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Would you like a sweet?

  •  English    25     Public
    Units 1 and 2
  •   Study   Slideshow
  • What is the difference between rob and steal?
    Rob: its object is the place or person that owned the thing stolen; steal takes as object the thing taken from a person.
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  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "happen"
    Go on
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "be informed about"
    keep up with
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "become popular"
    catch on
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "cause something to stop working"
    break down
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "enter a place illegally"
    break into
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "close or stop something from working"
    Turn off
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "have the idea for"
    come up with
  •  5
  • Use a phrasal verb to tell me "cause something to work"
    turn on
  •  5
  • What is the difference between kill and murder?
    If you kill someone, it might be by accident. If you murder someone, you cause the death of a person intentionally.
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  • What is the difference between burglar, robber and thief?
    Burglar: steal in a house, normally when there is no one inside; A robber uses weapons or violance, and a thief doesn't use it.
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  • Report looks like ________ in Spanish but it actually means __________ (Spanish translation)
    "reportaje" / <informe>
  •  5
  • Advise looks like ________ in Spanish but it actually means __________ (Spanish translation)
    "aviso" / <aconsejar>
  •  5
  • Over can mean: ____________________ and ______________________
    "more than" and "finished"
  •  5
  • Still can mean ______________, _____________ and ______________ (word category or meaning, both are valid answers)
    "however" / adverb ; "quiet" / adjective ; "continuing until now" / adverb
  •  10
  • When we combine two actions that happened in the past, what tense do we use to refer to the action that happened first? Which one do we use to refer to the later?
    The one happening first:past perfect; the later action: past simple
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