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Word Lesson Page Part o Pron

Argentina 1A 6 n ˌɑːdʒənˈtiːnə
Brazil 1A 6 n brəˈzɪl

Canada 1A 6 n ˈkænədə

Italy 1A 6 n ˈɪtəli
Japan 1A 6 n dʒəˈpæn
Mexico 1A 6 n ˈmeksɪkəʊ

Poland 1A 6 n ˈpəʊlənd

Spain 1A 6 n speɪn

Thailand 1A 6 n ˈtaɪlænd

the UK 1A 6 n ðə ˌjuː ˈkeɪ

the US 1A 6 n ðə ˌjuː ˈes

Turkey 1A 6 n ˈtɜːki

doctor 1B 8 n ˈdɒktə
farmer 1B 8 n ˈfɑːmə

football player 1B 8 n ˈfʊtbɔːl ˌpleɪə

nurse 1B 8 n nɜːs

office worker 1B 8 n ˈɒfɪs ˌwɜːkə

pilot 1B 8 n ˈpaɪlət

school teacher 1B 8 n ˈskuːl ˌtiːtʃə


taxi driver 1B 8 n ˈtæksi ˌdraɪvə

artist 1B VB 136 n ˈɑːtɪst


bus driver 1B VB 136 n ˈbʌs ˌdraɪvə

manager 1B VB 136 n ˈmænɪdʒə

police officer 1B VB 136 n pəˈliːs ˌɒfɪsə

receptionist 1B VB 136 n rɪˈsepʃənɪst


shop assistant 1B VB 136 n ˈʃɒp əˌsɪstənt

soldier 1B VB 136 n ˈsəʊldʒə


student 1B VB 136 n ˈstjuːdənt

tennis player 1B VB 136 n ˈtenɪs ˌpleɪə


tour guide 1B VB 136 n ˈtɔː ɡaɪd

waiter 1B VB 136 n ˈweɪtə

waitress 1B VB 136 n ˈweɪtrəs

writer 1B VB 136 n ˈraɪtə


American 1C 10 adj əˈmerɪkən
Argentinian 1C 10 adj ˌɑːdʒənˈtɪniən
Brazilian 1C 10 adj brəˈzɪliən
British 1C 10 adj ˈbrɪtɪʃ
Canadian 1C 10 adj kəˈneɪdiən

Italian 1C 10 adj ɪˈtæliən


Japanese 1C 10 adj ˌdʒæpəˈniːz
Mexican 1C 10 adj ˈmeksɪkən
Polish 1C 10 adj ˈpəʊlɪʃ
Spanish 1C 10 adj ˈspænɪʃ
Thai 1C 10 adj taɪ
Turkish 1C 10 adj ˈtɜːkɪʃ
brother 2A 14 n ˈbrʌðə

children 2A 14 n pl ˈtʃɪldrən
dad 2A 14 n dæd
daughter 2A 14 n ˈdɔːtə
father 2A 14 n ˈfɑːðə
husband 2A 14 n ˈhʌzbənd
mother 2A 14 n ˈmʌðə
mum 2A 14 n mʌm
parents 2A 14 n pl ˈpeərənts
sister 2A 14 n ˈsɪstə
son 2A 14 n sʌn
wife 2A 14 n waɪf

aunt 2A VB 137 n ɑːnt

boyfriend 2A VB 137 n ˈbɔɪfrend

cousin 2A VB 137 n ˈkʌzən

girlfriend 2A VB 137 n ˈɡɜːlfrend

grandad 2A VB 137 n ˈɡrændæd

grandma 2A VB 137 n ˈɡrændmɑː

nephew 2A VB 137 n ˈnefjuː

niece 2A VB 137 n niːs

parents 2A VB 137 n pl ˈpeərənts

uncle 2A VB 137 n ˈʌnkəl


book 2B 16 n bʊk

box 2B 16 n bɒks

chair 2B 16 n tʃeə

clock 2B 16 n klɒk

computer 2B 16 n kəmˈpjuːtə

cup 2B 16 n kʌp

desk 2B 16 n desk

key 2B 16 n kiː
pen 2B 16 n pen

phone 2B 16 n fəʊn
photo 2B 16 n ˈfəʊtəʊ
table 2B 16 n ˈteɪbəl

backpack 2B VB 137 n ˈbækpæk

credit card 2B VB 137 n ˈkredɪt ˌkɑːd

glasses 2B VB 137 n pl ˈɡlɑːsɪz

handbag 2B VB 137 n ˈhændbæɡ

keyboard 2B VB 137 n ˈkiːbɔːd


laptop 2B VB 137 n ˈlæptɒp

money 2B VB 137 n ˈmʌni

newspaper 2B VB 137 n ˈnjuːsˌpeɪpə

passport 2B VB 137 n ˈpɑːspɔːt

screen 2B VB 137 n skriːn

umbrella 2B VB 137 n ʌmˈbrelə

wallet 2B VB 137 n ˈwɒlɪt


a hundred 2C 18 n ə ˈhʌndrəd
eight 2C 18 n eɪt
eiɡhteen 2C 18 n ˌeɪˈtiːn
eiɡhty 2C 18 n ˈeɪti
eleven 2C 18 n ɪˈlevən
fifteen 2C 18 n ˌfɪfˈtiːn
fifty 2C 18 n ˈfɪfti
five 2C 18 n faɪv
fourteen 2C 18 n ˌfɔːˈtiːn
forty 2C 18 n ˈfɔːti
four 2C 18 n fɔː
one 2C 18 n wʌn

nine 2C 18 n naɪn

nineteen 2C 18 n ˌnaɪnˈtiːn
ninety 2C 18 n ˈnaɪnti
seven 2C 18 n ˈsevən
seventeen 2C 18 n ˌsevənˈtiːn
seventy 2C 18 n ˈsevənti
six 2C 18 n sɪks
sixteen 2C 18 n ˌsɪkˈstiːn
sixty 2C 18 n ˈsɪksti
ten 2C 18 n ten
thirteen 2C 18 n ˌθɜːˈtiːn
thirty 2C 18 n ˈθɜːti
three 2C 18 n θriː

twelve 2C 18 n twelv
two 2C 18 n tuː
twenty 2C 18 n ˈtwenti

twenty-one 2C 18 n ˌtwenti ˈwʌn


twenty-two 2C 18 n ˌtwenti ˈtuː
twenty-three 2C 18 n ˌtwenti ˈθriː

bank 3A 22 n bæŋk

bookshop 3A 22 n ˈbʊkʃɒp

café 3A 22 n ˈkæfeɪ
cinema 3A 22 n ˈsɪnəmə

flat 3A 22 n flæt
hotel 3A 22 n həʊˈtel

house 3A 22 n haʊs

market 3A 22 n ˈmɑːkɪt

park 3A 22 n pɑːk
restaurant 3A 22 n ˈrestərɒnt

supermarket 3A 22 n ˈsuːpəˌmɑːkɪt
train station 3A 22 n ˈtreɪn ˌsteɪʃən

bathroom 3B 24 n ˈbɑːθrʊm, -ruːm


bed 3B 24 n bed

bedroom 3B 24 n ˈbedrʊm, -ruːm


kitchen 3B 24 n ˈkɪtʃən

lift 3B 24 n lɪft

living room 3B 24 n ˈlɪvɪŋ ruːm

oven 3B 24 n ˈʌvən

shower 3B 24 n ˈʃaʊə

toilet 3B 24 n ˈtɔɪlət

TV 3B 24 n ˌtiː ˈviː

wifi 3B 24 n ˈwaɪfaɪ

basement 3B VB 138 n ˈbeɪsmənt

bath 3B VB 138 n bɑːθ

cupboard 3B VB 138 n ˈkʌbəd

curtains 3B VB 138 n pl ˈkɜːtnz

door 3B VB 138 n dɔː


floor 3B VB 138 n flɔː

fridge 3B VB 138 n frɪdʒ

hall 3B VB 138 n hɔːl

mirror 3B VB 138 n ˈmɪrə

roof 3B VB 138 n ruːf

washing machine 3B VB 138 n ˈwɒʃɪŋ məˌʃiːn

window 3B VB 138 n ˈwɪndəʊ


bad 3C 26 adj bæd
big 3C 26 adj bɪɡ

busy 3C 26 adj ˈbɪzi

cheap 3C 26 adj tʃiːp


expensive 3C 26 adj ɪkˈspensɪv
good 3C 26 adj ɡʊd
new 3C 26 adj njuː

old 3C 26 adj əʊld


quiet 3C 26 adj ˈkwaɪət

small 3C 26 adj smɔːl


big 3C VB 138 adj bɪɡ

cheap 3C VB 138 adj tʃiːp


clean 3C VB 138 adj kliːn

closed 3C VB 138 adj kləʊzd


dark 3C VB 138 adj dɑːk
dirty 3C VB 138 adj ˈdɜːti
expensive 3C VB 138 adj ɪkˈspensɪv
light 3C VB 138 adj laɪt
new 3C VB 138 adj njuː

old 3C VB 138 adj əʊld

open 3C VB 138 adj ˈəʊpən


small 3C VB 138 adj smɔːl
beard 4A 30 n bɪəd

blonde hair 4A 30 n ˌblɒnd ˈheə

brown hair 4A 30 n ˌbraʊn ˈheə

grey hair 4A 30 n ˌɡreɪ ˈheə

red hair 4A 30 n ˌred ˈheə

blue eyes 4A 30 n pl ˌbluː ˈaɪz

brown eyes 4A 30 n pl ˌbraʊn ˈaɪz

green eyes 4A 30 n pl ˌɡriːn ˈaɪz

in his 30s/40s 4A 30 n phr ɪn hɪz ˈtwentiz/ˈθɜːtiz

in her 20s/50s 4A 30 n phr ɪn hɜ ˈfɔːtiz/ˈfɪftiz

arm 4A VB 139 n ɑːm

chest 4A VB 139 n tʃest

ear 4A VB 139 n ɪə
elbow 4A VB 139 n ˈelbəʊ

eye 4A VB 139 n aɪ

face 4A VB 139 n feɪs


finger 4A VB 139 n ˈfɪnɡə

hair 4A VB 139 n ˈheə

hand 4A VB 139 n hænd

head 4A VB 139 n hed


knee 4A VB 139 n niː

leg 4A VB 139 n leɡ

mouth 4A VB 139 n maʊθ

neck 4A VB 139 n nek

nose 4A VB 139 n nəʊz

shoulder 4A VB 139 n ˈʃəʊldə


stomach 4A VB 139 n ˈstʌmək

bag 4B 32 n bæɡ

bottle of water 4B 32 n ˌbɒtl əv ˈwɔːtə

camera 4B 32 n ˈkæmərə

coat 4B 32 n kəʊt

credit card 4B 32 n ˈkredɪt ˌkɑːd

food 4B 32 n fuːd

key 4B 32 n kiː
money 4B 32 n ˈmʌni

passport 4B 32 n ˈpɑːspɔːt

phone 4B 32 n fəʊn

sunglasses 4B 32 n pl ˈsʌnˌɡlɑːsɪz

ticket 4B 32 n ˈtɪkɪt

drink tea/coffee 4C 34 v phr ˌdrɪnk ˈtiː/ˈkɒfi

go to 4C 34 v phr ˈɡəʊ tə
see a film/show 4C 34 v phr ˌsiː ə ˈfɪlm/ˈʃəʊ

take 4C 34 v teɪk

ˌteɪk ə
take a taxi/bus/train 4C 34 v phr ˈtæksi/ˈbʌs/ˈtreɪn
take photos 4C 34 v phr ˌteɪk ˈfəʊtəʊz
try … food 4C 34 v phr ˌtraɪ ˈfuːd

