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Annex 1 Task 4 – Personal and professional future plans.

Stage 1: Prepare the topic

Recording in the forum

Insert audio recording (2022). (Image). Forum in Learning Environment.

Visit the page www.naturalreaders.com and enter the script made in the
previous step; break it into short sentences to listen and practice the
pronunciation in English.

Phrasal verbs

Phrasal verbs are usually two-word phrases consisting of verb +


adverb or verb + preposition.

Verb Meaning Example

Get up To get out of bed after sleeping I get up at 6:00.

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Verb Meaning Example

To get into a bus, plane or


train. / To continue doing
The bus was full, but I
Get in something, especially with
could get in.
more effort or more quickly
than before.

To have just enough of


something such as money or I can get by with my
Get by
knowledge so that you can do English in Miami.
what you need to do.

When a vehicle or driver drives


off, the vehicle starts moving
and leaves. / To force someone The police drove off the
Drive off
to go away, especially when suspect car.
they are attacking or
threatening you.

To know more about phrasal verbs, it is suggested to check and develop


the exercises of the E-book B2: unit 2, module 6. To access the E-book
B2, it’s necessary to be logged to the English course.

First Conditional

Type 1
This type of condition is used for present or future activities which are
likely to happen. We use the present simple tense in the if clause and the
shall/will/can/may+infinitive construction in the main clause.

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Cuellar, D. (2017). (Image). If Clauses in Conditional Sentences.

To know more about conditionals, it is suggested to check the following


Virtual Information Object click here. To access this resource, it’s
necessary to be logged to the English course.

Second Conditional

Type 2

The condition is used for present or future activities which are unlikely
or impossible to happen. We use the past simple tense in the if clause
and the should/would+infinitive contruction in the main clause.

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Cuellar, D. (2017). (Image). If Clauses in Conditional Sentences.

To know more about conditionals, it is suggested to check the following


Virtual Information Object click here. To access this resource, it’s
necessary to be logged to the English course.

Future Perfect

We use the future perfect to say that something will be finished by a


time in the future. We often use the future perfect with ‘by’, “in” or ‘by
the time’.

• I think astronauts will have landed on Mars by the year 2020.


• I’ll have finished in an hour and then you can use the computer.
• By the time you finish your soup, the rest of your meal will be
cold.

‘By’ and “by the time” mean ‘not later than a particular time’ and ‘in’
means ‘within a period of time’.
We use these expressions when we don’t know exactly when something
will finish.
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• I promise I’ll have done all the work by next Saturday. - We don’t
know exactly when this person will finish the work – maybe
Thursday, maybe Friday – but definitely before Saturday.

Future perfect
Affirmative Will have + past participle
Negative Will + not + have + participle
Questions Will + pronoun + have + participle

To know more about the future perfect, it is suggested to check and


develop the exercises of the E-book B2: unit 1, module 1. To access the
E-book B2, it’s necessary to be logged to the English course.

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