1st Term s1 English Language
1st Term s1 English Language
LESSON NOTE
PEDAGOGUE’S NAME:
CLASS: S.S.S. 1
EDU J CONSULT/1ST TERM/ENGLISH LANGUAGE/SS1 Page 1
TERM: FIRST TERM (1ST TERM )
SESSION:
WEEK TOPIC
1 General Revision of Last Term’s Examination; Review of the word class-Parts
of Speech- Noun, Pronoun, Verb and Adjective. Spelling; Doubling of
Consonants
2 Comprehension, Reading Skills; Word Meanings in Context- Unit 3, pages 54-
55
Structure: Introduction to Phrasal Verbs; More on Parts of Speech- Adverb,
Conjunction and Preposition.
Vocabulary Development: Words Associated with Libraries.
3 Essay Writing: Types of Essays ;Speech Work: Monophthongs; Idioms
Vocabulary Development: Words Associated with Entertainment.
4 Comprehension/ Reading Skills: Skimming and Scanning- Unit 4. Vocabulary
Development: Agriculture.
Structure: Noun Phrase and Verb Phrase
Spelling: Words Commonly Misspelt; Unified Test.
5 Structure: Kinds of Sentences- Simple, Multiple, Compound, Complex and
Compound-Complex
Essay Writing: Expository- “Honesty is the Best Legacy”
Vocabulary Development: Stock Exchange and Insurance.
6 Comprehension/Oral Skills- Pages 86-87: Figures of Speech- Simile, Metaphor,
Irony, Personification and Rhetorical Question. Structure: Adverbial Clause
Essay Writing: Descriptive
Speech Work: Diphthongs.
7 Structures: Learning about Noun Clause; Vocabulary Development:
Transportation- Aviation, Rail, Road and Maritime.
Speech Work: Introduction to Consonant Sounds
Essay Writing: More on Narrative- A story that ends with,“It Pays to be Hard-
working”.
8 Comprehension/ Reading Skills- Page 60. More on Consonant Sounds
Structure: Adjectival Clause. Argumentative- “Patriotism Enhances the
Growth of a Nation”
9 Comprehension / Reading Skills: Introduction to Answering Comprehension
Questions
Vocabulary Development: Words Associated with Religion.
EDU J CONSULT/1ST TERM/ENGLISH LANGUAGE/SS1 Page 2
Speech Work: Stress.
10 Comprehension and Writing Skills: Vocabulary Development: Introduction to
Summary Writing
Spelling: Prefixes and Suffixes
Structure: Adverbial and Prepositional Phrase
11 Vocabulary Development: Registers of Judiciary. Essay Writing: Informal
letter- “A letter to the sister who plans to divorce her husband advising her
against the decision”
Structure: Definite and Indefinite Articles
Speech Work: More on Consonants.
REFERENCES
Effective English Book .1-Michael Montgomery et al.
Countdown English – O. Ogunsanwo et al.
Goodbye to Failure in English, Book 3 Ken Mebele et al.
Communication in English – Blessing Dupe el al.
WEEK ONE
TOPIC: GENERAL REVISION OF LAST TERM’S EXAMINATION; REVIEW OF PARTS OF SPEECH- NOUN,
PRONOUN, VERB ADJECTIVE, SPELLING; DOUBLING OF CONSONANTS
CONTENT
A: General revision of the last term’s work and examination: The teacher goes over the questions with
the students and offers expected solution
Reading Assignment:
Lexis and structure questions from WASSCE/NECO past questions
FEATURES OF NOUNS:
i. Most nouns form their plurals with ending – ‘s’ or –‘es’: girl - girls, box - boxes, church – churches
ii. Nouns are often used with articles, demonstratives and adjectives, e.g a cup, an hour , a church,
that house, black girl, some people.
iii. Words that end with the following morphemes are usually often nouns-
age- e,g damage, grainage, homage, image, stoppage.
al- e.g arrival, cabbinal, dismissal, mammal, refusal.
tion- e.g action,option, association, imagination, admonition, composition.
er- e,g adviser, marker, player, teacher, worker
ery- machinery, slavery, stationery,
titude- e.g servitude, solitude
hood- boyhood, girlhood, childhood, womanhood
like- childlike,
Types of Nouns
Proper Nouns: These name a SPECIFIC person, place or thing. Note that the first letter of every proper
noun must be written in capital letter regardless of its position in a sentence. E.g We will travel to Atan-
Ota on Monday in the month of August. Proper nouns in the sentence above are: Atan-Ota, Monday and
August.
