Please enable JavaScript.
Coggle requires JavaScript to display documents.
Overall review - Coggle Diagram
Overall review
-
FCE strategies
- Read the example and title before you read through the task
- If you are unsure, try to work out which answers are wrong. See what is left, if you are still unsure, make a guess
- Look carefully at the words that come before and after each of the gaps.
Steps
-
-
Concentrate on the words before and after the gap, ask yourself, what do I need, a verb, noun, adjective?
Look at the four options. If you think one option is correct, check if it is the correct type of word and that it fits any possible collocation , expression, etc
-
If you are unsure, try to work out which answers are wrong. See what is left, and if you are still unsure, make a guess!
Second
Conditional
-
A second conditional sentence consists of two clauses, an "if" clause and a main clause.
-
Giving advice
After ‘should’ we use an infinitive
without ‘to’.
- You should do more travelling
- You shouldn’t drink so much beer.
Unlike ‘should’, we always use ‘to’ in ‘ought to’ for giving
advice
- You ought to do more travelling.
-You ought not to drink so much beer.
-
1st Conditional
First Conditional
The first conditional is a structure used for talking about possibilities in the present or in the future.
First Conditional
The first conditional is a structure used for talking about possibilities in the present or in the future.
-
Passive Voice
If we want to show the person or thing doing
the action, we use by:
- She was attacked by a dangerous dog.
- The money was stolen by her husband.
Articles and nouns.
An article is a word that identifies (or modifies) a noun. A noun may be a person, place, thing, or idea. Each noun is also either a count noun (countable) or a mass noun (uncountable).
Vocabulary page 56
- Steering wheel: a wheel in a vehicle that the driver turns in order to make the vehicle go in a particular direction.
- Departure lounge: the area in an airport where passengers wait before getting onto an aircraft.
- Commuters: someone who regularly travels between work and home.
- Runaway: having escaped or run away from somewhere.
- Handlebars: the bar along the front of a bicycle or motorcycle that a rider holds in order to balance and turn.
- Cockpit: the small closed space where the pilot sits in an aircraft, or where the driver sits in a racing car.
- Motorist: a person who drives a car.
- Backpackers: a person who travels with a backpack, usually not spending very much money and staying in places that are not expensive.
- Rush hour: the busy part of the day when towns and cities are crowded.