Philip’s Saint Valentine’s Day Quiz

13 02 2009

1. For St. Valentine’s Day what would you buy for your partner ?
a) a card b) a small fun present c) a romantic meal d) a ring
2. Which romantic symbol appeals to you most ?
a) a heart b) a red rose c) an original personal symbol
3. How would you most like your partner to be ? (choose one)
a) rich b) famous c) beautiful d) intelligent e) kind
4. What colour do you associate with romance ?
a) red b) white c) blue d) green e) pink
5. What is the first thing you notice about a potential partner ?
a) their eyes b) their hair c) their hands
6. How romantic do you like your partner to be ?
a) very romantic b) romantic c) “normal” d) reserved
7. If your partner goes away for a few days, what would you most like to receive ?
a) a postcard b) a nice long letter c) a love poem
8. How long can you bear to be separated from your partner ?
a) one day is too long b) maximum a week c) a month or more is OK
9. Marriage for you is :
a) wonderful b) good for people who are serious c) a legal necessity d) a trap
10. Romeo and Juliet’s love for each other was :
a) stupid b) perfect c) rather too quick
11. Love at first sight. What do you think ?
a) I believe in it b) I don’t believe in it c) I’m not sure
12. Romance today is :
a) dead b) dying c) not common d) alive and well
13. If the boy or girl of your dreams asked you to marry after the first day, would you
a) say YES straight away b) say yes probably but give me some time c) say perhaps d) say NO
14. What would you be prepared to sacrifice for love ?
a) everything b) all of your friends c) school d) nothing at all

Scores
1. a=1 b=2 c=3 d=4 2. a=2 b=3 c=2 3. a=1 b=1 c=2 d=2 e=3 4. a=3 b=2 c=1 d=1 e=2 5. a=3 b=2 c=2
6. a=4 b=3 c=2 d=1 7. a=1 b=2 c=3 8. a=4 b=2 c= 1 9. a=3 b=2 c=1 d=0 10. a= -1 b=3 c=1
11. A=3 b=0 c=1 12. a=-1 b=0 c=1 d=3 13. a=4 b=3 c=2 d=0 14. a=4 b=3 c=2 d=0

Interpretation of your score

47-44 Romeo/ Juliet. You are ultra-romantic. Your head is in the clouds. Love is the most important thing in your life. You think about love far too much, be careful !
43-38 You are very romantic. Romance is an important part of your life. Perhaps there is a fairy tale marriage written in your stars. But make the right choice. Don’t accept the first partner you find.
37-32 You are romantic. You have a good healthy attitude towards love. You will probably have a happy life with the partner you choose
31-26 You are modern and realistic. You can be romantic at times but you are a realist in you daily life. You see love as a normal consequence of life. Marriage for you is not mystical.
25-21 Practical/Down to earth. You have rather a practical view about love and relationships. Perhaps it would be good for you to be a little more romantic at times. Make an effort !
20-13 Unromantic. You are a rather prosaic in your attitude to romance. Perhaps you have had a disappointment and you have become a bit too cynical. Try to see love and life more positively. Go and watch a romantic film !
12-8 You are a STONE !





Facebook

22 12 2008

Facebook link

www.facebook.com/people/Philip-Drury/1069852502″ title=”Philip Drury’s Facebook profile” target=_TOP><img src=”http://badge.facebook.com/badge/1069852502.199.727729042.png” border=0 alt=”Philip Drury’s Facebook prof





Lesson 3 Wednesday 10th December 2008

11 12 2008

The lesson on Adverbs, Verbs and Phrasal verbs will be put on the blog on Friday 12th when I complete chapter 3.

Please feel free to write a comment.

Best wishes

Philip





Lesson 2

6 12 2008

Hello

Here is the content of the second lesson at Ragusa.


Lesson 2 Ragusa 5th December 2008

From Verbs to Adverbs

Corresponding to About English by Catherine Riley Chapter 3

Chapter 3 Verbs (3.6 p. 91) and next time ….. Adverbs (3.7 p.99)

A verb is often defined as a word which shows action or state of being.

