OBJECTIVES
This class aims to develop the students' awareness of these features:
-a verb can consist of two parts
-a verb can consist of two parts that are not next to each other
-there are separable and inseparable transitive phrasal verbs
-a pronoun object of a separable phrasal verb must go between the two parts
-phrasal verbs are often idiomatic
(중략)
You need to use spec
I. Lesson objectives
1. Theme: Phrasal verbs
2. Teaching Aids: a computer (including ppt and a listening file) & a projector, four sheets of handout (including matching, writing, listening, and paper cards)
3. Target Students: 11th grade Korean students (intermediate, CEFR level B1-B2)
4. Objectives:
a. Students will understand the basic structure of the phrasal verb
b. Students will cove
verbs in a sentence or only before the first one.
Do not mix forms.
OOO likes to read books, write essays, and studying grammars. (x)
(2) Clauses
A parallel structure that begins with clauses must keep on with clauses. Changing to another pattern or changing the voice of the verb (from active to passive or vice versa) will break the parallel structure.
Professor Yu told the students th
2.1. Argument Structure
※ Argument : The various NPs that occur with a verb
※ Verbs differ in terms of the number and types of NPs they can take as complements.
1) Intransitive verbs : The subject
2) Transitive verbs : The subject + direct object
3) Ditransitive verbs : The subject + direct object + indirect object
- have “transfer direct object to indirect object” in their mea
Certain forms of AdjP occur right at the beginning of the NP, before the indefinite article a.
E.g.
a. [How big a box] do we need?
b. We'd select [this big a box].
a. It seemed [such a computer].
b. [What a handsome] I was.
[noun]
- virtual disaster *his almost death
[verb]
- It virtually evaporated. He almost died.
[adjective]
- It was virtually impossible. He was