visit 4C 34 v ˈvɪzɪt
get up 5A 38 phr v ɡet ˈʌp
have breakfast 5A 38 v phr hæv ˈbrekfəst

go to work 5A 38 v phr ˌɡəʊ tə ˈwɜːk


work 5A 38 v wɜːk
have lunch 5A 38 v phr hæv ˈlʌnʃ
go home 5A 38 v phr ɡəʊ ˈhəʊm

have dinner 5A 38 v phr hæv ˈdɪnə


watch TV 5A 38 v phr ˌwɒtʃ tiː ˈviː

study 5A 38 v ˈstʌdi

go to bed 5A 38 v phr ˌɡəʊ tə ˈbed


finish work 5A VB 140 v phr ˌfɪnɪʃ ˈwɜːk
go shopping 5A VB 140 v phr ˌɡəʊ ˈʃɒpɪŋ

have a coffee 5A VB 140 v phr hæv ə ˈkɒfi

have a shower 5A VB 140 v phr hæv ə ˈʃaʊə

meet friends 5A VB 140 v phr ˌmiːt ˈfrendz


play a game 5A VB 140 v phr ˌpleɪ ə ˈɡeɪm

read a book 5A VB 140 v phr ˌriːd ə ˈbʊk

relax 5A VB 140 v rɪˈlæks

run 5A VB 140 v rʌn


start work 5A VB 140 v phr ˌstɑːt ˈwɜːk
arrive 5B 40 v phr əˈraɪv ət
cycle 5B 40 v ˈsaɪkl
drive 5B 40 v draɪv
leave home 5B 40 v phr ˌliːv ˈhəʊm ət

walk 5B 40 v wɔːk
go/travel by … 5B 40 v phr ˌɡəʊ/ˌtrævəl baɪ
go/travel to … 5B 40 v phr ˌɡəʊ/ˌtrævəl tʊ
take a … 5B 40 v phr ˌteɪk ə
bike 5B 40 n baɪk
boat 5B 40 n bəʊt
bus 5B 40 n bʌs

car 5B 40 n kɑː
taxi 5B 40 n ˈtæksi

train 5B 40 n treɪn
ˌɡəʊ/ˌwɔːk/ˌteɪk ə …
go/walk/take a ...
home/to work 5B 40 v phr ˈhəʊm

bread 5C 42 n bred

cake 5C 42 n keɪk

cheese 5C 42 n tʃiːz
chicken 5C 42 n ˈtʃɪkɪn

chocolate 5C 42 n ˈtʃɒklət

coffee 5C 42 n ˈkɒfi

egg 5C 42 n eɡ

fish 5C 42 n fɪʃ
meat 5C 42 n miːt

milk 5C 42 n mɪlk

salad 5C 42 n ˈsæləd

sandwich 5C 42 n ˈsænwɪdʒ

sugar 5C 42 n ˈʃʊɡə

tea 5C 42 n tiː

apple 5C VB 140 n ˈæpl


banana 5C VB 140 n bəˈnɑːnə

burger 5C VB 140 n ˈbɜːɡə

carrot 5C VB 140 n ˈkærət

chips 5C VB 140 n pl tʃɪps

orange 5C VB 140 n ˈɒrəndʒ

potato 5C VB 140 n pəˈteɪtəʊ

rice 5C VB 140 n raɪs


soup 5C VB 140 n suːp

strawberry 5C VB 140 n ˈstrɔːbəri

tomato 5C VB 140 n təˈmɑːtəʊ

water 5C VB 140 n ˈwɔːtə

in the morning 6A 46 phr ɪn ðə ˈmɔːnɪŋ

in the afternoon 6A 46 phr ɪn ði ˌɑːftəˈnuːn

in the evening 6A 46 phr ɪn ði ˈiːvnɪŋ

at night 6A 46 phr ət ˈnaɪt


ət ðə ˌwiːkˈend,
at the weekend 6A 46 phr ˈwiːkend
every day 6A 46 phr ˌevri ˈdeɪ
every week 6A 46 phr ˌevri ˈwiːk

clean the bathroom 6B 48 v phr ˌkliːn ðə ˈbɑːθrʊm


cook dinner 6B 48 v phr ˌkʊk ˈdɪnə

feed the dog 6B 48 v phr ˌfiːd ðə ˈdɒɡ

go to the supermarket 6B 48 v phr ˌɡəʊ tə ðə ˈsuːpəmɑːkɪt

make the beds 6B 48 v phr ˌmeɪk ðə ˈbedz


walk the dog 6B 48 v phr ˌwɔːk ðə ˈdɒɡ

do the washing 6B 48 v phr ˌduː ðə ˈwɒʃɪŋ

wash the dishes 6B 48 v phr ˌwɒʃ ðə ˈdɪʃɪz

build a website 6C 50 v phr ˌbɪld ə ˈwebsaɪt

dance 6C 50 v dɑːns

draw pictures 6C 50 v phr ˌdrɔː ˈpɪktʃəz

fly a plane 6C 50 v phr ˌflaɪ ə ˈpleɪn

make a cake 6C 50 v phr ˌmeɪk ə ˈkeɪk

make clothes 6C 50 v phr ˌmeɪk ˈkləʊðz, kləʊz

play football 6C 50 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈfʊtbɔːl

ride a horse 6C 50 v phr ˌraɪd ə ˈhɔːs


sing 6C 50 v sɪŋ
sleep on a train 6C 50 v phr ˌsliːp ɒn ə ˈtreɪn

speak two languages 6C 50 v phr ˌspiːk tuː ˈlæŋɡwɪdʒɪz

swim 6C 50 v swɪm

make a short film 6C VB 141 v phr ˌmeɪk ə ˌʃɔːt ˈfɪlm

make Japanese food 6C VB 141 v phr ˌmeɪk ˌdʒæpəniːz ˈfuːd


make bread 6C VB 141 v phr ˌmeɪk ˈbred

play the guitar 6C VB 141 v phr ˌpleɪ ðə ɡɪˈtɑː

play the violin 6C VB 141 v phr ˌpleɪ ðə ˌvaɪəˈlɪn

play chess 6C VB 141 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈtʃes

play golf 6C VB 141 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈɡɒlf

ride a motorbike 6C VB 141 v phr ˌraɪd ə ˈməʊtəbaɪk

ride a horse 6C VB 141 v phr ˌraɪd ə ˈhɔːs

ride a bicycle 6C VB 141 v phr ˌraɪd ə ˈbaɪsɪkl

speak four languages 6C VB 141 v phr ˌspiːk fɔː ˈlæŋɡwɪdʒɪz

speak Spanish 6C VB 141 v phr ˌspiːk ˈspænɪʃ

air 7A 54 n eə

cloud 7A 54 n klaʊd

direction 7A 54 n dəˈrekʃən, daɪ-

east 7A 54 n iːst

field 7A 54 n fiːld

flower 7A 54 n ˈflaʊə

hill 7A 54 n hɪl
island 7A 54 n ˈaɪlənd
lake 7A 54 n leɪk
land 7A 54 n lænd
mountain 7A 54 n ˈmaʊntən
north 7A 54 n nɔːθ

plant 7A 54 n plɑːnt

river 7A 54 n ˈrɪvə

sea 7A 54 n siː

sky 7A 54 n skaɪ

south 7A 54 n saʊθ

tree 7A 54 n triː

water 7A 54 n ˈwɔːtə

west 7A 54 n west

January 7B 56 n ˈdʒænjuəri, -njʊri

February 7B 56 n ˈfebruəri, ˈfebjʊri

March 7B 56 n mɑːtʃ

April 7B 56 n ˈeɪprəl
May 7B 56 n meɪ
June 7B 56 n dʒuːn

July 7B 56 n dʒʊˈlaɪ

August 7B 56 n ˈɔːɡəst

September 7B 56 n sepˈtembə

October 7B 56 n ɒkˈtəʊbə

November 7B 56 n nəʊˈvembə

December 7B 56 n dɪˈsembə

first 7B 56 n, adj fɜːst

second 7B 56 n, adj ˈsekənd

third 7B 56 n, adj θɜːd

fourth 7B 56 n, adj fɔːθ

fifth 7B 56 n, adj fɪfθ


sixth 7B 56 n, adj sɪksθ

seventh 7B 56 n, adj ˈsevənθ

eighth 7B 56 n, adj eɪtθ

ninth 7B 56 n, adj naɪnθ

tenth 7B 56 n, adj tenθ

eleventh 7B 56 n, adj ɪˈlevənθ

twelfth 7B 56 n, adj twelfθ

thirteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌθɜːˈtiːnθ

fourteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌfɔːˈtiːnθ

fifteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌfɪfˈtiːnθ

sixteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌsɪkˈstiːnθ

seventeenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌsevənˈtiːnθ

eighteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌeɪˈtiːnθ

nineteenth 7B 56 n, adj ˌnaɪnˈtiːnθ

twentieth 7B 56 n, adj ˈtwentiəθ

twenty-first 7B 56 n, adj ˌtwenti ˈfɜːst

twenty-second 7B 56 n, adj ˌtwenti ˈsekənd

twenty-third 7B 56 n, adj ˌtwenti ˈθɜːd

twenty-fourth 7B 56 n, adj ˌtwenti ˈfɔːθ

thirtieth 7B 56 n, adj ˈθɜːtiəθ

thirty-first 7B 56 n, adj ˌθɜːti ˈfɜːst

cold 7C 58 adj kəʊld


dark 7C 58 adj dɑːk

difficult 7C 58 adj ˈdɪfɪkəlt


easy 7C 58 adj ˈiːzi
fast 7C 58 adj fɑːst

happy 7C 58 adj ˈhæpi


high 7C 58 adj haɪ
hot 7C 58 adj hɒt

light 7C 58 adj laɪt


long 7C 58 adj lɒŋ

low 7C 58 adj ləʊ


old 7C 58 adj əʊld

sad 7C 58 adj sæd


short 7C 58 adj ʃɔːt
slow 7C 58 adj sləʊ

young 7C 58 adj jʌŋ

bored 7C VB 142 adj bɔːd


clever 7C VB 142 adj ˈklevə
difficult 7C VB 142 adj ˈdɪfɪkəlt
famous 7C VB 142 adj ˈfeɪməs
fast 7C VB 142 adj fɑːst

