Communication » 2A Interacting
Pag.23
n.4
1) Jack and Linda don’t have to work outside.
2) Jack has to work at weekends.
3) Linda has to wear a uniform.
4) Linda doesn’t have to stand for a long time.
5) Jack and Linda have to work long hours.
6) Jack doesn’t have to get up early.
n.5
WORK:
- Inside
- Long hours
- At night
- Outside
- At weekends
WEAR:
- A uniform
- Special clothes
BE GOOD WITH:
- Children
- Animals
- Your hands
n.6
1) Cooks have to be good with their hands.
2) A farmer doesn’t have to wear a uniform.
3) Teachers don’t have to work on Sundays.
4) Doctors have to have special qualifications.
5) A vet has to be good with animals.
6) A dentist doesn’t have to work outside.
Pag.26
n.19
1) Working in a circus is a dangerous job. T
2) You have to be good with animals if you work in a circus. F
3) In a circus you have to work very long hours. T
4) You travel all over the world if you work in a circus. T
5) People who work in a circus earn a lot of money. F
n.21
1) You see animals in the Cirque du Soleil. F
2) The Cirque du Soleil employs 3,500 artists. F
3) Cirque has shows in different countries. T
4) Grant has to find famous performers. F
5) He has to use a computer in his job. T
6) All the people in Cirque speak English. F
7) Grant says his job is always interesting
8) He wants to continue doing this job. T
Pag.30
n.1
Perception: feel, see, hear.
Opinion: think, prefer, believe.
Possession and stable characteristics: have got, know, own, be.
n.2
1) I want to see you as soon as possible because I have favour to ask you. Are you free at 12?
2) I know that Steve speaks French and German but I think he is speaking to thast man in Italian at the moment!
3) Are you listening to this music? I’m trying to work! – OK, turn it off. I don’t like it much anyway.
n.3
1) She used to be shy.
2) I didn’t use to be shy.
3) Did you used to work?
4) Yes, I do.
5) No, she doesn’t.
n.4
1) \
2) What were you used to do in the evenings when you were young? – We used to watch TV.
3) NO
4) I used to walk in the park with my dog when I lived in London.
5) Were you parents neighbours when they were children? – Yes, they were. They used to caught the school bus together.
Pag.31
n.10
1) You have to stay.
2) We have to.
3) They have to.
4) I don’t have to.
5) He/She/It doesn’t have to.
6) We don’t have to walk.
7) They don’t have to.
8) Do you have to stay?
9) Does he has to?
10) Do we have to?
11) Do they have to?
12) No, I don’t.
13) Yes, you do.
14) No, he doesn’t.
15) Yes, we do.
16) No, they don’t.
n.11
1) We have to wear skirts to school but we can’t wear jeans.
2) What time do you have to get up tomorrow?
3) Why does our teacher have to give us so much homework?
4) Europeans don’t have to have a passport to go to the UK but they have to take an identity card.
5) You have to understand a bit of English to surf on the Net but you don’t have to speak it.
6) My dad usually has to get up at 6 a.m. but he doesn’t have to work on Fridays – that’s his day off.
7) Do your parents have to go to work at the weekends? – Yes, they have to.
8) If you want to be a pilot, which subjects do you have to study at university?
n.12
1) What do you have to do in your job?
2) How often do you have to go on tour?
3) Do you have to travel by plane?
4) Do you often have to sleep in hotels?
5) What do you have to do after concerts?