- •Introduction
- •1.1 Rooms and furniture
- •1.2 Where things are Practice
- •1.4 Services
- •1.5 Asking about services Practice
- •1.6 Amenities
- •1.7 Talking about amenities Free practice
- •1.8 Along the coast
- •2.1 Will & going to
- •2.2 Making decisions Practice
- •2.3 Changing your mind Practice
- •2.4 Intentions and plans
- •2.5 Making money
- •2.6 Arrangements
- •2.7 Your own plans Free practice
- •In groups, talk about your own arrangements and plans for the future. Talk about:
- •2.8 A celebration Listening
- •3.1 Jobs Presentation and practice
- •3.2 What's your job? Practice
- •3.3 Places and people Practice
- •3.4 Your own job Free practice
- •3.5 Daily routine
- •3.6 Precise frequency
- •3.7 All in a day's work: the passive
- •3.8 A life in the day of... Reading
- •3.9 Talking to janet and warren Free practice
- •4.1 Prepositions of direction Presentation
- •4.2 Where do they go? Practice
- •4.3 How do you do it? Practice
- •4.4 Describe and draw Practice
- •4.5 Giving directions Presentation
- •4.6 Finding your way Practice
- •4.7 Your own area Free practice
- •4.8 Making puppets Listening
- •5.1 Relating past events
- •5.2 Before, after & while Practice
- •5.3 First experiences Practice
- •5.4 Life story Writing
- •5.5 Past times
- •5.6 Past events: the passive
- •5.7 Test your memory: quiz Free practice
- •5.8 Famous lives
- •6.1 Uses of the present continuous Presentation
- •6.2 What are they doing? Practice
- •6.3 See for yourself
- •6.4 Describe and choose Practice
- •6.5 Long-term changes Free practice
- •6.6 Current activities Practice
- •6.7 Reading game:
- •6.8 What’s going on?
- •6.9 A telephone call
- •Interviewing famous people
- •7.1 Asking people to do things
- •7.2 Getting people to stop Presentation and practice
- •7.3 Request notes Writing
- •7.4 Asking for permission
- •7.5 Making offers
- •7.6 Reporting offers
- •7.7 Problems Free practice
- •7.8 Great bores of today
- •8.1 Making preparations
- •8.2 Preparations and results Practice
- •8.3 Leaving notes Writing
- •8.4 The present perfect continuous Presentation
- •8.5 Recent activities Practice
- •8.6 Recent activities and achievements Practice
- •8.7 A busy time Writing
- •8.8 Recent developments Free practice
- •8.9 Summer jobs Listening
- •9.1 Comparison of adjectives
- •9.2 Significant differences Practice
- •9.3 Which would you rather?
- •9.4 Comparison of adverbs
- •9.5 Comparisons involving verbs Presentation and practice
- •9.6 Salary scales Free practice
- •9.7 Sun and skin
- •9.8 Advertisements
- •10.1 Used to
- •10.2 Life in the past
- •10.3 Remembering the past
- •10.5 The present perfect passive
- •10.6 Changes of habit Practice
- •10.7 Modern developments
- •10.8 Hallowe’en
- •11.1 Degrees of enjoyment Presentation
- •11.2 Responding to suggestions Practice
- •11.3 Preferences
- •11.4 Your own likes and dislikes Free practice
- •11.5 Things that happen to you
- •11.6 Types of people
- •11.7 Preferred life styles: like to
- •11.8 Fond of flying
- •12.1 Events and circumstances
- •12.2 Circumstances and consequences Practice
- •12.3 Headline news
- •12.4 Experiences
- •12.5 Evidence of the senses Presentation
- •12.6 Witnesses Practice
- •12.7 Rupert and the space pirates Writing
- •12.8 The ghost of fernie castle
- •13.1 Leisure activities: adverbs
- •13.3 How much? Practice
- •13.4 Kinds of people Free practice
- •13.5 Skills Presentation
- •13.6 Asking favours Practice
- •13.7 Jobs
- •13.8 Your own leisure activities and skills
