Showing posts with label bachillerato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bachillerato. Show all posts

Monday

Acceso a Liveworksheets

                   
Mirad el siguiente vídeo si os he enviado el usuario y contraseña para acceder a las actividades. 



Identificación de alumno/a

Usuario: 

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Proporcionado por Live Worksheets

1º Bach Unit 8 Reported Speech II

Reported Speech Statements ex 

Reported Speech Orders and Commands ex 

Reported Speech Questions ex

Agendaweb

Reported Speech, an interactive worksheet 






Grammar & Activities

1º Bach Unit 8 Reported Speech





Click on the image above to find more resources on Reported Speech.





Mapa Mental creado con GoConqr por Diego Santos



Click on the chart below








What is Coronavirus?



OUR HEROES

                                

Free Marvel Comics

Marvel is giving away dozens of free comics to read in quarantine

Marvel always offers to help us through our worst moments, whether it's saving humanity through its comics or helping us spend our time locked away thanks to the release of material that will surely help us liven up our time at home.
Now Marvel saves our lives again and offers free access to many of its comic books.

In order to read them, you can either download the Marvel Unlimited app from the App Store (if you’re on iOS) or Google Play (if you’re an Android user) or simply click the links below and read them in your browser.

The following comic arcs will be free on the Marvel Unlimited service from April 2nd through May 4th:
AVENGERS VS. X-MEN
CIVIL WAR
AMAZING SPIDER-MAN: RED GOBLIN
BLACK PANTHER BY TA-NEHISI COATES VOL. 1
THANOS WINS BY DONNY CATES
X-MEN MILESTONES: DARK PHOENIX SAGA
AVENGERS: KREE/SKRULL WAR
AVENGERS BY JASON AARON VOL. 1: THE FINAL HOST
FANTASTIC FOUR VOL. 1: FOUREVER
BLACK WIDOW VOL. 1: S.H.I.E.L.D.’S MOST WANTED
CAPTAIN AMERICA: WINTER SOLDIER ULTIMATE
CAPTAIN MARVEL VOL. 1: HIGHER, FURTHER, FASTER, MORE




Thursday

1º & 2º Bachillerato Dracula & Moby Dick

Macmillan Education has decided to share part of its resources to ensure learning remains as enjoyable as possible during the COVID-19 crisis.
Enjoy the reading and please, #StayHome to help  #FlattenTheCurve.

                                 



                               

Monday

Gramática en Español



Para repasar y consultar dudas

2º Bach Unit 6 Passive Voice






Passive Activities and Charts




Two objects in an active sentence – two possible passive sentences

When there are two objects in an active sentence, there are two possible active sentences and two possible passive sentences.
  • Sentence 1: The professor gave the students the books.
  • Sentence 2: The professor gave the books to the students.
There are two objects in each of the following sentences:
  • Object 1 = indirect object → the students
  • Object 2 = direct object → the books
An indirect object is very often a person, a direct object a thing. When a direct object is followed by an indirect one, we put to in front of the indirect object.

Active sentence 1

SubjectVerbindirect Objectdirect Object
The professorgavethe studentsthe books.

Active sentence 2

SubjectVerbdirect Objectindirect Object with to
The professorgavethe booksto the students.

Each of the objects (books/students) in the active sentences can become subject in the passive sentence.

Passive sentence 1

SubjectVerbObject(by-agent)
The studentswere giventhe books.(by the professor).

Passive sentence 2

SubjectVerbObject(by-agent)
The bookswere givento the students(by the professor).

Ex 1      Ex 2     Ex 3

Causative & Impersonal Passive


2º Bach Unit 5 VOCAB Prefixes & Phrasal Verbs


Ex 1        Ex 2        Ex 3

Complete with the activities in Student's & Workbook




2ºBach Unit 5 Relative Clauses


Relatives General Information and activities

Relatives Games

Wednesday

Irregular Verbs

You only truly master the irregular verbs when you are able to say them in the blink of an eye without making any mistake.

These are my suggestions:

Say them aloud. Here is a list of verbs with the sounds that will help you repeat them correctly
Play with them





                




               Tiny Cards game      Educaplay cards   Hangman

               Memory Game 1      Memory Game 2


Ex 1    Ex 2   Ex 3   50 Basic Irregular Verbs


Sunday

GET

GRAMMAR REVISION EXERCISES


Adjectives/Adverbs
Articles
Conditional sentences - if
Gerund and Infinitive
Modal Auxiliaries, Modals
Nouns
Participles
Passive Voice
Phrasal Verbs
Prepositions
Pronouns
Quantifiers
Questions
Reported Speech
Sentences, Word order
Tenses
VariousVerbs


     

MODAL VERBS OVERVIEW

 


MORE INFO ABOUT MODALS

The Brexit 2016 Referendum

On 23rd June 2016, Britain decided by a referendum to leave the European Union, the so-called Brexit option. The opinion polls showed the race was a close one and the national debate still gets louder and louder. But what does it all mean?
                      