Examples of proper nouns are:
Names of persons- Ade, Obi, Chike,
Names of places/countries- Ottawa in Canada, Oslo-Norway, Oshodi, Ado-Ekiti, Ibadan,
Days of the week and months of the years-January, December, Monday, Friday.
Note: The first letter of the proper noun must be written in capital letter regardless of its position in a
sentence.
Common Noun: This is the opposite of concrete noun. It is used to name things/person/places which are
of general kinds. E.g boy, man, lady, church, mosque, boxes, table, knives.
Concrete Noun: This type of noun can be seen and touched. It is the opposite of abstract noun. Examples
of concrete nouns are: books, tables, bag etc.
Abstract Nouns: These only exist in names. They can neither be seen nor touched. These can only be felt.
E.g hatred, hunger, pains, intelligence, etc
Count nouns: These are nouns that can be counted. They usually have singular and plural forms, E.g one
man- five men, one orange-several oranges, a book-five books.
Non count or mass nouns: These cannot be counted, and they therefore have only singular form. Sand ,
soap, rice, homework, water. Although, they may be counted when converted to units of measurement.
E,g, three bags of rice, a bar of soap, some loaves of bread,
OTHER types of uncountable nouns are: equipment, jewelry, stationery, information, baggage, luggage,
machinery, furniture, baggage, damage, -NOTE- These uncountable nouns must not attract –s- to form
their plurals.
E.g All the students were instructed to take their baggage. Not baggages
We have got information/some pieces of information about them. Not ‘an information’ or ‘informations’.
The rain wrecked serious damage to the building. Not ‘damages’. Note –The word damages means a fine
imposed on someone. E,g He was ordered by the court of law to pay damages for the damage to his car.
NUMBER: There are two numbers in English- singular and plural. This singular relates to one, while the
plural relates to more than one. Countable nouns have both singular and plural forms, uncountable
nouns have only the singular form.
REGULAR PLURALS- s and es
SINGULAR PLURAL
School schools
Mat mats
House houses
Box boxes
Bonus bonuses
IRREGULAR PLURAL
SINGULAR PLURAL
man men
ox oxen
goose geese
crisis crises
forum fora
formula formulae
symposium symposia
foot feet
parenthesis parenthesis
medium media
index indices/indexes
larva larvae
louse lice
mouse mice
curriculum curricula
axis axes
oasis oases
ZERO PLURALS
OTHERS
machinery
information
equipment
advice
jewelry
stationery
furniture
baggage
luggage
TYPES OF PRONOUNS
Personal pronouns: Examples I, we, they , us etc.
Possessive pronouns: yours, his, hers, theirs, its, yours etc.
Demonstrative pronouns: this that these those.
Interrogative pronouns: who which, whom, whose, etc.
Reflexive pronouns: myself, themselves, yourselves/yourself, ourselves, oneself etc.
Reciprocal pronouns: each other and one another.
Relative pronoun: which, whom, whose, who, that etc.
ADJECTIVES
These are words that describe or qualify nouns. Adjectives are said to perform attributive functions when
they are placed before noun. E.g, A red shirt, a gentle lady.
However, an adjective performs a predicative function if it is placed after a link verb. E.g the shirt is red,
the lady is gentle.
