martes, 24 de marzo de 2015

KET1 - UNIT1 - EJERCICIOS


EJERCICIOS

1.Cambia las contracciones a formas largas y las formas largas a contracciones.

Cuando termines el ejercicio recuerda escribir las marcas de puntuación correctas. Cuando escribas una nueva oración, termina con un punto aparte, signo de interrogación o de exclamación, según el contexto. No escribas ninguna puntuación final si ya hay una fuera del área.

I stupid.
You clever.
She here.
He from Poland.
It an apple.
We friends.
You my partner.
They fast.


2.Escribe preguntas sí/no para cada oración.

Cuando termines el ejercicio recuerda escribir las marcas de puntuación correctas. Cuando escribas una nueva oración, termina con un punto aparte, signo de interrogación o de exclamación, según el contexto. No escribas ninguna puntuación final si ya hay una fuera del área.


It is winter.
They are in England.
I am a student.
She is tired.
Your name is Greg.
We are the champions!

3.Haz oraciones de estas palabras y con la forma correcta del verbo "to be".

Cuando termines el ejercicio recuerda escribir las marcas de puntuación correctas. Cuando escribas una nueva oración, termina con un punto aparte, signo de interrogación o de exclamación, según el contexto. No escribas ninguna puntuación final si ya hay una fuera del área.

your / car / very / fast

it / in / summer / hot / here / very
very / she / pretty / not
in / John and Max / today / school / ?
years / Susan / old / 10 / ?
you / astronomy / in / interested / ?





KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1 Bonus Writing

Beginner - Writing - Unit 1


A SELECTION OF SPEAKING PHRASES
Una selección de frases útiles

Precios
How much is a large cola?
How much is it altogether?

¿Cuánto vale una coca-cola grande?
¿Cuánto es todo junto?

Británico

That's L5.54 - that's five pounds fifty-four pence
That's L3.32 - three pounds thirty-two (p)
That's 56 p - that's fifty-six p(ence)
That's 78 p, please - that's seventy-eight p, please

Son L5.54 - Son 5 libras con cincuenta y cinco peniques
Son L3.32 - tres libras con treinta y dos peniques
Son 56 p - son cincuenta y seis peniques
Son 79 p, por favor - son setenta y ocho p, por favor
Americano
That's 78 cents - seventy-eight cents
That's $4,45 - that's four dollars forty-five cents

Son 78 céntimos - setenta y ocho centavos
Son $4,45 - son cuatro dólares y cuarenta y cinco centavos
Vocabulario extra
I'll have two, then.
Can I have two, then?
A large / regular / small cola

I'll leave it.
a donut
There is everything in that shop except for good service.

Me llevo dos, entonces.
¿Me da dos, entonces?
Una coca cola grande/ normal/ pequeña
No me lo llevo
Un donut
En esa tienda hay de todo, excepto buen servicio.

Diálogos de ejemplo

Assistant: Yes, please?
Customer: Two white coffees, please.
Assistant: Small or large?
Customer: Large, please.
Assistant: Anything else?
Customer: Yes. Two donuts with jam and one ice-cream, please.
Assistant: Is that all?
Customer: Yes, thank you. How much is that?
Assistant: That's L5.78 please.
Customer : Here you are.
Assistant: Thank you.
Customer: Thanks.

Dependienta: Dígame.
Cliente: Dos cafés con crema, por favor.
Dependienta: ¿cortos o largos?
Cliente: Largos, por favor.
Dependienta: ¿Algo más?
Cliente: Sí, dos donuts con mermelada y un helado, por favor.
Dependienta: ¿Eso es todo?
Cliente: Sí, gracias. ¿Cuánto es?
Dependienta: Son L5.78, gracias.
Cliente: Aquí tiene.
Dependienta: Gracias
Cliente: Gracias

KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1- Speaking

Beginner - Speaking - Unit 1


Números

one 1 eleven 11 thirty 30
two 2 twelve 12 forty 40
three 3 thirteen 13 fifty 50
four 4 fourteen 14 sixty 60
five 5 fifteen 15 seventy 70
six 6 sixteen 16 eighty 80
seven 7 seventeen 17 ninety 90
eight 8 eighteen 18 a hundred 100
nine 9 nineteen 19
ten 10 twenty 20

twenty-one 21
thirty-eight 38
ninety-one 91
fifty-four 54

  • How many people are there?
  • About 20.
  • Are there many chairs in his office?
  • No, there is only one armchair
  • ¿Cuánta gente hay?
  • Alrededor de 20.
  • ¿Hay muchas sillas en su oficina?
  • No, sólo hay una poltrona.
Países y nacionalidades

Country Países Nationality Nacionalidades
Poland Polonia Polish Polaco
Britain Bretaña British Británico
England Inglaterra English Inglés
Scotland Escocia Scottish Escocés
Wales Gales Welsh Galés
The USA Estados Unidos American Americano
France Francia French Francés
Germany Alemania German Alemán
Italy Italia Italian Italiano
Spain España Spanish Español
Brazil Brasil Brazilian Brasileño
China China Chinese Chino

Continentes


Europe Europa
Asia Asia
South / North America Sudamérica/Norteamérica
Australia Australia
Africa África

Información personal


name and surname nombre y apellido
Mr. / Mrs. / Ms. Sr./Sra./Srta.
age edad
job / occupation trabajo/oficio
family familia
hobbies pasatiempos
appearance aspecto físico

Preguntas
What's your / his / her / its name? ¿Cuál es tu/su nombre?
How are you? ¿Cómo estás?
How old are you? ¿Cuántos años tienes?
Are you married? ¿Estás casado/a?
Do you like swimming / riding a horse / skiing / watching TV / playing computer games? ¿Te gusta nadar/cabalgar/esquiar/ver televisión/jugar en el ordenador?
What does she / he / it look like? ¿Qué aspecto tiene?
When were you born? ¿Cuándo naciste?
Where are you from? ¿De dónde eres?
What's your phone number? ¿Cuál es tu número de teléfono?

Respuestas

My / your / his / her name is . Mi/tu/su nombre es.
I'm / he's / they're Soy/es/son
I'm fine / not bad / OK / so so / awful Estoy bien/no estoy mal/bien/más o menos/mal
I'm twenty / seventeen / twenty-five / forty / sixty Tengo veinte años/diecisiete/veinticinco/cuarenta/sesenta
I'm married / single Estoy casado(a)/soltero(a)
I'm an engineer / student / unemployed / plumber / carpenter / farmer Soy ingeniero/estudiante/desempleado/fontanero/carpintero/granjero
I / you / we / they like singing / swimming and watching TV. Me/te/nos/les gusta cantar/nadar y ver televisión.
He / She's tall / short
slim / thick
good-looking / ugly
intelligent / stupid
funny / boring
Él/Ella es alto(a)/bajo(a)
delgado(a)/grueso(a)
guapo(a)/feo(a)
inteligente/estúpido(a)
divertido(a)/aburrido(a)

I'm from Canada / Poland / France Soy de Canadá/Polonia/Francia

In a café - En una cafetería

Ordering - Pidiendo
  • Hello, can I have two coffees, please?
  • I'd like two coffees with milk. and a glass of wine, please.
  • A bottle of mineral water, please.
  • Two apple cakes, please.
  • Orange / grapefruit / banana / kiwi / apple juice.
  • Hola, me pone dos cafés, por favor
  • Quisiera dos cafés con leche y una copa de vino, por favor.
  • Una botella de agua mineral, por favor.
  • Dos tartas de manzana, por favor.
  • Zumo de naranja/toronja/plátano/kiwi/manzana.
The bill - La cuenta

  • Are you ready to order, sir / madam?
  • Anything else?
  • Can I have the bill?
  • That's L 3.50 - three pounds fifty
  • Here you are.
  • ¿Está listo para pedir, señor/señora?
  • ¿Algo más?
  • ¿Me puede traer la cuenta, por favor?
  • Son L 3.50 - tres libras cincuenta
  • Aquí tiene
Diálogo de ejemplo

