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Licence 1 Week 2 WEEK 2 LISTENING PRACTICE Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club ....................... as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out ....................... concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change ....................... - a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK ....................... would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club ....................... as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out ....................... concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change ....................... - a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK ....................... would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out ....................... concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change ....................... - a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK ....................... would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change ....................... - a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK ....................... would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK ....................... would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year .......................: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually ....................... good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are ....................... seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the ....................... piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is ....................... I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the ....................... artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ....................... the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a ....................... problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official ....................... and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is ....................... late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury ....................... nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury PRIZE nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for ....................... of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury PRIZE nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for MUCH of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-....................... concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury PRIZE nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for MUCH of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-RAISING concert sold ....................... in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury PRIZE nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for MUCH of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-RAISING concert sold OUT in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ....................... stays in the spotlight. Fill in the blanks Climate change will top the bill at London’s KOKO club TONIGHT as celebrities, politicians and VIPs join screaming fans to see Radiohead's Tom Yorke and Johnny Greenwood play a sell-out BENEFIT concert in aid of the Big Ask... The BIg Ask is a Friend’s of the Earth campaign that calls for a new climate change LAW- a move which a new survey shows three quarters of the UK POPULATION would support. Tom Yorke is already a Friends of the Earth ambassador and launched the Big Ask campaign a year AGO: «What drew me into this campaign, and Friends of the Earth, is Friends of the Earth are actually QUITE good at getting laws passed and they are TAKEN seriously by Parliament - which is good. The Big Ask, a 3% cut thing in carbon emissions, to me is like ...yes, that was the FIRST piece of sense that I'd read about the whole thing for ages. There is no longer this sense of powerlessness which is WHAT I had for so long about it all. » The Big Ask is already supported by more than 60,000 people across Britain and has been backed by more than half of all MPs. « In common with Tom Yorke and the OTHER artists helping us with The Big Ask live, the majority of people ACROSS the country want the government to take the lead on climate change. They can see it is a HUGE problem and they can see the need for official LAWS and policies to help solve it. And that's the message coming from the concert this evening - is that the government needs to take action before it is TOO late. » Tom will be joined tonight by TV presenter Simon Amstell along with music from Mercury PRIZE nominee Kate Rusby and Gruff Rhys lead singer of Super Furry Animals. « It's a very good idea to help with the Big Ask which I don't think is even a big ask ; it is a very small ask of the government. » So far, climate change has topped the political agenda for MUCH of 2006 ; yet carbon dioxide emissions in the UK continue to rise. Tickets for tonight's awareness-RAISING concert sold OUT in just 2 minutes and campaigners will be hoping that tonight's event will ensure the ISSUE stays in the spotlight. COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership 1. Climate change is.......... a group playing at KOKO tonight. a new British group sponsored by Radiohead. a very worrying problem for California. an issue Friends of the Earth is focussing on. 2. In the KOKO audience there will be......... (which one was NOT mentioned) politicians. celebrities. the Minister for the Environment. some very important people. 3. The proceeds from the concert will be given to..... Friends of the Earth. a group of charities. Climate Change. third world countries. 4. More than ......... in the UK are in favour of a new law to help deal with this issue. 75% of people 34% of people 340,000 people 3,000,000 people 5.Tom Yorke started campaigning with Friends of the Earth because he ....... thinks it is an effective organisation. has friends who work there. is paid to campaign for it. disapproves of Greenpeace. 6. The Big Ask was started.... six months ago. nine months ago. three months ago. a year ago. 7. The Big Ask is a campaign for donations. in favour of the Kyoto protocol. for a new law. against polluters. 8. It aims to get carbon emissions reduced by... 3%. 3.5%. 3.3%. 3.4%. 