Let's hold a debate/discussion on whether the UK should remain in the EU or not. Shall we vote?

Brexit: All you need to know about the UK leaving the EU (BBC)






BREXIT

brand   ·   Britain   ·   brought   ·   characters   ·   consequential   ·   continental   ·   could   ·   countries   ·   eight   ·   empire   ·   front   ·   immigration   ·   include   ·   London   ·   marine   ·   middle   ·   movement   ·   other   ·   physically   ·   really   ·   risk   ·   second   ·   that's   ·   they'd   ·   undemocratic   ·   union   ·   whether   ·   while   ·   wrong?  
1.Could Britain  be about to leave Europe? Not literally, of course. Its land mass may have detached itself from  Europe some  thousand years ago, but whatever happens, Britain will stay  more or less where it is.
2.However, on June 23rd voters will be asked  they want to remain in the European Union, or if  rather head for the exit in a Brexit. And it  be close — the country is split down the  .
3.Those who want to leave invoke the age of  , wartime spirit, and Margaret Thatcher. They say the European  is overbearing, costly and  . And  many of their best friends are European, they worry a lot about  .
4.Those who want to remain are keen to remind people that as glorious as the  World War was for  , it's probably best we don't have a rematch. They say that the EU has  a historically bloodthirsty continent together, and its single market and free  rules have benefitted everyone. Leaving would put all that at  .
5.So, who's saying what? Well, those in favour of remaining in the EU  the leaders of all the main UK political parties, all the leaders of all the other EU  , Barack Obama, the IMF and, well, Emma Thompson. On the  side, a more, how can we put it, eccentric cast of  . The former mayor of  Boris Johnson, UKIP leaders and serial EU hater Nigel Farage, US presidential hopeful Donald Trump,  Le Pen of the French National  and ... Michael Caine. One thing everyone can agree on is that it's the biggest and most  decision British voters will make in a generation.  if you don't count a recent public vote to name our  new £300 million pound Arctic explorer Boaty McBoatface. What could go 

Phrasal Verbs

In English, a phrasal verb consists of a verb and a preposition or adverb that modifies or changes the meaning; 'give up' is a phrasal verb that means 'stop doing' something, which is very different from 'give'. The word or words that modify a verb in this manner can also go under the name particle.The verb and the particle and/or a preposition together form a single semantic unit.
Typically, their meaning is not obvious from the meanings of the individual words themselves. For example:

She has always looked down on me.
Fighting broke out among a group of 40 men.
I’ll see to the animals.
Don’t put me off, I’m trying to concentrate.
For instance, in the first example, the phrasal verb ‘to look down on someone’ doesn’t mean that you are looking down from a higher place at someone who is below you; it means that you think that you are better than someone.

Phrasal verbs can be divided into groups:
Intransitive verbs These don't take an object
They had an argument, but they've made up now.
Inseparable verbs The object must come after the particle.
They are looking after their grandchildren.
Separable verbs
With some separable verbs, the object must come between the verb and the particle:
The quality of their work sets them apart from their rivals.
With some separable verbs, the object can before or after the particle, though when a pronoun is used it comes before the particle:
Turn the TV off.
Turn off the TV.
Turn it off.



Click on the image above to learn new phrasal verbs.

Phrasal Verbs exercises 1

Still not satisfied?

Separable and inseparable list

Gramática en español



It is never too late. Nunca es demasiado tarde para intentar aprobar inglés en bachillerato. Se necesita aplicar una dedicación constante, sostenida en el tiempo, organizada y comprometida.
Elegid uno de los cursos propuestos  y dedicadle una hora diaria, los fines de semana que podáis aumentad el tiempo de estudio.
No hay poción mágica, no hay hechizo ni conjuro que os ayude a aprobar si no ponéis vuestro tiempo y esfuerzo a trabajar en esa dirección. Go for it!! 👍🏆



Apuntes organizados en 50 lecciones en español

Repaso para 1º de bachillerato. Apuntes, ejercicios y vídeos

Aprender Inglés Rápido y Fácil curso y ejercicios organizados por niveles.

Curso para bachillerato

El Blog para aprender inglés. Todas las lecciones.

Más apuntes de gramática en español