Idioms
Neighbourhood
Gerund VS Infinitive
Asking and giving directions
Types of text
100

Very small

No room to swing a cat

100

An area where cars or other vehicles may be left temporarily

Parking lot

100

I am very good at  ___________(to play) computer games

I am very good at playing  computer games.

100

Traffic lights that  control the traffic by signalling when vehicles have to stop and when they can go.  

Traffic lights

100

Usually nonfiction, informational text.

Expository text

200

an area of a city in which homeless people live

Cardboard town

200

A district or community within a town or city.

Neighbourhood

200

Smartphones are good for _____________ (to communicate)  with my relatives and friends.

Smartphones are good for communicating  with my relatives and friends.

200
A specified part of a road where pedestrians have right of way to cross.


PEDESTRIAN CROSSING      

200

A story with complication or problematic events and it tries to find the resolutions to solve the problems.

Narrative text

300

an area in a city, in which poor people live in small, very cheaply built houses

Shanty town 

300

An amusement park with a unifying setting or idea.


Theme park

300

Students in our school are not allowed  to ________ (to use)  phones during the lessons.

Students in our school are not allowed  to use phones during the lessons.

300
A line or lines of stationary or very slow-moving traffic, caused by roadworks, an accident, or heavy congestion.

Traffic jam

300

Any text where the main purpose is to present a point of view and seeks to persuade a reader.

Persuasive text

400

an area around a city where many peoplewho work in the city live

Commuter belt

400

A wide street in a town or city, typically one lined with trees.

Boulevard 

400

•When we want to talk about someone’s intention or goal, about why they are doing something, we need to use _________________

•When we want to talk about someone’s intention or goal, about why they are doing something, we need to use ‘to + infinitive’.

400

A course along which someone or something moves.

DIRECTION        

400

Text  FORMS 


Speech, article, report, text books, instruction manuals

Expository text

500

Rural person

Country bumpkin 

500

A place to visit that is very popular with tourists.

Tourist sights

500

•We use "___________" when we want to explain what something is generally used for or what its purpose is.

We use ‘for + verb-ing’ when we want to explain what something is generally used for or what its purpose is.

500

Set against, facing, or back to back; at the other end or side;

Opposite

500

Text form 

Advertisements, posters, book/film reviews, debates, essays, songs

Persuasive Text