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Review of yesterday: • Making progress: • How is the present perfect formed? • Regular and irregular verbs** • Using still, yet, and already*** Review: Irregular Verbs How do you form the present perfect for: • • • • • Begin Buy Choose Do Read I have _____ the reading. She has _____ the gift. He has ____ to sleep late. They have ___ the work. Have you ___ the book? Still • We use 'still' to talk about something, a situation or an action, that's continuing, often for a longer time than expected. It hasn't changed or stopped. 'Still' usually goes in the middle of the sentence, before the verb. • Examples: I still haven’t found what I’m looking for. Are you still working in the hospital? Yet • We use 'yet' mostly in questions and negative sentences. Using 'yet' shows that we're expecting something to happen or have happened. In spoken English 'yet' almost always comes at the end of the sentence or question and is commonly used with the present perfect. • Examples: I haven’t seen him yet. Have you finished it yet? Already • We use 'already' to talk about things that have happened, often earlier than expected. It usually goes in the middle or the end of sentence, just before or after the verb and is also commonly used with the present perfect. • Examples: I’ve eaten already. She’s already done it. Putting it all together • Listen to a news clip from CBS about a current problem with the New York train system. • Answer the questions on your worksheet. Today We Will • Practice listening and pronunciation tasks • Identify final consonant clusters with –ed/d endings • Learn to summarize important information Speaking • You will have 3 minutes to talk to your partner about what have you experienced in New York so far. Use the present perfect tense. Example: I have been to the Empire State Building. I haven’t been to the Statue of Liberty. • Your partner will listen and give you feedback using a check list. • You will then switch roles. !!Challenge: use still, yet, and already in your speech!!! Review Homework Consonant Cluster (-ed and -d) • Ask /k/ • Asked • Help /p/ • Helped • Perform • Turn /m/ /n/ /t/ /t/ • Performed /d/ • Turned /d/ Pronunciation Practice • Textbook: page 7 Exercise 4 and Exercise 5 • Answers: A: /n/, /nd/ A: /b/, /bd/ B: /k/, /kt/ B: /k/, /kt/ A: /č/, /čt/ • Now try to predict the pronunciation of the words from the puzzle. Learning to Summarize • To summarize: to give main points in a logical, clear way • A summary: is shorter than the original is in the speaker’s own words gives the most important details What is the main point of the picture below? Practicing to Summarize • Workbook page 6, Practice 10 • Work on letter A and letter B with a partner Wrap up • Homework: Workbook page 6, Practice 10 letter C. • Tomorrow: Writing a letter of inquiry using summary and main idea