English Workbook 1 Answers
English Workbook 1 Answers
English Workbook 1 Answers
1 Factual writing
The Channel Tunnel
1 Fear of war (between Britain and France)
2 Steam trains (too much smoke); could be used for invasion
3 Funded privately/not by taxpayers
4 Three
5 Tunnelling begun from each end; joined up in the middle
6 a) Enmity/War
b) Serious difficulties in making things work
c) Bearing ill will
d) Assorted suggestions
e) Result
7 Any five of the following: Built by Channel Tunnel Company; construction began in 1988; runs from
Folkestone to Coquelles; two rail tunnels plus one service tunnel; cost 4650 million/about $7 billion;
involved 1500 workers; opened 6 May 1994; carries High Speed passenger trains and shuttles for cars/lorries;
locomotives powered by electricity; 23.5 miles/37.5 kilometres long; worlds longest undersea tunnel.
Benefits
Plan in advance.
You can save money which can be spent while on holiday and will allow you
to spend longer on holiday.
Book early.
7 The Channel Tunnel is impersonal, written in third person; uses passive verbs; textbook tone. How to Travel
on a Limited Budget is addressed directly to the reader, uses second person (you); active verbs.
Fact or opinion?
1 Fact
2 Fact
3 Opinion
4 Opinion
5 Fact
6 Opinion
7 Fact
8 Opinion
9 Fact
10 Fact
Common nouns
Proper nouns
Collective nouns
Abstract nouns
day
Thursday
class
suspense
school
Rohan
excitement
classroom
Shivane
ambition
lesson
English
life
recess
Emil
society
novel
German
time
detective(s)
Berlin
book
Europe
city
country
bus
morning
adult
Subject
Verb
(comical-looking) Dodo
is
people
think (of)
they
are asked
everyone
knows
became
they
were
rats
devoured
are
Mauritius
was
it
is
there
are
that
exist
met
others
came
(hard-working) people
saved
Sentence types
1 Simple
2 Simple
3 Complex
4 Compound
5 Complex
6 Complex
7 Simple
8 Compound
9 Complex
10 Simple
2Autobiography
Extract 1: Mary Seacole
1 a) The things that my mother liked were naturally passed on to me.
b) Longing for
c) Female supporter/Sponsor
d) Affection/Flattery
e) Most predominant
f) Pleasure/Satisfaction
g) I saw in my imagination
h) Dangerous/Risky
i) Pretend/Imitate
2 Kindness; comfortable childhood. She could have been overindulged and become spoilt/lazy.
3 Her doll
4 Children play roles. Left alone a child will turn anywhere into a role-play area and will use a doll as a partner
with which it can act out its feelings/scenes.
5 She started to treat the cats and dogs in the area.
6 Vocabulary used (blandishments, etc.); sentence length; the overall (slightly sentimental) tone
3 Descriptive writing
Extract 1: Baskerville Hall
1 a) With banisters
b) Gloomy/Dark
c) Coarse laughter
d) Intimidated/Unnerved
e) Sadness
2 Long room; raised platform at the end with a step up to it
3 Quiet and restrained
4 They were overawed by the surroundings and their atmosphere.
5 The last impression he had of the scene outside reinforced his earlier feelings.
6 Candles so pre-electricity but post-Regency period, probably mid/late nineteenth century. Harsh,
threatening landscape; dining room is dark; shadows; haunting portraits; modern billiard room.
Punctuation: commas
1 Mrs Singh, the Headteacher, is a very caring person.
2 On the bedroom shelf were books, an alarm clock, some toys and a glass containing water.
3 The groups first album, in my opinion, is the best they ever made.
4 That was an enjoyable meal, dont you agree?
5 Because of their strange and unnatural appearance, clowns may terrify some children.
6 Excuse me, sir, can you direct me to the library?
7 Her birthday, the last day in March, was a very special celebration.
8 Having set off much too quickly, Lee finished last in the 1500 metres race.
9 Slowly, clumsily and making far too much noise, Ravi failed to leave the house without anyone knowing.
10 Im sorry, but, no, Im sure I was told to expect you for lunch today.
4Non-fiction
Roald Dahl
1 a) Set in an imaginary world with imaginary characters
b) An exciting mixture of bizarre, scary content and humour
c) Extreme overstatement
d) Having power (over people)
2 Worked for Shell because he thought it would involve foreign travel.
3 Independently minded; strong willed; adventurous; brave; determined
4 They contain disturbing and exciting content but it is interlaced with humour.
5 He exaggerated wildly events and characters were larger than life.
6 Their sarcasm and humour appeal to adults.
7 A thrilling mixture of the grotesque and comic; Roald Dahl is perhaps the most popular and best-selling
childrens book author; one of the most widely read and influential writers of our generation.