Kind of Adjectives
Adjectives of Colour: red, green, black – a red shirt, a green basket
Adjectives of Size - e.g big , small, long
Adjectives of Age - old young
Adjectives of Shape - rectangular, circular, round, spherical
Adjectives of Origin - Nigerian, Ghanaian, Canadian
Adjectives of Number- one , two, three, twenty
Demonstrative Adjectives - this, these, that, those
Possessive Adjectives - your, my, her, their
Distributive Adjectives - each, some, every , any
FORMATION OF ADJECTIVES
- cal - grammatical, classical,
- ic - authentic historic, workaholic
- eous advantageous
- ious- melodious, odious, copious, superstitious
- uous - promiscuous, continuous, conspicuous
- ive - meditative, sedative, curative
- able - edible, curable, sensible, marketable
- al - illegal, regal, digital, rural, brutal
- ial - social, crucial, essential, commercial
TYPES OF VERBS
Lexical Verb: This type of verb expresses action. It can stand on its own without depending on other type
of verb. Another name for lexical verb is ‘main verb’. Examples are: speak, pray, write etc.
Auxiliary verbs: There are two types of auxiliary verbs. Those that are not capable of independent
existence, and those that can stand on their own while they express a state. Those that can stand on
their own and function like main verbs are called PRIMARY AUXILIARY VERBS- E.g be, am, is , are, was,
were, being, been. While those that can stand on their own are called MODAL AUXILIARY VERBS-E.g can,
could, may, might, shall, should, will, would. Others are ought to, dare, need.
Non-Finite Verbs- They do not agree with the subject in terms of person, number and tense. They belong
to the following group. Infinitive- ‘to work’, ‘to eat’, ‘to dance’. They usually have –ing- ending. E.g
dancing, singing, praying, cooking, etc.
Transitive Verb: This type of verb receives object. E.g He killed a snake.[ a snake is the dirtect object of
the verb killed].
Intransitive Verb: This type of verb does not require an object. E.g She died, They cooked, We prayed.
When the vowel is doubled (o,a) ,do not double the consonant.
Examples:
boat – boating
boil – boiled
cheap –cheapest
sweet – sweeter
Exception: wool – woollen
Words of more than one syllable not accented on the last syllable.
Do not double the consonant if you add an ending that begins with a vowel
Evaluation
Write five words where consonants are doubled.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Read page 273 of the Effective English.
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
What are monophthongs?
State at least four types of essay and define them.
WEEK TWO
TOPICS: COMPREHENSION, READING SKILLS; RELIGION.
STRUCTURE: INTRODUCTION TO PHRASAL VERBS. ADVERBS, CONJUNCTIONS AND PREPOSITIONS
VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT: WORDS ASSOCIATED WITH THE LIBRARY
EVALUATION
Choose five words from the phrasal verbs taught and use them in sentences.
FORMATION OF ADVERBS
Many adverbs are formed from adjectives. e.g certain- certainly fortunate- fortunately, careful-
carefully, quick- quickly, indoor-indoors, outdoor-outdoors
Some Adverbs showing direction end in –wards- E.g downwards, forwards, backwards,
Some adverbs expressing manner or viewpoint end in –wise- E.g clockwise, foodwise, moneywise.
Many other adverbs have no special ending- always, early , fast, if, how, quite, often, very, when, hard,
late, so, very.
TYPES OF ADVERBS
ADJUNCTS: These normally tell us how, when, where, to what extent, etc, the action of the verb is
performed.
Examles:
a. He came at 6 O’clock (when)
b. She ran fast. (how?)
DISJUNCTS: These normally express an attitude or a viewpoint, often of the speaker. E.g, Luckily She
arrived
CONJUNCTS: These perform a connective function: they join two sentences or clauses. E.g, It was a hard
task, nevertheless, we performed well.
She is hardworking, besides, she is intelligent.
Other examples are, consequently, meanwhile, otherwise, similarly, then, alternately etc.
CONJUNCTIONS
A conjunction is a word which joins words, or groups of words, together.
TYPES OF CONJUNCTIONS
Co-ordinating Conjunctions: These conjunctions join words or groups of words that are of the
grammatical rank. Examples are; and, or, but, E.g Joy and Jane, In the garden and in the room, Bolu or
Joy, We came but you were not around, We went and we saw him.
Correlative Conjunctions: These are conjunctions that are used in pairs. E.g either….or, not only….but
also, both……and, neither….nor. E.g Both James and Jerry attended the party,
She is not only intelligent but also kind.
Either the teacher or the man comes here regularly.
