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Screen English. CHANNEL SURFING GAME. Gossip Girls. CSI. Say an American TV show. Say a Korean TV show!. Say a US crime drama. Say an American animation. Say a US comedy. Say a scary English show. Say a British comedy. Say an American TV show. What’s your favorite TV show?.
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Screen English
CHANNEL SURFING GAME Gossip Girls CSI Say an American TV show.
About Our ClassScreen English Summer 2012 • We will watch a popular American sitcom in order to • Learn English phrasal verbs* • Learn English idioms • Improve our listening skills • Discuss interesting things *Our main focus this semester is learning and using phrasal verbs. Phrasal verbs make up an important part of the English language. Knowing their meanings and usage means you will help you improve your communication skills.
Phrasal Verbs? Phrasal verbs are idiomatic expressions that use verbs (i.e. to give) and prepositions (i.e. up). Separately “to give” means “to allow someone to have” and “up” is a direction word. However, together, “to give up” has a completely different meaning. “To give up” means “to quit”. Phrasal Verb Madness Each preposition creates a different meaning! Give away – tell a secret,; distribute something freely Give back – to return something Give in – to stop doing something Give in to – agree to do something you dislike Give it up for – to applause Give off – emit pollution or something unpleasant Give out – to collapse or fall down Give up – to quit Give sb up – to surrender to the police
Types of Phrasal Verbs There are four types of phrasal verbs. Knowing the types will help you understand how to use them. Intransitive (int) These don't take an object.Example: “They had an argument, but they've made up now.” Nonseparable transitive (non) The object must come after the preposition.Example: “They are looking aftertheir grandchildren.” Separable obligatory transitive (sob) The object must come between the verb and the particle:Example: “The quality of their work setsthemapart from their rivals.” Separable optional transitive (sop) The object may come between the verb and the particle, but doesn’t have to:Example: “We need to call off the show.” “We need to callthe showoff”
Practice Make a sentence with each phrasal verb. Pay attention to the kind of phrasal verb it is. Give out (int) – to collapse or fall from weakness The building gave out. Give in to (non) – to agree to do something you dislike I dislike giving in to others. Give up (sop) – to quit Everyone should give up smoking. You should give drinking up. Give sb up (sob) – to surrender sb to the police He gave himself up last week.
We will watch S01E01 – “Pilot” A “pilot” is the first episode of a show. It is usually a test to see if it will be successful. Watch with English subtitles. First ~5 minutes: Answer questions on board Rest of show: Fill in phrasal verbs Discuss phrasal verbs Watch the show with no subtitles. Short discussion Game Skit Homework Goodbye! Don’t look at the subtitles to fill in the phrasal verb. Use your ears! Look down or close your eyes! Follow along with the script if you need help.
Why is Claire mad at Haley? What is Gloria’s village famous for? Why was Mitchell upset on the plane? Why is Phil “the cool dad”? What’s the punishment for Luke shooting someone with his gun?
Screen English
The Phrasal Verbs • take out (sop) – to attack, kill, or murder • Our mission is to take out these terrorists. • Our goal is to take them out quickly and quietly • be stuck with (non) - forced to deal with sb/st you don’t like • We are going to be stuck with your parents all weekend! • come on (int) – expression of encouragement, or disbelief • Come on…let me borrow $20! • Come on? You want $20? • deal with (non) – handle, take care of • Who will deal with all these bills? • follow through (int) – to finish • Follow through on your goals.
The Phrasal Verbs • be with sb (non) – to agree with sb • I am with Phil on this idea. • toughen up (sop) – to make stronger, tougher • People usually toughen up in the military. • tear away (sop) – remove sb against their will • We had to tear him away from the TV so he could go to school. • point out (int) – make sb aware of st • Please don’t point out that I am wrong. • go on (int) – to continue • I thought that class would go on forever. • Make trouble for – cause trouble for sb • Don’t make trouble for your teacher.
The Phrasal Verbs • drop off (sop) – to leave sb somewhere • I need to drop my friend off at the subway station. • go ahead (int) – to proceed • Minsu, go ahead and read page 77. • come out with st (non) – tell the truth about st • I came out with the truth and felt much better. • have sb over (sob) – receive a guest • I would like to have some people over tonight. • break up (with) (int/non) – finish a relationship • We broke up. / I broke up with her last night. • be better off (int) – a better condition • My bank account would be better off ifI didn’t buy that Gucci bag.
The Phrasal Verbs • Turn (it) off (sop) - to change one’s personality • This is my personality. You can’t turn it off. • Screw up (sop) – do badly or fail • I screwed up on my English exam! The Idioms and Other Expressions • Out of control – to have wild behavior • My son is out of control! The car was out of control! • Take it outside – an invitation to fight • Let’s take this outside. • A blowup – an argument • My gf and I had a little blowup.
The Idioms and Other Expressions • Make love – to have sex • We made love all night long. • Fairies– a gay man (possible insult) • I love being a fairy. • To give someone your heart – to tell / show someone you love them • I gave him my heart and he rejected me. • To know better – be wise about something • You should know better than to trust stranger. • Get in the spirit (of things) – celebrate • Scrooge never got in the spirit of Xmas. • Drama Queen – very dramatic person • My teacher is such a drama queen. • Seriously – interjection meaning “Are you serious?”, “I’m serious”, “Can you believe it?” or “I can’t believe it.” • Seriously. I just found 50,000 won! Seriously? You’re going to lie?
This episode introduces the whole “Pritchard Clan”. A clan is a big, extended family. Do you have a big family like on Modern Family? What cultural differences do you notice in Modern Family? What is similar? Which family member is most similar to you? Do any of the other characters remind you of your family? What kind of personality does Manny have?