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UNIT 10

March, Thursday the 31st, 2022


Objective: SWBA to learn to compare and talk about things you have

Lesson A
Class Agenda
1. Reading activities
2. Grammar: comparative adjectives
3. Vocabulary: IT collocations
1. Answer the questions

a)
1.
I think that these people are members of a family, they are two brothers and a sister. they
are having dinner at his house
2.
one is talking to his girlfriend and the other to his boss
3.
she is bored and she doesn't like that they are on the phone at dinner time
4.
they planned to have dinner with family. the girl is angry because her brothers were busy at
dinner
b)
the true sentence is the fourth because I put the cell phone next to me to sleep
2. Reading

1.
In my country I am very popular because they have many technological advances and allow
various activities

2.
People use them to contact for work reasons, with their friends, to do tasks, consult, to
watch videos, to find locations on google maps

3. Take notes the video

What are adjectives?


Adjectives are words that describe nouns. Adjectives can give us information such as the
size or age of a noun. Adjectives can also tell us someone’s opinion about a noun or
describe how someone is feeling. We use comparative adjectives to compare two people,
places, or things. Comparative adjectives tell us how one noun is different from the other.
For example: She is taller than him. This painting is more beautiful than that painting. My
brother looks happier than my sister. How are comparative adjectives formed in English? It
depends on how many syllables the adjective has. For one-syllable adjectives, we add -er to
the adjective. For example, “short” becomes “shorter.” If the adjective ends in a consonant-
vowel-consonant pattern, we double the final consonant before adding -er.
For example, “big” becomes “bigger.” For two-syllable adjectives that end in -y, we change
-y to -i and add -er. For example, “hungry” becomes “hungrier” and “noisy” becomes
“noisier. For adjectives that are two syllables or more, we use the word “more” before the
adjective. For example, “modern” becomes “more modern” and “expensive” becomes
“more expensive. “Some comparative adjectives in English don’t follow the usual rules.
For example, the adjective “good” becomes “better” in the comparative form. “Bad”
becomes “worse” and “far” becomes “farther” or “further.” The most common sentence
pattern for comparative adjectives in English is: subject plus verb plus comparative
adjective plus "than" plus object. Let’s look at some examples of comparative adjectives in
a sentence. The blue house is bigger than the yellow house. Rock music is better than
classical music.
My dog is lazier than my cat. The singer is more famous than the actor. My boots are more
expensive than your shoes. Look at the adjective. Say or write the comparative adjective.
4. Examples

1 syllable 1 sillable V+C 2 syllables with C+Y 2 + Sillables more


More
5 5 5 5
Old older Fat- fatter Busy – busier More dangerous
Cold colder Happy happier
Tall taller

5. Vocabulary
a)
1 surf
2 check
3 make

b)
1 b; c
2 d
3 a
4 a; e
5 b; c
6. Do your lingo in the computer in the morning?
1. I usually cheeky emails, maybe twice a day
2. I visit many websites, but I prefer those which have interactive activities for my students.
3.yes, of course. I surf the web at work. My students have to work there and I check them
4. I log on to my computer since the morning until night.

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