[æ]
Sandy
If you, Sandy, have two candies
Andy
Give your candy to Andy, Sandy.
candy
If you, Andy, have two candies
have
Give your candy to Sandy, Andy.
Hat
Fact A black cat sat on a mat.
Mat
Man
Sat
Bad That’s the man that sat
Cat
that On my black hat in the tram.
Black
He’s a bad man, that’s the fact.
Lad
Once there lived a lad
Sad
Who was always very sad
Dad
For he hadn’t any mother
Hadn’t
And he hadn’t any dad.
That’s
bad. 1) – It’s an
absolute scandal!
And that’s that. -
Absolute scandal? Are you sure?
Can
you imagine that?
Fancy!
Fancy that! 2) – What
happened to Jack?
That’s bad
grammar. - Don’t worry. He
failed his exam!
That’s
absolutely fantastic!
Is
that the man who attacked you? 3) – Hullo, Dad!
Jack can do it that
way. - Good morning, Sam!
[
е ]
[
e ] [ æ ] Happy end. Busy editor.
Egg
bag Dirty entrance.The emblem.
Bed
bad The energy. The envelope.
Men
man Merry. Any.Many.Question.
Red
glad
Says
sad Nelly has seven red pens,
Pen
plan And Sally has ten.
Together
to gather
Beg
bag Pat keeps two pets:
Head
had A cat and a rat.
Met
mat Pat likes her pets
pet
Pat And his two pets like Pat.
Guess
gas
Better
matter Better to do well than to say well.
Ready
Daddy
Well
said. Press bell. Get better.
Very
well, then. Well, I never.
He’s
telling me he isn’t ready yet.
1) – I can’t come before
Wednesday.
-
Before when?
2) – You met him on the
tenth of September.
-
You met him when?
3) – I shall never help him
again.
-
Never is a very dangerous word to say.
[ i: ]
[ i: ]
[ I ]
least
list One, two, three,
eat it
Let me see
deal
Bill Who likes coffee
beach
switch And who likes tea.
field
built One, two, three
people
simple Oh, I see.
Leave
live You all like coffee
Sheep ship
And I like tea.
Seat
sit
Feel
fill A sailor went to sea
Need
did To see what he could see.
Easy
busy But all he could see
Meeting
pretty Was sea, sea, sea.
Sea
captain.Knee-deep.Sea coast. 1) – It’s a
fine piece of work, Jean.
Three each. No
equals. Go east. - Do you really
mean that?
Please. The evening.The
eagles.The east. 2) - Peter’s staying with us next
week.
Appeal. Indeed.
Reading. Creature. - Do bring him
round to see us.
Pleased to meet
you. 3) - When
shall we meet you?
Please, be
seated.
- After tea?
Extremes
meet.
4) - I’m afraid he is not free this evening.
Eating between meals? -
When’s he likely to be free?
Steve is eager to please
the teacher.
The teacher has every
reason to be displeased.
He speaks Chinese and
Japanese with equal ease.
[ I ]
[ I ]
pit
big Little Bill, sit still.
hid
till Will you sit still, little Bill?
Sit miss
Lit
list Big cities are hidden in thick mist.
This silly
Tin
little ‘Tick’, the clock says.
Bill
sister ‘Tick, tick, tick.
Still
What you have to do
Twist Do
quick’.
will
The industry.The
interview.The issue.
Infinitive.Impossibility.Initiative.Institute.
Is Mickey in?
It isn’t cricket.
It’s the limit.
Willie’s quick-witted.
It isn’t his business,
is it?
It is written in simple
English, isn’t it?
1) – Thedigging’sfinished.
- Is it? All of it?
2) – Whose
responsibility is it?
- Whose responsibility?
Why, Bill’s.
3) – How many children
has Jill?
- How many? Six, I
think.
[ Λ ]
mother
lucky
brother
young
son
something Every country has its customs.
Russian
lunch
must
doesn’t There’s a bus coming. Hurry up!
disjunctive
hurry
study
hungry Come to lunch, Bunny!
London sun
Shutter.Summit.
Submarine.
Mummy.Sonny.Hurry.Southern.
Come.
Some.None.Done.Tongue.
Wealthy uncle.Cruelly
unjust.