Subordinating Conjunctions: These conjunctions introduce subordinating clauses. They include the
following conjunctions: after, because, before, if, in order that, since, which, when, who, whose, that etc.
Consider these:He left when she was cooking. We cooked before they arrived.
PREPOSITION
This shows relationship between two words in a sentence. Examples are: within, before, at , in, on , over
etc.
Some prepositions go with certain words
allergic to, subjected to, arrive in, live in, live on,
live at, stare at, indict for, convicted of, victim of,
down with{fever}, charge with, abide by{rule}, come by, good at, abide with{a
person}, kick against, connive at, quick at, bad at,
spy at, frown at consist of, confidence in, confide in, senior to,
junior to, related to, agree to{a plan}, in different to, part with, agree with{a
person}, recoil from, popular with{girls}, tremble with, die on,
differ with, comply with, blame on, hinges on, wait upon.
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Page 271 -272 Countdowns by Evans Question 91-100.
WEEK THREE
TOPICS: ESSAY WRITING: TYPES OF ESSAYS; SPEECH WORK: MONOTHONGS, IDIOMS
VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT: WORDS ASSOCIATED WITH ENTERTAINMENT.
A. ESSAY WRITING: TYPES OF ESSAY
Essay writing is an art of communication, it requires the acquisition of the necessary skills to attain
excellence.
Types of Essays
Narrative
Descriptive
Expository
Argumentative
Creative Writing
Signature
Peter Andrew
Prefect (Amina Hostel)
EVALUATION
Write minutes of meeting for a particular club meeting
C. IDIOMS.
An idiom is an expression with a meaning that cannot be guessed from the meanings of the individual
words. E.g He shed crocodile tears. This does not mean that ‘he cried like a crocodile’. It is just a kind of
expression that is formed based on certain principle.
Examples of idioms and meanings are:
To chase one’s shadow- to deceive oneself.
To add insult to injury - to displease a person and still insult him.
To give an airy nothing – to make useless, empty remarks.
An acid test – a very severe test.
Achilles’ heel/ the heel of Achilles – the weak spot or one’s weak point.
An ample opportunity – various or many opportunities.
EVALUATION
Give two examples to each of the sounds taught.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Page 11 of Standard Speech 10 Book Diction in English Course.
EVALUATION:
Effective English for SS 1 page 148 practice.
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Page 352 of Countdown. Passage A no1-18
WEEK FOUR
TOPICS: COMPREHENSION/ READING SKILLS: SKIMMING AND SCANNING.
STRUCTURE: NOUN PHRASE AND VERB PHRASE
VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT: AGRICULTURE
SPELLING: WORDS COMMONLY MISSPELT; UNIFIED TEST.
READING ASSIGNMENT
More on Drama pages 68-71 of your Effective English
The gerundial phrase which is also a noun phrase can function as a subject of the verb e.g.
Telling lies often belittles a person.
Consciously wounding someone is wicked.
The infinitive can also be used as a noun phrase and function as the subject of verb.
To tell lies belittles a person.
To consciously wound someone is wicked.
An adjective can be the head of a noun phrase.
The poor suffer a lot.
The conquered expect no mercy from their conqueror.
The wise learn from experience.
(ii) As object of Verb
The officer praised the students (Direct Object)
(iii) As subject Complement
The grateful boy called his friend saviour.
His village made him a chief.
(v) As complement of a preposition
The governor thought of the brilliant lawyer when choosing his cabinet.
The thief hid the gun under his bed.
READING ASSIGNMENT:
Page 236 of Countdown by Evans
LIVESTOCK
livestock: these are domestic animals raised for their working ability or for their value as a source of food
and other products.
ranches: This a farm/confined space for rearing of animals.
beef: This is meat from cattle or cow.
animal droopings: Dung or faeces of animals or birds.
broiler: These are young chickens reared for eating.
dairy products: These are food items made from milk, e.g Cheese and butter.
pasture: This is a grassland on which grass-eating animals feed.
pullet: This is a young hen.
vaccinate: Inject with a vaccine as protection against illness.
veterinarian or veterinary doctor: A person who treats animals.
fish-net It is used to catch fish
FISHERY
cane pole and Those are also used to catch fish.
line
ripples A small wave on the surface of the water after a net
or cane pole has been thrown into the water.
bait Anything used to attract fish so that it may be caught
e.g. earthworm.
float Piece of wood or cork at the end of a fishing-line (or
string) which moves when a fish bites the hook.
