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Are you bored and you feel like doing something fun?
Well, I’m sending you below some word and vocabulary games.
Let´s play together! Enjoy it!
1. Travel Wordsearch
First, look at the grid and see how many travel-related words you can find.
Words may go across or back, up or down, and diagonally up or down in the
grid.
Then, look on the next page, and use the definitions to help you identify any
travel words you still haven’t got.
Good luck!
P I R T D N U O R I D
A C I K A T S E B L E
K E N I R B A L I K T
C G N I K O O B Y A U
H A P E F L U A B R M
E G C R O T L T R E M
C G U P R E P E E D O
K U T I D U A M E E C
I L A T E N O I L Y S
N O I T A N I T S E D
Travel definitions:
1. an arrangement to buy a travel ticket, stay in a hotel room etc at a later date (7).
2. in or on a ship, bus, train, or plane (6)
3. a situation in which a plane, train, etc leaves or arrives late (5)
4. the place where someone or something is going (11)
5. a journey in a plane that flies late at night (3-3)
6. a journey to a place and back again (5, 4)
7. a way that buses, trains, ships, or planes travel regularly (5)
8. a list of the times when buses, trains, etc arrive and leave (9)
9. to travel regularly to and from work (7)
10. a journey in which you visit several places for pleasure (4)
11. bags and suitcases that you take on a journey (7)
12. The process you go through when you arrive at an airport (5-2)
2. Making Sentences
HOW MANY SENTENCES ARE YOU ABLE TO CREATE WITH THESE WORDS?
(Sentences with three words, sentences with four or more words). Sentences may be like this:
Well, no problem. Try to find out how these movie titles were translated in Argentina.
How many of these titles can you guess before googling for the answers?
1. Bridesmaids
3. Coming to America
5. Saw 2
6. A Bug’s Life
7. Booksmart
8. Home Alone
9. The Hangover
These English idioms are extremely common in everyday conversation. You will hear them in movies and TV shows; so it's a good
idea to master some of these expressions. Have you ever used them? Find out their Spanish counterparts.
BREAK A LEG
KILL TWO BIRDS WITH ONE STONE
A STORM IN A TEACUP