favourite 7C VB 142 adj ˈfeɪvərət

interesting 7C VB 142 adj ˈɪntrəstɪŋ


nice 7C VB 142 adj naɪs

old 7C VB 142 adj əʊld


sad 7C VB 142 adj sæd

slow 7C VB 142 adj sləʊ


tired 7C VB 142 adj taɪəd

travel to work 8A 62 v phr ˌtrævl tə ˈwɜːk

travel by bus 8A 62 v phr ˌtrævl baɪ ˈbʌs

travel by car 8A 62 v phr ˌtrævl baɪ ˈkɑː


ˌtrævl tə maɪ
travel to my
grandparents' house 8A 62 v phr ˈɡrænpeərənts ˌhaʊs

travel with my family 8A 62 v phr ˌtrævl wɪð maɪ ˈfæməli

watch TV 8A 62 v phr ˌwɒtʃ tiː ˈviː

watch a film 8A 62 v phr ˌwɒtʃ ə ˈfɪlm

live with my parents 8A 62 v phr ˌlɪv wɪð maɪ ˈpeərənts

live with my family 8A 62 v phr ˌlɪv wɪð maɪ ˈfæməli

live in a city 8A 62 v phr ˌlɪv ɪn ə ˈsɪti


live in a town 8A 62 v phr ˌlɪv ɪn ə ˈtaʊn

live in a house 8A 62 v phr ˌlɪv ɪn ə ˈhaʊs

talk to my parents 8A 62 v phr ˌtɔːk tə maɪ ˈpeərənts

talk to my teacher 8A 62 v phr ˌtɔːk tə maɪ ˈtiːtʃə

talk about the weather 8A 62 v phr ˌtɔːk əbaʊt ðə ˈweðə


ˌtɔːk əbaʊt maɪ
talk about my
weekend 8A 62 v phr ˈwiːkend

play games 8A 62 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈɡeɪmz

play tennis 8A 62 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈtenɪs


play with friends 8A 62 v phr ˌpleɪ wɪð maɪ ˈfrendz

play with my family 8A 62 v phr ˌpleɪ wɪð maɪ ˈfæməli

ate 8B 64 v et, eɪt

bought 8B 64 v bɔːt

broke 8B 64 v brəʊk

felt 8B 64 v felt

forgot 8B 64 v fəˈɡɒt

got up 8B 64 v ɡɒt ˈʌp

had 8B 64 v d, əd, həd, hæd

lost 8B 64 v lɒst

met 8B 64 v met

ran 8B 64 v ræn

saw 8B 64 v sɔː

spoke 8B 64 v spəʊk

took 8B 64 v tʊk

went 8B 64 v went
drove 8B VB 143 v drəʊv

found 8B VB 143 v faʊnd

gave 8B VB 143 v ɡeɪv

left 8B VB 143 v left

made 8B VB 143 v meɪd

sat 8B VB 143 v sæt

saw 8B VB 143 v sɔː

sent 8B VB 143 v sent

spent 8B VB 143 v spent

taught 8B VB 143 v tɔːt

won 8B VB 143 v wʌn

wrote 8B VB 143 v rəʊt

go for a walk 8C 66 v phr ˌɡəʊ fər ə ˈwɔːk

go shopping 8C 66 v phr ˌɡəʊ ˈʃɒpɪŋ

go to restaurants 8C 66 v phr ˌɡəʊ tə ˈrestərɒnts


have a good time 8C 66 v phr hæv ə ˌɡʊd ˈtaɪm

relax 8C 66 v rɪˈlæks

stay in a hotel 8C 66 v phr ˌsteɪ ɪn ə həʊˈtel

swim in the sea 8C 66 v phr ˌswɪm ɪn ðə ˈsiː

visit a museum 8C 66 v phr ˌvɪzɪt ə mjuːˈziəm


above 9A 70 prep əˈbʌv

at 9A 70 prep ət, æt
behind 9A 70 prep bɪˈhaɪnd

below 9A 70 prep bɪˈləʊ

between 9A 70 prep bɪˈtwiːn


in 9A 70 prep ɪn

in front of 9A 70 prep phɪn ˈfrʌnt əv

next to 9A 70 prep phˈnekst tʊ


on 9A 70 prep ɒn

do exercise 9B 72 v phr ˌduː ˈeksəsaɪz

do/play some sport 9B 72 v phr ˌduː/ˌpleɪ səm ˈspɔːt

listen to music 9B 72 v phr ˌlɪsən tə ˈmjuːzɪk

listen to the radio 9B 72 v phr ˌlɪsən tə ðə ˈreɪdiəʊ

listen to a song 9B 72 v phr ˌlɪsən tʊ ə ˈsɒŋ

listen to a story 9B 72 v phr ˌlɪsən tʊ ə ˈstɔːri

play cards 9B 72 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈkɑːdz

play a game 9B 72 v phr ˌpleɪ ə ˈɡeɪm

play a video game 9B 72 v phr ˌpleɪ ə ˈvɪdiəʊ ˌɡeɪm

read a book 9B 72 v phr ˌriːd ə ˈbʊk

read a newspaper 9B 72 v phr ˌriːd ə ˈnjuːsˌpeɪpə

read a story 9B 72 v phr ˌriːd ə ˈstɔːri

use the internet 9B 72 v phr ˌjuːz ði ˈɪntənet

watch a film 9B 72 v phr ˌwɒtʃ ə ˈfɪlm

watch a play 9B 72 v phr ˌwɒtʃ ə ˈpleɪ


ˌwɒtʃ ə tiː ˈviː
watch a TV
programme 9B 72 v phr ˌprəʊɡræm

baking 9B VB 144 n ˈbeɪkɪŋ

camping 9B VB 144 n ˈkæmpɪŋ

cooking 9B VB 144 n ˈkʊkɪŋ

cycling 9B VB 144 n ˈsaɪklɪŋ


fishing 9B VB 144 n ˈfɪʃɪŋ

gardening 9B VB 144 n ˈɡɑːdnɪŋ

painting 9B VB 144 n ˈpeɪntɪŋ

running 9B VB 144 n ˈrʌnɪŋ

sightseeing 9B VB 144 n ˈsaɪtˌsiːɪŋ

skateboarding 9B VB 144 n ˈskeɪtbɔːdɪŋ

travelling 9B VB 144 n ˈtrævəlɪŋ

write on the board 9C 74 v phr ˌraɪt ɒn ðə ˈbɔːd


take a course 9C 74 v phr ˌteɪk ə ˈkɔːs

use a dictionary 9C 74 v phr ˌjuːz ə ˈdɪkʃənəri

take an exam 9C 74 v phr ˌteɪk ən ɪɡˈzæm

do my homework 9C 74 v phr ˌduː maɪ ˈhəʊmwɜːk

go to the library 9C 74 v phr ˌɡəʊ tə ðə ˈlaɪbrəri, -bri

make notes 9C 74 v phr ˌmeɪk ˈnəʊts

do online practice 9C 74 v phr ˌduː ˌɒnlaɪn ˈpræktɪs

pass an exam 9C 74 v phr ˌpɑːs ən ɪɡˈzæm

fail an exam 9C 74 v phr ˌfeɪl ən ɪɡˈzæm

know the answer 9C 74 v phr ˌnəʊ ði ˈɑːnsə


ˌkɑːnt rɪˌmembər ə
can't remember a
word 9C 74 v phr ˈwɜːd

start a business 10A 78 v phr ˌstɑːt ə ˈbɪznɪs

join a club 10A 78 v phr ˌdʒɔɪn ə ˈklʌb


make some new
friends 10A 78 v phr ˌmeɪk səm ˌnjuː ˈfrendz

change jobs 10A 78 v phr ˌtʃeɪndʒ ˈdʒɒbz


ˌspend mɔː ˌtaɪm wɪð
spend more time with
my family 10A 78 v phr maɪ ˈfæməli

try a new sport 10A 78 v phr ˌtraɪ ə njuː ˈspɔːt


have children 10A 78 v phr hæv ˈtʃɪldrən
sell some things 10A 78 v phr ˈsel sʌm ˌθɪŋz

build a house 10A 78 v phr ˌbɪld ə ˈhaʊs

move to a big city 10A 78 v phr ˌmuːv tʊ ə ˌbɪɡ ˈsɪti

move to a small town 10A VB 145 v phr ˌmuːv tʊ ə ˌsmɔːl ˈtaʊn


move to another
country 10A VB 145 v phr ˌmuːv tʊ əˌnʌðə ˈkʌntri

build a house 10A VB 145 v phr ˌbɪld ə ˈhaʊs

build a computer 10A VB 145 v phr ˌbɪld ə kəmˈpjuːtə

make bread 10A VB 145 v phr ˌmeɪk ˈbred

make clothes 10A VB 145 v phr ˌmeɪk ˈkləʊðz, ˈkləʊz


spend ˌtaɪm wɪð maɪ
spend time with my
kids 10A VB 145 v phr ˈkɪdz
spend ˌtaɪm wɪð maɪ
spend time with my
friends 10A VB 145 v phr ˈfrendz
spend ˌtaɪm wɪð maɪ
spend time with my
grandparents 10A VB 145 v phr ˈɡrænpeərənts

change cars 10A VB 145 v phr ˌtʃeɪndʒ ˈkɑːz


change jobs 10A VB 145 v phr ˌtʃeɪndʒ ˈdʒɒbz

join a band 10A VB 145 v phr ˌdʒɔɪn ə ˈbænd

join a club 10A VB 145 v phr ˌdʒɔɪn ə ˈklʌb

talk to friends 10B 80 v phr ˌtɔːk tə ˈfrendz

play games 10B 80 v phr ˌpleɪ ˈɡeɪmz

listen to music 10B 80 v phr ˌlɪsən tə ˈmjuːzɪk

dance 10B 81 v dɑːns

sing songs 10B 81 v phr ˌsɪŋ ˈsɒŋz

snack 10B 80 n snæk

drink 10B 80 n drɪŋk


dessert 10B 80 n dɪˈzɜːt

sandwich 10B 80 n ˈsænwɪdʒ

salad 10B 80 n ˈsæləd


fruit 10B 80 n sing/pfruːt

autumn 10C 82 n ˈɔːtəm

spring 10C 82 n sprɪŋ

summer 10C 82 n ˈsʌmə

winter 10C 82 n ˈwɪntə

in summer/winter etc 10C 82 n phr ɪn ˈsʌmə/ˈwɪntə


in March/September
etc 10C 82 n phr ɪn ˈmɑːtʃ/səpˈtembə
ɒn ðə ˌnaɪnθ əv
this month/week/year 10C 82 n phr ˈfebruəri, ˈfebjʊri/ɒn
ˌðɪs ˈmʌnθ/ˈwiːk/jɪə
ðə ˌtwenti ˌsekənd əv
on 9th February, on
22nd June etc 10C 82 n phr ˈdʒuːn
for five days/for two fə ˌfaɪv ˈdeɪz/fə ˌtuː
weeks/for seven
months etc 10C 82 n phr ˈwiːks/fə ˌsevən ˈmʌnθs
Definition
a large country in the southern part of South America
the largest country in South America
a country in North America, north of the US