EVALUATION
Choose five words from the words taught and use them in sentences.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Countdown page 144-145
EVALUATION: Dictation
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Passage B, 19-30 pages 353-354 of Countdown in English Language
WEEK FIVE
TOPICS
A. STRUCTURE: KINDS OF SENTENCES- SIMPLE, MULTIPLE, COMPOUND, COMPLEX AND COMPOUND-
COMPLEX
Essay Writing: Expository- “Honesty is the Best Legacy”
Vocabulary Development: Words Associated with Fisheries and Animal Husbandry
THE SENTENCE:
A Sentence is a group of words that contains a subject and a verbs / and expresses a complete sense or
thought.
Types of Sentences
Simple Sentence: This contains one subject and one predicate or verb. It is made up of one main clause.
Simple sentences can be long, but each has only one subject and verb unit.
The woman ran.
He is in the room.
The thief has been caught
Compound Sentence: This contains two main clauses linked by co-ordinating conjunctions like and , but,
or etc
Main clause Conjunction Main clause
The work stops but the tools are kept handy.
Ngozi found the goat and she took it to her mother.
The complex Sentence: This contains one main clause and one or more subordinate clause.
Subordinate clause Main clause
When it rains, he does not go to work.
EVALUATION
Write five sentences and mention each type you have written.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Complete English Course for Senior Secondary School by Ukamaka Chioma Ibe page 223-224
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Passage C, no 31-40 page 354-355 of Countdown
WEEK SIX
TOPICS: COMPREHENSION/ORAL SKILLS: FIGURES OF SPEECH- SIMILE, METAPHOR, IRONY AND
PERSONIFICATION
ESSAY WRITING: DESCRIPTIVE
Speech Work: Diphthongs
A. COMPREHENSION/ORAL SKILLS
ADVERTISING: Page 86-87 of the Effective English.
The passage discusses about two basic objectives advertising, which are: to inform the target audience
about the product or service; and to create or stimulate demand for the product or service through
persuasion.
Evaluation
Answer the questions below the passage.
Reading Assignment
B. FIGURES OF SPEECH
Content:
Meanings
Kinds
Figures of speech are ways of creating imagery by using figurative language, through which we conjure
the picture of two or more things into writing and thereby bringing out very aptly the quantity or idea we
are presenting.
Examples:
SIMILE:
A simile is that figure of speech in which a likeness is definitely or formally expressed. It is introduced by
“like” “as” e.t.c.
Examples
He runs like a hare
Her cheeks appear as the dawn of day.
METAPHOR
It is a figure of speech founded on the resemblance. It is also used like simile to create a picture or
images of events without using as or like.
Examples
The general, who is a lion in the field, has seen many wars.
He is no good at crickets, he has okro fingers.
PERSONIFICATION
It is the transfer of the quality of human being to animals and inanimate objects.
Examples
Let the floods clap their hands.
Confusion heard his voice.
IRONY
It is also a device by which a writer expresses a contrary meaning, which appears contrary to the stated
or ostensible one.
Examples
Charles is so brilliant that he passed one subject out of his nine papers.
He is such a good keeper that he conceded ten goals in the first half of the match.
EVALUATION
Give one example for each of the figures of speech taught.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Essential Literature in English for SSS page 42-43
Let us examine how a descriptive essay question like the following one should be treated.
“Describe a rainy day you will live to remember
EVALUATION: Write an essay on the title “A rainy day I will live to remember”
/uƏ/ as in
“u” – plural , during
“ure” – pure, cure, sure
“our” – tour
“oor” moor, boor, poor
EVALUATION
Write two examples for each of the eight diphthongs
READING ASSIGNMENT
Standard Speech Book 10: Diction in English language Course page 16-18.
