Download TABLA PARCIAL DE CONTENIDOS – EXÁMENES DE

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Comparison (grammar) wikipedia , lookup

Zulu grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Chichewa tenses wikipedia , lookup

Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup

English clause syntax wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Grammatical tense wikipedia , lookup

Old Norse morphology wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Spanish verbs wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Russian declension wikipedia , lookup

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Dutch grammar wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
TABLA PARCIAL DE CONTENIDOS – EXÁMENES DE ACREDITACIÓN (Basado en los textos utilizados al 01/09/14) PARA CAMBIO DE CÓDIGO O PASO A FACULTAD LENGUAJE
– Announce and respond to good and bad
news
– Apologize for and explain lateness
– Ask about and describe a past vacation
– Ask about and describe daily routines
– Ask about and describe family members
– Ask about and describe family members
– Ask about and describe the weather
– Ask about birthdays
– Ask about free-time activities
– Ask about future plans
– Ask about life experiences
– Ask about someone who looks familiar
– Ask about someone’s age
– Ask about the location of places
– Ask and answer questions about events
– Ask and answer questions about events
– Ask and answer questions about family
– Ask and answer questions about first and
last names, phone numbers, addresses
and country of origin
– Ask for and give directions
– Ask for and give directions
– Ask for and make suggestions
– Ask for and make suggestions
– Ask for service and repairs
– Ask for something you can't find
– Ask if you are late
– Ask what someone is doing
– Ask who someone is
– Check into and out of a hotel
– Cheer someone up
– Choose a hotel
– Clarify and confirm information
– Compare opinions about clothes
– Compare opinions about furniture
– Compare people
– Compare people
– Compare tastes in movies
– Complain when things don’t work
– Complain when things don’t work
– Confirm information
– Decline an invitation
– Describe a car accident and damage
– Describe a favorite season
– Describe a recipe
– Describe abilities
– Describe an object
– Describe car problems
– Describe clothes
– Describe features of machines
– Describe features of machines
– Describe how you decorate your home
– Describe movies you've seen lately
– Describe people
– Describe people
– Describe unique foods
– Describe your daily activities
– Describe your home
– Describe your mood and emotions
– Describe your own diet
– Describe your own diet
– Describe your Schedule
– Discuss driving rules
– Discuss exercise and diet
– Discuss family size
– Discuss family size
– Discuss food and health choices
– Discuss food and health choices
– Discuss hotel room features and facilities
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Discuss lifestyle changes
Discuss personality types
Discuss plans
Discuss the effects of violence in the media
Discuss the impact of birth order on
relationships
Discuss ways people improve their
appearance
Discuss what to cook
Discuss what to eat
Discuss what to eat
Discuss your favorite artists
Exchange personal information
Explain local customs
Express concern
Express frustration and offer sympathy
Express frustration and offer sympathy
Express opinions about art
Express regret
Get reacquainted with someone
Get to know someone’s life story
Give and accept compliments about
clothes
Give and get directions
Greet a visitor
Greet an acquaintance you haven’t seen in
a while
Identify family members
Identify family relationships
Identify family relationships
Identify people
Introduce people
Introduce someone
Invite someone to an event
Invite someone to join you
Leave and take a phone message
Make a polite phone call
Make plans to get together
Offer and ask for foods at the table
Offer dishes and decline food
Offer reasons for purchasing a product
Offer reasons for purchasing a product
Offer to call back later
Offer to introduce someone
Offer to introduce someone
Offer to pay or return the favor
Offer, accept, and decline invitations
Offer, accept, and decline invitations
Order, get the check, and pay for a meal
Order, get the check, and pay for a meal
Politely begin a conversation
Provide an excuse
Reassure someone
Recommend a museum
Rent a car
Request help or permission
Request housekeeping services
Request salon services
Schedule and pay for personal care
Shift to informality
Shop for personal care products
Show concern about an injury
Spell names and words
State color preferences
Suggest a means of
Suggest a remedy
Suggest a time to meet
Suggest and plan an activity
Talk about an ailment
Talk about dates
