Sunday, April 12, 2026

How to Buy Fish - Gordon Ramsay


Watch:


Fish Buying & Cooking – Worksheet

Match the words (a–j) with the meanings (1–10).

Words

a. fresh
b. oily fish
c. white fish
d. smell
e. fillet
f. steam
g. poach
h. firm
i. market
j. cut

Meanings

  1. _____ a place where food (like fish) is bought and sold
  2. _____ fish that contains a lot of natural oil (e.g. mackerel)
  3. _____ to cook food gently in hot water or steam
  4. _____ a piece of fish prepared for cooking
  5. _____ to use your nose to notice a smell
  6. _____ fish that is pale and low in fat (e.g. cod)
  7. _____ recently caught or not old
  8. _____ a portion or section of fish
  9. _____ solid and not soft
  10. _____ to cook food in liquid below boiling point

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Part 2: Fill in the Blanks

Use words from the box:

Word bank: fresh, smell, oily, white, fillet, market, poach, steam

  1. Always check if the fish is ______ before buying it.
  2. You should ______ the fish to check its quality.
  3. Cod is a type of ______ fish.
  4. Mackerel is an ______ fish.
  5. A fish ______ is easy to cook in a pan.
  6. Billingsgate is a famous fish ______ in London.
  7. It is best to ______ fish gently in water.
  8. You can ______ fish in the oven or a fish kettle.

Part 3: True or False?

  1. Fish should smell very strong when it is fresh. ______
  2. Oily fish is considered healthy. ______
  3. The whiter the cod, the worse it is. ______
  4. Fresh fish often looks bright and shiny. ______
  5. Smoked salmon can be eaten cooked or raw. ______

 

Part 4: Short Answer Questions

  1. What should you do before buying fish?
    → ______________________________________
  2. Name one example of oily fish.
    → ______________________________________
  3. What is a fillet?
    → ______________________________________
  4. Why is fresh fish better?
    → ______________________________________

How to buy fish



1.Why does Roger love fish?
2. Why should you smell fish when buying it?
3. What should a fresh fish look like?

4. How should you use the following cuts? Whole salmon, steak, side, fillet, smoked?
5. What two basic kinds of fish are there?
6. What kind of fish is a cod?
7. What kind of fish is a mackerel?
8. Which fish should you eat if you're sick?

9. What does it mean if a fish is hard?
10. How do you know if a flat fish is fresh?

A. for over 50 years

B. Here’s a quick look at

C. Follow your fishmonger’s advice

D. The way to tell good fish is

E. 365 days a year

F. the fresher they are

 G. the whiter the better


 

Gordon: Next up, my shopping guide to getting the finest fish. When I buy my fish, I only want the freshest and the best, and if anyone knows how to get the best, it’s Roger Kent Baron. He’s been buying and selling fish at the world-famous Billingsgate Market in London 1.________________.

Roger: “I love fish. I think it’s the greatest food of all time. I sell literally every variety there is. I could feed you a different fish 2._______________.”

This guy really knows how to sniff out the good from the bad. All fish smell different—the longer it’s around, the more fishy it will smell. When it’s lovely and fresh, it doesn’t smell.

Whenever you’re going to buy fish, don’t be afraid—get your nose right into it. Don’t go like that, get it into it, smell it. It smells delightful.

I call it salmon, and it’s lovely. Baramundi is a lovely fish. 3._______________ to look at it closely. It’s shining, it’s still got the bloom on it. His eyes are as bright as yours looking, lovely and red. Put it in a bag for the gentleman, please.

People should always be asking about their fish. What kind of fish is it? Where does it come from? A nice salmon—£19, it’s a bargain at £20.

Gordon: Roger’s right, salmon’s brilliant value and a great all-rounder, really healthy and super delicious.

4._______________ the different cuts and how to use them. Salmon always impresses. It’s fantastic stuffed and steamed, either in a fish kettle or in the oven wrapped in foil. Steaks are great value and brilliant baked. A side of salmon is perfect for poaching, home curing, or baking in pastry. The fillet is so versatile—easy, fast to cook, and great for pan frying. Smoked salmon is delicious cooked or raw. I love it with scrambled eggs.