Tough luck.Just my luck.
Double Dutch.
Come to lunch, Bunny!
Does the bus run every
other Monday?
None but dullards copy
one another.
Don’t touch this money
till next month.
There wasn’t much
sunshine in London last Monday.
– This train doesn’t run
on Sundays.
- Come by bus, then.
[ a: ]
[a:] [Λ]
car
March much
pass
glass fuss He laughs best who laughs last.
garden
clerk luck
father
fast just The car passed the park at
half past five in the afternoon.
basket
rather other
carpet
class bus
at last
harm come
part
aunt front
glass
father mother
darling
yard
large
Army.Party.Drama.Hardly.Tomato.
1) – Pass me that card, Bart.
Cart – cut. Barn –
bun. Harm – hum. - Which card?
New art.Heavy
armchair.Enemy army. 2) – I asked Arthur yesterday.
The architect.The
Arctic.The Argentine. - And what was his answer?
Hard bargain!
Start the car.
I hardly like the
remark, Papa. 3) – Parker’s on the
phone.
Cars can’t be parked
here after dark. - Ask him about my car.
Shan’t we dance after
classes?
The exam will be rather
hard to pass. 4) – Shall I pass them to Martin?
I can’t stay after
classes. - Pass them
to me rather.
[ u ]
room
book
good
Look at this good cookery-book.
look
put
Too good to be true.
cooker
sugar
It looks good.
full
pull
woman
Good. Could.Would.Should.Room.Wood.
Woman.Sugar.Pudding.Bullet.
Full. Bull.
Wool.Wolves.Pullman.
Could you if you
would? 1) – He injured his
foot. So he couldn’t play.
Here’s your
cook-book. - Why
couldn’t he play?
Keep a good
look-out. 2) – Mrs.
Cook’s looking for you.
It wouldn’t look good,
would it? - Looking for me? Mr.
Cook?
Would you help the woman
if you could? 3) – Could you show me how to cook that pudding?
I can’t help looking,
could I? - I would if I could, but I
never cooked that pudding.
Would you wait till I’ve
had time to look for it?
You’d better put on your
woollen pullover.
[ u: ]
new [u:
] [ u ]
shoe
route foot
school
suit put
music
shoot should
do
too to
student
group
moon
How do you do?
noon
who
Soon the cool moon will shine on the gloomy pool.
whose
you
pupil
youth
Neutral.Beauty.Duty.Humour.
1) – This is Mr. Doolittle.
Too moody.New school.Too
gloomy. – How do you do?
Cucumber.Kangaroo.Hooligan.
Junior.Wounded.Balloon.
Include. 2) – What would you do?
- It’s up to you. You
must make up your own mind.
Who’ll do the rooms?
You’re the nuisance,
too. 3) – It’s absolutely
true.
Rupert will do
beautifully. - But who’s
going to believe it?
Review the rules for the
future tenses.
Do you usually have two
pupils on duty? 4) – I arrived on Tuesday afternoon.
Read the newspaper
review through and through. - At exactly what time in the
afternoon?
We’re moving very soon,
before the end of June.
5) – Which would you
choose if you were me?
- The new one, of
course.
[ o ]
Tom Sorry.
dog
I am sorry.
watch
I am very sorry.
what
I am sorry indeed.
what not
I am very sorry indeed.
John
Molly got a lot of spots on her frock.
pocket
What’s wrong?
box
What’s the problem?
doctor
What’s going on?
New office.Funny
opera.Solitary object. 1) – It’ll cost a lot of
dollars.
The orator.The
origin.The opposite. – Obviously.
Politics.Honour.Knowledge.Godmother.
2) – Molly’s being very obstinate.
Not for
toffees! -
Then you be obstinate, too.
Possibly
not.
3) - What about Hob’s offer?
Upon my
honour. -
Was it an offer, in fact?
What a lot of nonsense!
Will you be gone long,
John?
Was it not possible to
stop, Tom?
This cloth wants
washing.
[ o: ]
ball [
o ] [o: ]
call
draw
cross course
small hot
bought
sport
shot short
daughter
dog door The porter’s daughter caught a
small tortoise.
porter
doctor porter
of course
doll tall Many words hurt more than
swords.
door gone
torn
floor
got ought Is this ball big or small?
storm
knock talk
talk
doctor daughter
order
naughty
four
your
The order.The orchestra.The
orbit.