a country in southern Europe, with the Mediterranean


Sea on three sides
a country in East Asia consisting of many islands
a country south of the US and north of Guatemala
a country in central Europe, east of Germany and west
of Belarus
a country in southwest Europe, between France and
Portugal
a country in southeast Asia, between Malaysia,
Myanmar, Cambodia and Laos
the United Kingdom, a country in northwest Europe,
made up of England, Wales, Scotland and Northern
Ireland
the United States of America, a country in North
America
a country in west Asia and in southeast Europe,
between the Mediterranean Sea and the Black Sea
someone who is trained to treat people who are ill

someone who owns or manages a farm


someone who plays football, especially a professional
player
someone whose job is to look after people who are ill or
injured, usually in a hospital
someone who works at a desk in a building owned by a
company or organisation
someone who operates the controls of an aircraft or
spacecraft
someone whose job is to teach, especially in a school

someone who is paid to drive people in a car


someone who produces art, especially paintings or
drawings
someone who is paid to drive people in a bus
someone whose job is to direct or control part or all of a
company or other organisation
someone who works for an official organisation whose
job is to catch criminals and make sure that people obey
the law
someone whose job is to welcome and deal with people
arriving in a hotel or office building, visiting a doctor etc

someone whose job is to help customers in a shop


a member of the army of a country, especially someone
who is not an officer
someone who is studying at a university, school etc
someone who plays tennis, especially a professional
player
someone whose job is to take tourists to a place and
show them around
a man who serves food and drink at the tables in a
restaurant
a woman who serves food and drink at the tables in a
restaurant
someone who writes books, stories etc, especially as a
job
relating to the US or its people
relating to Argentina or its people
relating to Brazil or its people
relating to the UK or its people
relating to Canada or its people
relating to Italy or its people

relating to Japan or its people


relating to Mexico or its people
relating to Poland or its people
relating to Spain or its people
relating to Thailand or its people
relating to Turkey or its people
a male who has the same parents as you
plural of ‘child’: a son or daughter of any age

an informal word for ‘father’


someone’s female child
a male parent
the man that a woman is married to
a female parent
an informal word for ‘mother’
someone’s father and mother
a female who has the same parents as you
someone’s male child
the woman that a man is married to
a sister of your father or mother, or the wife of your
father’s or mother’s brother
a man that you are having a romantic relationship with

a child of your uncle or aunt

a woman that you are having a romantic relationship


with
an informal word for ‘grandfather’ = the father of
someone’s mother or father
an informal word for ‘grandmother’ = the mother of
someone’s mother or father
a son of someone’s brother or sister, or a son of
someone’s husband’s or wife’s brother or sister
a daughter of someone’s brother or sister, or a daughter
of someone’s husband’s or wife’s brother or sister

someone’s father and mother


a brother of your mother or father, or the husband of
your aunt
a set of printed pages that are held together in a cover
so that you can read them
a container for putting things in, especially one with four
stiff straight sides
a piece of furniture for one person to sit on, which has a
back, a seat and four legs
an instrument that shows what time it is, in a room or
outside on a building
an electronic machine that stores information and uses
programs to help you find, organise or change the
information
a small round container, usually with a handle, that you
use to drink tea, coffee etc
a piece of furniture like a table, usually with drawers in it,
that you sit at to write and work
a small specially shaped piece of metal that you put into
a lock and turn in order to lock or unlock a door, start a
car etc
an instrument for writing or drawing with ink
a piece of equipment that you use when you are talking
to someone in another place
a photograph (= a picture taken using a camera)
a piece of furniture with a flat top supported by legs
a bag used for carrying things on your back

a small plastic card that you use to buy goods or


services and pay for them later
two pieces of specially cut glass or plastic in a frame,
which you wear in order to see more clearly
a small bag in which a woman carries money and
personal things
a board with buttons marked with letters or numbers that
are pressed to put information into a computer or other
machine
a small computer that you can carry with you
what you earn by working and can use to buy things

a set of large folded sheets of printed paper containing


news, articles, pictures, advertisements etc which is sold
daily or weekly
a small official document that you get from your
government, that proves who you are, and which you
need in order to leave your country and enter other
countries
the part of a television, computer or mobile phone where
the picture or information appears
an object that you use to protect yourself against rain or
hot sun
a small flat case, often made of leather, that you carry in
your pocket, for holding paper money, bank cards etc

the number 100


the number 8
the number 18

the number 80
the number 11
the number 15
the number 50
the number 5
the number 14
the number 40
the number 4
the number 1
the number 9

the number 19

the number 90
the number 7
the number 17
the number 70
the number 6
the number 16
the number 60
the number 10
the number 13
the number 30
the number 3
the number 12

the number 2
the number 20
the number 21

the number 22
the number 23
a business that keeps and lends money and provides
other financial services
a shop that sells books

a small restaurant where you can buy drinks and simple


meals
a building in which films are shown
a place for people to live that consists of a set of rooms
that are part of a larger building
a building where people pay to stay and eat meals
a building that someone lives in, especially one that has
more than one level and is intended to be used by one
family
a place, usually outside or in a large building, where
people buy and sell goods, food etc
a large open area with grass and trees, especially in a
town, where people can walk, play games etc
a place where you can buy and eat a meal
a very large shop that sells food, drinks, and things that
people need regularly in their homes
a place where trains stop for passengers to get on and
off
a room where there is a bath or shower, a basin and
sometimes a toilet
a piece of furniture that you sleep on
a room for sleeping in

the room where you prepare and cook food


a machine that you can ride in, that moves up and down
between the floors in a tall building
the main room in a house where people relax, watch
television etc
piece of equipment that food is cooked inside, shaped
like a metal box with a door on the front
a piece of equipment that you stand under to wash your
whole body
a large bowl that you sit on to get rid of waste liquid or
waste matter from your body
a television (= a piece of electronic equipment shaped
like a box with a screen, on which you can watch
programmes)
a way of connecting computers or other electronic
machines to a network or the internet by using radio
signals rather than wires
a room or area in a building that is under the level of the
ground
a large long container that you fill with water and sit or
lie in to wash yourself
a piece of furniture with doors, and sometimes shelves,
used for storing clothes, plates, food etc
pieces of hanging cloth that can be pulled across to
cover a window, divide a room etc
the large flat piece of wood, glass etc that you move
when you go into or out of a building, room, vehicle etc,
or when you open a cupboard
the flat surface that you stand on inside a building
a large piece of electrical kitchen equipment, used for
keeping food and drinks cool
the area just inside the door of a house or other building,
that leads to other rooms
a piece of special glass that you can look at and see
yourself in
the structure that covers or forms the top of a building,
vehicle, tent etc
a machine for washing clothes

a space or an area of glass in the wall of a building or


vehicle that lets in light
low in quality or below an acceptable standard
of more than average size or amount
a busy place is very full of people or vehicles and
movement
not costing a lot of money, or lower in price than you
expected
costing a lot of money
of a high standard or quality
recently made, built, invented, written, designed etc
something that is old has existed or been used for a long
time
a place that is quiet has no noise or not much noise
not large in size or amount

of more than average size or amount


not costing a lot of money, or lower in price than you
expected
without any dirt, marks etc
if a shop, public building etc is closed, it is not open and
people cannot enter or use it
quite close to black in colour
covered in or marked by an unwanted substance
costing a lot of money
a light colour is pale and not dark
recently made, built, invented, written, designed etc
something that is old has existed or been used for a long
time
ready for business and allowing customers, visitors etc
to enter
not large in size or amount
hair that grows around a man’s chin and cheeks
the things like fine threads that grow on your head, pale
or yellow in colour
the things like fine threads that grow on your head, the
colour of earth, wood or coffee
the things like fine threads that grow on your head,
neither black nor white in colour
the things like fine threads that grow on your head,
orange-brown in colour
the parts of the body that you use to see with, the colour
of the sky on a fine day
the parts of the body that you use to see with, the colour
of earth, wood or coffee
the parts of the body that you use to see with, the colour
of grass or leaves
of a man, aged between 30 and 39/40 and 49

of a woman, aged between 20 and 29/50 and 59

one of the two long parts of your body between your


shoulders and your hands
the front part of your body between your neck and your
stomach
one of the organs on either side of your head that you
hear with
the joint where your arm bends
one of the two parts of the body that you use to see with

the front part of your head, where your eyes, nose and
mouth are
one of the four long thin parts on your hand, not
including your thumb
the mass of things like fine threads that grows on your
head
the part of your body at the end of your arm, including
your fingers and thumb, that you use to hold things

the top part of your body that has your face at the front
and is supported by your neck
the joint that bends in the middle of your leg
one of the long parts of your body that your feet are
joined to, or a similar part on an animal or insect
the part of your face which you put food into, or which
you use for speaking
the part of your body that joins your head to your
shoulders, or the same part of an animal or bird
the part of a person’s or animal’s face used for smelling
or breathing
one of the two parts of the body at each side of the neck
where the arm is connected
the front part of your body, below your chest
a container made of paper, cloth or thin plastic, that
usually opens at the top
a container with a narrow top, usually made of plastic,
full of the clear liquid without colour, smell or taste that
falls as rain and that is used for drinking, washing etc

a piece of equipment used to take photographs or make


films or television programmes
piece of clothing with long sleeves that is worn over your
clothes to protect them or to keep you warm
a small plastic card that you use to buy goods or
services and pay for them later
things that people and animals eat, such as vegetables
or meat
a small specially shaped piece of metal that you put into
a lock and turn in order to lock or unlock a door, start a
car etc
what you earn by working and can use to buy things
a small official document that you get from your
government, that proves who you are, and which you
need in order to leave your country and enter other
countries
a device that you use to have a conversation with
someone in another place
dark glasses that you wear to protect your eyes when
the sun is very bright
a printed piece of paper which shows that you have paid
to enter a cinema, travel on a bus, plane etc
to have a cup of a hot drink, based on dried leaves or
ground roast beans
to travel to and spend time in a place, especially for
pleasure or interest
to watch a story that is told with sound and moving
pictures at a cinema/to watch a performance, especially
a musical one, at a theatre
to move or go with someone or something from one
place to another
to use a particular form of paid transport (a car with a
driver/a large vehicle which can carry a number of
people/a number of linked carriages which travels on a
railway)
to use a camera to make pictures on film
to taste food or drink to find out if you like it
to go and spend time in a place or with someone,
especially for pleasure or interest
to get out of your bed after sleeping
to eat the meal you have in the morning
to travel to a place where you do your job, which is not
your home
to do a job that you are paid for
to eat the meal you have in the middle of the day
to travel back to the place where you live
to eat the main meal of the day, eaten in the middle of
the day or the evening
to look at the television for a period of time
to learn about a subject, usually at school, university etc

