WEEK SEVEN

  1. Structure – More about Phrasal Verbs.

    Remember phrasal verbs are made up of verbs followed by a prepositions or adverbs – particles. The meanings of these combinations, as already known, cannot be determined in isolation, rather they have to be comprehended from the entire phrase. These meanings can sometimes be obvious or obscure. When the meaning is obscure, it becomes idiomatic. On the other hand, if the meaning is obvious it becomes non-idiomatic. Some phrasal verbs can express single meaning while in some cases, a single phrasal verb may have different meanings.

    1. Phrasal verb with obvious meaning

      Example:    They waited for him to come down
              They were sitting down

    2. Phrasal verb with obscure meaning

      Example:    The convict broke down (lost control of his feelings)
              Did you catch on (understand)?
              I will not be surprised if he goes back on his words (= breaks his promise)

    3. Phrasal verbs with same meaning.

      Example:     After completing his prison term, he kept out of
                                  Kept away from    trouble
                                  Stayed away from

    4. Phrasal verb with different meanings.

      Example:    During the Christmas party, I fell in with (met by chance) an old friend of mine.
              I am ready to fall in with (agree to) anything you propose.

       At this juncture, it is necessary to note that a single verb can combine with different particles. This means that there will be a change in meaning of each phrasal verb as the particle changes.
      Example:     

      1. break in – enter a building by force.

        break up – end a relationship
        break down – stop working suddenly
        break through – to overcome.

         

      2. turn out – prove, show

        turndown – reject/refuse
        turnin – submit

         turnoff – make somebody lose interest or feel bored

      3. stand up for – support

        stand up to – oppose

         

      4. give in – surrender

        give up – renounce
        give away – reveal

         

      5. look after – take care of

        look down on – despise
        look up to – respect

EVALUATION

  1. From the words lettered A – D, choose the word or group of words that best complete each of the following sentences.
    1. Personally, I ________ rather easily when it comes to arguments. A. give in B. give from C. give against D. give on
    2. If she takes _______ her mother, you can be sure of her efficiency. A. up B. on C. with D. after
    3. Their marriage finally ____________ A. fell about B. fell apart C. fell down D. fell upon
  2. For each of the underlined phrasal verb, substitute with a single-word verb.
    1. It is doubtful my provisions will hold out for one more week.
    2. He is always hard up because he does not lay out his money wisely.

 READING ASSIGNMENT
Countdown in English, pg 240 – 241.

 

  1. Summary – Advancement in Technology, Effective English, pg 109

    The passage reveals that advanced technology has brought about productivity of workers. Many organisationsnow use computers not only to save, access information but also, to save time and cost. With flow of information, however, every organisation has to be security conscious. There is need for protection against hackers

 EVALUATION
Relationships of time – see Effective English pg 112.

 

  1. Speech Work – /ʧ/ and /∫/, /ʤ/ and /ʒ/

     /∫/
    This is a voiceless palato – alveola fricative consonant. It is realized when the tip of the tongue and blade make a light contact with the alveolar ridge and the airstream escapes with a frictional noise.
    Examples     sh –    sheep, shop
            ch-    champagne, machine
            s –    sugar, sure
            ss-     mission, pressure
            c –     ocean
            ti –    nation, education
            ci –    special, sufficient

     /ʧ/
    This is called voiceless palato – alveolar affricate. In its production, the blade and rims of the tongue from a total obstruction to the airstream with the alveolar ridge while the front of the tongue is raised towards the hard palate. The spellings symbols for /ʧ/ are listed below
    Examples    ch –    chief, church
            -ture –    nature, picture
            tch –    match, catch
            -teous–righteous, courteous
            tual –    ritual, factual

     /ʒ/
    This consonant is a voiced palato – alveolar fricative which has the same process of articulation as /ᶘ/ except that the vocal cords vibrate as if it is produced. In other words, /ʒ/ is the voiced counterpart of the voiceless /∫/. The symbols for /ʒ/ are as follows:
        s    –    usual, measure
        z    –    seizure,
        si    –    evasion, vision

     /ʤ/
    This is the voiced palato – alveolar affricate which is the same way as /tᶘ/. However, /ʤ/ is voiced because the vocal cords vibrate during its production. The spelling symbols for /ʤ/ are as follows:
        j    –    judge, joy
        g    –    gin, giant
        dg    –    bridge, badge
        d    –    soldier

         SoundContrast
    /ᶘ/            /tᶘ/
    lash        latch
    mash        match
    dish        ditch
    fish        fetch
    ship        chip
    shop        chop     

     /ᶘ/            /ʒ/
    sure        genre
    bash        beige
    rush        rouge
    fission        vision
    pressure        pleasure

     /tᶘ/            /ʤ/
    cheer        jeer
    chin        gin
    cheap        jeep
    chaste        jest
    breach        bridge
    etch        edge
    rich        ridge

 EVALUATION
Identify the underlined consonant sound used in each the words below:
sheep        / /
Asia        / /
invasion    / /
joke        / /
punctual    / /

 READING ASSINGMENT
Oral English for Schools and Colleges, page 54 – 58

 

  1. Vocabulary Development – Technology.
    1. Invention –a thing or an idea that has been invented
    2. Pollution –substances that make air, water, soil etc. dirty
    3. Robot –a machine that can do some tasks that a human can do and that works automatically or is controlled by a computer.
    4. Fumes –smoke, gas or something similar that smells strongly or is dangerous to breathe in
    5. Astronauts – a person whose job involves travelling and walking in spacecraft.
    6. Spacecraft – a vehicle that travels through space
    7. Missile – a weapon that is sent through the air that explodes when it hits the thing it is aimed at
    8. Mast – a tall pole on a boat or ship that supports the sails/ a tall metal tower with an aerial that sends and receives radio or television signal.
    9. Automobile – a car.
    10. Technician – a person whose job is keeping a particular type of equipment or machinery in good condition

    Some other words include:
    Computer, electronic, factory, machine, install, telephone, industry, metro-line, traffic, high-precision, discoveries etc.

 EVALUATION
Complete each of the following sentences with one of the words in brackets (discoveries, transfer of technology, manufacture, life, style, standard of living, pollution, labour, market, revolutionalised, fumes, robot)

  1. Nigeria can only achieve greatness in technology ______________
  2. Our ___________ is rather low.
  3. Mr. Onum has made several amazing __________ this year.
  4. Too many industries in the town cause ___________.
  5. I am determined to ____________ bar soap in that factory.
  6. When the retrenchment exercise began, many people were thrown into the _____________.

 READING ASSIGNMENT
Countdown in English, pg 175

 GENERAL EVALUATION/REVISIONAL QUESTIONS

  1. Write two words each to show contrast of the following pairs of sounds:

    /ᶘ/ and /ʒ/
    /tᶘ/ and /ʤ/

  2. Write five examples of phrasal verbs and their meanings.

 WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Section A
Choose the word or phrase that is opposite in meaning to the underlined word.

  1. Olu was delighted when he heard the news. A. saddened B. frightened C. saddenedD. frightened
  2. His hard work proved fruitful in the end. A. negative B. hostile C. futile D. ordinary
  3. Amadi is too garrulous for my liking. A. laconic B. slow C. dull D. dumb
  4. The doctor certified the tumourmalignant. A. benign B. ripe C. painless D. dangerous
  5. You have ample time to do the job A. little B. less C. enough D. excess

 Section B
Practice 2 page 123, unit 8, Effective English

 

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