Highly organized.New
order.
Daughter.Morning.Naughty.Walking.
All aboard.
All the more so.
To cut a long story
short.
It’s all your fault.
To talk to George is
like talking to the wall.
Call me at a quarter to
four.
Your daughters are all
tall.
Could you show me the
shortest way to the port?
I caught a cold when I
walked along the shore.
1) – George was rather a
bore tonight.
- Isn’t h always?
2) – We still need his
support, don’t we?
- More than ever
before.
3) – You haven’t brought
enough of them.
- I shall be bringing
some more later in the morning.
[ ou ]
coat
home
no
radio
Oh, no! Don’t go home alone.
piano
only
Nobody knows how lonely the road is.
hope
don’t
Rose won’t go home alone, I suppose.
open
go
Soames never boasts of what he knows, and Rose never knows of what
she low boasts.
suppose
So the old boat floated slowly to the coast.
old
own
hullo
Boat. Soak. Toast.
Roast. Host.Photo. 1) – You can phone me tomorrow.
Window.Potato. Yellow.
Tomato.Cargo. - When can I phone you?
Slow answer. Go out.
Blue ocean. Very old.
The opening.The only
one.The overcoat. 2) – It’s going to turn cold.
I suppose so. No go.
Go slow. Nobody home. - Think so?
Follow your nose.
There’s no knowing.
No smoking. Don’t grow
cold. I vote we go home. 3) – Shall we go boating?
Stones grow old. I hope
you are both going home. - Tomorrow?
There’s no place like
home.
I hope you know who
wrote those poems. 4) – I stopped smoking a long
time ago.
[ oi ]
boy
Roy
many boys Tom is a little boy.
joy
much noise He is a good boy but he is very noisy.
toy
many voices Tom has many toys.
voice much
oil
noise
Noisy toys point to boys.
choice
a noisy city
oil
a good choice Boys’ voices are joyous.
soil
a fine voice
toil
a nice boy Boys will be boys.
Oil.Toil.Soil. Spoil.
Point. Boil. Toilet.
Annoy. Poison.
Destroy. Exploit.
The noise is annoying.
Join me in the voyage.
It’s beyond the point.
What’s the boiling point
of oil?
Small boys like
noise-making toys.
Roy was annoyed with the
boy because he’d spoiled his toy.
1) – Is that your little
boy?
- My little boy?
2) - Whatever made you
join them?
- It couldn’t be
avoided.
3) - There’s no point
in asking Roy.
- He’s got a good
voice.
4) – He refused point
blank.
- How very annoying!
[ ə: ]
girl term
bird third
work
word The third word is heard.
learn
university Her birthday is on Thursday, the
thirty-first of May.
nurse
thirty-first Certainly, sir.
first Thursday
worth worst
fur heard
firm word
verbGermany
verse
alternative
Earth.Early.Earnest.Dirt.Skirt.Girl.
1) – Are your girls learning German?
Very early.Thirsty
earth.Vitally urgent. - Yes, very
earnestly.
The earthquake.The
earnings.
Emergency.Interpreter.Surface.
2) – It’s my birthday today.
Return.
Excursion.Journey.Surgeon. - Very many
happy returns!
I’ve overheard the word.
I’ll turn in
early.
3) – Which do you prefer?
A worm will
turn. -
The lower birth, of course.
What a hurly-burly girl
she is.
Repeat the verse word
for word. 4) – Can I have a
word with you?
The work will serve no
purpose. - Certainly.
Earnest is determined to
learn German. 5) – I’ve missed my turn.
The first and the third
verses were most difficult to learn. - Serves you right.
[ ŋ ]
young
everything
tongue
nothing
among
interesting Spades for digging,
long
good-looking Pens for writing,
song
reading Ears for hearing,
wrong
speaking Teeth for biting.
ring
swimming Eyes for seeing,
sing
singing Legs for walking,
bang
teaching Tongues for tasting,
sang
writing And for talking.
rang
learning
morning
ringing
evening giving
language
English
frank
thanks
Strong nature.Shining
needle.Fishing net. 1) – It’s quite wrong.