  • Good afternoon. Are you Joanna and Brad Morgan?
  • Yes, we are. And who are you?
  • I'm Robert Mitchum.
  • How do you do?
  • How do you do?
  • Where do you come from, Mr. Mitchum?
  • I'm from the USA. And you?
  • We're from Scotland. What do you do?
  • I'm a teacher. What about you?
  • I'm a pilot and my wife is a nurse. Nice to meet you.
  • Nice to meet you, too.
  • Buenas tardes. ¿Son ustedes Joanna y Brad Morgan?
  • Sí, somos nosotros. ¿Y quién es usted?
  • Soy Robert Mitchum.
  • ¿Qué tal?
  • ¿Qué tal?
  • ¿De dónde es usted, Sr. Mitchum?
  • Soy de los Estados Unidos. ¿Y ustedes?
  • Somos de Escocia. ¿Y qué hace usted?
  • Soy profesor. ¿Y usted?
  • Soy piloto y mi esposa es enfermera. Encantado de conocerle.
  • Igualmente.

KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1 Listening



 Basic - Listening - Unit 1



https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=ZIFJo6FMDKE 

2 people at a café and a waiter
[Waiter] Good morning. Are you ready to order?
[Peter] Yes, thank you. I'd like a cup of tea, please.
[Sam] And I'll have a glass of fruit juice.
[Waiter] What kind of fruit juice would you like?
[Peter] Erm, which ones have you got?
[Waiter] We have orange, apple, grapefruit and tomato.
[Peter] Oh, I think I'll have a tomato juice.
[Waiter] Would you like anything to eat with that?
[Peter] Yes, please. Could I have a toasted cheese sandwich?
[Waiter] Toasted cheese sandwich. And for you?
[Sam] I'll have the same.
[Waiter] So that's one tea, one tomato juice and two toasted cheese sandwiches.
[Peter] Yes, that's right.
...
[Waiter] Here you are. One cup of tea, a glass of tomato juice and two toasted cheese sandwiches.
...
[Peter] Excuse me, could we have the bill, please?
[Waiter] Here you are.
[Peter] Right so that's eight pounds ninety.
[Sam] Here you are.
[Waiter] Thank you.

[Waiter] Good afternoon. What can I get you?
[John] Do you have everything on the menu?
[Waiter] Everything except the lasagne. I'm afraid we have run out of that.
[John] Oh, that's a pity. You have everything else though?
[Waiter] Yes, everything else.
[John] In that case I'll have the spaghetti Bolognese and a side salad.
[Waiter] One spaghetti Bolognese and one side salad. And for you, madam?
[Erica] Could I have a slice of quiche?
[Waiter] Certainly. We have three different quiches. Which one would you like? Spinach, asparagus or quiche Loraine?
[Erica] Er, what is quiche Loraine?
[Waiter] It's basically a quiche with bacon and tomato in it.
[Erica] Oh, that sounds good. I'll have that.
[Waiter] Would you like anything to go with it?
[Erica] Yes. What goes well with it? Do you recommend anything?
[Waiter] It goes well with a normal side salad but it also goes well with chutney.
[Erica] Oh, I'll have it with chutney then.
[Waiter] Right, so that's spaghetti Bolognese with a side salad and quiche Loraine with chutney. Anything to drink with that?
[John] Could I have a glass of mineral water?
[Waiter] Still or sparkling?
[John] Sparkling, please.
[Erica] And I'll have a coffee.
[Waiter] A sparkling mineral water and a coffee.
...
[Waiter] Here you are.
[John] Excuse me, I think there's been a mistake. This mineral water is still and I asked for sparkling.
[Waiter] Oh, I'm terribly sorry. I'll just go and get the right one.
...
[Waiter] Here you are. Sorry about that. One sparkling mineral water.
[John] Thank you very much.
[Waiter] Enjoy your meal.

lunes, 9 de febrero de 2015

KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1 Use of English

Use of English

Beginner - Use of English - Unit 1

Frases y palabras cotidianas

Hello Hola
Hi Hola
Hello, Ann. Hola, Ann.
Hi, John. Hola, John.
What's your name? ¿Cómo te llamas?
My name's... Me llamo...
My name's John. Me llamo John.
This is... Éste es...
This is David. Éste es David...
How are you? ¿Cómo estás?
Fine, thanks. Bien, gracias.
Very well. Muy bien.
Fine, thanks. And you? Bien, gracias. ¿Y tú?
Where are you from? ¿De dónde eres?
Where is he from? ¿De dónde es él?
Where is she from? ¿De dónde es ella?