Roger: There’s white fish and there’s oily fish—they come under two different sections. Here we have white fish: it’s cod. It’s the best cod in the world. It comes from a place called Peterhead. It’s nice and white— 5.________________.

One of the most oily fish you’ll find is mackerel. There it is, lovely colour. With most fish, the fresher they are, the firmer they are. If you’re not well and you’re ill, have a mackerel.

Sprats, otherwise known as “top hats.” Here we have flatfish, and these are known as plaice. As you can see, they’ve got spots—the redder they are, 6.________________. It really is a lovely fish to eat. King George couldn’t have better fish—fresh enough for royalty.

Gordon: 7._________________and you’ll never ever have another dodgy, do-or-die sole again.

Poaching the salmon in the miso stock gives it a really nice sort of sweet flavour. Whitebait are an oily fish that are healthy, delicious, and cook in minutes.

 

Find the adjectives and write them in the order they are used. What is the synonym?

 


Versatile                a_____able
World-famous     a____aimed
Delightful              ag____able
Lovely                     ap____ling
Bright                      sh____y

 

Fishy                       d___gy
Brilliant                  mar_____ous
Super-delicious   scru____tious
Fantastic               exc____nt
dodgy                      f___hy
Raw                          unc____ed
Oily                           fa__y


 


1

2

3

4

5

6

7

8

9

10

11

12


How to make a paper helicopter

 


Visual only instructions


In this exercise the class will divide into two halves. We will make two slightly different helicopters.



Simple useful verbs


fold

cut

mark

crease

tear

attach

enjoy


other useful words


one third

diagonal

straight

precision

three



Saturday, April 11, 2026

How To Eat Sushi

 

How to make perfect pasta

a. Taste the pasta a minute or two before the suggested time to check for doneness (“al dente” = tender but slightly firm).
b. Add the pasta to the boiling water.
c. Drain the pasta in a colander—do not rinse unless making a cold dish.
d. Bring the water to a rolling boil over high heat.
e. Fill a large pot with plenty of water (about 4–6 liters for 500g of pasta).
f. Toss the pasta with your sauce right away and serve hot.
g. Reserve a cup of pasta water before draining (useful for sauces).
h. Cook according to the package instructions (usually 8–12 minutes), stirring occasionally.
i. Add a generous pinch of salt to the water (it should taste slightly salty).
j. Stir immediately to prevent the pasta from sticking together.

 

Order (1–10)











 

 

 

 

 

How to make a yummy pasta sauce for your perfect pasta

 

Sentences

  1. _____ 2–3 tablespoons of olive oil in a pan over medium heat.
  2. _____ finely chopped onion and cook until soft and translucent.
  3. _____ in minced garlic and cook for about 30 seconds (don’t let it burn).
  4. _____ a can of crushed or chopped tomatoes.
  5. _____ well and bring the sauce to a gentle simmer.
  6. _____ with salt, pepper, and a pinch of sugar (to balance acidity).
  7. _____ dried herbs like oregano or basil (or fresh if you have them).
  8. _____ the sauce simmer for 10–20 minutes, stirring occasionally.
  9. _____ and adjust seasoning as needed.
  10. _____ the cooked pasta into the sauce and mix until well coated.

 

Verbs (Random Order)

  • Taste
  • Add
  • Stir
  • Let
  • Season
  • Toss
  • Add
  • Stir
  • Heat
  • Add

 







Don't even think about putting that pickled ginger on the fish. A Tokyo chef explains how it's done.

Watch:

How to Eat Sushi

True or false?

1. Mr. Yasuda owns his own restaurant.
2. Fish is the most important element of sushi.
3. Wasabi is not a radish.
4. Wasabi is bitter.
5. Good seaweed is tender.
6. The best tuna has no fat.
7. Don’t use chopsticks to eat sushi roll.
8. Never put ginger in soy sauce.
9. Only use a touch of soy sauce.
10. Use chopsticks with pickled ginger.
11. Eat the ginger to cleanse the palate.
12. Shake off the excess soy sauce when dipping a single piece of sushi
13. Shaking reminds us of something unappetizing.
14. It makes no difference whether you eat the sushi at the counter or the table.

