2 definite future time words and 2 indefinite future time words
definite --> after (tomorrow), in (a month), next, this (summer)
indefinite --> soon, in a few (days, weeks..), in the near future, at some point, someday/eventually
Easy to walk around
walkable
6 quantity expressions starting from the highest quantity. What is the difference between quantity expressions with specific nouns vs general nouns
All (100%)
Most
a lot
half
some
none (0%)
For general nouns, you don't use of and you use a plural count noun (ie students, mountains). For specific count nouns, you use of + noun phrase (all of my students/friends)
Difference between looks good in and looks good on
(someone) looks good in (clothing)
(clothing) looks good on (someone)
Jobs that you do around the house and jobs that you do outside of your house
chores, errands
Difference between face challenges and overcome
face challenges --> deal with problems
overcome --> move past something difficult
The difference between to get to and to get around
to get around --> to go from place to place in a town/city
to get tom --> to travel somewhere