9. More than........ of M.P.s are in favour of it. 40% 50% 60% 70% 10. According to the Friends of the Earth spokesman the British public want .... a government decree. a referendum. government action. a general election. 11. The question of climate change has ...... been referred to by politicians in 2006. frequently rarely occasionally constantly 12. With this concert Friends of the Earth hopes to ..... raise awareness of the issue. raise funds to fight the problem. raise their public profile. increase their membership PRONUNCIATION Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Règle de lion -LY marque de l’adverbe: suffixe faible, ne peut être accentué Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing RAPPEL: Règle de Lion Les mots de type ION sont accentués sur la syllabe qui précède le suffixe i e V ( C) u pe'culiar, spon'taneous, e'ventual -ia, -iac, -iad, -ial,-ian, -iar, -iate, -iel, -ient, -ier, -ies, -iet, -io, -iol, -ion, iom, -iot, -ious, -ium,-ius, -ea, -eal, -ean, -ear, -eate, -eon, -eous, ual, -uar, -ate, -uene, -uine, -uit, -uous. L'accentuation reste identique si l'on ajoute un deuxième suffixe faible --> pe'culiarly, e'ventually, spon'taneously Exception de type ,Euro'pean: -ea, -eal, -ean, bien qu'ayant la structure ION, ont un accent sur -e- dans de nombreux mots. Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Règle de Lion -LY marque de l’adverbe: suffixe faible, ne peut être accentué Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Règle 'origin VCV(C)# accent sur l'anté-pénultième syllabe ( schéma 0oo) <-- cas le plus fréquent Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. SEriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Règle de Lion -LY marque de l’adverbe: suffixe faible, ne peut être accentué Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Règle 'origin VCV(C)# accent sur l'anté-pénultième syllabe ( schéma 0oo) <-- cas le plus fréquent Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Political: -ic est un suffixe fort, accent sur la syllabe qui précède. Agenda: Règle me'mento les mots terminés par VC2V(C)# sont accentués sur l'avant-dernière syllabe ( schéma 0o) Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Celebrities b. ceLEBrities c. celebRIties d. celebriTIES Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Politicians b. poLIticians c. poliTIcians d. politiCIANS Règle Regu'larity, i'dentify -ity et ify imposent un schéma 0oo Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Population b. poPUlation c. popuLAtion d. populaTION Règle de Lion Which syllable is stressed in the following word ? a. Seriously b. seRIously c. seriOUSly d. seriousLY Règle de Lion -LY marque de l’adverbe: suffixe faible, ne peut être accentué Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. BEnefit CONcert b. beNEfit conCERT c. beneFIT CONcert d. beneFIT conCERT Règle 'origin VCV(C)# accent sur l'anté-pénultième syllabe ( schéma 0oo) <-- cas le plus fréquent Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. POlitical Agenda b. poLItical aGENda c. poliTIcal agenDA d. politiCAL agenDA Which syllables are stressed in the following expression ? a. Awareness-RAISing b. aWAREness-raisING c. awareNESS-raisING d. aWAREness-RAISing Po’litical: -ic est un suffixe fort, accent sur la syllabe qui précède. A’genda: Règle me'mento -ing et –ness sont des suffixes faibles ( pas d’influence sur l’accentuation) Grammaire The Passive 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from reentering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released 1 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 2 This picture (admire). (present) A is admired B admired C was admired 3 A number of priceless works of art (destroy) in the earthquake. (past ) A destroyed B were destroyed C was destroyed B =This is what most English speakers would say, although formal usage would use "was". 11 The bridge (build) next year. (future) A will be built B will build C will being built 4 The box (not open) for the last hundred years. (present perfect) A is not opened B has not been opened C have not been opened 14 Because my visa had expired, I (prevent ) from re-entering the country. (past) A was being prevented B was prevented C were prevented 5 The castle (use) as a prison. (past) A is used B used C was used 15 The whole programme (give over) to a report on the war. (past ) A is given over B was given over C was gave over 6 This play (forget) in a few years’ time. (future) A will forget B will be forgotten C will forgetting 7 English (speak) all over the world. (present) A speaks B is spoke C is spoken 8 It is incredible to think that these clothes (wear) by Queen Victoria. (past) A worn B was worn C were worn 9 . The matter (discuss) tomorrow. (future) A will be discussed B will discuss C will have been discussed 10 . Your question (answer) ? (present perfect) A has answered? B is being answered? C has been answered? 12 My brother ( never beat ) at tennis. (present perfect) A have never been beaten B has never beaten C has never been beaten 13 His leg (hurt) in an accident. (past) A was hurt B is hurt C willl be hurt 16 A new drug (develop) to combat cancer in small children. (present perfect) A has been developed B have been developed C developed 17 The animals (not feed) last night. (past) A were not fed B were not feed C was not fed 18 Some coffee (spill) on the carpet. (past) A were spilled B was spilled C spilled 19 A number of political prisoners (release). (past) A were released B was released C released Comparative & superlative adjectives and adverbs Comparative & superlative adjectives and adverbs • Comparative Form and Superlative Form (-er/est) one-syllable adjectives (clean, new, cheap) two-syllable adjectives ending in -y or -er (easy, happy, pretty, dirty, clever) • Exceptions in spelling when adding -er / -est silent ‘e’ is dropped Example: late-later-latest final ‘y’ after a consonant becomes i Example: easyeasier-easiest final consonant after short, stressed vowel is doubled Example: hot-hotter-hottest _________________________________________ • Comparative Form and Superlative Form (more/most) adjectives of three or more syllables (and twosyllable adjectives not ending in -y/-er) Comparative Form and Superlative Form (irregular comparisons) 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst 1 For the 10.20 train …. we can leave home is 10 o’clock. A the latest B the later C the more late 2 Of all the students, Henry works …. A harder B most hard C the hardest. 