to get onto a piece of furniture that you sleep on, ready


to sleep
to end the day at your place of work
to go to shops and buy things
to drink a cup of a hot dark brown drink that has a
slightly bitter taste
to wash your body while standing under a shower

to go to a place where people you like will be at a


particular time, according to an arrangement, so that you
can talk or do something together
to take part or compete in a game or sport
to look at and understand the words in a set of printed
pages that are held together in a cover
to rest or do something that is enjoyable, especially after
you have been working
to move very quickly, by moving your legs more quickly
than when you walk
to begin the day at your place of work
to get to a place you are going to
to travel by bicycle
to make (a car, truck, bus etc) move along
to go away from the place where you live
to move forward by putting one foot in front of the other

to use (a certain form of transport)


to make a journey to (a destination)
to use (a certain form of transport)
a bicycle
a vehicle that travels across water
a large road vehicle that people pay to travel on
a road vehicle with four wheels and an engine, that can
carry a small number of passengers
a car and driver that you pay to take you somewhere
a set of several carriages that are connected to each
other and pulled along a railway line by an engine
to travel in a certain way back to the place where you
live, or to the place where you work
a type of food made from flour and water that is mixed
together and then baked
a soft sweet food made by baking a mixture of flour,
butter, sugar and eggs
a solid food made from milk, which is usually yellow or
white in colour, and can be soft or hard
the meat from a common farm bird, eaten as food
a sweet brown food that you can eat as a sweet or use
in cooking to give foods such as cakes a special sweet
taste
a hot dark brown drink that has a slightly bitter taste, or
the ground beans or powder used to make this
a round object with a hard surface, especially one
produced by a chicken, that is used for food
the flesh of an animal that lives in water, and uses its
fins and tail to swim, used as food
the flesh of animals and birds, eaten as food
a white liquid produced by cows or goats that is drunk by
people
a mixture of raw vegetables, especially lettuce,
cucumber and tomato
two pieces of bread with cheese, meat, cooked egg etc
between them
a sweet white or brown substance that is obtained from
plants and used to make food and drinks sweet
a hot brown drink made by pouring boiling water onto
the dried leaves from a particular Asian bush, or a cup of
this drink
a hard round fruit that has red, light green or yellow skin
and is white inside
a long curved tropical fruit with a yellow skin
a flat round piece of finely cut beef, which is cooked and
eaten, or one of these served in a bread bun
a long pointed orange vegetable that grows under the
ground
long thin pieces of potato cooked in oil

a round fruit that has a thick orange skin and is divided


into parts inside
a round white vegetable with a brown, red or pale yellow
skin, that grows under the ground
a food that consists of small white or brown grains that
you boil in water until they become soft enough to eat
cooked liquid food, often containing small pieces of
meat, fish or vegetables
a soft red juicy fruit with small seeds on its surface, or
the plant that grows this fruit
a round soft red fruit eaten raw or cooked as a vegetable

the clear liquid without colour, smell or taste that falls as


rain and that is used for drinking, washing etc
durinɡ the early part of the day, from when the sun rises
until 12 o’clock in the middle of the day
durinɡ the part of the day after the morning and before
the evening
durinɡ the early part of the night between the end of the
day and the time you go to bed
durinɡ the dark part of each 24-hour period when the
sun cannot be seen and when most people sleep
durinɡ Saturday and Sunday, in most countries,
especially considered as time when you do not work
at least once in each day
at least once in each week
to remove dirt from a room where there is a bath or
shower, a basin, and sometimes a toilet
to prepare food for eating at the main meal of the day
to give food to a pet animal with four legs, fur and a tail

to visit a very large shop to buy food, drinks, and things


that people need regularly in their homes
tidy the sheets and covers of the piece of furniture you
sleep on
to take your pet animal for a walk for exercise
to wash dirty clothes

to wash all the plates, cups, bowls etc that have been
used when eating a meal
to make and structure a place on the internet so that it
works well
to move your feet and body in a way that matches the
style and speed of music
to make shapes, lines etc painted on a surface with
pens, pencils or crayons, showing what someone or
something looks like
to be at the controls of an aeroplane and direct it as it
flies
to mix flour, butter, eggs and sugar and bake them to
make something good to eat
to sew material to make things that people wear to cover
their body or keep warm
to take part in a game where two teams of 11 players try
to kick a round ball into the other team’s goal
to sit on a large, strong animal and make it move along

to produce a musical sound with your voice


to rest your mind and body, with your eyes closed, while
travelling on a set of several carriages that are
connected to each other and pulled along a railway line
by an engine
to be able to communicate in spoken words used by the
people of two different countries or areas
to move yourself through water using your arms and
legs
to use a camera to make a short story that is told using
sound and moving pictures
to prepare things which people in Japan eat

to mix flour and water, and often yeast, and bake it


to make music using a musical instrument that usually
has six strings that you pull with your fingers
to make music using a small wooden musical instrument
that you hold under your chin and play by pulling a bow
(= special stick) across the strings
to take part in a game for two players, who move their
playing pieces according to particular rules across a
special board to try to trap their opponent’s king (= most
important piece)
to take part in a game in which the players hit a small
white ball into holes in the ground with a set of golf
clubs, using as few hits as possible
to travel on a small fast two-wheeled vehicle with an
engine
to sit on a large, strong animal and make it move along

to travel on a vehicle with two wheels by pushing its


pedals with your feet
to be able to communicate in spoken words used by the
people of four different countries or areas
to communicate in spoken words, using the language
used in Spain and parts of Latin America
the mixture of gases around the Earth, that we breathe

a white or grey mass in the sky that forms from very


small drops of water
the way something or someone moves, faces or is
aimed
the direction from which the sun rises, and which is on
the right if you are facing north
an area of land in the country, especially one where
crops are grown or animals feed on grass
a coloured or white part that a plant or tree produces
before fruit or seeds
an area of land that is higher than the land around it, like
a mountain but smaller
a piece of land completely surrounded by water
a large area of water surrounded by land
the solid dry part of the Earth’s surface
a very high hill
the direction that is at the top of a map of the world,
above the Equator. It is on the left if you are facing the
rising sun.
a living thing that has leaves and roots and grows in
earth, especially one that is smaller than a tree
a natural and continuous flow of water in a long line
across a country into the sea
the large area of salty water that covers much of the
Earth’s surface
the space above the Earth where clouds and the Sun
and stars appear
the direction that is at the bottom of a map of the world,
below the Equator. It is on the right if you are facing the
rising sun.
a very tall plant that has branches and leaves, and lives
for many years
the clear liquid without colour, smell or taste that falls as
rain and that is used for drinking, washing etc; an area
of water such as the sea, a lake etc
the direction towards which the sun goes down, and
which is on the left if you are facing north
the first month of the year, between December and
February
the second month of the year, between January and
March
the third month of the year, between February and April

the fourth month of the year, between March and May

the fifth month of the year, between April and June


the sixth month of the year, between May and July
the seventh month of the year, between June and
August
the eighth month of the year, between July and
September
the ninth month of the year, between August and
October
the tenth month of the year, between September and
November
the eleventh month of the year, between October and
December
the twelfth month of the year, between November and
January
ordinal number 1st; coming before all the other things or
people in a series
ordinal number 2nd; the second person, thing, event etc
is the one that comes after the first
ordinal number 3rd; coming after two other things in a
series
ordinal number 4th; coming after three other things in a
series
ordinal number 5th; coming after four other things in a
series
ordinal number 6th; coming after five other things in a
series
ordinal number 7th; coming after six other things in a
series
ordinal number 8th; coming after seven other things in a
series
ordinal number 9th; coming after eight other things in a
series
ordinal number 10th; coming after nine other things in a
series
ordinal number 11th; coming after ten other things in a
series
ordinal number 12th; coming after eleven other things in
a series
ordinal number 13th; coming after twelve other things in
a series
ordinal number 14th; coming after thirteen other things
in a series
ordinal number 15th; coming after fourteen other things
in a series
ordinal number 16th; coming after fifteen other things in
a series
ordinal number 17th; coming after sixteen other things in
a series
ordinal number 18th; coming after seventeen other
things in a series
ordinal number 19th; coming after eighteen other things
in a series
ordinal number 20th; coming after nineteen other things
in a series
ordinal number 21st; coming after twenty other things in
a series
ordinal number 22nd; coming after twenty-one other
things in a series
ordinal number 23rd; coming after twenty-two other
things in a series
ordinal number 24th; coming after twenty-three other
things in a series
ordinal number 30th; coming after twenty-nine other
things in a series
ordinal number 31st; coming after thirty other things in a
series
when there is cold weather, the temperature of the air is
very low
if a place is dark, there is little or no light
hard to do, understand or deal with

not difficult to do, and not needing much effort


moving or able to move quickly
having feelings of pleasure, for example because
something good has happened to you or you are very
satisfied with your life
measuring a long distance from the bottom to the top
something that is hot has a high temperature – used
about weather, places, food, drink or objects
a place that is light has plenty of light in it, especially
from the sun
measuring a great length from one end to the other
having a top that is not far above the ground

someone who is old has lived for a very long time


not happy, especially because something unpleasant
has happened
measuring a small amount in length or distance
not moving, being done or happening quickly
a young person, plant or animal has not lived for very
long
tired and impatient because you do not think something
is interesting, or because you have nothing to do

able to learn and understand things quickly


hard to do, understand or deal with
known about by many people in many places
moving or able to move quickly
your favourite person or thing is the one that you like the
most
if something is interesting, you give it your attention
because it seems unusual or exciting or provides
information that you did not know about
pleasant, attractive or enjoyable
something that is old has existed or been used for a long
time
a sad event, situation etc makes you feel unhappy
not moving, being done or happening quickly

feeling that you want to sleep or rest


to ɡo to the place where you do the job that you are paid
for
to go from one place to another on a large vehicle that
people pay to travel on
to go from one place to another in a vehicle with four
wheels and an engine, that can carry a small number of
passengers
to go to the place where your father’s or mother’s
parents live
to go on a journey with your parents and/or brothers and
sisters
to look at the television for a period of time

to look at a story that is told using sound and moving


pictures, shown at a cinema or on television
to have your home with your mother and father

to have your home with your mother and father, brothers


and sisters etc
to have your home in a large important town
to have your home in a large area with houses, shops,
offices etc where people live and work, that is smaller
than a city and larger than a village
to have your home in a building that usually has more
than one level and is intended to be used by one family

to say things to your mother and father as part of a


conversation
to say things to someone whose job is to teach you as
part of a conversation
to say things about the temperature and other conditions
such as sun, rain and wind as part of a conversation

