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W hat to remember:
The comparative and superlative are formed as follows:
E xercises:
1. What is the difference between the following?
Add –er or more to each of the words below and use it in a sentence to describe the difference between the pairs.
exotic | higher | dangerous | intelligent | small |
Example: What is the difference between a twig and a branch.
A twig is smaller than a branch.
2. Look at the picture and then complete the sentence using a degree of comparison.
The Great White and the Zambezi shark are both feared, but the Great White is more feared than the Zambezi.
2.1 Our dog and cat eat very quickly, but our dog eats __________
2.2 The lion, cheetah and leopard all run fast, but the ___________
2.3 Lavender and cacti require little water, but cacti require _________________
2.4 All animals have good camouflage, but the chameleon has the __________
(4)
[20]
LU 6 |
Language Structure and UseThe learner will know and be able to use the sounds, words and grammar of the language to create and interpret texts. |
We know this when the learner: |
6.3 understands and uses direct and indirect speech; |
6.8 uses some language to talk about language (meta-language – terms such as “paragraph”); |
6.9 expands vocabulary (e.g. uses prefixes to form new words: autobank, autobiography, automatic). |
ACTIVITY 2:
To have green fingers: to have a knack with plants/gardening |
To hear it through the grapevine: to hear news through a number of people and not directly from the source |
To be a dog in a manger: Those who will not let others enjoy/ have something and yet derive no enjoyment / benefit from it themselves |
To be mutton dressed up as lamb: an older person dolled up as a youngster |
To be a wolf in sheep’s clothing: an enemy posing as a friend |
To have goose flesh: the pimply reaction of the skin to cold / shock |
To reap what one sows: to get out what one puts in e.g. effort |
You can take a horse to water but you cannot make it drink: o ne can present opportunities but one cannot force action |
To cast pearls before swine: to offer wisdom to an unappreciative audience |
Not to count your chickens before they have hatched: make sure that a thing is actually yours before you speak and act as if it were |
All his geese are swans: to overestimate; to see things in too rosy a light |
To cook his goose: to ruin his chances |
He can’t say 'Boo' to a goose: he is timid and cannot stand up for himself |
To kill the goose that laid the golden egg: he sacrificed future reward for present gain |
The old woman is plucking her goose: it is snowing |
What’s sauce for the goose is sauce for the gander: what’s good for one is good for the other |
To be in the doghouse: to be in disgrace |
To be as sick as a dog: to be very ill |
To go to the dogs: to go to ruin |
To rain cats and dogs: to pour with rain |
To let the cat out of the bag: to disclose a secret |
To put a cat among the pigeons: to stir up trouble |
To be a rose among the thorns: to be the only man among a group of women |
To be a thorn in the flesh: to be a source of constant irritation |
(24)
Lily (Fleur-de-Lis) | France |
Pomegranate | Spain |
Rose | England |
Shamrock | Ireland |
Thistle | Scotland |
Sugar Maple | Canada |
(6)
ACTIVITY 2:
COMMAS
“was responsible for sending plants , bulbs and seeds…”
“These include Nerine , G azanias , Ericas and Clivias…”(2)
Any acceptable example (1)
Any acceptable example (1)
Any acceptable example (1)
No (1)
“One of the governors of the Cape , Ryk Tulbagh , a lover of wild flowers…”
“… Carl Linnaeus , the Swedish botanical expert…”
“..Sir Joseph Banks , the acting director of Kew , before it …” (2)
“… he collected more than 400 species of plants , includ ing seventy-nine
different species of protea…” (1)
“…Ryk Tulbagh , a lover of wild flowers , was responsible…”
“…the acting director of Kew , before it became a public garden , sent Francis Masson…” (2)
DEGREES OF COMPARISON
(a) People are more intelligent than monkeys.
(b) A lion is more dangerous than a cat.
(c) An orchid is more exotic than a daisy.
(d) A mouse is smaller than a rat.
(e) An eagle flies higher than a guinea-fowl. (5)
2.1 …our dog eats more quickly than our cat does.
2.2 …cheetah runs the fastest.
2.3 … less water than lavender does.
2.4 … best camouflage of all. (4)
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