3 Eight is late, could you possibly arrive here any . A earlier B more early C earliest 4 If we don’t drive ……. we’ll never arrive on time. A faster B more fast C fastest 5 She sings ..................... than any other opera singer. A more beautifully B beautifully C beautiful 6 Andy’s the most intelligent, but Sheila works ...................... A better. B the best. C good. 7 I could sleep .................... if I wasn’t so worried about my exams. A more peacefully B peacefully C the most peacefully 8 Andy speaks French …of all the students in his class. A the most fluently B more fluently C fluently 9 You can order the ................... steak on the menu, if you like. A expensive B most expensive C more expensive 10 Henry’s party was ....................... than watching the grass grow. A most boring B boring C more boring 11 This hotel room is ............... than a luxury camping site. A cheaper B more cheaper C most cheap 12 She lives three miles .................... away from the office than I do. A further B furthest C more further 13 This film is ................... than the reviews said. It is the worst I have seen. A bad B worse C worst READING COMPREHENSION UN says eat less meat to curb global warming : Climate expert urges radical shift in diet Industry unfairly targeted – farmers September 7, 2008 by Juliette Jowit, environment editor 1. According to the world’s leading expert on global warming, people should give up meat for one day a week if they want do something that would help tackle climate change. Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said that people should then go on to reduce their meat consumption even further. So far this is the most controversial advice the panel has given on how individuals can help tackle global warming. 2. Dr Pachauri said diet change was important because of the huge greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental problems – including habitat destruction – associated with rearing cattle and other animals. It was relatively easy to change eating habits compared to changing means of transport, he said. 3. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that meat production causes nearly 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions. These gases are generated during the production of animal feeds, for example, while ruminants, particularly cows, emit methane, which is 23 times more effective as a global warming agent than carbon dioxide. The agency has also warned that meat consumption will probably double by the middle of the century. 4. “Reducing meat consumption is the most attractive option because it can be done almost immediately and it will bring about reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in a short period of time,” said Pachauri. “Give up meat for one day [a week] initially, and then continue to decrease it,” said the Indian economist, who is a vegetarian. However, he also said that other changes in lifestyle would help to tackle climate change. “That’s what I want to emphasize: we really have to reduce consumption in every sector of the economy.” 5. Pachauri can expect some strong responses from the food industry to his advice, though he has received unexpected support from restaurateur John Torode, who is about to publish a new book, John Torode’s Beef. “I have a little bit of meat and enjoy it,” said Torode. “Too much meat for any person is gluttony. But there’s a more important question here: where [the meat] comes from. If we all bought British food and stopped buying imported food we’d save a huge amount of carbon emissions.” 6. Pachauri will be speaking at an event organized by animal welfare group Compassion in World Farming, which has calculated that if the average UK home reduced meat consumption by 50%, that would reduce emissions more than if people cut car use by 50%. The group wants the government to lead campaigns to reduce meat consumption by 60% by 2020. Campaigners have also pointed out the health benefits of eating less meat. The average person in the UK eats 50g of protein from meat a day, equivalent to a chicken breast and a lamb chop – a relatively low level for rich nations but 25-50% more than World Health Organization guidelines. 7. Professor Robert Watson, a government scientific adviser, said the government could help educate people about the benefits of eating less meat, but it should not ‘regulate’. “Eating less meat would help, there’s no question about that, but there are other things,” Watson said. 8. However, Chris Lamb, head of marketing for the pig industry group BPEX, said the meat industry had been unfairly targeted and was working hard to find out which activities had the biggest environmental impact and reduce those. Some ideas were contradictory, he said – for example, one solution to emissions from livestock was to keep them indoors, but this would damage animal welfare. “Climate change is a very young science and our view is there are a lot of simplistic solutions being proposed,” he said. 9. Last year a report into the environmental impact of meat eating claimed livestock generated eight per cent of UK emissions – but eating some meat was good for the planet because some habitats benefited from grazing. It also said vegetarian diets that included lots of milk, butter and cheese would probably not reduce emissions much because dairy cows produce the potent greenhouse gas methane, which is released through flatulence. UN says eat less meat to curb global warming : Climate expert urges radical shift in diet Industry unfairly targeted – farmers September 7, 2008 by Juliette Jowit, environment editor 1. According to the world’s leading expert on global warming, people should give up meat for one day a week if they want do something that would help tackle climate change. Dr Rajendra Pachauri, chair of the United Nations Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change, said that people should then go on to reduce their meat consumption even further. So far this is the most controversial advice the panel has given on how individuals can help tackle global warming. 