Leading
newspaper.Charming manner. - How do you know it’s wrong?
Finger.Stronger.Anger.English.Jungle.
Nothing is
wrong. 2) – What are
you doing these days?
Things are
mending. - Earning my
living and going to evening classes.
Bring them along.
Thanks for calling.
Everything’s going
wrong.
Saying and doing are two
things.
Some Englishmen are
murdering King’s English.
[ au ]
house
brown
[ Λ ] [ au ] Sit down!
how
Read aloud.
down
shut shout Speak loudly.
now
run round Sound every vowel
in the word ‘towel’.
shout
fuss house
about
bus blouse How, how, Brown
Owl,
town
front count Why do you
frown
pound
done down Down at the mouse
found
hundred scoundrel On the ground?
sound
running Browning
without
mouse
fountain
Outbreak. Outlaw.
Outline. Pound.Sound. 1) – I have to go out now.
Cowboy.Mountain.County.Boundless.
- How long will you be out?
Lucky outcome.Early
hours.New outlook. 2) – I gave him a pound to buy a fountain
pen.
Out of
bounds!
- A pound won’t be enough.
Out of
doubt.
3) – Some flowers for you.
I’m doubtful about the
hour. - How nice! How sweet
of you!
They found themselves
about the town tower. 4) – I really must go now.
Out of the house to the
grounds. - Well, good bye, Powel.
Mr. Brown was not
allowed to go out of the house.
It took her about an
hour to get to town.
[ ai ]
write
kind
nice [
au ] [ ai ] I like life.
why found
find Buy my nice pies.
cry
how high Tigers and lions bite.
my
out white Science fights lies.
buy
loud light Out of sight out of
mind.
pie
pound plight
sign
house nice
lie
shout sight
mine
down nine
five
sound sight
time
towel tight
Ice. Either.
Iron.Pie. Try. Fly. Sky. 1) – Mike’ll meet
us at nine.
Rocky island. Bitter
irony. First try. - At what time?
The Irish.The ice
cream.The eyesight. 2) - Would you like to try?
- Would I like to try?
Time flies!
Go to bye-bye.
Mind your eyes!
3) – Tell me the time, please.
I had a white
night.
- Tell you the time? Nine minutes past 9.
I find it quite right.
Stop piping the eye like
the crocodile. 4) – These matches won’t
strike.
The island is nine miles
long and five miles wide. - Mine strike.
The climate is pretty
mild in Ireland.
I should like you to
write your reply on Friday.
[ θ ]
three
think
[ s ] [ θ ] One, two three we are free.
thank
you I think
they both have a toothache.
everything
sing thing Susan thinks that this is a
bit thick.
third
sink think Fred fried three fresh fish.
thirty
sin thin
thin
sort thought He couldn’t say ‘fifth,
sixth, seventh, eighth’ quickly,
thousand
tense tenth But he could say,
mouth
force fourth ‘Sixty-six sheep need
sixty-six shepherds’.
fifth
yes death
twelfth
course north is thick has
thick
fifth
once month is thin has
thin
depth first
earth
Fourth side.Twentieth
sign.Twelfth song. 1) – Thank you so
much.
Immense theatre.Serious
thing.Beneath you. - Not at all, thank
you.
Wise theory.Silent
threat. Golden thought.
Those things.Worthless.
Strengthen. Death mask. 2) – I’m so sorry, I threw it
out.
Myths.Deaths.Lengths.Baths.Depths.
- Don’t give it another thought.
Nothing like youth.
Think things over.
When three Thursdays
come together.
A thousand thanks to you
both.
Thomas thinks of
terrible things, of nothing but death in a month.
I have a thousand and
one thing to ask you.
I must speak the truth
and nothing but truth.
[ ð ]
this
that
What is this
then
And what is that?
There
This is a dog
They
And that is a cat.
with them
please
them This one. That one. Go there.
tell
them This is the thing. This is the story.
mother
With love. With me.With mother.Clothes.
father
They gathered all the brothers.
is this is that
it’s this it’s that
When then? This and
that. A good thing, though.
Please them. Choose
them. Tease them.
Write them. Meet
them. Beat them. Tell them.
