1. Unit 3: Using the Dictionary
Phrasal Verbs
Sentence Stress
LETâS GET STARTED
2. Using the Dictionary â p.53
ï Even though two words may have the same basic meaning,
we often use them differently (look at adolescence and
youth in your student book).
ï Many times the difference between how we use words can
be for specific or in a more general way.
ï If you have problems trying to figure out the difference in
usage between two words with the same meaning, you can
usually go to google and type âvsâ, for example:
economic vs financial
ï The online dictionary at tw.yahoo.com is also pretty good at
giving examples of how words are used, but not always.
3. economic vs. financial
ï Look at the definitions given in the book. If the
definition gives examples of the words being used,
you should use those examples to help you
understand which word you should use.
ï You can see that economic is used for a whole
country or society (âsocial, economic and political
issuesâ).
ï The word financial is used in a more personal way
in the examples, (âto give financial adviceâ and âto
be in financial difficultiesâ).
4. ceremony vs. rite
ï Look at the definitions in your book.
ï The main difference between ceremony and rite is
public and formal for ceremony, and particular
and often religious for rite.
ï Ceremonies are usually commonly known events
that many people can attend, such as weddings,
graduations, and giving awards.
ï Rites are usually smaller events (fewer people
attending), usually with some sort of religious theme,
and they are often more serious, such as a funeral.
5. Hereâs what you can do
ï Check the example sentences for the words
ï Try googling âword 1 vs. word 2â and see if other
people are asking the same question.
ï Try tw.yahoo.com dictionary for more example
sentences, but be careful â sometimes they donât give
the best examples.
ï If youâre still not sure, you can usually use the more
general word in conversation, and the more specific
one if you are writing or giving a presentation.
6. age vs. mature
ï age: the length of time that a person has lived or a
thing has existed:
he died from a heart attack at the age of 51
his wife is the same age as Carla
he must be nearly 40 years of age
young people between the ages of 11 and 18
ï mature: fully developed physically; full-grown:
she was now a mature woman
owls are sexually mature at one year
mature trees
a young man mature beyond his years
7. order vs. instruct
order: give an authoritative direction or instruction to
do something:
she ordered me to leave
âStop frowning,â he ordered
instruct: teach (someone) a subject or skill:
he instructed them in the use of firearms
8. cover vs. hide
cover: put something such as a cloth or lid on top of or
in front of (something) in order to protect or conceal it:
the table had been covered with a checked tablecloth
she covered her face with a pillow
hide: put or keep out of sight; conceal from the view or
notice of others:
he hid the money in the house
Hal could hardly hide his dislike
9. Letâs try some:
ï Some of my classmates have _____ a lot since we
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started college together. (aged, matured)
The _____ situation in Taiwan has become worse.
(financial, economic)
My mother _____ all of us how to be polite and
hardworking. (ordered, instructed)
Some people think you should ______ your head from
the rain so that you wonât catch a cold. (cover, hide)
Prince William had a very public wedding ______ last
year. (celebration, rite)
10. Phrasal verbs
ï Phrasal verbs are usually two-word phrases
consisting of verb + adverb or verb +
preposition.
ï Think of them as you would any other English
vocabulary. Study them as you come across them,
rather than trying to memorize many at once.
ï Look at p. 55 in your book.
11. Transitive
ï A transitive phrasal verb requires a direct object.
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Did you turn on the radio?
We will have to put off the wedding.
I had to look up the word to understand its meaning.
ï Most transitive phrasal verbs are separable â you can put the direct object
between the words, such as:
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Did you turn the radio on?
We will have to put the wedding off.
I had to look the word up to understand its meaning.
ï If the direct object is a pronoun (he, she, it, etc.), it must go between the
verb and the particle.
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The TV is too loud! You need to turn it down.
That dress is nice. You should try it on.
ï Some transitive phrasal verbs are inseparable. You canât put a direct
object inside.
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I have been looking for my homework all morning.
I have to hand in the report tomorrow.
12. Intransitive
ï Intransitive phrasal verbs donât need an object, and
they canât be separated.
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My scooter is going to break down any day now.
Are you hungry? Letâs eat out tonight.
I never want to go back to that restaurant.
I told him to get out.
13. Letâs try some:
ï ___ He came back after two hours.
ï ___ Take off your smelly socks.
ï ___ Make sure to write down the answer.
ï ___ I believe in ghosts, don't you?
ï ___ I have to put down my cellphone for a minute.
ï (__) We will have to wait the bus for at the corner.
ï (__) I threw it away.
ï (__) I hope you get your broken heart over quickly.
14. Letâs try some:
ï _I_ He came back after two hours.
ï _T_ Take off your smelly socks.
ï _T_ Make sure to write down the answer.
ï _I_ I believe in ghosts, don't you?
ï _T_ I have to put down my cellphone for a minute.
ï (NO) We will have to wait the bus for at the corner.
ï (OK) I threw it away.
ï (NO) I hope you get your broken heart over quickly.
15. Sentence Stress
ï Stressing different words can completely change the
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meaning of what we are saying:
I don't think he should get the job.
Somebody else thinks he should get the job.
I don't think he should get the job.
It's not true that I think he should get the job.
I don't think he should get that job.
I'm not sure he'll get that job.
I don't think he should get that job.
Somebody else should get that job.
I don't think he should get that job.
In my opinion it's wrong that he's going to get that job.
I don't think he should get that job.
He should have to work hard for that job.
I don't think he should get that job.
He should get another job.
I don't think he should get that job.
Maybe he should get something else instead.