The verb is the heart of a sentence – every sentence must have a verb.

Recognizing the verb is often the most important step in understanding the meaning of a sentence.

There are different kinds of verbs, two groups of which, auxiliary verbs and modals are function words and are dealt with in 3.14

All other verbs are known as lexical verbs or main verbs (p.91)

Examples in a table:

Word

Sentence

Part of Speech

can

I think I can do it.

verb

can

Don’t open that can of beans.

noun

only

This is my only pen.

adjective

only

He was only joking.

adverb

his

That book is his.

pronoun

his

That is his book.

adjective

English

Can you speak English?

noun

English

I am reading an English novel.

adjective

There are many ways of classifying verbs.

Verbs of : activity, communication, mental, causative, occurence, existence or relationship, aspect (Longman Student Grammar of Spoken and Written English in Riley Ref. P.91)

Verbs can be grouped according to transitivity patterns

According to form: one-word verbs, multi-word verbs, compound verbs,

Regular and irregular verbs

Reflexive, reciprocal and ergative verbs

Whether followed by a bare or full infinitive (p.92)

Most common lexical verbs

45% in conversation !

Activity verbs: get (2), go (3) make (7), come (8) take (9) give (11)

Mental know (4), think (5), see (6), want (10), mean (12)

Communicative: say(1)

There are 4,500 occurences of the verb say in each million words of English (p.92)

Delexical Verbs

3 of the 6 most commonly occurring activity verbs in spoken English

make, take, and give are often used as delexical verbs – a group of verbs whose own lexical meaning is very weak when used with certain nouns like

make a mistake,

take a photograph

Copular (link) Verbs

Get and go are aften used as copular (link) verbs in many phrases.

Example: In winter, even in Sicily it gets dark at about 5.30.

My father is going deaf, the fans went mad when they saw the pop star

Transitivity

Certain verbs ,must be accompanied by a direct object

i.e. they are transitive

The direct object must come directly after the verb

N.B. Word order is much stricter in English than in Italian. Knowing about word classes should also include their position in a sentence. (p.93)

Examples

In the sentence ‘The dog bit the teacher’, bit is the verb and the word which shows the action of the sentence.

In the sentence : ‘The Ragusa language student is sitting on a chair’, even though the action doesn’t show much activity, sitting is the verb of the sentence.

In the sentence ‘Jo is a smart girl’, there is no action but a state of being expressed by the verb is. The word be is different from other verbs in many ways but can still be thought of as a verb.

Unlike most of the other parts of speech, verbs change their form.

Sometimes endings are added

learn – learned

and sometimes the word itself becomes different

teach-taught

Tense/person/number/voice

The different forms of verbs show different meanings related to such things as

tense (past, present, future),

person (first person, second person, third person),

number (singular, plural) and

voice (active, passive)

One of the most important things about verbs is their relationship to time.

Verbs tell if something ……has already happened, if it will happen later or if it is happening now

For things happening now, we use the present tense of a verb; for something that has already happened, we use the past tense; and for something that will happen later, we use the future tense.

Verbs like those in the chart above that form the past tense by adding -d or -ed are called regular verbs.

Some of the most common verbs are not regular and the different forms of the verb must be learned.

There are a large but limited number of irregular verbs

Not only are there the simple tenses of the verbs.

There are also progressive or continuous forms which show that the action takes place over a period of time, and perfect forms which show completion of the action.

Simple present tense verbs have a special form for the third person singular. Singular means “one” and plural means “more than one.”  Person is used here to show who or what does the action and can have the following forms:
1st person or the self (I, we)
2nd person or the person spoken to (you)
3rd person or a person not present (he, she, it, they)
The third person singular forms are represented by the pronouns he, she, it.

A verb must “agree” with its subject. Subject-verb agreement generally means that  the third person singular verb form must be used with a third person subject in the simple present tense.