With salt.With sand.With
snow.With love.
With me.With mother.With
water.
Is this the thing? Is
this the same thing?
What’s the matter?
What’s the idea? What’s the trouble? What’s the difference?
And that’s that.
That’s neither here nor
there. 1) – Does the noise bother
you?
Then there’s another
thing. - Rather.
I’ll do anything rather
than that.
You never know with the
weather. 2) – It all depends on the
weather.
They couldn’t tell one
brother from the other. - Why does it depend on the
weather.
There’s no one there,
neither mother nor father.
This film is no worse
than the others. 3) – What shall I do with
these things?
The less men think the
more they talk. - Take them out and clean
them.
I think this thing is
theirs.
[ w ]
why
wife
[ w ] [ v ]
what
went vent Why do you cry, Willie?
when
wet vet Why do you cry?
where
while vile Why, Willie, why, Willie,
white
wine vine Why, Willie, why?
window
west vest
woman
worse verse Why worry?
women
very well Away with war.
swim
quickly
Walter was with us when we went away
twelve
Walter always knows what’s what.
Queen.Quick.Quite.Question.
Quarrel.
Safe way.Rough water.
Waterproof watch.
Twice.Twelve.Twenty.Twins.Tweed.Twist.
Time works
wonders. 1) – Walter
is coming as well.
Whatever will we
do? - Splendid! I
was afraid he wouldn’t be able to.
We’ll walk whatever the
weather.
We see what we wish
to. 2) – No sign of
William yet.
We wondered where we
were. - He always keeps us
waiting.
The sweater will wear
well.
When will we
meet? 3) – What
did you think of the equipment?
It was a wonder the
weather was so wet. - It was wonderful!
No sweet without sweat.
William always wears a
very warm woollen vest in winter. 4) – What do you think, Walter?
Victor however, will
never wear woollen underwear - Does it matter what I think?
[ r ]
room
to rent a
room a teacher of English
write
the grammar of English
red
Come for a walk.
read
the colour of this rock
rugby
Dinner is ready.
ring
Here is an apple for you.
restaurant
There are better apples in our own garden.
very
sorry She spent an hour alone
in that car of yours.
very
well Harry very rarely
writes.
brown
Don’t run across the narrow bridge.
breakfast
foreign
railway
Very sorry. Quarrel.
Merry.For ever.
Fresh roses.Clean room.
Wise raven. 1) – I am terribly worried about
that.
Nuclear arms.Nuclear
energy.Fire alarm. - Why should it worry you?
Rack your brains.
Very
true.
2) – This is my new radio set.
Rather
curious.
- Is it really?
It’s rather strange, yet
true.
The three ‘R’s are
Reading, Writing and (a)rithmetic. 3) – I am most terribly sorry!
When angry count a
hundred. - You have no
reason to be.
There is neither rhyme
nor reason in it.
When a friend asks,
there is no tomorrow.
She never really looks
very well.
[ t ]
[ tr ] [ tl
] [ tn ]
train
little bitten a bit
of at the Nelson’s
tree
kettle kitten fit
it at the bed
try
settle beaten put
it at the camp
true
gentle tighten eat
it at this time
street
battle meet me let us
at that map
country
cattle can’t be
instrument
title can’t think
stress
stopped him
straight
It’s better to talk too
little than to talk too much.
Tell Tom to come to tea
tomorrow.
Separate table. Perfect
tact.Pleasant talk.
Lost chance.Private
garden.Quiet gaze.
Beetle.Battle. Butler.
Button.Cotton.Kitten.
Treaty.Trouble.Tram.Twins.Twist.Twice.Twain.
Good taste. Red
tape.Bad temper.
Silent thanks. Elegant
theatre. Pleasant thought.
Write them. Respect
them. Correct them.
After dinner, if you are
not too tired, you’ll tell me about it.
Tom was in time, and so
was Tim.
The more I thought about
it the less I liked it. 1) – What made him take it?
Cut it
short.
- He took it because he wanted it.
Try to put it right.
Don’t take it to
heart. 2) - I may
be a bit late.
I don’t like my tea too
strong. - That wouldn’t
matter in the least.
Put
two and two together.