- •13.9 Chips with everything
- •14.1 Suggestions and advice
- •14.2 Alternative solutions Practice
- •14.3 Problems Free practice
- •14.4 Taking precautions Presentation and practice
- •14.5 Just in case
- •14.6 Road signs: warnings Practice
- •14.7 General advice
- •14.8 Visiting britain
- •15.1 Origin and duration
- •15.2 Asking questions Practice
- •15.3 Points and periods Practice
- •15.4 ‘Since’ with clauses Presentation and practice
- •15.5 Talking about yourselves Free practice
- •15.6 The last time Presentation
- •15.7 When did you last...? Practice
- •15.8 Lazy days Reading
- •15.9 Personality quiz
- •16.2 Whole and parts Presentation and practice
- •16.3 Precise location Practice
- •16.4 Location quiz Practice
- •16.5 Describing places and things Free practice
- •16.6 Geographical location
- •16.7 Describing countries
- •16.8 Skiing in scotland Listening
- •17.1 Discovering similarities Presentation and practice
- •17.2 Similarities and differences Practice
- •17.3 The same thing in a different way Practice
- •17.4 Both & neither Presentation and practice
- •17.5 Identifying features Presentation and practice
- •17.6 Tastes in common Free practice
- •17.7 Classifying Presentation and practice
- •17.8 Similar but different
- •17.9 Colloquial and written arabic
- •18.1 Obligation and permission Presentation
- •18.2 Doctor’s orders Practice
- •18.3 Notices Practice
- •18.4 Make & let
- •18.5 Past obligations Free practice
- •18.6 Freedom of choice Presentation
- •18.7 It’s up to you Practice
- •18.8 Away from home
- •18.9 Coal mines
- •19.1 Degrees of probability
- •19.2 Reassuring predictions Practice
- •19.3 If & unless Practice
- •19.5 Going to
- •19.6 Will be doing & will have done
- •19.8 Postscript to the future
- •20.1 Identifying types
- •20.2 The lost property office Practice ы
- •20.3 What do they do? relative clauses
- •20.4 Oneupmanship Practice
- •20.5 Wedding presents Free practice
- •20.7 Asking for things you need Practice
- •20.8 Definitions quiz Free practice
- •20.9 A difficult choice
- •21.1 Too & enough Presentation
- •21.2 The wrong man for the job Practice patience
- •21.3 Linking sentences Presentation and practice
- •21.4 Useless possessions Practice
- •21.5 Faults and remedies
- •21.6 So & such Presentation
- •21.7 Reading game: so & such Practice
- •21.8 Holidays
- •21.9 The ugly nature of earth’s twin sister
- •22.1 Setting a scene Presentation
- •22.2 Temporary activities
- •22.3 Scenes from the past Practice
- •22.4 Striking scenes Free practice
- •22.5 The past perfect tense
- •22.6 Previous events
- •22.7 Memories Free practice
- •22.8 Morning call
- •23.1 What’s wrong? Presentation and practice
- •23.2 Should & if
- •23.3 Irritating behaviour
- •23.4 Recriminations Free practice
- •23.5 Past mistakes Presentation and practice
- •23.6 Events and circumstances
- •23.7 Carnival
- •23.8 Whose fault? Free practice
- •24.1 Kinds of explanation
- •24.2 Giving reasons Practice
- •24.3 General purpose
- •24.4 Causes and results
- •24.5 Explanations quiz Free practice
- •24.6 Not what you’d expect Presentation and practice
- •24.7 Reading game: because of & in spite of Practice
- •24.8 Out of the ordinary Free practice
- •24.9 Spokes
- •1.1 Rooms and furniture
- •1.7 Talking about amenities
- •2.4 Intentions and plans
- •5.1 Relating past events
- •7.6 Reporting offers
- •8.4 The present perfect continuous
- •10.3 Remembering the past
- •11.3 Preferences
- •12.4 Experiences
- •13.3 How much?