Wednesday, April 8, 2026

Talking

 


Do you enjoy talking in English?









What would help you get better at talking in English?







Do you sometimes talk too much?







Do you sometimes talk too little?








Who do you like talking to most in the whole world?







Do you like talking to strangers?


















Synonyms of "talk"





chat
speak
tell
discuss
converse
gossip


1. I love calling my friends back at home to catch up on all the latest ______
2. He is a quiet person and doesn't _____ much.
3. Are you a good at ____ing jokes?
4. Everyone in the cafe is _____ing loudly.
5. I need to _______ my future with my boss.
6. She is very good at French - she can ______ quite naturally.







Conversation skills

 

Are you a natural talker?

Do you talk too much?

Do you like talking to new people?


match

 

1. you can't finish a conversation well

2. You tell long boring stories

3. you talk for too long

4. you can't tell a good story

5. you have nothing in common with anyone

6. you say things at the wrong moment

 

A) Always searching for anecdotes (stories about things that happened to you)

B) prolonging a conversation unnecessarily

C) struggling to find common interests

D) lacking storytelling confidence

E) mis-timing your entrance

F) You end the conversation at the wrong moment

 

Rank the following from easiest to hardest: 1-6

___ To start a conversation
___ To finish a conversation
___ To change topic in a conversation
___ To get the other person to contribute to a conversation
___ To get the other person to stop talking for a moment
___ To disagree without offending the other person/people

 

When was the last time you talked and talked and talked with someone?

Where do you talk more?

in the classroom

in the car

in the train

in a cafe

online

What would you most enjoy talking about?

a famous painting      cats      your house     the weather       politics      your culture      sports     travel     yourself        nightlife        new foods you haven't tried              your feelings        music       feelings      people          work         nature

 

Here are some expressions with the word "talk" - can you guess what they mean?

 

sweet talk

small talk

sleep talk

straight talk

sales talk

to talk shop

to talk truth

to talk rubbish

to talk sth over

to talk yourself out

 


I once asked a Japanese student what she missed most from Japan. She said "talking without speaking". 

 

What do you think she meant?



The following pictures represent idioms literally

Image result for lip service idiom

Lip service

The government only pays lip service to the idea of improving the living standards of the poor.










Related image

A slip of the tongue


"Be careful what you say to the police - a slip of the tongue could get us all put in jail."




Try these  out - there's no correct answer

She said


"                  ", she answered.
"                  ", she responded.
"                  ", she replied.
"                  ", she retorted.
"                  ", she called.
"                  ", she explained.
"                  ", she laughed.
"                  ", she screamed.
"                  ", she shouted.
"                  ", she admitted.
"                  ", she lied.
"                  ", she whispered.
"                  ", she sobbed.
"                  ", she hissed.
"                  ", she apologised.



Hey there!
You're wrong about that
No thanks
Go away!
I can't go on!
I love you
I hate you
I'm sorry, it's all my fault
It is very late and I am too tire to discuss this
Only an idiot would say that
I'm depressed
I suppose you're right
stop it at once
I'll be there in a minute
I'm just not ready for this level of commitment





What is she actually saying to him?


She: Hey - are golfing today? It's the second time this week.
He: But you said it was fine?
She: It is fine. It's perfectly fine.






What does she mean?

She: Are you wearing that?

She: Hey do you want to get some coffee?

She: I'll be ready in a minute.

She: Do you think she's pretty?






What does he mean?

He: Hey - mind if I catch a movie with the guys?

He: Wow - you're beautiful.

He: I'm fine. Really. Stop looking at me.









