Introduction (page 11)
1 and 2- soap opera viewers:
Fanatics: people who watch several soap operas avidly and regularly. ____
Ironics: people who watch one or more soap operas despite claiming not to like
aspects of them. ____
Non-committed:
people who watch one or more soap operas on a casual basis but don’t feel particularly
strongly about them. ____
Dismissives:
people who don’t watch any soap operas and consider them to be a waste of time.
____
2- (listening vocabulary):
appalling: /əˈpɔːlɪŋ/ (adj) 1 (North American
English, formal or British English) shocking; extremely bad. E.g.: The prisoners were living in
appalling conditions.
2- (informal) very bad. E.g.: The bus service is appalling now.
be off the mark: (idiom) not to be accurate in a guess, statement, etc. E.g.: No, you're way
off the mark.
depict: /dɪˈpɪkt/ 1- to
show an image of somebody/something in a picture. depict somebody/something
(as somebody/something). E.g.: a painting depicting the
Virgin and Child. depict somebody/something doing something. E.g.: The
artist had depicted her lying on a bed. 2- to describe something in
words, or give an impression of something in words or with a picture.
depict somebody/something. E.g.: The novel depicts French
society in the 1930s. depict somebody/something as
somebody/something. E.g.: The advertisements depict smoking as
glamorous and attractive. depiction /dɪˈpɪkʃn/ (n)E.g.: They object to the movie's
depiction of gay people.
gritty: (adj) 3- showing something unpleasant as it really
is. E.g.: a gritty description
of urban violence; gritty
realism.
hooked: /hʊkt/ (adj)
2 [not before noun] hooked (on something) (INFORMAL) needing something that is bad for you, especially a drug. 3 [not before noun] hooked (on something) (informal) enjoying something very much,
so that you want to do it, see it, etc. as much as possible.
3- Collocations:
hackneyed
storylines / situations / plot
mundane
storylines / situations / characters / issues / plot
eccentric
characters
compulsive
viewing / acting
corny
storylines / situations / endings / characters / acting / plot
cliffhanger
endings
unconvincing
storylines / situations / endings / characters / acting / settings / plot
atrocious
storylines / endings / characters / acting / settings / plot
negative
stereotypes / characters
glamorous
situations / characters / settings
topical
storylines / situations / issues
far-fetched
storylines / situations / plot
contrived
storylines / situations / endings / characters / settings / plot
atrocious: / əˈtrəʊʃəs/ (adj) very bad or unpleasant.
cliffhanger: /ˈklɪfhæŋə(r)/ (adj) a situation in a story, movie, competition, etc. that is very
exciting because you cannot guess what will happen next or you do not find out
immediately what happens next.
compulsive: / kəmˈpʌlsɪv/ (adj) behavior that is difficult to stop or control.
contrived: /kənˈtraɪvd/ (adj) planned in advance and not natural or genuine; written or arranged
in a way that is not natural or realistic.
corny: (adj) not original; used too
often to be interesting or to sound sincere.
eccentric: (adj) /ɪkˈsentrɪk/ considered strange or unusual.
far-fetched: (adj) very difficult to
believe.
glamorous: (adj) expecially attractive
and exciting, and different from ordinary things or people.
hackneyed: /ˈhæknid/ (adj) used too often and therefore boring. E.g.: a hackneyed phrase.
mundane: /mʌnˈdeɪn/ (adj) not interesting or exciting.
topical: (adj) connected with
something that is happening or of interest at the present time.
unconvincing: (adj) not seeming true or
real.
Reading & Use of English – Part 5
vocabulary
– pages 12 and 13
conjure something up: (ph.v.) 1- to make
something appear as a picture in your mind; evoke. E.g.: That smell always
conjures up memories of holidays in France. He strained to conjure up her face and voice,
but they had vanished.
copper =
Cu
dash: (v) to go somewhere very
quickly.
draw up: if a
vehicle draws up, it
arrives and stops. E.g.: The cab drew up outside the house.
flutter: /ˈflʌtə(r)/ (v) 1- to move lightly and quickly; to
make something move in this way. 2- when a bird or an
insect flutters its wings, or its wings flutter, the
wings move lightly and quickly up and down
paramount: /ˈpærəmaʊnt/ (adj) 1- more important than
anything else. E.g.: This matter is of paramount importance.