The  word be – the most irregular and also most common verb in English – has different forms for each person and even for the simple past tense.

English is an S V O language

Almost always in the affirmative a subject comes before a verb and an object may come after it.

The subject is what does the action of the verb and the object is what receives the action.

In the sentence Bob ate a humburger, Bob is the subject or the one who did the eating and the hamburger is the object or what got eaten.

A verb which has an object is called a transitive verb and some examples are throw, buy, hit, love.

A verb which has no object is called an intransitive verb and some examples are go, come, walk, listen.

Verbs are often made up of more than one word.

The future forms, for example, use the word will and the perfect forms use the word have. These words are called helping or auxiliary verbs.

The word be can serve as an auxiliary and will and shall are also auxiliary forms.

There is a type of auxiliary verb called a modal which changes the meaning of a verb in different ways.

Words like can, should, would, may, might, and must are modals and are covered in other lessons.

Later we will also look at Phrasal Verbs

Present Continuous

Present Perfect

is looking

has looked

is speaking

has spoken

is talking

has talked

Singular

Plural

1st Person (I)

see
hear
come

1st Person (we)

see
hear
come

2nd Person (you)

see
hear
come

2nd Person (you)

see
hear
come

3rd Person (he, she, it)

sees
hears
comes

3rd Person (they)

see
hear
come

Best wishes

Philip





Ragusa

3 12 2008

Hello,

Please feel to read the notes on Lesson 1 3rd december 2008

See you soon

Philip

Linguistics : Word Class

About English by Catherine Riley

Chapter 3

Please do the exercises suggested in the book from page 79-89

3.1 Categories and Classes: parts of speech

3.2 Bricks and Mortar: content words and function words

3.3 The Bricks: content words

3.4 The Name’s the Game: nouns

3.5 What’s it like: adjectives

3.6 Getting things done: verbs

3.1 The parts of speech (word class) that are used to describe English words are:

Nouns
Verbs
Adjectives
Adverbs
(Pronouns)
Prepositions
Conjunctions
Articles

3.2 Content words or Lexical words

Nouns Verbs Adjectives Adverbs

Functional words

Prepositions Conjunctions Articles

Closed class of words

3.4 A noun is often defined as a word which names a person, place or thing.

Here are some examples of nouns: teacher, river, friend, Sicily, triangle, day, school, truth, university, idea, Obama, aunt, vacation, eye, dream, flag, teacher, class, grammar.

Barrack Obama is a noun because it is the name of a person; Ragusa is a noun because it is the name of a place; and desk is a noun because it is the name of a thing.

Grammar books divide nouns into 2 groups.

Proper nouns are nouns which begin with a capital letter because it is the name of a specific or particular person place or thing.  Some examples of proper nouns are: Italy, Massimo Sturiale, Mediterranean Sea, December, Wednesday, Peterborough, Linda, Oxford Street, Burger King. If you see a word beginning with a capital letter in in the middle of a sentence, it is probably a proper noun.

Most nouns are common nouns and do not begin with a capital letter.

Many nouns have a special plural form if there is more than one.  For example, we say one book but two booksPlurals are usually formed by adding an -s (books) or -es (boxes) but some plurals are formed in different ways (child – children, person – people, mouse – mice, sheep – sheep). We added man – men woman – women.

We will do more on this

Collective noun (p.83)

Quantifying noun

Unit noun

Compound noun (p.84)

Attributive noun (nouns as modifiers)

3.5 What’s it like: adjectives

An adjective is often defined as a word which describes or gives more information about a noun or pronounAdjectives describe nouns in terms of  such qualities as size, colour, number, and kind.

In the sentence ‘The lazy student sat on the rug’, the word lazy is an adjective which gives more information about the noun student.  We can add  more adjectives to describe the student as well. The lazy, young, language student sat on the rug.

We can also add adjectives to describe the rug as in the sentence The lazy, young, language student sat on the beautiful, expensive, new rug. The adjectives do not change the basic meaning or structure of the sentence, but they do give a lot more information about the student and the rug. As you can see in the example above, when more than one adjective is used, a comma (,) is used between the adjectives.