Phrases used

It's the second time this week!
But you said it was fine.
It is fine. It's perfectly fine.
Well, you're in luck.
Let me just check with my wife.
Mind if I go?
If that's what you want to do.
You're in luck.
On second thought
Now that's more like it





Synonyms of "talk"


chat

speak

tell

discuss

converse

gossip


 

1. I love calling my friends back at home to catch up on all the latest ______

2. He is a quiet person and doesn't _____ much.

3. Are you a good at ____ing jokes?

4. Everyone in the cafe is _____ing loudly.

5. I need to _______ my future with my boss.

6. She is very good at French - she can ______ quite naturally.

 

 

Rank the following from easiest to hardest: 1-6

___ To start a conversation
___ To finish a conversation
___ To change topic in a conversation
___ To get the other person to contribute to a conversation
___ To get the other person to stop talking for a moment
___ To disagree without offending the other person/people

 

 

When was the last time you talked and talked and talked with someone?


Where do you talk more?


in the classroom

in the car

in the train

in a cafe

online

in the kitchen



 

What would you most enjoy talking about?


a famous painting     

cats     

your house   

 the weather       

politics     

your culture     

sports    

travel     

yourself       

nightlife       

new foods you haven't tried             

 your feelings       

music      

feelings     

people         

 work        

nature


 

Here are some expressions with the word "talk" - can you guess what they mean?


 sweet talk

small talk

sleep talk

straight talk

sales talk

to talk truth

to talk rubbish

to talk sth over 



I once asked a Japanese student what she missed most from Japan. She said "talking without speaking". 

 What do you think she meant?

 

Video – The Manslator

What is she actually saying to him?

She: Hey - are golfing today? It's the second time this week.

He: But you said it was fine?

She: It is fine. It's perfectly fine.

 

What does she mean?

She: Are you wearing that?

She: Hey do you want to get some coffee?

She: I'll be ready in a minute.

She: Do you think she's pretty?

 

What does he mean?

He: Hey - mind if I catch a movie with the guys?

He: Wow - you're beautiful.

He: I'm fine. Really. Stop looking at me.

 

Phrases used


It's the second time this week!

But you said it was fine.

It is fine. It's perfectly fine.

Well, you're in luck.

Let me just check with my wife.

Mind if I go?

If that's what you want to do.

You're in luck.

On second thought

Now that's more like it


 








Do you like getting or giving advice?










Which things to do like to get advice about?

health
love life
shopping
restaurants
family matters
travel ideas
friendship
school
career
books to read
films or TV shows to see
money matters

Where do you get advice? - books, friends, family, TV, online...









Do you need advice on anything at the moment?










Has anyone ever given you some really bad advice?










Has anyone ever given you some good advice?









What's the difference?

We stopped to talk.                  We stopped talking.


















I once asked a Japanese student what she missed most from Japan. She said "talking without speaking". 

What do you think she meant?













Can you think of a better way to say this?


How was you're weekend?
It was good.


How's your soup?
Good.

Did you enjoy that class.
No


That's a nice shirt.
Thanks.

What do you think about Joanna?
She's nice.


How are you feeling after she spoke to you that way.
Bad.


Tell me about you'r family?
They are nice.


What are your plans this weekend?
I don't know




Recreate this simple story. You can't use nice good, big , or bad, and you can't repeat yourself.


Last weekend I performed with my band at a book launch. Lots of nice people came and the room was big and really nice. It felt good to play to a big crowd of nice people. The listened to the music good. It made me feel good about my music, which was nice. I'm quite bad at feeling good in crowds though. It doesn't feel good, even though I try to be nice. I just always somehow feel bad, you know? Anyway, my girlfriend was really nice and videoed our performance. I expected it to sound bad, but when I watched it it sounded pretty good. That's nice.



Big talk








Are you a fast talker?














Do you mind being interrupted?























Do you tend to talk directly or indirectly about your feelings?















Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Common responses

 



Echoing:

Another easy way to keep the other person talking is to echo the key thing they're saying, like this:

A) I'm going to the movies tonight.
B) The movies?

 In this dialogue the speakers echo one another to maintain clarity. Guess the words in the gaps.