Diálogos de ejemplo

  • Ann: Hello, my name's Ann. What's your name?
  • Peter: My name's Peter.
  • Ann: How are you, Peter?
  • Peter: Fine, thanks. And you?
  • Ann: Very well, thanks.
  • John: Hello, Jane. This is David.
  • Jane: Hi, David.
  • David: Hi, Jane.
  • Ann: Hola, me llamo Ann. ¿Cómo te llamas?
  • Peter: Me llamo Peter
  • Ann: ¿Cómo estás, Peter?
  • Peter: Bien, gracias. ¿Y tú?
  • Ann: Muy bien, gracias.
  • John: Hola, Jane. Éste es David.
  • Jane: Hola David.
  • David: Hola, Jane.

Palabras claves

Wordlist Lista de palabras Example
Hello Hola
capital Capital What's the capital of Poland?
from de I'm from Poland.
name nombre What's your name?
where dónde Where do you live?
Argentina Argentina
Brazil Brasil
France Francia
Hungary Hungría
Italy Italia
Japan Japón
Poland Polonia
Spain España
Switzerland Suiza
Turkey Turquía
the UK Reino Unido
the USA Los Estados Unidos
Numbers Números
one 1
two 2
three 3
four 4
five 5
six 6
seven 7
eight 8
nine 9
ten 10
eleven 11
twelve 12
thirteen 13
fourteen 14
fifteen 15
sixteen 16
seventeen 17
eighteen 18
nineteen 19
twenty 20
twenty-one 21
twenty-two 22
thirty 30
forty 40
fifty 50
sixty 60
seventy 70
eighty 80
ninety 90
a / one hundred 100
Classroom language El idioma de la sala de clases
alphabet alfabeto
apple manzana
bag bolso
book libro
boy chico
desk escritorio
dictionary diccionario
girl chica
goodbye adiós Say 'goodbye' and leave.
man hombre
to mean significar (querer decir) What does "imperialism" mean?
to meet quedar (con alguien) Where shall we meet?
notebook libreta
orange naranja
pen bolígrafo
please por favor "Follow me, please," the guide said.
to pronounce pronunciar I can't pronounce his name...
to repeat repetir I decided not to repeat the mistake of my first marriage...
to say decir I'd like to say a few words.
sorry lo siento I didn't know, sorry.
to spell deletrear Can you spell your name?
student estudiante
teacher profesor(a)
umbrella paraguas
to understand entender Do you understand?
what qué
woman mujer
word palabra
Personal information Información personal
address dirección
age edad
number número
phone / telephone teléfono
Plurals Plurales
badge insignia
box caja
child niño(a)
children niños(as)
dress vestido
men hombres
people gente
person persona
toothbrush cepillo de dientes
watch reloj
women mujeres
Adjectives Adjetivos
bad malo
big grande
cheap barato
colo(u)r color
expensive caro
fast rápido
fat gordo
good bueno
heavy pesado
light ligero
new nuevo
old viejo
short bajo Jim is rather short.
slim delgado
slow lento
small pequeño
tall alto
thick espeso
thin delgado
young joven
Colours Colores
black negro
blue azul
brown marrón
green verde
grey gris
orange naranja
pink rosado
purple violeta
red rojo
white blanco
yellow amarillo
In a café En la cafetería
anything else algo más Would you like anything else?
coffee café
French fries patatas fritas
large grande
lemonade limonada
menu menú
orange juice zumo de naranja
pence penique
pizza pizza
pound libra
tea

KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1 Reading

Reading

Basic - Reading - Unit 1





Joshua, Natalie and Chloe are university students. They study at Portsmouth University. 
Joshua comes from Newcastle. Newcastle is a city in the north of England. 
Joshua has two brothers and a pet dog.