Talk about foods you love and hate
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Talk about homes that you like and why
Talk about how often you do things
Talk about music likes and dislikes
Talk about music likes and dislikes
Talk about past activities
Talk about present-time activities
Talk about shopping for clothes
Talk about time
Talk about tourist activities
Talk about wants and needs
Talk about what you do
Talk about where you live, work, or study
Talk about where you were born
Tell why you are a morning person or an
evening person
Tell your life story
Transportation
Describe a car accident and damage
Express concern
Ask for service and repairs
Describe car problems
Rent a car
Discuss driving rules
Shop for personal care products
Ask for something you can't find
Request salon services
Schedule and pay for personal care
Discuss ways people improve their
appearance
VOCABULARIO
– Abilities and skills
– Academic subjects
– Accidents and injuries
– Adjectives for travel conditions
– Adjectives of emotion
– Adjectives to describe hair
– Adjectives to describe movies
– Adjectives to describe people
– Adjectives to describe personality
– Adjectives to describe vacations
– Adverbs to describe ability
– Ailments
– Airline passenger information
– Bad driving behaviors
– Car parts
– Categories of clothing
– Categories of food
– Clothes
– Clothing described as “pairs”
– Colors and other descriptive adjectives
– Common materials
– Computer products and accessories
– Computer toolbars and commands
– Containers and Quantities
– Customs around the world
– Daily activities at home
– Days of the week
– Describing clothes
– Describing colors
– Describing food
– Descriptive adjectives
– Drinks and foods: non-count nouns
– Early, on time, late
– Electronic products
– Electronics
– Entertainment events
– Events
– Excuses for not eating something
– Explanations for being late
– Family members
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Family relationships
Food and health
Food passions
Foods: count nouns
Free-time activities
Furniture and appliances in the home and
office
Handicrafts
Hotel facilities
Hotel room amenities and services
Hotel room features
Household chores and leisure activities
Interior locations and directions
Internet activities
Kinds of music
Life events
Lifestyles and health problems
Locations and directions
Machine features
Machines at home and at work
Marital status and Relationships
Means of Transportation
Means of transportation
Menu items
Money and travel
Months of the year
Moral dilemmas
Movie genres
Nationalities
Numbers 0–20
Numbers 20–100
Occupations
Ordinal numbers
Parts of the body
Past-time expressions
Personal care products
Personal values
Phrasal verbs
Physical and everyday activities
Places for sports and games
Places in the community
Places to keep food in a kitchen
Polite address
Positive adjectives
Reasons to decline an invitation
Relationships
Remedies
Requests
Rooms in the home
Salon services
Seasons
Suggestions to cheer someone up
Talking about health habits
Talking about prices
Telephone messages
The alphabet
The face
Tickets and trips
Time
Time expressions
Titles and names
Tourist activities
Transportation Problems
Travel problems
Travel services
Types of art
Types of cars
Types of clothing and shoes
Types of vacations
Verbs want, have, need
Ways to acknowledge thanks
– Ways to describe similarities and
differences
– Ways to express certainty
– Ways to express likes and dislikes
– Ways to improve appearance
– Ways to say you don’t like something
– Ways to schedule and pay for personal
care
– Ways to show concern
– Ways to state a Complaint
– Ways to sympathize
– Weather
– Weekend activities
– What to say to a waiter or waitress
– Workplaces and homes
– Years
GRAMÁTICA
– A lot of
– A, an, the
– Adjectives
– Be going to for the future
– Be: information questions with What
– Be: plural statements
– Be: questions about time
– Be: questions with How old
– Be: questions with Where
– Be: questions with Who
– Be: singular statements
– Be: yes / no questions and short answers
– Can and can’t
– Can and have to
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Comparative adjectives
Comparisons with as … as
Conditions and results in the future
Contractions / Information questions
Could and should
Count and non-count nouns / there is and
there are
Count and non-count nouns: indefinite
quantities and amounts—some, any, a lot
of, many, and much
Direct object placement with phrasal verbs
Expressions with prepositions
Factual and unreal conditional sentences
Frequency adverbs
Gerunds after prepositions
Gerunds and infinitives after certain verbs
Had better
Have / has: affirmative statements
How many and Are there any
How much and Is there any
Negative yes / no questions and Why don’t
…?