Safety is paramount. The welfare of the child must always be the
court's paramount consideration. 2-
(formal) having the highest
position or the greatest power. E.g.: China's paramount leader. paramountcy
(n).
praiseworthy: /ˈpreɪzwɜːði/
(adj.; formal) deserving praise; commendable /kəˈmendəbl/
pursue: (v) /pəˈsjuː/ pursue sth: 2- to continue to
discuss, find out about or be involved in something. pursue sb/sth: to follow or chase somebody/something,
especially in order to catch them.
recall: (v) to remember sth.
swarm (of something): 1- a large
group of insects, especially bees, moving together in
the same direction. E.g.: a swarm of bees/locusts/flies. 2- a large group
of people,
especially when they are all moving quickly in the same direction.
stoker: /ˈstəʊkə(r)/ (n) a person whose job is
to add coal or other fuel to a fire, etc, especially on a
ship or a steam train.
straggle: /ˈstræɡl/ (v) to grow, spread or move in an untidy way
in different directions. E.g.:
Her hair was straggling over her eyes. The town straggled to an end and the fields began.
thrashing: /ˈθræʃɪŋ/ (v) 1- an act of
hitting somebody very hard, especially with a stick. E.g.: to give sb/get a thrashing.
toss: (v) to throw something lightly or carelessly.
wail: (v) to
make a long loud high cry because you are sad or in pain. E.g.: The little girl was wailing miserably.
8-
a (duration) short-term / long-term / faded
/lingering / fleeting
b (clarity) vivid / distant / faded / fuzzy /
vague
c (positive) cherished / precious / nostalgic /
treasured
d (negative) dreadful / bitter-sweet / haunting
/ disturbing / bitter / traumatic
bitter-sweet: (adj) bringing pleasure mixed
with sadness.
cherished: /ˈtʃerɪʃt/ (adj) to keep an idea, a hope or
a pleasant feeling in your mind for a long time.
fleeting: (adj) lasting only a short time.
fuzzy: (adj) /ˈfʌzi/ 4- confused and not expressed clearly. E.g.: fuzzy
ideas/thinking. a
somewhat fuzzy definition of ‘in the national interest’.
haunting: (adj) beautiful, sad or frightening
in a way that cannot be forgotten.
lingering: slow to end or disappear.
9-
blot sth out: (ph.v.) 1 to
cover or hide something completely. E.g.:
Clouds
blotted out the sun.2 to
deliberately try to forget an unpleasant memory or thought. E.g.: He tried to blot out the
image of Helen's sad face. She
just wanted to sleep and blot out the terrifying events of the day.
push sth aside: (ph.v.) to avoid thinking about something. E.g.: He pushed aside the feelings of fear.
rekindle: /ˌriːˈkɪndl/ rekindle something (formal) to make something become active
again; reawaken. E.g.: to rekindle feelings/hopes.
The sight of her after so many years rekindled his passion.
spark: (v) 1- [transitive] to cause something to start or develop, especially
suddenly. spark something: The proposal would spark a storm of protest around the country. Winds brought down power lines, sparking a fire. The organizers are hoping to spark some interest in young people. spark something off: The riots were sparked off by the arrest of a local leader.
stir (sb up): to encourage somebody to do something; to make somebody feel they must
do something.
Grammar (pages 14 and
15):
at the
crack of dawn: (informal,
idiom) very early in the morning. E.g.: I have to get up at the
crack of dawn.
light up: (ph.v.) 3- if sb's eyes or face light up, or something lights them up, they show happiness or excitement. E.g.: His eyes lit up when
she walked into the room. A smile
lit up her face.
sort
something/somebody/yourself out: (ph.v.) (especially British English) to
deal with somebody's/your own problems successfully. E.g.: If you can
wait a moment, I'll sort it all out for you. You load up the car and
I'll sort the kids out.
settle down: (ph.v.) 2- to start to have a
quieter way of life, living in one place. E.g.: When are you going to get married and settle down? It's time I settled down.
work out: (ph.v.) 2- to develop in a successful way. E.g.: My first job
didn't work out. Things
have worked out quite well for us.
