| |
Materials: Guidelines
Body Part Idioms
• Details
| Name of Item |
Idioms Are A Pain In The Neck |
| Activity Type |
Vocabulary / Discussion |
| Student Level |
Intermediate / Upper Intermediate |
| Time Allowance |
15 - 25 minutes |
| Preparation Required |
Preparing to explain various words / idioms if required |
| Other Items Needed |
None |
| Vocabulary |
flower arranger / world leaders / funeral / (plus the idioms themselves) |
| Grammar |
Nothing special |
• Instructions
Individually, or in small groups, the students should read the sentences and make guesses of the probable meanings
of the phrases in bold letters. Impress upon them that any guess - even a wrong one is better than nothing at all.
When this has gone on as long as you think best, stop the proceedings and compare answers as a whole group. Where
guesses differ wildly from the actual meanings, this should serve as a timely warning as to the treacherous nature of
English idioms.
Some basic definitions follow, but don't take my word for it. If you don't agree, stick to what you think.
- able to do accurate / detailed work with few mistakes
- take an interest in things that do not concern you
- help somebody with a difficult or long task
- start having a certain ambition / dream for the future
- not be upset / complain in a bad situation
- agree with somebody
- struggling to remember or think of something
- be a nusiance / be an annoyance
- make a gesture to indicate not knowing an answer (and possibly not caring)
- cause other people to be surprised / shocked
- be successful after a major problem / set-back
- put a lot of energy into a job
• Download And Print
You have a choice of two different methods of getting this handout to your printer.
It all depends on whether your computer has "Adobe Acrobat Reader" installed.
If it has, then this would be the recommended method for printing out the worksheet.
Try selecting the "PDF (Adobe Acrobat)" link below.
If all goes well, a new application window should appear including a print button,
which when selected will print out one copy.
If, on the other hand you do not have "Adobe Acrobat" select the "HTML (web page)" link below. (Also, this method
is recommended for users of Netscape Navigator, which seems to have trouble interacting with the Acrobat program like this.)
If all goes well, a new browser window will open, from which you can either click the "print button" on the toolbar
or open the "File" menu, select "Print" and then adjust the "Print Dialog Box" to your own preferences.
The final link below is to enable you to print this "instruction page" if you want to. Click on the link,
and when the page appears on a new screen you will be able to print it using the browser's "print button" or "file menu".
After printing, close the window again so that you can continue to navigate around the site.
| |
 |