Non-count nouns
Object pronouns: as direct objects and in
prepositional phrases
Past participles
Possessive adjectives and nouns
Possessive nouns and Adjectives
Possessive pronouns
Prepositions of place
Prepositions of time and place: On, in, at
Proper nouns and common nouns
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Questions with How often
Requests with Could or Can
Should for advice
Singular and plural nouns
Someone and anyone
Subject pronoun it
Superlative adjectives
The future with will
The imperative
The infinitive of purpose
The passive voice: statements and
questions
The past continuous
The past tense of be
The present continuous and the simple
present tense
The present continuous: affirmative and
negative statements
The present continuous: continuing
activities and future plans
The present continuous: for actions in
progress and the future
The present continuous: information
questions
The present continuous: yes / no questions
The present participle: spelling rules
The present perfect: additional uses—for
and since
The present perfect: yet, already, ever, and
before
The simple past tense
The simple past tense: questions
– The simple past tense: regular and
irregular verbs
– The simple present tense and the present
continuous
– The simple present tense: affirmative
statements
– The simple present tense: habitual
activities
– The simple present tense: information
questions
– The simple present tense: spelling rules for
the third-person singular
– The simple present tense: statements and
yes / no questions
– The verb : Yes / no questions
– The verb be: Questions with When, What
time, and Where / Contractions
– There is and There are
– This, that, these, those
– Time expressions
– Too + adjective
– Too and enough
– Use of adjectives for physical description
– Used to
– Very and so
– Would like
– Would rather
– Yes / no questions / Information questions
PARA BACHILLERATO Y MAESTRÍA, ADEMÁS DE LO ANTERIOR:
LENGUAJE
– Accept responsibility for a mistake
– Ask about and describe holiday traditions
– Ask and explain where a place is located
– Ask for and give advice about acceptable
conversation topics
– Ask for and give advice about customs
– Ask for and recommend a service provider
– Ask how someone prefers to be addressed
– Comment on another’s point of view
– Compare important inventions
– Compare two people’s tastes in fashion
– Complain about a problem
– Convey a message for a third person
– Debate a plan for economic development
– Debate pros and cons
– Describe a natural setting
– Describe a new invention
– Describe dental problems and medical
symptoms
– Describe holidays, celebrations, and
wedding traditions
– Describe natural disasters
– Describe personality types
– Describe quality of service
– Describe rules of etiquette
– Describe your reading habits
– Describe your relationship with a family
member
– Describe yourself
– Discuss cultural changes
– Discuss plans for an emergency
– Discuss skills, abilities, and qualifications
– Discuss whether to purchase a product
– Evaluate types of reading materials
– Explain a change in life and work choices
– Explain an article you read
– Explain preferences in medical treatments
– Explain where you learned something
– Explain your financial goals
– Express agreement or disagree politely
– Express an opinion on animal treatment
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Express regrets about life decisions
Get to know someone
Give and accept a compliment
Greet someone you haven’t seen for a
while
Make an appointment
Make small talk with a stranger
Offer an excuse
Plan a social event
Reassure someone
Recommend a book
Recommend a place for its beauty
Report what you heard on the news
Request express service
Respond to good and bad news
Show concern and empathy
State your opinion
Suggest solutions to global problems
Talk about medications
Warn about risks or dangers
VOCABULARIO
– Adjectives to describe services
– Business and non- business services
– Charity and Investment
– Controversial issues
– Dangerous animals and insects
– Dental emergencies
– Describing character traits
– Describing creative personalities
– Describing fashion and style
– Describing low prices and high prices
– Describing parent and teen behavior
– Describing pets
– Describing spending habits
– Elements of music
– Emergency preparations and supplies
– Examples of bad behavior
– Expressing buyer’s remorse
– Fields for work or study
– Geographical features
– Mechanical inventions in history
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Medical procedures
Medications
News sources
Personality types
Political and social beliefs
Political terms and types of governments
Positive and negative descriptions
Reasons for changing your mind
Severe weather events and other disasters
Shopping expressions
Skills and abilities
Social events
Some ways to enjoy Reading
Steps for planning a social event
Symptoms
Terminology for discussing disasters
Terms for describing manners, etiquette,
and culture
Types of books
Types of holidays
Types of treatments and practitioners
Ways animals are used or treated
Ways to commemorate a holiday
Ways to describe innovative products
Ways to describe possible risks
Ways to describe reading material
Ways to describe the natural world
Ways to disagree politely
Ways to express certainty
Ways to express fear and fearlessness
Ways to perform community service
Ways to persuade
Ways to say “I don’t know.”