2. Dr Pachauri said diet change was important because of the huge greenhouse gas emissions and other environmental problems – including habitat destruction – associated with rearing cattle and other animals. It was relatively easy to change eating habits compared to changing means of transport, he said. 3. The UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization estimates that meat production causes nearly 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions. These gases are generated during the production of animal feeds, for example, while ruminants, particularly cows, emit methane, which is 23 times more effective as a global warming agent than carbon dioxide. The agency has also warned that meat consumption will probably double by the middle of the century. 4. “Reducing meat consumption is the most attractive option because it can be done almost immediately and it will bring about reductions in greenhouse gas emissions in a short period of time,” said Pachauri. “Give up meat for one day [a week] initially, and then continue to decrease it,” said the Indian economist, who is a vegetarian. However, he also said that other changes in lifestyle would help to tackle climate change. “That’s what I want to emphasize: we really have to reduce consumption in every sector of the economy.” 5. Pachauri can expect some strong responses from the food industry to his advice, though he has received unexpected support from restaurateur John Torode, who is about to publish a new book, John Torode’s Beef. “I have a little bit of meat and enjoy it,” said Torode. “Too much meat for any person is gluttony. But there’s a more important question here: where [the meat] comes from. If we all bought British food and stopped buying imported food we’d save a huge amount of carbon emissions.” 6. Pachauri will be speaking at an event organized by animal welfare group Compassion in World Farming, which has calculated that if the average UK home reduced meat consumption by 50%, that would reduce emissions more than if people cut car use by 50%. The group wants the government to lead campaigns to reduce meat consumption by 60% by 2020. Campaigners have also pointed out the health benefits of eating less meat. The average person in the UK eats 50g of protein from meat a day, equivalent to a chicken breast and a lamb chop – a relatively low level for rich nations but 25-50% more than World Health Organization guidelines. 7. Professor Robert Watson, a government scientific adviser, said the government could help educate people about the benefits of eating less meat, but it should not ‘regulate’. “Eating less meat would help, there’s no question about that, but there are other things,” Watson said. 8. However, Chris Lamb, head of marketing for the pig industry group BPEX, said the meat industry had been unfairly targeted and was working hard to find out which activities had the biggest environmental impact and reduce those. Some ideas were contradictory, he said – for example, one solution to emissions from livestock was to keep them indoors, but this would damage animal welfare. “Climate change is a very young science and our view is there are a lot of simplistic solutions being proposed,” he said. 9. Last year a report into the environmental impact of meat eating claimed livestock generated eight per cent of UK emissions – but eating some meat was good for the planet because some habitats benefited from grazing. It also said vegetarian diets that included lots of milk, butter and cheese would probably not reduce emissions much because dairy cows produce the potent greenhouse gas methane, which is released through flatulence. VOCABULARY 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text . consumption - ruminant - gluttony livestock - flatulence - controversial simplistic - contradictory - graze - habitat 1. An animal’s .................................... is the place it normally lives. 2. .................................... is when a person or animal has too much gas in their tomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are .................................... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. .................................... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is .................................... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text . consumption - ruminant - gluttony livestock - flatulence - controversial simplistic - contradictory - graze - 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. .................................... is when a person or animal has too much gas in their tomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are .................................... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. .................................... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is .................................... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text . consumption - ruminant - gluttony livestock - flatulence - controversial simplistic - contradictory - graze - 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are .................................... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. .................................... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is .................................... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text . consumption - ruminant - gluttony livestock - controversial - simplistic - contradictory - graze - 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. .................................... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is .................................... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text . consumption - ruminant - gluttony controversial - simplistic - graze - livestock - 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is .................................... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text - ruminant - gluttony - simplistic - graze - livestock 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. =qui porte à controverse 6. A .................................... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text - ruminant - gluttony - graze - livestock 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .....simplistic ....... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals .................................... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text - ruminant - gluttony - livestock 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .....simplistic ....... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals ...... graze ........... they eat grass growing in a field. = paître, brouter 8. .................................... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text - ruminant - gluttony 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .....simplistic ....... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals ...... graze ........... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .......... livestock......... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. =bétail 9. A .................................... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text - gluttony 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .....simplistic ....... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals ...... graze ........... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .......... livestock......... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A ......... ruminant ......... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .................................... is the bad habit of eating more than you need 1. Key words : Fill the gaps in the sentences using key words from the text 1. An animal’s ........ habitat....... is the place it normally lives. 2. ....... flatulence ........ is when a person or animal has too much gas in their stomach or intestines. 3. If two or more ideas are ........ contradictory...... they disagree with each other and cannot both or all be true. 4. ...... consumption...... is the process of eating or drinking something. 5. If an idea is ..... controversial ... it causes strong disagreement or disapproval. 6. A .....simplistic ....... idea treats something in a way that makes it seem simpler than it really is. 7. When animals ...... graze ........... they eat grass growing in a field. 8. .......... livestock......... is the collective word for animals such as cows, sheep and pigs that are kept on farms. 9. A ......... ruminant ......... is an animal such as a cow or sheep that brings food back from its stomach into its mouth to chew it a second time. 10. .....gluttony .......... is the bad habit of eating more than you need = gourmandise COMPREHENSION QUESTIONS 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 1.According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization how much of global greenhouse gas emissions are produced by meat production? • 2.How much meat protein does the average person in the UK eat each day? • 3. By what percentage is UK meat consumption above WHO guidelines? • 4. Which is the more effective global warming agent – methane or carbon dioxide? • 5. By what percentage does Compassion in World Farming want to reduce meat consumption by 2020? • 6 What percentage of UK emissions is generated by livestock? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 1.According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization how much of global greenhouse gas emissions are produced by meat production? • 2.How much meat protein does the average person in the UK eat each day? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 1.According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization how much of global greenhouse gas emissions are produced by meat production? • P3 meat production causes nearly 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions • 2.How much meat protein does the average person in the UK eat each day? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 1.According to the UN’s Food and Agriculture Organization how much of global greenhouse gas emissions are produced by meat production? • P3 meat production causes nearly 20% of global greenhouse gas emissions • 2.How much meat protein does the average person in the UK eat each day? • P6 The average person in the UK eats 50g of protein from meat a day 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 3. By what percentage is UK meat consumption above WHO guidelines? • 4. Which is the more effective global warming agent – methane or carbon dioxide? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 3. By what percentage is UK meat consumption above WHO guidelines? • P6 a relatively low level for rich nations but 25-50% more than World Health Organization guidelines. • 4. Which is the more effective global warming agent – methane or carbon dioxide? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 3. By what percentage is UK meat consumption above WHO guidelines? • P6 a relatively low level for rich nations but 25-50% more than World Health Organization guidelines. • 4. Which is the more effective global warming agent – methane or carbon dioxide? • P 3 emit methane, which is 23 times more effective as a global warming agent than carbon dioxide 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 5. By what percentage does Compassion in World Farming want to reduce meat consumption by 2020? • 6 What percentage of UK emissions is generated by livestock? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 5. By what percentage does Compassion in World Farming want to reduce meat consumption by 2020? p 6 campaigns to reduce meat consumption by 60% by 2020. • 6 What percentage of UK emissions is generated by livestock? 2. Find the information : Look in the text and find the answers to these questions as quickly as possible. • 5. By what percentage does Compassion in World Farming want to reduce meat consumption by 2020? p 6 campaigns to reduce meat consumption by 60% by 2020. • 6 What percentage of UK emissions is generated by livestock? p9 livestock generated eight per cent of UK emissions RIGHT/WRONG 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • if the average UK home reduced meat consumption by 50%, that would reduce emissions more than if people cut car use by 50%. • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 cows produce the potent greenhouse gas methane, which is released through flatulence. • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 The agency has also warned that meat consumption will probably double by the middle of the century. • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. FALSE P6 but 25-50% more than World Health Organization guidelines • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. FALSE P6 • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. FALSE P6 • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. TRUE P6 • Campaigners have also pointed out the health benefits of eating less meat. • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. FALSE P6 • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. TRUE P6 • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. 