Red Line 1, Coursebook
Manchmal hörst oder liest du ein englisches Wort, das mehrere Bedeutungen im Deutschen hat, z. B. letter = „Buchstabe“ oder „Brief“. Nur wenn du den ganzen Satz hörst oder liest, kannst du erkennen, was das Wort bedeutet. Beispiel: There are 26 letters in the alphabet. My friend sends me a letter every week. Falls eine Bedeutung nicht passt, versuche es mit der anderen Bedeutung. 108 one hundred and e i ght Look at the underlined words in the sentences. What do they mean in German? 1. She is in Year 7. 2. There are twelve months in a year. 3. Let’s play cards. 4. This is a birthday card. 5. All your answers are right! 6. Turn right into River Road. VOCABULARY SKI LLS C 3 Sounds: [ v ] and [ w ] 2 What do you think? a) Sort the phrases and make two lists. I think it’s great! That’s right. Very nice. That’s OK. Yes! That’s a good answer. That’s not very nice! That’s wrong! No, thank you. You’ve got no idea. I don’t think that’s right. No! … That’s awful! 1 Words with two meanings b) Write short dialogues with the phrases. Example: Would you like an apple? – No, thank you. Here’s a bag of sweets for you. Tom, you’re really sweet! That’s great! That’s awful! … … !v? !w? !v? – !w? I lo v e the new v ideo. His bag is v ery expensi v e. Da v id is se v enteen. She li v es abo v e the shop. I don’t w ant to go w ithout you. Emma al w ays w ins the race! Today is really w et and w indy. W hich boy is w orking? W here is my in v itation? W ear your fa v ourite pullo v er. It’s v ery w arm in the library. I’m w aiting for my v isitors. You’re an idiot! You’re cool! A B C ➝ WB 72, 1 – 3 7 Check-in Language Story Wordwise Check-out Nur zu Prüfzwecken – Eigentum des Verlags öbv
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