Usually an adjective comes before the noun that it describes, as in plump man. It can also come after a form of the word beas in The man is plump.  More than one adjective can be used in this position  in the sentence The man is tall, dark and handsome. The Englishman is blond.

Most adjectives do not change form whether the noun it describes is singular or plural.  For example we say big books and big books, old house and old houses, good time and good times.  There are, however, some adjectives that do have different singular andplural forms.  The common words this and that have the plural forms these and those. These words are called demonstrative adjectives because demonstrate or point out what is being referred to.

Another common type of adjective is the possessive adjective which shows possession or ownership. The words my dog or my dogs indicate that the dog or dogs belong to me.  I would use the plural form our if the dog or dogs belonged to me and other people.

3.6 Getting things done: verbs

A verb is often defined as a word which shows action or state of being. The verb is the heart of a sentence – every sentence must have a verb.

Recognizing the verb is often the most important step in understanding the meaning of a sentence. In the sentence The dog bit the man, bit is the verb and the word which shows the action of the sentence.

In the sentence The man is sitting on a chair, even though the action doesn’t show much activity, sitting is the verb of the sentence.

In the sentence She is a smart girl, there is no action but a state of being expressed by the verb is. The word be is different from other verbs in many ways but can still be thought of as a verb.

Unlike most of the other parts of speech, verbs change their form.  Sometimes endings are added (learn – learned) and sometimes the word itself becomes different (teach-taught).

The different forms of verbs show different meanings related to such things as tense (past, present, future), person (first person, second person, third person), number (singular, plural) and voice (active, passive).

Verbs are also often accompanied by verb-like words called modals (may, could, should, etc.) and auxiliaries(do, have, will, etc.) to give them different meanings.

One of the most important things about verbs is their relationship to time.

Verbs tell if something has already happened, if it will happen later, or if it is happening now.

For things happening now, we use the present tense of a verb;

for something that has already happened, we use the past tense;

and for something that will happen later, we use the future tense.

On Friday we will also talk about adverbs

We have seen that an adjective is a word that gives more information about a noun or pronoun.  An adverb is usually defined as a word that gives more information about a verb, an adjective or another adverbAdverbs describe verbs, adjectives and adverbs in terms of such qualities as time, frequency and manner.  In the sentence Sue runs fast, fast describes how or the manner in which Sue runs.  In the sentence Sue runs very fast, very describes the adverb fast and gives information about how fast Sue runs.

Most, but not all adverbs end in -ly as in  But not all words that end in -ly are adverbs (ugly is an adjective, supply and reply can both be nouns or verbs). Many times an adjective can be made into an adverb by adding -ly as in nicely, quickly, completely, sincerely.

Adverbs of time tell when something happens and adverbs of frequency tell how often something happens.





Liceo Scientifico Archimede Acireale PON

24 11 2008

Welcome to the Archimede ‘Learning Objects’ PON project.

Please look at our PowerPoint and give us some feedback.

Best wishes

Teaching Team





Teachers Meeting at Maria Ausiliatrice

31 03 2008

PowerPoint

Here is the Powerpoint File.

I hope you enjoyed the meeting with the interactive whiteboard.

Best wishes

Philip





Primary News

26 03 2008

There is a new meeting for Primary school educators inViterbo 27-28 March.





Materials for Primary schools

23 01 2008




Happy New Year

4 01 2008

Dear Students,

I wish you a happy and sucessful 2008!

Best wishes

Philip

5th year students Maria Ausiliatrice

You need to write the introduction to your project in English.

It should be about one page. You could use this a model:

Title:

 My project is about …….. and centres around (materia) however it has links to (……)I chose this topic because I was very interested in …… especially ……The most interesting things to say about the contents are:1)2)3)4)By doing this project I learned a lot about …. and … I also learned how to do original research and to make a bibliography.