. . . DOCTOR SAID,“YOU WILL BE FINE. IT’S NOTHING SERIOUS.” 14. ....

13. . . . doctor said,“You will be fine. It’s nothing serious.” 14. . . . what do I read. . . what he issaying. 15. . . . asked me that ,“When will you behome?”

[Sometimes

learners write quotation marks on the line rather than above the line.]

EXERCISE 38, p. 430. Noun clauses and questions. (Charts 5 - 2 and 14 -1 14 - 4)Depending upon your students’ purposes in studying English, this final exercise could bedeveloped into a full-fledged composition that includes thoughtful argument for or againstthe views stated by John Newsom (a fictional person invented for the textbook). His viewsshould appear in quotations in the students’ compositions — much as is done in researchpapers. You could ask your students to agree or disagree with each of Mr. Newsom’sstatements, one at a time, in order to encourage ample opportunity to practice themechanics of quoting from a source.

Appendix 1: PHRASAL VERBS

ORDER OF CHAPTER CHARTS EXERCISES WORKBOOKPreview Ex. 1Introduction A1-1 Ex. 2 →4Phrasal verbs: separable and nonseparable(Groups A →E) Ex. 5 →15 Pr. 1 →10Phrasal verbs: intransitive(Group F) A1-2 Ex. 16 →17 Pr. 11 →12Three-word phrasal verbs(Groups G and H) A1-3 Ex. 18 →19 Pr. 13 →16Reference list of phrasal verbs A1-4Cumulative review Pr. 17General Notes on Appendix 1• Phrasal verbs are presented in an appendix so that the teacher may dip into its units whenit best fits into her or his lesson plans.The Appendix presents the phrasal verbs in groups so that students can concentrate onlearning only a limited number at a time. In the previous edition, the phrasal verbs came atthe ends of various chapters in order to intersperse them through the term. Now they aregathered in an appendix to allow the teacher flexibility in their use.• TERMINOLOGY: A phrasal verb consists of a verb and a particle (or two particles) thatin fixed combination have a single meaning. Phrasal verbs are also called “two-word / three-word verbs” or sometimes “prepositional verbs.”A particle (simply defined as a “small word” in the text) is either a preposition (e.g.,off,on)or an adverb of direction or position (e.g.,away, back).

EXERCISE 1, p. 431. Preview: phrasal verbs. (Chart A1-1)This preview introduces the concept of what a phrasal verb is: two words with one meaning.ANSWERS: