Prepositions and phrasal verbs

Which synonyms are you unsure about from list 1 and 2?
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Slide 1: Mind map
EngelsMiddelbare schoolvwoLeerjaar 4

This lesson contains 13 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 45 min

Items in this lesson

Which synonyms are you unsure about from list 1 and 2?

Slide 1 - Mind map

English
With Ms Hart

Slide 2 - Slide

Learning goals
Check synonyms
Review prepositions - all four types
Rediscover phrasal verbs

Slide 3 - Slide

Prepositions (voorzetsels)
Show relationships
Can be one-word, compound or phrasal

1. Prepositions of time
  • At, in, on, until, since, during, for, circa
2. Prepositions of direction
  • Towards, across, over, under, around

3. Prepositions of place
  • At, in, on, inside, in front of, above, below
4. Prepositions of manner
  • By, with, like
5. Prepositions of agent or instrument
  • By, with, at, of, for
6. Prepositions of possession 
  • With, of, for
Deceptive Dutch vs. English!!!! 
By and on/in

Slide 4 - Slide

The same preposition can be used to show different relationships, so it fits in different categories.
A
true
B
false

Slide 5 - Quiz

Example

  • That map you need is behind the filing cabinet. (basic spatial sense or position)
  • Everyone is behind the government. (behind = gives support)

  • Beyond the hotel were beautiful mountains. (basic spatial sense or position)
  • Learning Chinese in a year was beyond them all. (beyond = too difficult for)



Slide 6 - Slide

What does ''circa'' mean? What kind of preposition is it?
A
At approximately; time
B
More of the same kind; possession
C
More of the same kind; time
D
Near approximately; place

Slide 7 - Quiz

Look at the list of prepositions on page 14. Are there any you don't know?

Slide 8 - Mind map

What does ''regardless of'' mean?
A
Dankzij
B
Hoewel
C
Los van het feit
D
Aangaande

Slide 9 - Quiz

Slide 10 - Slide

Phrasal verbs
A phrasal verb is a phrase that’s made up of a verb and another word or two, usually a preposition. One verb can make many different phrasal verbs, depending on the preposition.

Try to think of each part literally (or spatially)
  • Example: Hang out; hang in; hang up; hang around; hang on
  • Example: Look into; look out for; look up to; look around

Slide 11 - Slide

I wish you didn’t bring up/bring on that subject. I don’t want to talk about it.
A
bring up
B
bring on

Slide 12 - Quiz

Learning goals acheived

  • Learned more about prepositions
  • Reviewed phrasal verbs
Homework

  1. Do 2 of the grammar exercises online (links on Itslearning planner)
  2. Take a screenshot and send it to me on Itslearning

Slide 13 - Slide