to say things about what you did on Saturday and


Sunday as part of a conversation
to do activities or sports in which people compete with
each other according to agreed rules
to take part in a game for two people or two pairs of
people who use rackets to hit a small soft ball
backwards and forwards over a net
to do things that you enjoy with people that you like
to do things that you enjoy with your parents, brothers,
sisters, cousins, etc
the past tense of ‘eat’ (= to put food in your mouth and
chew and swallow it)
the past tense and past participle of ‘buy’ (= to get
something by paying money for it)
the past tense of ‘break’ (= make something separate
into two or more pieces, for example by hitting it,
dropping it or bending it)
the past tense and past participle of ‘feel’ (= to
experience a particular physical feeling or emotion)
the past tense of ‘forget’ (= to not remember facts,
information or people or things from the past)
the past tense and past participle of ‘get up’ (= to get out
of your bed after sleeping)
the past tense and past participle of ‘have’ (= to
experience something or be affected by something)
the past tense and past participle of ‘lose’ (= to become
unable to find someone or something)
the past tense and past participle of ‘meet’ (= to go to a
place where someone will be at a particular time,
according to an arrangement, so that you can talk or do
something together)
the past tense of ‘run’ (= to move very quickly, by
moving your legs more quickly than when you walk)
the past tense of ‘see’ (= to notice or examine someone
or something, using your eyes)
the past tense of ‘speak’ (= to talk to someone about
something)
the past tense of ‘take’ (= to use a particular form of
transport)
the past tense of ‘go’ (= to move to a particular place in
order to do something)
the past tense of ‘drive’ (= to travel somewhere in a car)

the past tense and past participle of ‘find’ (= to discover,


see or get something that you have been searching for)

the past tense of ‘give’ (= to let someone have


something as a present, or to provide something for
someone)
the past tense and past participle of ‘leave’ (= to go
away from a place or a person)
the past tense and past participle of ‘make’ (= to cook or
prepare food or drink)
the past tense and past participle of ‘sit’ (= to be on a
chair or seat, or on the ground, with the top half of your
body upright and your weight resting on your buttocks)

the past tense of ‘see’ (= to watch a television


programme, play, film etc)
the past tense and past participle of ‘send’ (= to arrange
for something to go or be taken to another place,
especially by post)
the past tense and past participle of ‘spend’ (= to use
your money to pay for goods or services)
the past tense and past participle of ‘teach’ (= to show
someone how to do something)
the past tense and past participle of ‘win’ (= to be the
best or most successful in a competition, game, election
etc)
the past tense of ‘write’ (= to put words in a letter to
someone)
to make a journey by walking, especially for exercise or
enjoyment
to go to the shops and buy things

to visit places where you can buy and eat meals

to enjoy yourself
to rest or do something that is enjoyable, especially after
you have been working
to pay to stay and eat meals in a building for a short time

to move yourself through salty water using your arms


and legs
to go to a building where important cultural, historical or
scientific objects are kept and shown to the public
in a higher position than (something else)
used to say exactly where something or someone is, or
where something happens
at or towards the back of (a thing or person)
in a lower place or position, or on a lower level, than
(something or someone)
in or through the space that separates (two things,
people or places)
used with the name of a container, place or area to say
where someone or something is
further forward than (someone or something)

very close to (someone or something), with no other


person, building, place etc in between
touching (a surface) or being supported by (a surface)
to do physical activities to stay healthy and become
stronger
to do a physical activity in which people compete against
each other
to pay attention to a series of sounds made by
instruments or voices in a way that is pleasant or
exciting
to pay attention to programmes that are broadcast on a
piece of electronic equipment, such as music and news

to pay attention to a short piece of music with words that


you sing
to pay attention to a description of how something
happened, that is intended to entertain people, and may
be true or imaginary
to enjoy games with 52 small pieces of thick stiff paper
with numbers and signs or pictures on one side.

to do an activity in which people compete with each


other according to agreed rules
to do a computer game in which you move images on a
screen using electronic controls
to look at and understand the words in a set of printed
pages that are held together in a cover
to look at and understand the words in a set of large
folded sheets of printed paper containing news, articles,
pictures, advertisements etc which is sold daily or
weekly
to look at and understand a description of how
something happened, that is intended to entertain
people, and may be true or imaginary
to look at, and exchange information with other users
using, a computer system
to look at a story that is told using sound and moving
pictures, shown at a cinema or on television
to go to a theatre and see a story that is written to be
performed by actors
to look at something on television

the activity of making cakes, bread etc

the holiday activity of living in a tent

the activity of preparing food so that it is ready to eat,


usually by heating it
the activity of riding a bicycle
the sport or business of catching fish

the activity of working in a garden, growing plants,


cutting a lawn etc
the act or skill of making a picture, using paints

the activity or sport of moving very quickly, by moving


your legs more quickly than when you walk
the activity of visiting famous or interesting places,
especially as tourists
the fun pastime or sport of standing on a short board
with two small wheels at each end, and riding it
the act or activity of going from one place to another,
especially places that are far away
to form letters or numbers on a piece of dark wood,
white plastic or an interactive screen
to attend a series of lessons in a particular subject
to look in a book that gives a list of words in alphabetical
order and explains their meanings in the same
language, or another language
to do a spoken or written test of knowledge, especially
an important one
to do work that your teacher asks you to do at home

to visit a room or building containing books that can be


looked at or borrowed
if a student makes notes, they write down information
during a lesson, from a book etc
to use the internet to do a particular thing, often
regularly, in order to improve your skill at it
to succeed in a spoken or written test of knowledge,
especially an important one
to not succeed in a spoken or written test of knowledge,
especially an important one
to be aware of the correct information about something
that you write or say in reply to a question in a test or
competition
to not be able to bring a word that you know into your
mind
to set up an organisation such as a company, shop or
factory that produces or sells goods or provides a
service
to become a member of an organisation for people who
share a particular interest or enjoy similar activities, or a
group of people who meet together to do something they
are interested in
to become friendly with some different people

to move your job from one employer to another

to pass more time than before at home with your


parents/children/brothers and sisters
to do a physical activity for a short while to discover
whether it is suitable, enjoyable etc
to give birth to sons and/or daughters
to give items to someone in exchange for money

to make a building to live in, or to pay someone to do


this for you
to go and live in a very large, important town

to go and live in an area with houses, shops, offices etc,


that is smaller than a city and larger than a village

to go and live in a different area of land that is controlled


by its own government, president, king etc
to make a building to live in, or to pay someone to do
this for you
to make an electronic machine that stores information
and uses programs to help you find, organise or change
the information
to mix flour and water, and often yeast, and bake it

to sew material to make things that people wear to cover


their body or keep warm
to pass time with your children

to pass time with people you like

to pass time with your father’s or mother’s parents

to buy a different car

to move your job from one employer to another


to become a member of a group of musicians, especially
a group that plays popular music
to become a member of an organisation for people who
share a particular interest or enjoy similar activities, or a
group of people who meet together to do something they
are interested in
to say things to people you like as part of a conversation

to do activities or sports in which people compete with


each other according to agreed rules
to pay attention to a series of sounds made by
instruments or voices in a way that is pleasant or
exciting
to move your feet and body in a way that matches the
style and speed of music
to produce words and musical sounds with your voice
a small amount of food that is eaten between main
meals or instead of a meal
an amount of liquid that you put in your mouth and
swallow
(a) sweet food served after the main part of a meal
two pieces of bread with cheese, meat, cooked egg etc
between them
a mixture of raw vegetables, especially lettuce,
cucumber and tomato
something that grows on a plant, tree or bush, can be
eaten as a food, contains seeds or a stone, and is
usually sweet
the season between summer and winter, when leaves
change colour and the weather becomes cooler
the season between winter and summer when leaves
and flowers appear
the time of the year when the sun is hottest and the days
are longest, between spring and autumn
the season after autumn and before spring, when the
weather is coldest
used to say when something happens, happened or will
happen during a season
used to say when something happens, happened or will
happen during a particular month
used to say when something happens, happened or will
happen during a particular month, week or year
used to say when something happens, happened or will
happen on a particular date

used to describe the length of the period during which


something happens, happened or will happen
Example
Argentina has four very different types of climate.
Portuguese is the main language of Brazil.
We travelled through Canada by train, from the east coast to
the west coast.
Pizza came from Italy but is now popular all over the world.

Japan has a fast, efficient railway system.


Chocolate was first used in cooking in Mexico.
Warsaw is the capital of Poland.

The Canary Islands are part of Spain.

We visited some beautiful temples when we were in


Thailand.
Ben Nevis is the highest mountain in the UK.

Florida is a popular tourist destination in the US.

I learned to dive when I was on holiday in Turkey.

I’ve been having bad headaches so I’m going to the doctor.

The farmer will sell these sheep in September.


Football players train hard for most of the year.

The nurse put a bandage on my arm.

A lot of office workers come to this café at lunchtime.

The pilot checks the plane before every flight.

Katja’s artistic skills are useful in her job as a primary


schoolteacher.
He paid the taxi driver when he got out at the airport.
Scott was a wildlife artist who specialised in painting birds.

She asked the bus driver where to get off for the hospital.
Marek is going to be the manager of the new department.

The police officer asked to see his driving licence.

The receptionist told me when the hotel gym would be open.

The shop assistant brought me a jacket in a larger size.


Soldiers helped people whose homes were destroyed by the
earthquake.
Approximately 40% of law students are women.
Tennis players can play in tournaments all through the year.
Our tour guide recommended a restaurant where the local
people eat.
We asked the waiter to bring the bill.

The waitress explained some of the local dishes on the


menu.
She is famous as a writer of thrillers, but this is her first novel
for teenagers.
Los Angeles is the centre of the American film industry.
The tango is a famous Argentinian dance.
The Brazilian rainforest is an important habitat.
The pound is the name for British money.
Ice hockey is a popular Canadian sport.
Michelangelo and Leonardo da Vinci are well-known Italian
artists.
Sushi is a popular Japanese food.
The Aztecs were an ancient Mexican civilisation.
The Polish flag is red and white.
Paella is one of my favourite Spanish foods.
The Songkran festival celebrates the Thai New Year.
Nuts are an important ingredient in Turkish cooking.
I have to take my little brother to school.
Our three children are in their twenties and have left home.

Dad, can you drive me to the station?


We have two daughters and a son.
My father used to help me mend my bicycle.
My husband always cooks dinner at the weekend.
My mother taught me to drive.
We’re making a cake for Mum’s birthday.
Melissa’s spending the weekend at her parents’ house.
I share a bedroom with my sister.
They have three sons and a daughter.
Have you met my wife?
My aunt is two years younger than my mum.

Josh was my first boyfriend.

Twice a year, we see all our cousins at my grandparents’


house.
He’s never had a girlfriend.

My grandad lets me drive his boat.

My grandma taught me to play the piano.

My nephew is a few years older than my children.

My niece is living with us for a few months until she gets her
own flat.

Our parents encouraged us to visit other countries.


My uncle is taller than my dad.
I’ve just started reading a book by Zadie Smith.

Put your toys back in the box now.

They bought a new table and chairs.

She looked at the clock. It was eight-thirty.

Most people do jobs in which they have to use a computer.

Helen took the coffee cups into the kitchen.

Why is your desk always so tidy?

I can’t find my keys. I usually keep them in my handbag.

