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Exercise 9. Complete the conversations using the words in brackets. 1. –I walked home from the town centre. (take/bus) – You mean you walked all the way? Didn’t you take a bus? 2. – I think I’d like to lie down for a while. (feel/well) – Oh, dear! 3. – I’m looking forward to getting the photos you’ve sent. (arrive/yet) – I sent them weeks ago. 4. – I saw Rita, but she walked straight past me (say ‘hello’) – Without speaking to you? 5. – I never sit by the pool. I hate water. (swim) – Really? Exercise 10. Put in Yes or No: 1. Didn’t Mike stop and give you a lift? – , he didn’t, but maybe he didn’t see me. 2. Aren’t you tired after working all day? – , I feel fine. 3. Didn’t you write the number down? – , but I’ve lost the piece of paper. 4. Haven’t you got an umbrella? – , it’s here in my bag. 5. Couldn’t you get in to the opera? – , we didn’t have the tickets.
2) the earliest
3) easier
4) easier,
5) cheerfully
6) patiently
7) unusual
8) early
2 The General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE) is an academic qualification awarded in a specified subject, generally taken in a number of subjects by pupils in secondary education in England and Wales over two years
3. England also has a tradition of independent schools (sometimes termed "public schools") and home schooling alongside state schools; legally, parents may choose to educate their children by any suitable means. State-funded schools can be categorised as grammar schools, which are selective, or comprehensive schools, which are not. These can be further subdivided into free schools, other academies and state-run schools. More freedom is given to free schools, including most religious schools, and other academies in terms of curriculum, but all are subject to assessment and inspection by Ofsted.
The state-funded education system is divided into stages based upon age:[10] Early Years Foundation Stage (ages 3–5); primary education (ages 5 to 11), subdivided into Key Stage 1 (KS1) Infants (ages 5 to 7) and Key Stage 2 (KS2) Juniors (ages 7 to 11); secondary education (ages 11 to 16), subdivided into Key Stage 3 (KS3; ages 11 to 14) and Key Stage 4 (KS4; ages 14 to 16); Key Stage 5 is post-16 education (ages 16 to 18); and tertiary education (for ages 18+).[11]
At age 16 the students typically take exams for the General Certificate of Secondary Education or other Level 1/2 qualifications. While education is compulsory until 18, schooling is only compulsory to 16, thus post-16 education can take a number of forms, and may be academic or vocational. This can involve continued schooling, known as "sixth form" or "college", leading (typically after two years of further study) to A-level qualifications (similar to a high school diploma in some other countries), or a number of alternative Level 3qualifications such as BTEC, the International Baccalaureate or the Cambridge Pre-U. It can also include work-based apprenticeshipsor traineeships, or volunteering.
Higher education often begins with a three-year bachelor's degree. Postgraduate degrees include master's degrees, either taught or by research, and doctoral level research degrees that usually take at least three years. Tuition fees for first degrees are up to £9,000 per academic year for English, Welsh and European Union students, although these are set to rise to £9,250 for students starting from 2017.
4. It is June now
1) teach-teacher5
2) vary--varyation
3) natural-nature
4) propose--proposal
5) contradict- contradiction
6 Vary-- varuous
Space---spacious
3) differ--different
4) Imagine --imaginary
5) magnet-magnetic