3. Comprehension check : Are these statements True (T) or False (F) according to the text? • 1. If people reduced car use by 50%, it would reduce greenhouse gas emissions more than if they reduced meat consumption by 50%. FALSE P6 • 2. Dairy cows release methane through flatulence. TRUE P9 • 3. Meat consumption is expected to double by the middle of the 21st century. TRUE P3 • 4. The average person in the UK eats less meat than the WHO guidelines recommend. FALSE P6 • 5. Eating less meat is good for your health. TRUE P6 • 6. If everyone became vegetarian, greenhouse gas emissions would decrease dramatically. FALSE P 9 • It also said vegetarian diets that included lots of milk, butter and cheese would probably not reduce emissions much SYNONYMS 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. (para 1) • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. (para 1) TACKLE • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT signaler, faire remarquer, indiquer • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT signaler, faire remarquer, indiquer • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) EQUIVALENT TO • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT signaler, faire remarquer, indiquer • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) EQUIVALENT TO • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) IMPACT • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT signaler, faire remarquer, indiquer • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) EQUIVALENT TO • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) IMPACT • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) POTENT 4. Find the word : Look in the text and find the following words and expressions. • 1. A verb meaning to make an organized and determined attempt to deal with a problem. TACKLE s’atteler, s’attaquer • 2. A noun meaning a group of people who make decisions of judgments. (para 1) PANEL commission, comité, jury • 3. An adjective meaning extremely large. (para 2) HUGE • 4. A phrasal verb meaning to make something happen. (para 4) BRING ABOUT occasionner, entraîner • 5. A phrasal verb meaning to tell someone something. (para 6) POINT OUT signaler, faire remarquer, indiquer • 6. A two-word expression meaning of the same value as something else. (para 6) EQUIVALENT TO • 7. A noun meaning effect. (para 8) IMPACT • 8. An adjective meaning powerful or effective. (para 9) POTENT Puissant, fort MATCHING 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse 2. climate 3. global 4. environmental 5. carbon 6. health 7. animal 8. vegetarian a. welfare b. benefits c. change d. diet e. impact f. dioxide g. warming h. gases 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre 2. climate 3. global 4. environmental 5. carbon 6. health 7. animal 8. vegetarian a. welfare b. benefits c. change d. diet e. impact f. dioxide g. warming h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre 2. climate change 3. global 4. environmental 5. carbon 6. health 7. animal 8. vegetarian a. welfare b. benefits c. d. diet e. impact f. dioxide g. warming h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. welfare 2. climate change b. benefits 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental d. diet 5. carbon e. impact 6. health f. dioxide 7. animal g. 8. vegetarian h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. welfare 2. climate change b. benefits 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental impact d. diet 5. carbon e. 6. health f. dioxide 7. animal g. 8. vegetarian h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. welfare 2. climate change b. benefits 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental impact d. diet 5. carbon dioxide dioxyde de carbone e. 6. health f. 7. animal g. 8. vegetarian h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. welfare 2. climate change b. 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental impact d. diet 5. carbon dioxide dioxyde de carbone e. 6. health benefits bienfaits pour la santé f. Health benefits also means prestations maladie 7. animal g. 8. vegetarian h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. 2. climate change b. 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental impact d. diet 5. carbon dioxide dioxyde de carbone e. 6. health benefits bienfaits pour la santé f. Health benefits also means prestations maladie 7. animal welfare bien-être/ protection des animaux g. 8. vegetarian h. 5. Two-word expressions : Match the words from the left-hand column with the words in the right- hand column to make expressions from the text. 1. greenhouse gases gaz à effet de serre a. 2. climate change b. 3. global warming réchauffement climatique c. 4. environmental impact d. 5. carbon dioxide dioxyde de carbone e. 6. health benefits bienfaits pour la santé f. Health benefits also means prestations maladie 7. animal welfare g. 8. vegetarian diet régime végétarien h. WORD BUILDING 6. Word building : 1 consume 5 solve 2 reduce 6 respond 3 emit 7 propose 4 destroy 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve Consommation 2 reduce 6 respond 3 emit 7 propose 4 destroy 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer 2 reduce Consumption 5 solve Consommation reduction 6 respond 3 emit 7 propose 4 destroy 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond 3 emit emission 7 propose 4 destroy 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond 3 emit emission 7 propose 4 destroy destruction 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond 3 emit emission 7 propose 4 destroy destruction 8 advise solution 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve solution response Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond 3 emit emission 7 propose 4 destroy destruction 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve solution Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond response 3 emit emission 7 propose proposal 4 destroy destruction 8 advise 6. Word building : 1 Consume consommer Consumption 5 solve solution Consommation 2 reduce reduction 6 respond response 3 emit emission 7 propose proposal 4 destroy destruction 8 advise advice HIGH FREQUENCY VOCABULARY 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s a..................... is quite clear – we must r..................... our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to c..................... it out entirely; we just need to c..................... it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a l..................... expert on such matters, eating less would make a h..................... difference. 