Here’s my pen. You can write a note to Rob.


Please can I use your phone?

There’s a photo of his children on his desk.


We ate at two long tables in the garden.
We gave Charlie a little backpack when he started school.

I used my credit card to buy tickets online.

I’ve worn glasses since I was five.

I keep my purse and keys in my handbag.

You can use this keyboard to write Japanese.

I use my laptop to work on the train.


Don’t spend all your money on the first day of your holiday!

I don’t read a newspaper; I watch the news on TV.

For travel abroad, you must have a valid passport.

My computer at work has a very large screen.

Everyone knows that if you take an umbrella, it won’t rain!

He took a credit card out of his wallet.

The tree was probably a hundred years old.


I know eight different ways to cook eggs.
Helen is going to have a big birthday party when she’s
eighteen.
Their garden is eight metres long.
I counted eleven pigeons on the roof this morning.
I have to buy fifteen new books for college this year.
John wants to retire when he reaches fifty years of age.
They have five children under the age of 10.
It’s only fourteen days till we go on holiday!
It cost me forty pounds to get a new tyre for my car.
They will be arriving in four hours from now.
One of my hobbies is building model railways.
I took nine different photos of the mountain and I don’t like
any of them!
He looks very young for somebody who’s supposed to be
nineteen.
Ninety countries took part in the games.
Seven is my lucky number.
She passed her driving test when she was just seventeen.
I want to retire when I get to the age of seventy.
It takes six minutes to boil an egg the way I like it.
There are sixteen houses in my street.
Sixty people were arrested at the demonstration.
You have ten fingers and ten toes.
Some people think that thirteen is an unlucky number.
There are thirty days in June.
There are three ways to tackle this problem.
When I was twelve, we moved from England to Hong Kong.

I have two sisters and a brother.


Twenty pounds for a pizza is too much!
The soldiers fired twenty-one guns to celebrate the Queen’s
birthday.
The train is running twenty-two minutes late.
I’ve only got twenty-three pages of this book left to read.
I went to the bank to put some money in my account.

I bought this guidebook for Thailand at the bookshop by the


cinema.
The central square was full of outdoor cafés.

Do you know what’s on at the cinema?


We’re moving into a first-floor flat.

We stayed in a hotel near the airport.


They live in a really big house in Dublin.

I usually buy all my vegetables at the market.

Let’s go for a walk in the park.

We booked a table at our local Italian restaurant.


Many supermarkets now deliver your shopping to your home.
I need to get to the train station early to buy my ticket.

Don’t leave the towels on the bathroom floor.

He sat on the bed and took off his shoes.


In my first year at university I had a really tiny study bedroom.

Luke is in the kitchen making a meal.


It’s on the third floor. Let’s use the lift.

We bought a new sofa for the living room.

Bake the bread in a hot oven for ten minutes.

Our hotel room had a bath as well as a shower.

There are two bathrooms and a separate room with a toilet.

Lucy turned on the TV to watch the evening news.

What’s the password for the hotel wifi?

There’s a laundry room in the basement.

I had to get out of the bath to answer the phone.

We keep all the cleaning equipment in a cupboard under the


stairs.
Ella drew the curtains and switched the light on.

Don’t forget to lock the garage door.

I’ve got to clean the bathroom floor.


Can you put the milk back in the fridge, please.

We hung our coats in the hall.

He looked in the mirror as he combed his hair.

They finally found the cat up on the roof.

My dad took the clothes out of the washing machine and


hung them out to dry.
She looked out of the window to see if it was raining.

That was a really bad film; it was boring and depressing.


I need a bigger desk.
We live on a very busy road.

The cheapest way to travel to Manchester is to take the bus.


Photography is an expensive hobby.
The train service is not very good.
Have you been to the new sports centre yet?
My car is getting old, but a new one will be expensive.

This is the quietest room in the house to work in.


My grandparents have moved to a smaller house with no
stairs.
Berlin is the biggest city in Germany.
This handbag was cheap but it has already broken.

Are your hands clean?


The shops here are closed on Sundays.

There were dark clouds in the sky.


Put those dirty clothes in the washing machine, please.
He bought her some expensive diamond earrings.
She has blue eyes and light brown hair.
I need a new phone; this one has stopped working.
We visited a beautiful old castle by a lake.

The museum is open every day in the summer.

The T-shirt was too small for him.


Father Christmas has a big white beard.
Many people from Norway have blonde hair.

I have dark brown hair like my mother.

In the forest, the princess met a strange old lady with grey
hair.
I’m the only person in our family with red hair.

We both have blue eyes, so our children have them too.

The baby had black hair and big brown eyes.

People with red hair often have green eyes.

My brother lived in Vietnam for a few years when he was in


his 30s.
The CEO of the company I work for is an Italian woman in
her 50s.
She broke her left arm when she fell off her bike.

Older people often suffer from chest infections.

African elephants have bigger ears than Indian elephants.

I banged my elbow on the door; it really hurt!


Both their children have brown eyes.

Her face was white with fear.


She was wearing a ring on nearly every finger.

Her hair was short and dark.

Don’t take your hands off the steering wheel.

Visitors must wear a helmet to protect their head in the cave.

I cut my knee when I fell in the street.


A bee has six legs.

Babies put things in their mouth to learn about them.

A giraffe has a very long neck.

He was very cold so his nose was red.

She carried a bag over one shoulder.

These exercises make your stomach muscles stronger.


She put her shopping bags into the back of the car.

It was a hot day, so we took bottles of water to the beach.

The team set up their cameras some distance from the


animals.
You’ll need a good winter coat in Canada.

I paid for the hotel by credit card.

She wanted a rest and some hot food.

I left my car keys in the hotel bedroom.

Good food doesn’t have to cost a lot of money.


You can apply for an Italian passport if your parents are
Italian.

Please switch off your phone in the cinema.

I keep a pair of sunglasses in the car to wear when I’m


driving.
I’d like two tickets to Berlin, please.

Every morning of our holiday we drank coffee at a café in the


town square.
If you have time when you’re in Barcelona, go to Park Güell.
In the evening, we’re going to eat in a Chinese restaurant
then see a show.

Take an umbrella in case it rains.

We took a bus from the airport into the city centre.

Can you take a photo of me and Rachel?


Have you ever tried Korean food?
When we go to Russia, we’re hoping to visit Saint
Petersburg.
We got up early to go to the airport.
Paul got up, washed and had breakfast.
My dad goes to work by bus.

We both work for the same company.


I usually have lunch at my desk.
I met my friend for a coffee before I went home.
We’re having dinner at my uncle’s house tonight.

We only watch TV at the weekend.


I can’t study with that music playing all the time.

What time do you go to bed last night?

I didn’t finish work till 8 p.m.


She missed lunch to go shopping.
She stopped in a café to have a quick coffee.

Mary loves having a hot shower after she’s been swimming.

I’m planning to meet friends at the weekend; we’ll probably


go to the cinema.

Shall we watch TV or would you like to play a game?


What book are you reading at the moment?

In the evenings, I like to relax with some music and a nice


meal.
I run for an hour after work most days; I find it relaxing.

I usually go for a swim before I start work.


What time does the plane arrive in New York?
Do you cycle to work?
She drives to work three days a week.
I tried calling him, but he’d already left home.
The children walk to school.

Do you prefer to travel to by car or by train?


Are you going to Madrid at the weekend?
We took a taxi to the train station.
We go for long bike rides in the summer holidays.
They’re sailing a boat down the coast of Portugal.
I got off the bus at the hospital.
He isn’t old enough to drive a car.

We took a taxi to the hotel.


I got on the train at Bristol.

I usually walk home, but if it’s raining I sometimes take a bus.

Would you like some bread with your soup?

Let’s make a cake for his birthday.

Cover the vegetables with the grated cheese.

For dinner we’re having roast chicken.


We shared a packet of chocolate biscuits.

Jake had a quick breakfast and a mug of coffee.

I wasn’t very hungry, so I just had a boiled egg for lunch.

In Japan, people eat raw fish.

Does this stew have meat in it?


She poured milk on her cornflakes.

Would you like some salad with your pasta?

I made a tuna sandwich for lunch.

Do you take sugar in your coffee?

Would you like a cup of tea?

My grandad made us a lovely apple pie.

A banana with yoghurt is a good healthy snack.


We cooked burgers on the barbecue.

Carrot cake is my favourite!

We always have fish and chips when we go to the seaside.

Freshly squeezed orange juice is delicious … and healthy!

Peel and slice the potatoes.

Serve the curry with plain boiled rice.


I love my grandma’s homemade tomato soup.

We ate bread and butter with strawberry jam.

I made a simple tomato sauce for the pasta.

Does anyone want a drink of water?

What time do you get up in the morning?

It was very hot in the afternoon.

I do most of my studying in the evening.

At night the temperature drops below zero.

I never work at the weekend.

They see each other every day.


I visit my parents every week.
It’s Tom’s turn to clean the bathroom.

Marta cooks dinner for the whole family on Saturdays.


We’ll have to go back home. I forgot to feed the dog!

I go to the supermarket on Tuesdays to buy food for the


whole week.
We have breakfast together, then Patrick makes the beds
while I have a shower.
Grandma’s out walking the dog.
Her mum still does her washing … even though she’s nearly
30!
You cooked dinner, so I’ll wash the dishes.

Students learn how to build their own websites.

This music makes me want to dance.

The children sat and drew pictures while we spoke to the


doctor.

Mario learned to fly a plane when he was 17.

We made a cake to welcome Dad home.

My grandma made most of her children’s clothes herself.

The boys are playing football in the garden.

Liu had never ridden a horse.

We had a great time singing some of the old songs.


I don’t know how John manages to sleep on the train!

My father is Thai and my mother is Swedish, so I’ve always


spoken two languages.
I love swimming in the sea.

He made a short film about turtles, which won a prize at the


festival.
When you make Japanese food, use fish, meat and
vegetables that are really fresh.
I learned to make bread last year and now I never buy it.
We sat round the fire singing songs, while James played the
guitar.
Tariq plays the violin in a local orchestra.

They meet fairly often to play chess.

They go to Portugal every year to play golf.

I’m too scared to ride a motorbike but my sister loves riding


hers.
We had a wonderful day riding horses on the beach.

I didn’t learn to ride a bicycle until I was ten.

My cousin works for an international charity; she can speak


four languages.
I learned to speak Spanish when I lived in Peru.

Let’s go outside and get some fresh air.

Dark clouds hid the moon.

Which direction did they go in?

He turned and walked away towards the east.

In summer the wheat fields turn yellow.

Flowers were growing along the side of the road.

Their house is on a hill overlooking the sea.

There is a small island in the centre of the lake.


Are there any fish in the lake?
The crocodile lays its eggs on land.
Mount Ararat is the highest mountain in Turkey.
Segovia is about 40 miles to the north of Madrid.

Plants grow towards the sun.

There were several boats on the river.

Whales are mammals that live in the sea.

The sky was blue and the sun was shining.