[ p ]
pen [ pt
] cheap book
pet
stopped jump down
pit
hoped drop it here The puppy pulled a piece of pretty
pink paper
out of Peter’s pocket.
paper wept
drop by drop
pass
shipped up to now
place
kept a cup of tea
plate
chapter a cup of coffee
part
people
play
Deep pit.Cheap paper.
Lamp posts. 1) – Whose pen is this?
Damp places.Ripe
pears.Soup plate. - Peter’s, perhaps.
Stop buying.
Shop-bell.Top- boots.
Captain.Chapter.September.
2) – Where does Paula come from?
Sheep-dog.Sharp glance.Deep
gratitude. - Spain, I think.
Wild passion.Large
portion.Active part.
Strange people.Skilled
pilot. 3) – Who gave him the paper?
Stop them. Type them.
Keep them. - Patrick did.
Speak up.
Present company
excepted. 4) – Pass me that
picture, please.
Keep up
appearances. -
Which picture?
Pete’s as pleased as
Punch.
Peg’s as pretty as a
picture. 5) – It all depends on
Peter.
Don’t pass up the
opportunity, Rupert. – Does it depend on him?
[ k ]
[ kt ]
cat act
black dog Every country has its custom.
coat
fact black cat Kate caught the kitten and
kissed it.
car talked
call walked
school picked
walk looked
actor
factor
doctor
Black cat.Weak
coffee.Dark corridor.
Rock’nroll. Dark
night.Black magic.
Quiet.
Quite.Quality.Quantity.Quick.
Cut and come
again. 1) – Can
Jack and Kate come to tea?
The coast is
clear.
– Kate can. But Jack can’t.
Ken’s as cold as a
cucumber.
Keep quite
quiet. 2)
– Nobody can come.
Come back and keep us
company. - Kitty can.
School keeps on till six
o’clock.
Come back as quick as
you can. 3) – I don’t like the
look of these cows.
I can’t understand what
the kids are talking about. - Quiet.
I can ask your cousin to
come to tea. 4) – Can you play cricket?
I think you’d better ask
the cook. - Once I could.
[ h ]
he
behave Savage hate Happy birthday!
harm
behind effective help Hold your head
high.
horse
somehow cold hands Henry is as hungry as
a hunter.
who a
house huge head I hope I haven’t
hurt him.
huge the
honey superb hair Every man has his
hobby-horse.
her
unhappy expensive habit Happy hearts make happy
homes.
high
enhance How horrid
of him.
How
Hilda is head over heals in love with him.
Hoist
Helen hated to meet him here.
whole
1) – How many hats has
she got?
- At least a dozen, I
hope.
2) – Whose house is
this?
- Mr. Hornsby’s, I
think.
3) – What sort of
holiday did you have?
- Perfectly horrid!
4) – Does he come here
often?
- Hardly ever
[ b ]
beauty
table be brief Ben’s a
bag of bones.
boom
about a bad job Betty’s as
bald as brass.
boast hobby
best member
Don’t be a busy body,
baby. 1) – Whose book
is this?
Barbara’s as busy as a
bee. - Bobby
Barton’s.
Bob lives at the back of
beyond. 2) – I hate
cabbage.
Buy me a
bike.
- So does Barbara.
You’d better ask
Barbara. 3) -
What’sBurton’s job?
We’d better have a bite
before we go. - He is in the
bakery business.
LOW FALL.
1)
__________
Oh! No! Why! Fine. Sure. When?
___________
Good.Quick.Right. Wait. Stop.
2)
___________
Have you? Is it? Can’t you?
___________
Does it? Aren’t they? Oughtn’t she?
Wait for her. Talk to
her. Write to them.
Borrow one. Show mw
one.
3)
___________
She had to. I’d like to. Of course not.A friend of mine. She wasn’t there.
___________
You must tell her. He’ll be happy. Just listen. And so on.
He came with us.
In a day or two. I
thought so.
4)
___________
Come here. Look here. Sit down. Don’t leave. Look out. No more.
___________
Ask John. Not now. How strange. Quite right. That’s true.
That’s all. What
for? Where to? Who from?
I’ll finish it
now. She married Mary’s brother.
She asked me to
go. It’s time the children went to bed.