Extended task
Students notes might include the following:
l Description 1: Old town and its walls; port; cathedral; hill; main gate (Porte des Dunes); Church of St
Nicolas; market in new town; four gates in old town; Tourist Information Cabin; castle museum and other
main buildings in old town; many cafs.
l Description 2: Upper and Lower Towns; hill; ramparts; rows of trees; view (to England); ruined outworks;
cathedral and other buildings (convent educating English girls); harbour; nobles live in UpperTown;
merchants in Lower Town; river Liane; jetties and piers; sandbank; open and unsafe road.
In their answers they should include these points:
l Description 1 is informative and positive; Description 2 is informative but with some personal opinion
(redesign of piers, etc.).
l Description 1 is written for visitors to Boulogne; Description 2 is written for the general reader to provide a
picture of the town.
l Specific historical period appears in the writers attitudes but also in references to cafs, use of the word
leagues, and so on.
Punctuation: apostrophes
The correct sentences are 1c), 2c), 3d), 4a), 5d), 6c), 7a), 8b), 9b), 10a).
5 Folk tales
Extract 1: The Man, the Boy and the Donkey
1 a) Oaf
b) Walk heavily
c) Mock
d) Deriding
e) Big and clumsy
2 Because they were not riding on the donkey.
3 That the boy was selfish by riding on the donkey rather than letting his father do so.
4 That the father was lazy/selfish for making his son walk while he rode.
5 Being cruel to the donkey by both riding on it.
6 The father and son arrived carrying the donkey tied to a pole. The animal struggled free, fell into the river
and drowned because his feet were tied together.
7 Try to please all and you will please none.
l
l
7 Accept any convincing comment based on the details of the story (e.g. pride comes before a fall; modesty
and cleverness will win the day).
Punctuation: apostrophes
1 a) Her sisters best friend is a nurse.
b) We saw the childrens ball in the middle of the garden.
c) The twins teachers could not tell them apart.
d) The two scientists conclusion could not be questioned.
e) The plays excitement increased in the second act.
f) Anybodys solution is better than mine.
g) When I was a child I spent all of my holidays at my grandparents farm.
h) The three teachers votes decided who won the prize.
i) Your bicycles front wheel has a puncture.
j) The dog chased its ball.
2 a) I didnt eat my supper yesterday.
b) Youre being very foolish.
c) Hed often arrive late for school.
d) Shes the best behaved student in the class.
e) We cant be late for the party tonight.
f) I hadnt finished my homework when my friend arrived.
g) Weve never been on holiday to Australia.
h) Ill make sure that I remember your birthday.
i) You wont forget that tomorrow is my birthday.
j) Surely she wouldnt forget to buy me a present.
Why? Mum repeated. Because things get broken or lost when theyre all willy-nilly like this. Come on, have a
tidy up now.
But Im very busy, Abby argued, and its boring on my own. Cant you help me?
No I cant, Im busy too. But Ill give you extra pocket money if you do a good job.
When Mum came back later all the toys and clothes and books had disappeared.
Im impressed, said Mum. But Ill inspect it properly later.
It was easy, said Abby. Can I have my extra pocket money now?
All right. Get it out of my change purse. Its in the kitchen tidy drawer.
In the kitchen Abby went over to the dresser and pulled open the tidy drawer. She hunted for the purse.
Any luck? Mum asked.
Abby shook her head.
It must be lurking at the bottom, Mum said. Lets have a proper look.
6 Short stories
High and Lifted Up Part 1
1 a) The letters that had just been saved after blowing away in the wind.
b) Swirling around in small joyful spirals.
c) Looked on as if enchanted.
d) Different colours (of leaves) twisting and twirling around.
2 Because of the strength of the wind.
3 It is blown out of the mailmans hands into the house, picked up by Mrs Pennington, blown out of her hands
and further into the house as Tommy opens the door.
4 Leaping, landing, jumping, chasing. All contribute to the lively action; the participles suggest a continuous
action.
5 He was absorbed in the movement of the leaves (watched in fascination) and wanted to join them (would
fly clear across the world).
