CHRISTMAS QUIZ

Exercise 1

Can you find the correct answers (a–i) to the questions (1–8)? There is one answer that you should not use.
1. What other name does Santa Claus have?
2. Lots of people put special decorations in their homes during the Christmas period. When
do they usually take them down?
3. What kind of animal pulls the sleigh that Santa Claus travels on?
4. On Christmas Eve in the United States, what do small children often leave for Santa Claus before they go to bed?
5. What are the two most popular Christmas colors?
6. Many families put a Christmas tree in their home during the Christmas period. What kind of tree is it, usually?
7. Complete the famous phrase associated with Christmas: “_______ on Earth, good will to men.”
8. What is a “white Christmas”?

 
a) a conifer
b) reindeer
c) peace
d) Saint Nicholas (St. Nick)
e) when there is snow on the ground on December 25
f) red and green
g) white and gold
h) early January
i) a plate of cookies and a glass of milk

 

Exercise 2

Can you find the correct answers (a–i) to match the questions (1–8)? There is one answer that you should not use.
1. Where does Santa Claus live?
2. What is the name of the snowman who came to life in a popular Christmas song and TV show?
3. In Christianity, the festival of Christmas is, of course, the celebration of the birth of Jesus Christ. He is believed to have been born close to which city?
4. What is the most famous ballet associated with Christmas?
5. If you were born on Christmas Day, December 25, what would be your star sign?
6. What is December 24, the day before Christmas Day, known as?
7. Every year, which country gives the UK a gift of a large Christmas tree as thanks for British help during the Second World War?
8. What is the name of the traditional hymns that people sing at Christmas?

 
a) Norway
b) Capricorn
c) The Nutcracker
d) Christmas carols
e) Christmas Eve
f) New York
g) the North Pole
h) Jerusalem
i) Frosty

 

KEY-KEY-KEY-

 

Exercise 1

1. d 2. h 3. b 4. i 5. f 6. a 7. c 8. e   Answer not used: g

Exercise 2

1. g 2. i 3. h 4. c 5. b 6. e 7. a 8. d    Answer not used: f

SOME FUN FOOD FOR KIDS…OR ADULTS!

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ORAL STRATEGIES FOR COMMUNICATION

Holding a conversation in English is much more than putting words together and not making grammar mistakes: We have to act both as a speaker and a listener, we have to adapt our behaviour to the changes in the conversation, we have to respect turn-taking and be able to cooperate with our interlocutor to keep the conversation going, we have to respect specific social conventions, we have to use suitable structures for the context. Sounds daunting,doesn’t it?

The How to… series on the Learning English section of the BBC site is a wonderful resource that can keep you busy for a lifetime and that will help you to learn how to proceed when you talk to people in English, either face to face or on the phone and which may be an invaluable tool to prepare the EOI oral exam, specially the second part, where you have to discuss a topic or a situation with another student.

In the How to… series you will find dozens of six-minute lessons that can show you the way native speakers interact with each other while holding a conversation. Each lesson consists of an audio clip that you can listen to or download, its accompanying transcript, a selection of key vocabulary and structures with examples for learners to study/revise at a glance and, sometimes, activities to consolidate everything that has been explained throughout the lesson.

The lessons are grouped under umbrella topics:

As I said before, a number of six-minute lessons unfolds under each topic, focusing on a specific language function that shows what native speakers do to express that function, and how we can do it. For example, under How to hold a conversation,  some of the lessons we can study are:

  • extending a conversation
  • closing topics
  • expressing likes and dislikes
  • responding to compliments
  • talking about funny incidents
  • getting back on a topic
  • being sarcastic

I know it may not always be easy to find your way around the Learning English section of the BBC site. To get to the How to… series, once you reach the Learning English section, click on Grammar, vocabulary and pronunciation, and you’ll find  the How to… series half way down the menu that unfolds.

XMAS COOKING

Ok, so it seems that you don´t have a lot of  ideas for our Xmas party this year…Well…don´t worry, because I have some suggestions for you. Click on the picture to find Xmas glee!

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