Writing –
Part 2, Set text
Vocabulary
Literature Essays & Reviews
The theme at the heart of the book lies in the narrator’s
relationship with his sister – a relatively square girl who joins the
army after her marriage ends in tatters.
O’Grady breathes fresh life into the genre with a compelling/gripping
and evocative novella, having one foot in the esoterically fogeyish world
of eccentric men of letters.
Narrative suspense mounts around the seemingly trite
question of who will lead her through this transformation from child to woman. Against
this backdrop, questions of freedom and alienation emerge as all the
more complex.
The power relation at play in the encounters
described are mirrored in Paulo’s small rural community, helping to paint a
lucid picture of turn of the century small town America.
The novel is laden with images of concealment,
carefully placed within the first section and resonating throughout,
culminating in a spine-chilling finale.
With more than a passing nod to history, this
sentimental novel describes the doomed relationship between a young, impressionable
farmhand and a sophisticated, but shallow countess.
Gilbert popularizes an intricate story well,
marring it intermittently by a tendency to overdramatize an already interesting
plot
backdrop:
everything
that can be seen around an event that is taking place, but which is not part of
that event. E.g.: The mountains provided a dramatic backdrop for our picnic.
compelling: that makes you pay
attention to it because it is so interesting and exciting; gripping. E.g.: Her latest book makes compelling reading.
concealment:
/kənˈsiːlmənt/ the act
of hiding something; the state of being hidden. E.g.: the
concealment of crime. Many animals rely on concealment for protection.
doom: (v)
[usually passive] doom somebody/something (to
something)| doom
somebody/something to do something to
make somebody/something certain to fail, suffer, die, etc. E.g.: The plan was doomed to failure. The marriage was doomed from the start.
fogeyish:
(adj) (informal) extremely fussy, old-fashioned, or conservative.
heart (of something): the most important part of something. E.g.: the heart of the matter/problem. The committee's report went to the heart of the government's dilemma. The distinction between right and wrong lies at the heart of all questions of morality.
in tatters:
(idiom) 1- torn in many places. E.g.: His clothes
were in tatters. 2- ruined or badly damaged; in shreds. E.g.: Her reputation was
in tatters. The government's education policy lies in tatters.
intricate:
/ ˈɪntrɪkət/ having
a lot of different parts and small details that fit together. E.g.: intricate patterns.
an intricate network of loyalties and relationships.
laden: 2 (LITERARY) full of something, especially something
unpleasant. E.g.: His voice was soft, yet laden with threat.
mar something: / mɑː(r)/ to damage or spoil something good
nod: a small quick
movement of the head down and
up again. E.g.: to give a nod of approval/agreement/encouragement.
resonate:
(v) to make
a deep, clear sound that continues for a
long time. E.g.: Her voice resonated
through the theatre.
shallow: 2- (disapproving) (of a person, an idea, a comment, etc.) not showing serious thought, feelings,
etc. about something.
square: (informal, disapproving) (of a person) considered to be boring, for example because they are
old-fashioned or work too hard at school.
trite: / traɪt/ (of a remark, an opinion, etc.)dull and
boring because it has been expressed so many times before; not
original; banal.
REFERENCES:
GUDE, Kathy; DUCKWORTH, Michael; ROGERS, Louis. Cambridge English Proficiency Masterclass. For the 2013 exam. Student's Book with Online Skills & Language Practice. Oxford University Press, 2012.
LINDSAY-CLARK, Jeanette; GREENE, Stephen. Cambridge English Proficiency Masterclass. For the 2013 exam. Teacher's Pack. Oxford, 2013.
Oxford Advanced Learner's Dictionary. Available on https://oald8.oxfordlearnersdictionaries.com/
Images from www.google.com
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