- •13.4 Kinds of people
- •14.3 Problems
- •15.1 Origin and duration
- •17.6 Tastes in common
- •18.6 Freedom of choice
- •19.1 Degrees of probability
- •20.2 The lost property office
- •21.5 Faults and remedies
- •22.1 Setting a scene
- •22.7 Memories
- •23.5 Past mistakes
- •24.4 Causes and results
19.5 Going to
Presentation
a) If I were you, I wouldn’t go to England for your summer holiday — it’ll probably rain.
b) Look at those dark clouds - it’s probably going to rain.
a) You wait and see - she’ll leave college, and then she’ll get married and have a baby.
She’s going to have a baby.
When do we use going to in making predictions?
Practice
Look at the remarks below. How does the speaker know what is/isn’t going to happen ?
Something tells me we’re going to have sausages for lunch.
I don’t think we’re ever going to get served.
Let’s get out of here. There’s going to be trouble.
I think I’m going to be sick.
5. Look out. She’s going to faint.
Now look at these pictures. What do you think is going to happen ?
19.6 Will be doing & will have done
Presentation and practice
A scientist working in astrophysics at NASA has just invented a Prediction Machine which can see into the future. This is what the machine tells him about his future.
In 1989, he will still be working at NASA.
By 1989, he will have invented a ‘speed of light’ spaceship. R P
Now talk about these other dates in the same way:
In 1991... In 1997 ... In 2001... In 2007 ... In 2012 ...
By 1991 ... By 1997 ... By 2001... By 2007 ... By 2012 ...
Practice
Work in groups.
What do you think you and the others will be doing (or might be doing):
this time next week? c) in ten years’time?
next summer? d) when you’re 66?
What do you think you and the others will have done (or might have done):
by this time next week ? c) by the year 2000 ?
by next summer ? d) by the time you’re 66 ?
19.7 FUTURE DEVELOPMENTS
Free practice
Work in groups. Look at the pictures, which show typical features of present-day life.
To what extent do you think these features will change in the future ? For each one say:
how things will change
why these changes will take place
what problems these changes might cause
Writing
Choose one of the topics you have discussed and express your opinion in a paragraph.
19.8 Postscript to the future
Reading
What kind of book is Our Future?
Choose the correct answer. Dr Руке mentions margarine to make the point that:
technological advances are very important
people are very slow to adapt to new things
artificial things are taking the place of natural things
What is Dr Руке certain about when he talks about the 2030s ?
In general, what changes does he think we might see by the 2030s in the following fields ?
a) energy b) work and leisure c) medicine
Imagine you are living in the 1930s and writing a book about the 1980s. Make predictions based on lines 33-42.
According to Dr Руке, in what ways were the 1930s:
very different from the 1980s ?
not very different from the 1980s ?
a) Why does Dr Руке feel we don’t have to worry much about the future ?
b) ‘Plus çа change, plus c’est la тêте chose’ (line 53). How does this apply to the passage?
Do you think the changes mentioned in lines 12-21 will actually have taken place by the 2030s ?
Are you as optimistic for the future as Dr Руке is ?
Writing
Summarise the main argument of the passage in about 60 words. Talk about:
the 1930s and the 1980s
the 2030s
why things won’t be so different
Unit 19 Summary of language
In this unit you have learnt how to:
key points
He will probably/certainly get in touch with us. They may/might/could move to a bigger house. She probably/certainly won’t come back before midnight.
I expect he’ll go abroad. I shouldn’t think she’ll be promoted. I doubt if he’ll get into trouble.
The firm may make a profit if they attract new customers. The firm certainly won’t make a profit unless they attract new customers.
Those plants will die unless you water them. Look at that plant -I think it’s going to die.
Next summer they’ll be living in Berlin. By next summer they will have moved to Berlin.
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Unit 20 Objects