A) I'm going to the movies tonight.
B) The _______?
A) Yes, I'm going to see a new anime movie.
B) An _______ movie?
A) It's a new one from Studio Ghibli.
B) ___________! I love those movies.
A)You _____ them?
B) Of course - what's the title?
A) The _____ - I'm not sure. I'll google it.
B) Okay ______ it. If I haven't seen it, could I come along?
A) Sure, you can _____ _____... Here it is - it's called Ponyo.
B) ______ - I don't think I've seen that one.
A) Well, it's on a 6.45 tonight.
B) ______. Great. I'm keen to come.
A) _____! Let's meet here at school at 5.15 and then walk down to the cinema.
B) _____. Sure thing, I'll be here.




Check

 

A) I'm going to the movies tonight.

B) The movies?

A) Yes, I'm going to see a new anime movie.

B) An Anime movie?

A) It's a new one from Studio Ghibli.

B) Studio Ghibli! I love those movies.

A) You love them?

B) Of course - what's the title?

A) The title - I'm not sure. I'll google it.

B) Okay google it. If I haven't seen it, could I come along?

A) Sure, you can come along... Here it is - it's called Ponyo.

B) Ponyo - I don't think I've seen that one.

A) Well, it's on a 6.45 tonight.

B) 6.45. Great. I'm keen to come.

A) Great! Let's meet here at school at 5.15 and then walk down to the cinema.

B) 5.15. Sure thing, I'll be here.

 


Common responses

Quizlet practice




Reacting to questions

When someone asks you a question, try commenting on the question before you answer it.

Oh, it's funny you should ask me that because...

I was wondering if you'd ask me that.

I wasn't expecting that question.

That's an interesting question.

I like the question.

That's a tricky one

This question makes me feel happy because...

I was hoping you'd ask me that.

Oh not that question!

Hmmm. Let me think about that.

Can you be more specific?

Can you rephrase the question?

What do you mean exactly?

Good question.

Tough question.

Nice question.




Prompts like these elicit further input from a conversational partner. Use them!

Really?
Interesting.
Go on?
Okay.
Yes?
Great.
Continue.
Did you really?
Perfect.
Nice.
How terrible.
Oh.
And?
Then what?
So?
Crazy!
Amazing.
No!?
You're kidding, aren't you?
Funny. Keep talking!
Good one.
Good for you.
Of course.
No way!?
Ha ha.
Yeah.
Yeah?
Yeah!


Noelia: Morning, Bob.

Bob: Oh, good ________. 

Noelia: It's so rainy today. The weather in this country is horrible!

Bob: Yes … yes … The ________ was even worse when I lived in Canada.

Noelia: Oh, I didn't know that you lived in __________, Bob. How cool!

Bob: One winter it was _______ cold and windy _____  I fell on the ice and broke my leg in three places.

Noelia: Oh no! You're ________!

Bob: I wish I _________, Noelia, I wish I was. I was never the same after that winter. And my leg is still bad today.

Noelia: Really? I'm sorry to _______ that. Poor you.

Bob: But it's not all bad. I met my wife in the hospital. She was the doctor who looked at my leg!

Noelia: __________! 

Bob: It was love at first ________! 

Noelia: Ah, ______’s brilliant!

Bob: Yes, and we're _________ in love 40 years later …  

Noelia: So in the end, breaking your leg was ______________ that could have happened.

Bob: Yes, I _________ it was!

 




Noelia: Hi, Bob!

Bob: Oh, morning, Noelia.

Noelia: So, what's _____? 

Bob: New, hmm, let me ______. Hmm … Nothing _____. Oh, hang on. My dog Bertie had his 14th birthday on Monday! 

Noelia: Oh, he's getting old ______?

Bob: I guess ____ … but not as old as his owner. 

Noelia: Haha … er, _________ …

Bob: How _______ you, Noelia? How's it going? 

Noelia: Great, actually. Yeah … ______ good.

Bob: _____ the way, I ________ to ask you, where in Spain are you from?

Noelia: I'm from Santander.

