Sei sulla pagina 1di 3

UNIT ONE

INFORMAL GREETINGS:
Hi / Hello / Hey
Hi / Hello / hey
How are you doing?
Im ok
How are things going?
All right
Hows everything?
Fine, thanks
Hows school?
Fine
Hows business?
So-so
How are you?
Great
How are things?
Good
How is it going?
Not bad
Whats up?
Nothing much

FORMAL GREETINS:

Good morning
Good afternoon
Good evening
How are you today?
Fine, thank you


SUBJECT PRONOUNS:
I, You, He (male), She (female), We,
They, You (plural)

POSSESSIVE ADJECTIVES:
My, Your, His (male), Her (female),
Our, Your (plural), Their

INTRODUCING
Nice to meet you
Nice to meet you, too
Pleased to meet you
Pleased to meet you, too
Glad to meet you
Glad to meet you, too

UNIT TWO
OCCUPATIONS:
Teacher
Waitress (woman)
Waiter (man)
Doctor
Secretary
Computer programmer
Chef
Artist
Bank clerk
Salesperson
Dentist
Singer
Telemarketer
Politician
Engineer
Journalist

INDEFINITE ARTICLES A/AN
- Use A with a singular noun
beginning with consonant sound.
For example: a teacher, a
programmer
- Use AN with a singular noun
beginning with a vowel sound.
For example: an artist, an engineer,
an hour
DO AND DOES
What do I/You/We/They do?
What does He/She do?

UNIT THREE
Country/Nationality
Australia/Australian
Brazil/Brazilian
Canada/Canadian
China/Chinese
England/English
France/French
Germany/German
Italy/Italian
Japan/Japanese
Mexico/Mexican
Spain/Spanish
The U.S.A./American
In English, adjectives have no
gender and no plural forms. For
example: Hes American/Shes
American/Theyre American.
You should always write names of
countries and nationalities with
capital letters. For example:
Hes from Canada. Hes Canadian
You should use the article THE
before U.S.A. For example:
Hes from the U.S.A (United States
of America)

RELATIONSHIPS
This is my colleague
classmate
friend
boyfriend
girlfriend
co-worker

PREPOSITION IN
Where is Miami? Its IN Florida
Where is France? Its IN Europe
UNIT FOUR
CARDINAL NUMBERS

UNIT FIVE
ADDRESS
How to write addresses in the
U.S.A.
+ NUMBER NAME OF
+ + STREET/AVENUE CITY STATE
+ + ZIP CODE COUNTRY
VOCABULARY
Road (Rd.)/South (S.)
Telephone (phone)/Number (No.)
East (E.)/Apartment (Apt.)
Drive (Dr.)/Avenue (Ave.)
West (W.)/Street (St.)
North (N.)/Boulevard (Blvd.)

HOW TO SAY PHONE NUMBERS
With telephone numbers and
addresses you can say zero or
oh. For example:
407-755-1299 = four oh seven,
seven five five, one nine nine
Email:
teacher.ricardo.machado@hotmail.c
om = teacher dot ricardo dot
machado at Hotmail dot com (@=
at, . = dot)
UNIT SIX
ORDINAL NUMBERS

PREPOSITIONS IN/ON
Use IN with months and ON with
dates. For example:
- The meeting is in January
- The meeting is on January 15
DATES
Write Say
January 15 January fifteenth
1997 Nineteen ninety-seven

DEFINITE ARTICLE THE
We use the definite article THE to
refer to something specific. For
example: The meeting with the
managers is in January.

Potrebbero piacerti anche