Natalie comes from Pitlochry. Pitlochry is a town in Scotland. 
Natalie doesn't have any brothers or sisters, but she has a pet lizard.

Chloe comes from Swansea. Swansea is a town in the south of Wales. 
Chloe has three sisters. They are still at school.

Joshua is eighteen years old. He speaks English, French and Czech. He is a mathematics student. 
His maths lecturer comes from India.

Natalie is also eighteen. She only speaks English. She is a drama student. She has two lecturers. 
One is from England and the other is from Ireland.

Chloe is an engineering student. She is twenty and speaks English and Russian. 
Chloe's lecturers all come from Britain (one is English and two are Scottish).

Joshua doesn't play any musical instrument. Natalie plays the flute. Chloe plays the piano and the guitar.


https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=IjO01h15Hc8

KET 1 Unit1 Lesson1 Grammar

Grammar

Beginner - Grammar - Unit 1

El verbo "to be" ("to be or not to be...")

Forma positiva (afirmativa):

I am Yo soy Yo estoy
You are Tú eres Tú estás
He / she / it is Él/ella es Él/ella está

We are Nosotros somos Nosotros estamos
You are Vosotros sois Vosotros estáis
They are Ellos son Ellos están

Ej. I am a student. You are a teacher. She is a manager. They are soldiers. We are clerks.

Formación de interrogantes:
(las preguntas se forman intercambiando la posición del verbo y del sujeto)

Am I? ¿Soy? ¿Estoy?
Are you? ¿Eres? ¿Estás?
Is he / she / it? ¿Es? ¿Está?

Are we? ¿Somos? ¿Estamos?
Are you? ¿Sois? ¿Estáis?
Are they? ¿Son? ¿Están?


Ej. Am I a student? Are you a teacher? Is she a manager? Are they soldiers? Are we clerks?

Formación del negativo
(la negación se forma agregando la palabra "not")

I am not No soy No estoy
You are not No eres No estás
He / she / it is not No es No está

We are not No somos No estamos
You are not No sois No estáis
They are not No son No están


Ej. I am not a student. You are not a teacher. She is not a manager. They are not soldiers. We are not clerks.

En el lenguaje informal y cotidiano se utilizan abreviaciones.

Abreviaciones:

I am = I'm (I'm a boy.)
You are = You're (You're from Poland.)
He is = He's (He's a policeman.)
She is = She's (She's guilty.)
It is = It's (It's an egg.)
We are = We're (We're from the USA.)
You are = You're (You're too fast for me.)
They are = They're (They're from Poland.)

I am not = I'm not (I'm not a student.)
You are not = You aren't (You aren't from Poland.)
He is not = He isn't (He isn't a policeman.)
She is not = She isn't (She isn't guilty.)
It is not = It isn't (It isn't my car.)
We are not = We aren't (We aren't from the USA.)
You are not = You aren't (You aren't my parents.)
They are not = They aren't (They aren't black.)

Algunas abreviaciones tienen dos formas:
She isn't o She's not

Ambas formas son correctas y regularmente usadas.

Reglas para el uso del artículo definido "a / an"

Se usa el artículo indefinido "a / an" antes de cualquier sustantivo que cumpla estas condiciones:

  1. Cuando hay sólo uno
    Ej. a boy, a car, a flat (pero en plural: boys, cars, flats)

  2. Cuando son contables
    Ej. a girl, a year, an apple (pero: water, salt, coffee, tea - porque estos sustantivos son incontables)

  3. Aparecen en la forma contable cuando son usados por primera vez y el interlocutor no los conoce.
Cuándo se usa "a" y cuándo "an"?

Esta es una pregunta importante. Las dos palabras significan lo mismo, pero:

La palabra "a" se utiliza antes de sustantivos que comienzan con una consonante sonora
(Ej. a university, a girl, a dog),
Mientras que "an" se utiliza antes de sustantivos que comienzan con una vocal sonora
(Ej. an elephant, an hour).

¡Recuerda que las palabras en inglés a menudo se escriben de una forma, pero se pronuncian de otra!