Bob: Oh, _______. Wonderful to grow up near the sea. 

Noelia: Yeah, it was perfect. Ah, I miss the sea. 

Bob: I know what you ______. I used to live in Spain and I _________ loved it.

Noelia: Really? I _______ know that, Bob! 

Bob: Yeah, I had a little bar on the Costa Brava.

Noelia: Wow! So do you speak Spanish ______?

Bob: Oh, _____ much. Ah, those were the days! Excuse me. Perdona, Noelia. Tengo que irme. Me necesitan en el segundo piso. ¡Hasta pronto! 

Noelia: Wow! 

 


Alex: You won’t believe what happened to me yesterday.
Jamie: R_____?

Alex: I ran into my old school teacher at the airport.
Jamie: I__________.

Alex: And guess what—he remembered my name after ten years.
Jamie: G___ ___?

Alex: He even asked about that science project I failed.
Jamie: O____.

Alex: Then he started laughing about it like it was the best thing ever.
Jamie: Y___?

Alex: And he said it was actually his favorite project because it exploded.
Jamie: G____.

Alex: Apparently, he tells that story to every class he teaches now.
Jamie: C_______.

Alex: He even showed me pictures he kept of the mess.
Jamie: D__ ___ r______?

Alex: Yep, still had them on his phone!
Jamie: P______.

Alex: I couldn’t believe it either.
Jamie: N___.

Alex: But then he told me the school had to repaint the whole lab.
Jamie: H__ t_______.

Alex: Yeah… I felt a bit bad about that.
Jamie: O_.

Alex: But wait, there’s more.
Jamie: A__?

Alex: He said that incident inspired three students to become scientists.
Jamie: T___ w___?

Alex: One of them even works at a big research company now.
Jamie: S__?

Alex: So my failure kind of helped people succeed!
Jamie: C_____!

Alex: I know, right?
Jamie: A_______.

Alex: He even thanked me for it.
Jamie: N__!?

Alex: I swear, I’m not making this up.
Jamie: Y_____ k_______, a_____ y__?

Alex: Not at all!
Jamie: F____. K___ t______!

Alex: Then we grabbed coffee and talked for an hour.
Jamie: G___ o___.

Alex: He said I was one of his most memorable students.
Jamie: G___ f__ y__.

Alex: I guess I made an impression.
Jamie: O_ c______.

Alex: And get this—he offered to write me a recommendation letter.
Jamie: N__ w__!?

Alex: Yep, just like that.
Jamie: H_ h_.

Alex: I walked away feeling pretty great.
Jamie: Y___.

Alex: You think that’s lucky, right?
Jamie: Y___?

Alex: Best airport trip ever.
Jamie: Y___!

Alex: You won’t believe what happened to me yesterday.
Jamie: Really?

Alex: I ran into my old school teacher at the airport.
Jamie: Interesting.

Alex: And guess what—he remembered my name after ten years.
Jamie: Go on?

Alex: He even asked about that science project I failed.
Jamie: Okay.

Alex: Then he started laughing about it like it was the best thing ever.
Jamie: Yes?

Alex: And he said it was actually his favorite project because it exploded.
Jamie: Great.

Alex: Apparently, he tells that story to every class he teaches now.
Jamie: Continue.

Alex: He even showed me pictures he kept of the mess.
Jamie: Did you really?

Alex: Yep, still had them on his phone!
Jamie: Perfect.

Alex: I couldn’t believe it either.
Jamie: Nice.

Alex: But then he told me the school had to repaint the whole lab.
Jamie: How terrible.

Alex: Yeah… I felt a bit bad about that.
Jamie: Oh.

Alex: But wait, there’s more.
Jamie: And?

Alex: He said that incident inspired three students to become scientists.
Jamie: Then what?

Alex: One of them even works at a big research company now.
Jamie: So?

Alex: So my failure kind of helped people succeed!
Jamie: Crazy!

Alex: I know, right?
Jamie: Amazing.

Alex: He even thanked me for it.
Jamie: No!?