Ways to soften an objection
Wedding terminology
GRAMÁTICA
– Adjective clauses with object relative
pronouns
– Adjective clauses with subject relative
pronouns
– Causatives get, have, and make
– Conditional sentences: review
– Future in the past: was / were going to and
would
– Future plans and finished future actions
– Gerunds and infinitives: changes in
meaning
– Indirect speech with modals
– Indirect speech: imperatives
– Indirect speech: say and tell; tense
changes
– Infinitives with too + adjective
– May, might, must, and be able to:
possibility, conclusions, ability
– Non-count nouns for abstract ideas
– Noun clauses
– Noun clauses as direct objects
– Noun clauses: embedded questions
– Order of modifiers
– Paired Conjunctions
– Passive forms of gerunds and Infinitives
– Perfect modals in the passive voice for
speculating about the past
– Perfect modals: meaning and form
– Possessives with gerunds
– Prepositions of place to describe locations
– Quantifiers
– Repeated comparatives and double
Comparatives
– Tag questions: form and social use
– The passive causative
– The passive voice with Modals
– The past perfect: form and use
– The past unreal conditional: inverted form
– The present perfect and the present
perfect continuous: finished and unfinished
actions
– The unreal conditional
– Verbs followed by objects and infinitives
PARA DOCTORADO, ADEMÁS DE LO ANTERIOR: LENGUAJE
–
Ask a rhetorical question to grab someone’s attention
–
Ask Are you sure . . . ? to confirm information
–
Ask Why not? to defend a position
–
Begin a response with True, but to present an alternate view
–
Begin a sentence with Well to allow time to think
–
Begin a statement with You’d think to indicate dissatisfaction with a current situation
–
Preface a statement with I guess to soften an opinion
–
Provide an example or clarifying statement to support a point of view
–
Respond with Of course and I’d be happy to to indicate willingness to help
–
Respond with That’s great to convey enthusiasm or encouragement
–
Say Really? to convey surprise
–
Say Really? to introduce a contrasting statement
–
Say So? to encourage someone to continue a funny story
–
Soften a suggestion with Maybe
–
Use Can you believe . . . ? to indicate shock or disapproval
–
Use Do you think so? to acknowledge an opinion you may not agree with Use Did you
hear the one about . . . ? to signal that a joke will follow
–
Use even if to challenge an argument
–
Use expressions like I know what you mean to encourage the listener to say more
–
Use expressions such as I feel terrible to convey regret
–
Use expressions such as I give up and I’ve had it to get a listener’s attention
–
Use expressions such as I wonder if you could and Do you think you could . . . ? to soften
a request for a favor
–
Use expressions such as I’m like that myself and I’m just the opposite to establish
common ground
–
Use expressions such as It’s like opening a can of worms and It’s a slippery slope to warn
about consequences
–
Use expressions such as That’s impossible to invite someone to reconsider a belief
–
Use expressions such as What a riot and That’s hilarious to praise a joke
–
Use I hate to tell you this, but to soften bad news
–
Use I mean to restate or support an opinion
–
Use If you ask me to call attention to your own opinion
–
Use It just goes to show you to make a point
–
Use It says here to share information from an article
–
Use That’s not necessary to decline help politely
–
Use That’s true to validate an opposing opinion
–
Use word stress to convey meaning
–
Use You know to ease into a conversation
VOCABULARIO
–
Asking for a favor
–
Comparing oneself with others
–
Discussing global issues
–
Discussing intelligence
–
Discussing statistics and trends
–
Distinguishing meaning
–
Dreams and goals
–
Economic terms
–
Encouragement and discouragement
–
Expressing a fear of consequences
–
Expressing admiration and compassion
–
Expressing and controlling anger
–
Expressing frustration and empathy
–
Expressions with mind
–
Innovative technologies
–
Life choices and plans
–
Practical jokes
–
Problematic attitudes and behaviors
–
Qualifications
–
Reacting to world issues and news
–
Sequence words
–
Story-telling expressions
–
Taking and avoiding responsibility
–
Types of verbal humor
–
Using collocations with have for job
–
Using expressions with have and be to describe talents
–
Using participial adjectives
–
Using participial adjectives as noun modifiers
–
Using parts of speech
–
Ways to express disbelief
Ways to respond to a joke
–
GRAMÁTICA
–
Adjective clauses with whose, where, and when
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
–
Clauses with No matter
Conditional sentences with mixed time frames
Describing the relationship of past events and actions to each other
Indefiniteness and definiteness: article usage
Indirect speech: changes to preserve meaning
Non-count nouns made countable
Relative pronoun as the object of a preposition
Reparability of transitive phrasal verbs
Subordinating conjunctions and transitions
The passive voice in unreal conditional sentences
The passive voice: the future, the future as seen from the past, and the future perfect
The present perfect and the present perfect continuous for unfinished or continuing actions
The present perfect for past events related to the present
The subjunctive