Gatwick airport is a few miles to the south of London.

Six huge oak trees blew down in the storm.

Rangoon is surrounded on three sides by water.

A damp wind blew from the west.

I haven’t heard from him since last January.

Francis was born on 6th February 1928.

The hospital will open in March.

I’m going to Cuba next April.

She started work here last May.


We met on 6th June.
I plan to graduate in July.

My birthday’s in August.

The meeting will be on 18th September.

We’re moving house next October.

It snowed in early November.

Last December they visited Prague.

There’s a meeting on the first Monday of every month.

A second-year student helped me.

He’s her third husband.

Independence Day in the US is on the fourth of July.

This is the fifth car I’ve owned.


This is the sixth time the competition has been held.

I’m planning to leave on the seventh.

It was Maya’s eighth birthday last Saturday.

September is the ninth month of the year.

He came tenth in the race.

She was born in the eleventh century.

This is the twelfth time I’ve told you!

Some people think the thirteenth is an unlucky date.

He passed his driving test at the fourteenth attempt.

He was stabbed in the back on the fifteenth of March.

The concert is going to take place on the sixteenth of August.

They will arrive on the seventeenth of the month.

Are you going to have a party on your eighteenth birthday?

The treasure is buried under the nineteenth stone from the


left.
This must be the twentieth letter I’ve written asking for them
to give me my money back!
Every year she says it’s her twenty-first birthday – again!

It’s Dave’s birthday on the twenty-second of September.

‘When is your appointment with the doctor?’ ‘It’s on the


twenty-third.’
He is the twenty-fourth person to be awarded this prize.

He isn’t looking forward to his thirtieth birthday.

The thirty-first of December is the last day of the year.

There will be more cold weather later this week.

It was a dark night with clouds covering the moon.


The homework was really difficult. It took me a long time to
finish it.
The test was easy. I think I’ll get a good mark.
He’s one of the fastest runners in the world.
It’s a lovely house and we’ve been very happy here.

This is the highest mountain in Japan.


It’s so hot in here. Can I open the window?

I like Sumaya’s kitchen; it’s really big and light.

I preferred her hair when it was long.


There’s a low wall between our front garden and the street.

You can still learn new skills when you are old.
She felt sad as she waved goodbye.

It’s a short walk from our house to the station.


The bus is much slower than the train.
My dad died when I was young.

After a while, I got bored and left.

Kim is quite clever and does well at school.


He’s finding it difficult to get a job.
The Eiffel Tower is a famous landmark.
This car can go much faster than his old one.
What’s your favourite colour?

There’s an interesting article in the newspaper today.

It was nice of them to offer to help.


Some of the houses around here are very old.

I’ve just heard some sad news: Carla’s grandma died.


My computer’s really slow compared to the ones at school.

I was really tired after our long journey.


It’s more expensive to travel to work from my new flat.

The children travel to school by bus.

It will be cheaper to travel to Munich by car than by train.

We always stop for a picnic at this bridge when we travel to


my grandparents’ house.
Last summer I travelled round New Zealand with my family.

We sometimes watch TV for a couple of hours in the evening.

He stayed in and watched a film on TV.

We’re living with my parents until we can move into our own
flat.
I lived with my family until I left university.

After 20 years of living in a city, I’d like to move to the


countryside.
We live in a small town by the sea.

We have lived in this house since I was ten.

I talked to my parents to ask their advice about changing


jobs.
You should talk to your teacher about the exam.

I often end up talking about the weather with other people on


the train!

On Mondays, I sometimes talk to my colleagues about my


weekend.
My grandpa plays games like chess and backgammon with
us.
Our hotel had a court, so we played tennis every morning on
holiday.

Musa plays with his friends in the park after school.


I love playing with my family on the beach.

I ate a big breakfast because I was going to miss lunch.

I’ve just bought a new car.

The chair was old and broke when he sat on it.

I felt ill yesterday, so we didn’t visit my aunt.

She forgot their anniversary.

We got up late this morning.

We had a lovely weekend in Wales.

I’ve lost the tickets for tonight’s show.

We met outside the cinema.

I ran down the stairs as fast as I could.

I saw a fox in the garden.

I spoke to her last Wednesday.

She took a bus to the airport.

We went to the cinema on Thursday.


Kai drove to Newcastle and back yesterday.

Marc found my keys under the sofa.

My grandma gave me these earrings.

I tried calling him, but he’d already left for work.

I made a cake for Hanna’s leaving party.

We sat on the beach and looked at the sea.

We saw ‘Hamlet’ at the theatre.

Lyn sent some photos of the wedding.

Fran spent £80 on Mike’s present.

My father taught me to swim.

He won the Tour de France last year.

I wrote her several letters, but she didn’t reply.

Let’s go for a walk on the beach.

We went shopping on Saturday and I bought some boots for


winter.
We loved going to seafood restaurants when we were on
holiday in Portugal.
The children had a good time on their uncle’s farm.
In two weeks’ time I’ll be relaxing on a beach in Greece.

We’ve booked to stay in a hotel on Lake Garda.

I prefer swimming in the sea; swimming pools are often noisy


and crowded.
They visited a museum and learned some interesting local
history.
Our office is above the hairdresser’s.
I was waiting at the bus stop.

I turned to speak to the person standing behind me.


The kitchen is directly below her bedroom.

I sat down between Su-lin and Mei.


He took us for a drive in his new car.

Suddenly, something ran across the road in front of the car.

The hotel was right next to the airport.

Leave your bags on the table over there.


Most people need to do more exercise.

I did/played a lot of sport at school.

I often listen to classical music when I’m in the car.

I don’t really listen to the radio very much.

Listen to this new song I’ve written.

After lunch, the youngest school children sit and listen to a


story.

If it rains on holiday, we sit and play cards for hours.

When you’ve finished your homework, we’ll play a game.

Petra loves playing video games with her dad.

I like to read a book for an hour or so before I go to sleep.

My mum reads the newspaper while she has breakfast.

Dad reads us a story at bedtime.

Children as young as two use the internet to play games and


learn.
Shall we play games or would you like to watch a film on TV?

Last week, we watched a play performed by my daughter’s


drama group.
We’ve been watching a TV programme about two families
that go and live in each other’s homes.
Sam’s really good at baking; he’s decided to start a business
selling cakes.
The shop sells camping equipment such as sleeping bags
and backpacks.
You did the cooking yesterday, so I’ll make dinner tonight.

Cycling is a good way of seeing the countryside and it’s good


exercise too.
Ben finds fishing very relaxing and he cooks the fish he
catches.
My mum likes gardening; her favourite thing is growing
vegetables.
I’ve started evening classes in painting; we’re learning about
colour at the moment.
I can’t go running at the moment because I’ve hurt my ankle.

Ella likes sightseeing and visiting museums, but Jake prefers


sunbathing.
The final of the skateboarding contest was amazing – some
of the jumps were so high!
Humza is planning to go travelling when he finishes
university.
Our teacher wrote some useful vocabulary on the board to
help us write a personal description.
I’m taking a course in graphic design.
We advise all our students to use a good dictionary.

We have to take exams at the end of each year.

When I’ve done my homework, I’m going to play football in


the park.
I need to go to the library to return some books.

I read the first chapter and made notes.

Doing online practice is a good way of learning verbs and the


ways they are used.
Did you pass your final exam?

If you fail the exam, you can retake it.

Do you know the answer to question 4?

I can’t remember the English word for ‘cuchara’.

The bank gave me a loan to help me start a business.

I decided to join a photoɡraphy club.

Yuri goes to a different school, so he has made some new


friends.
I’ve changed jobs, so I’m working different hours and for a
better salary.
Marco has changed his hours at work because he wants to
spend more time with his family.
Moving to another school is a good opportunity to try a new
sport.
We’d like to have children before we are in our 30s.
Luisa is going to sell some things to make some money for
travelling.
We’ve bought some land by a lake and we’re planning to
build a house.
I grew up in a small, boring village, so when I was 18 I moved
to a big city.
When they retired, my grandparents moved to a small town
near Milan.

I’m learning Spanish because I’d like to move to another


country.
At that time, the government gave you some land if you built
a house on it.
Julia took a course and learned how to build a computer.

My grandma taught me to make bread. I love the smell when


it comes out of the oven!
Laura enjoys making clothes, so she’s going to do a course
in fashion design.
Karl’s looking forward to spending a lot of time with his kids
on holiday.
I always try to spend some time with my friends every
weekend.
Piotr’s grandma has been ill, so he’s spending more time with
his grandparents.
I need to change cars – this one is very old and not very
reliable.
Stella has been much happier since she changed jobs.
Joe plays the drums. He joined a band a few months ago.

Joining a club is a great way to make new friends.

On Sunday mornings, I love to relax in a café, drinking coffee


and talking to friends.
When we go to the beach, we play games like volleyball or
cricket.
This evening I’m going to Anya’s house to listen to music.

We learned to dance salsa when we were on holiday in


Cuba.
After dinner, Mike played the piano and we all sang songs.
Drinks and light snacks are served at the bar.

There are plenty of cold drinks in the fridge.

Mila made a cake with fruit and cream for dessert.


There will be sandwiches, fruit and coffee available after the
meeting.
There’s lettuce and cucumber in the fridge … and some
peppers. We can make a chicken salad.
Try to eat plenty of fresh fruit.

In autumn the leaves turn red.

It was a cold, sunny day in early spring.

The children play on the beach during the summer.

We had a lot of snow last winter.

The hotel closes in winter.

My cousin had a baby in May.

Zahra is starting college this year.

I passed my driving test on 15th March.

Our nephew stayed with us for three months last year while
he was looking for a job.
Word Part of Speech Pron
Definition Example Unit
Topic
Wordlist

This spreadsheet is where you list the items to be included in the mini-dictionary. The completed list will then be
dictionary database to create a provisional Entries spreadsheet. NB If defs, examples and prons have already b
straight to the Entries section.

Column Required?

Word

Part of speech optional


Unit optional
Topic optional

Entries
This spreadsheet is derived from the Wordlist spreadsheet and has been populated with content from the dictio
needs to be checked and any blanks filled in.

Column Required?

Pron
Definition
Example
s where you list the items to be included in the mini-dictionary. The completed list will then be compared to the
e to create a provisional Entries spreadsheet. NB If defs, examples and prons have already been acquired, then go
ies section.

Guidance

To maximise chances of matching word from our database, avoid plurals, phrases, conjugated forms,
etc, where possible
Depends on the project whether they should be displayed, although normally you would want to
include. However, these are required to disabiguate when a word has multiple homographs.
Depends on the project whether this should be filled in. An entry can only be assigned one unit.
Depends on the project whether this should be filled in. An entry can only be assigned one topic.

s derived from the Wordlist spreadsheet and has been populated with content from the dictionary database. This
ed and any blanks filled in.

Guidance

IPA transcription - must use Charis SIL font.


Check the definition matches the intended sense of the word.
Check the example fits with the intended sense of the word.

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