Alex: I swear, I’m not making this up.
Jamie: You're kidding, aren't you?

Alex: Not at all!
Jamie: Funny. Keep talking!

Alex: Then we grabbed coffee and talked for an hour.
Jamie: Good one.

Alex: He said I was one of his most memorable students.
Jamie: Good for you.

Alex: I guess I made an impression.
Jamie: Of course.

Alex: And get this—he offered to write me a recommendation letter.
Jamie: No way!?

Alex: Yep, just like that.
Jamie: Ha ha.

Alex: I walked away feeling pretty great.
Jamie: Yeah.

Alex: You think that’s lucky, right?
Jamie: Yeah?

Alex: Best airport trip ever.
Jamie: Yeah!



Saturday, April 4, 2026

Animals and Nature

 

1
It is a small bird from New Zealand with soft, brown feathers. It cannot fly and uses its long beak to find food. It is active at night.

2
It is a black and white animal that lives in China. It mainly eats bamboo and spends many hours eating each day. It is usually calm and moves slowly.

3
It lives in Australia and moves by jumping on its strong back legs. It uses its tail to keep balance. It carries its baby in a pouch on its body.

4
It lives in the ocean and has a wide, flat body. It often hides under the sand to stay safe. It can use its tail to defend itself.

5
It lives in very hot and dry deserts. It has one or two humps that store energy. It can survive for a long time without drinking water.

6
It is a powerful animal that people often ride or use for work. It can run fast and travel long distances. It eats grass and needs a lot of space.

7
It is a long animal with no legs and smooth skin. It moves by pushing its body along the ground. Some types are poisonous, but many are harmless.

8
It is a farm animal that is good at climbing steep rocks. It eats grass, leaves, and other plants. It often has horns and can be very curious.

9
It is a large farm animal that lives in fields. It eats grass and produces milk for people. It usually lives in groups with other animals.

10
It is a strong bird that flies high and hunts for food. It has excellent eyesight to spot small animals. It catches its food with sharp claws.

11
It is a sea animal that is known for its intelligence. It lives in groups and communicates with sounds. It swims quickly and often jumps out of the water.

 





Parts of animals

udder       snout       horn       tusk       claw       beak
paw      tail       wing      antenna       fin       flipper 
shell     fur      whisker     gill      fang     trunk     hoof
feather   scales     antlers      pouch     hair     wool




Types of animals

a predator   a pack animal    a mammal    a reptile
an amphibian     a grazing animal     a rodent
an insect   a sea bird     a scavenger     a domesticated animal
an ape     a flightless bird   





Animal habitats


Image result for reef





Image result for north pole




Image result for alpine forest



Habitats - what animals live here?

The desert

Reefs

Rainforest

The city

Mountains

The deep ocean

The beach

The arctic

Antarctica

The moon



Grammar: Comparison

Comparatives review

less beautiful than
more beautiful than

easier than
smaller than


the most (longer) adj
the least (longer) adj

the adj + est

the + irregular adj
e.g. worst, best...




Basic animal vocabulary:

24 items (A2)

Kahoot (A2)














What animal is "man's best friend"?




Pollutionwildlifeendangeredspeciesconservationprotectionclimatechangeenvironmentallyfriendlyrecyclerainforestprimateschimpanzeeecologyfarmingresearchbiodiversityeagleloggingdeforestationpoachingthreatenedconservationisttourismeducationprogrammenationalparkshabitatwetlandsdestruction



Nouns:

continent
population
breed









Pronunciation:

(With some vocab from the workshop script)








zzzzuuuu (not tzu or joo or jzu!)

zoo










l / r

really interesting










v /r

favourite









r / z

differences









str / st

strongest








st / st  / nd / lz (consonant shift)

fastest land animals









ai / ng / r / nd

lazing around








kst

next










str / ks / ng

stretching and exercising










au / ( zh - television, unusual)

enclosure










r / r / nd

run around









l


definitely









ks / pt

except









r / ntl

apparently










l / ntly / r / nd (consonant shift)

I'll definitely recommend it