I am sorry I
came. How many people have you
invited to dinner?
He doesn’t speak much
English. What sort of weather do you have in London?
He’s never very
punctual.
LOW RISE.
1)
___________
Yes.Fine.Now. Who? Why? Where?
___________
Me?All? Stop. Good. Right.
2)
___________
Careful.Always. May I? Is there? Can’t you? Aren’t we? Try to.
___________
Sorry. Thank you. Really? Wait a bit. Possibly. Hasn’t she?
3)
___________
Remember. We haven’t. Continue. I’m sorry. Is he happy?
___________
Does it matter? Do you think so? There’s plenty.
4)
___________
That’s right. That’s good. That’s all. Never mind. Don’t bother.
___________
Good bye. Come here. Why not? How soon? Later on?
Not now? Cheer up!
Sit down. Who’s that?
All right. Well
done. No, thanks.
Can you come to lunch
tomorrow?
Shall I answer the door?
Have you heard the news?
Have you been waiting
long?
Were you in time?
There’s plenty of time
to prepare the dinner.
Ring me up some time on
Thursday.
Come and stay with us
again soon.
HIGH FALL.
1)
___________
Help! Yes. No. Why! More. Good.
___________
Fine Mine. Wait. Quick.
2)
___________
Always.Really. Was it? Thank you. Fancy! Surely.
___________
Gladly. Stop it. Wait for them. Certainly.
3)
___________
It’s easy. Good gracious! How lovely! He’s coming. Good morning!
___________
She might be. By no means. We’ve seen it. I’ll call on him.
4)
___________
Why not? Well done! I say! How strange! Ask John.
___________
Oh, God! Bad luck. Thank you! Look out!
I think you’d better ask
the others.
I thought it was going
to rain.
I couldn’t say ‘no’ to
you.
In spring it rains a
lot.
We haven’t seen him for
years.
But think of all the
difficulties.
Skiing is the sport for
you.
Nobody told me what to
do about it.
Why do you have to leave
at once?
It’s more than I can
afford.
I know you well.
What nonsense!
HIGH RISE.
1)
___________ Yes?
Me? Here? When? What?
___________
Now?You?Right? Wait?
2)
___________
Often?Really? May I? Like it? Which one? My fault?
___________ Must
I? Isn’t he? Interesting? All of it?
3)
___________ You
thought so? You like him? You’ve lost it? They think so?
___________ You
feel it? In October? It’s a new one?
4)
___________ No
more? Not true? Too big? What for? Well done?
___________ Right
now?Too busy? No news? Three times?
Another cup of tea?
You don’t regret it?
You want it back?
Something the matter,
Ann?
It’s not the one you
want?
She married Mary’s
brother?
Don’t worry, did you
say?
Who should I write to?
Where am I to sit?
FALL RISE.
1)
___________
Yes. No. Well. Read. Quick. Look.
___________
2)
___________
Show me. Always. Sorry. I did. Come on!
___________
This time. Help me. Catch me. Hello!
___________
That’s right! That’s good. Yes, please.
___________
Jolly good. Here you are. Many thanks.
3)
___________
Be careful. It’s easy. She might be. ___________
___________
We broke it. Not remember. He’s coming ___________
4)
___________ I
beg your pardon. He asked me to do it.
___________
You told me to ask her. How are you, Mr. Richards?
What shall I do,
Paul? Well, what’s the time, please?
He can’t hear me.
You won’t see him.
We know where it is.
I know he is very
well-read.
It must be finished in
time.
Do be quick.
That’s enough.
We don’t mind.
I beg your pardon.
RISE FALL.
1)
___________
No. Try. Thanks. Quite. Good.
___________
2)
___________
Really.Always. Show me. Ask him. Thank you.
___________
Can’t you? Do so. Keep it. Aren’t they?
3)
___________
Naturally.Probably.Perfectly.
___________
You can go. Do sit down. That was good.
Any time you like.
That’s what you think.
I quite agree with you.
Nobody at all.
I thought you knew.
I simply hated it.
How did you manage it?
Isn’t it ridiculous?
Which is the best way to
do it?
But I don’t want them to
come.
I’m much obliged to you
all.
I don’t like them very
much.
That’s perfectly true.
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