4. And it would s..................... a h..................... a..................... of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be r..................... easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to c..................... it out entirely; we just need to c..................... it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a l..................... expert on such matters, eating less would make a h..................... difference. 4. And it would s..................... a h..................... a..................... of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be r..................... easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a l..................... expert on such matters, eating less would make a h..................... difference. 4. And it would s..................... a h..................... a..................... of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be r..................... easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would s..................... a h..................... a..................... of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be r..................... easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be r..................... easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. H..................... a..................... say too much meat is bad for our h...................... 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On a..................... people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts e..................... a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which d........................ the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f..................... to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not f…….. to t..................... meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not fAIR to tARGET meat farmers. 11. He c..................... that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not fAIR to tARGET meat farmers. 11. He cLAIMS that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he p..................... out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not fAIR to tARGET meat farmers. 11. He cLAIMS that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he pOINTS out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our m..................... of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not fAIR to tARGET meat farmers. 11. He cLAIMS that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he pOINTS out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our mEANS of transport. 14. Could you give me some a..................... about how to r..................... my carbon footprint, please? 8. High Frequency Vocabulary exercises – N.B. remember to make the necessary spelling changes! 1. Dr Pachauri’s aDVICE is quite clear – we must rEDUCE our meat intake. 2. We don’t have to cUT it out entirely; we just need to cUT it down. 3. According to Dr Pachauri, who is a lEADING expert on such matters, eating less would make a hUGE difference. 4. And it would sAVE a hUGE aMOUNT. of carbon emissions. 5. Meat is so expensive that it should be rELATIVELY easy to give it up once or twice a week. 6. HEALTH aDVISERS say too much meat is bad for our hEALTH. 7. On aVERAGE people in Britain eat too much meat anyway, don’t they. 8. The experts eXPECT a strong response from the meat industry. 9. Most people aren’t aware that cows create methane which dAMAGES the air. 10. According to Chris Lamb, it is not fAIR to tARGET meat farmers. 11. He cLAIMS that the meat industry is fully aware of the dangers. 12. What’s more he pOINTS out that it is looking for ways to reduce its harmful activities. 13. It is relatively easier to change our diet than our mEANS of transport. 14. Could you give me some aDVICE about how to rEDUCE my carbon footprint, please? IRREGULAR VERBS Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak keep eat find deal buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple speak spoke Past participle Infinitive keep eat find deal buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat find deal buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken eat Ate keep find deal buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat Ate Eaten find deal buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt tell buy give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt dealt buy tell give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt dealt buy tell Told give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive speak spoke spoken keep eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt dealt buy tell told told give Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple speak spoke spoken keep kept eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt dealt buy tell told told give Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find deal dealt dealt buy tell told told give Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found deal dealt dealt buy tell told told give Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found found deal dealt dealt buy tell told told give Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found found deal dealt dealt buy bought tell told told give Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found found deal dealt dealt buy bought bought tell told told give Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found found deal dealt dealt buy bought bought tell told told give gave Infinitive Past simple Past participle Infinitive Past simple Past participle speak spoke spoken keep kept kept eat Ate Eaten find found found deal dealt dealt buy bought bought tell told told give gave given