Personality Adjectives
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Created on December 6, 2020
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Genially by A. Denutte
PersonalityAdjectives
Bonus
Level 3
Level 1
Documents
Level 2
Step
Step
Advanced Reading
IntroductionVideos
Index
Watch these short videos
Watch the video and take notes
LEVEL 1
Let's Practise !
Click here to enlarge
Let's Practise ! Match the pairs
Let's Practise ! Match the pairs - Audio
Let's Practise ! Sort positive / negative
Let's Practise ! Personality or Physical ?
Let's Practise ! Choose the antonym
LEVEL 2
Let's Practise !
Let's Practise ! The opposites
Let's Practise ! Match adjective / picture
Let's Practise ! Listen and Sort
Let's Practise ! Match words / pictures
Let's Practise ! Stressed Syllables
Let's Practise ! Match pictures / adjectives
Let's Practise ! Find the opposites
Let's Practise !
LEVEL 3
Let's Practise !
Let's Practise ! Frequency Adverbs - Translations
Let's Practise ! Frequency Adverbs
Let's Practise ! Frequency Adverbs
Let's Practise ! Degree Adverbs - Translations
Let's Practise ! Degree Adverbs
Talking about my personality
Let's Practise - Make a sentence 1
Let's Practise - Make a sentence 2
Let's Practise - Make a sentence 3
Let's Practise - Make a sentence 4
Let's Practise - Make a sentence 5
Documents
Documents
Bonus - Training - Match audio / definitions
Bonus - Training - Translate and Fill in the blanks
Bonus
Bonus - Advanced Level
Bonus - To watch at home
THE END
Here is Virginia Woolf, describing Mrs Ramsay’s husband’s friend, Charles Tansley, in To The Lighthouse: ‘[Mrs. Ramsay] looked at him. He was such a miserable specimen, the children said, all humps and hollows. He couldn’t play cricket; he poked; he shuffled. He was a sarcastic brute, Andrew said. They knew what he liked best – to be for ever walking up and down, up and down, with Mr. Ramsay, saying who had won this, who had won that …’ (p. 11)
Advanced - Reading
Here is George Eliot, describing Dorothea and Celia, in Middlemarch.‘The rural opinion about the new young ladies, even among the cottagers, was generally in favour of Celia, as being so amiable and innocent-looking, while Miss Brooke’s large eyes seemed, like her religion, too unusual and striking. Poor Dorothea! Compared with her, the innocent-looking Celia was knowing and worldly-wise.’ (p. 9)
Advanced - Reading
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documents
Two Three Sevens
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Weight & Height Driver's Licence
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Call me
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THE CROWN
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