6 He had joined the leaves/become a leaf.
7 A bit of a worrier (typical mother?); wants to make sure Tommy does not come to harm.
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5 Theres a fire at the dump that is likely to burn the leaves the old leaf has warned against not thinking of
possible dangers.
6 Unlikely; its a way of conveying the effects of Tommys imagination.
7 Cf. answer to Question 6 hes learnt to think more about the consequences of his actions.
Punctuation: commas
Oh! But he was a tight-fisted hand at the grindstone, Scrooge! A squeezing, wrenching, grasping, scraping,
clutching, covetous, old sinner! Hard and sharp as flint, from which no steel had ever struck out generous fire;
secret, and self-contained, and solitary as an oyster. The cold within him froze his old features, nipped his pointed
nose, shrivelled his cheek, stiffened his gait; made his eyes red, his thin lips blue; and spoke out shrewdly in his
grating voice. A frosty rime was on his head, and on his eyebrows, and his wiry chin. He carried his own low
temperature always about with him; he iced his office in the dog-days; and didnt thaw it one degree at Christmas.
External heat and cold had little influence on Scrooge. No warmth could warm, no wintry weather chill him.
Nowind that blew was bitterer than he, no falling snow was more intent upon its purpose, no pelting rain less open
to entreaty. Foul weather didnt know where to have him. The heaviest rain, and snow, and hail, and sleet, could
boast of the advantage over him in only one respect. They often came down handsomely, and Scrooge never did.
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Paragraphing
The Amazon rainforest gets its name from the Amazon River, the life force of the rainforest. The Amazon River
begins in the Peruvian Andes, and winds its way east over the northern half of South America. It meets the Atlantic
Ocean at Belem, Brazil. The main river is about 6560 kilometres long. Its drainage basin covers 7050000 square
kilometres, and lies in the countries of Brazil, Columbia, Peru, Venezuela, Ecuador, Bolivia, and the three Guyanas.
Sixteen per cent of all the worlds river water flows through the Amazon delta. 127 billion litres of water flow into
the Atlantic every minute, diluting the salinity of the ocean for more than 160 kilometres offshore. TheAmazon
rainforest watershed is home to the worlds highest level of biodiversity.
8Poetry
Important Notice and The Last Wolf Speaks from the Zoo
1 A representative (Mother Nature Managing Director) of World Wildlife Industries is speaking and
warning that stocks are getting low and the business may have to close as a rival company, Human Beings
International are threatening their livelihood. (Give credit to answers that show an understanding of the
way the metaphor of big business is being applied to concerns for the environment, etc.)
2 Many products (living creatures) are now extinct.
3 The cause is the selfish actions/greed of human beings. Readers are asked to get together with parents and
teachers to find ways of preserving wildlife species.
4 In a zoo. It is referring to its memories of being in the wild.
5 Children outside the cage looking at the wolf childflesh implies that the wolf still has predatory instincts.
Itwould seem that years before its sister wolf bit a childs finger which led to her being put down.
6 The wolf still remembers the scent of the sister which didnt fade from the earth of the enclosure for a full
month. The wolf still has residual memories of being in the wild and free, and still retains the howl of wolves
in the wild, but it is now captured and in a cage and cannot howl freely to the moon as in the past it is as
if the moon is muzzled and cannot reply (although, in fact, it is the wolfs freedom that is restrained and it is
no longer part of the natural world that the moon represents).
Extended task
Key points are that both poems are drawing our attention to the need to preserve endangered species and to be
aware of what human beings are doing to the balance of nature. Points about the words and imagery are covered
in answers to earlier questions.
The Statue
1 a) Speak ill of
b) Exceeding anything else
c) Looked smaller (in comparison with the lower part of the column)
d) Long-lasting
e) The people complained/criticised.
f) Symmetry/Matching dimensions
g) Easily persuaded/unstable in their beliefs
2 At the top of the great column
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3 Everlasting fame
4 Alcamenes carved his little best; Phidias had a great soul, dazzling thought which was like a bright sun
and worked with pure love.
5 It appeared to be crudely done with over-emphasised features.
6 It was too limited in its details it was impressive close up but looked insignificant when it was raised on
high.
7 The last line of the first verse is important as it suggests that judging something by first impressions is not
wise Phidiass sculpture at first appeared crude but he had understood the requirements for a carving that
was to be displayed at a great height and viewed from below.
Vocabulary: synonyms
A good dictionary and/or thesaurus will help students to distinguish the shades of meaning between words in the
different groups.
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