WEEK SEVEN
TOPICS: VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT-TRANSPORTATION
STRUCTURES: LEARNING ABOUT NOUN CLAUSE
SPEECH WORK: INTRODUCTION TO CONSONANT SOUNDS
ESSAY WRITING: MORE ON NARRATIVE- A STORY THAT ENDS WITH “IT PAYS TO BE HARD-WORKING”.
A. VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT-TRANSPORTATION
AIR TRANSPORTATION
SEA TRANSPORTATION
Maritime
Mast: a long pole set upright on a ship to support the sail or flag.
International waters: waters across the country’s water territory. It is called waters- not water.
Berth: a place in port where a ship can be moored.
Boatyard: this is a place where boats are built or repaired or fasten by rope.
Harbor: A place of shelter for ship.
Quayside: This is the side or edge of a quay.
Ocean liner- Ship used to carry passengers and some cargo is across the ocean
Cruise ship- This type of ship is used for adventurism
Cabin: This is a private room in a ship
Yacht: A boat or small ship, usually with sails, often with an engine, built and used for racing or cruising.
Row-row ship- This is used to convey cars into the country. Such ship will be widely opened for various
cars on the ship to be driven out.
Dredging: This is the clearing or deepening the river or body of water.
Dock: This is a platform built on the shore [wharf].
Coast: This is land along the sea.
Crew: A group of people who works or operates on a ship.
Captain: This is a commander of a ship.
Off shore: In or on the sea, not far from the coast. The opposite of this is ‘on-shore’
Flag: This is the flag a country mounted on a ship with which it sails.
Anchor: This is something, usually a heavy piece of metal with points which dig into the sea-bed, used to
hold a boat or a ship.
RAIL
Coach: A passenger railway train.
Freight: Goods or cargo.
Locomotive: Engine that goes from place to place using its own power, especially used to pull railway
trains.
Railway yard: A place where trains are parked or maintained.
Commuter trains: These carry passengers between large cities and the surrounding suburbs.
Freight service: This is a service which involves transportation of goods from one place to another.
Rail tracks. These are tracks on which a train moves.
EVALATION: Form ten sentences using words that are related to aviation industry.
EVALUATION
Write five sentences containing noun clauses. Write the grammatical functions of each noun clause.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Page 221 of Countdown by Evans..
Evaluation
Write 10 consonants sounds and give two examples for each
Reading Assignment
Standard Speech Book 10: Diction in English Course page 1-10
C. WRITING NARRATIVE
A narrative essay is the one that requires you to relate an event or incident as an eye-witness would. It
requires imagination
Study the following short passage:
It was pitch-dark outside the bedroom. It must have been that the security light was not switched on
before we went to bed. There was some movement outside one of the windows. I listened. As I got up
from bed to check at the windows, a flash of light through the window dazzled my eyes. I shouted “thief”
and the next thing I heard was a gun shot.
Note:
The writer is here trying to paint a picture in words. It is only by your own imagination that this picture
can be made more beautiful.
EVALUATION
Write a narrative essay that ends with “It pays to be hardworking”
READING ASSIGNMENT
Page 5-6 of Countdown by Evans
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Question 41-50 page 275-276 of Countdown by Evans
THE JEWS
The passage is about the Jews who looked at Abraham as their father. He made a covenant with God.
The Jews were once enslaved by the Egyptians. The Jews moved to their country (Canaan) and later
began to travel to other countries where they settled and became successful. Their main belief is that
there is only one God.
EVALUATION
Answer the questions below the passage. Page 61
READING ASSIGNMENT
Unit 3 page 54 of Effective English
Adjectival Phrase
It is a phrase that does the work of an adjective in a sentence i.e. It qualifies or describes a noun or
pronoun.
Examples
The man with the red hair is my brother. (Prepositional Phrase / an adjective phrase qualifying man)
The beautiful girl has been kidnapped (Adjective qualifying the noun “girl”)
A person bringing goods news is always welcome (Participial phrase as adjective phrase qualifying
“man”)
He is a man of great wealth. (prepositional phrase as an adjective phrase qualifying man)
The woman standing over there is our new principal . (participial phrase as adjective phrase qualifying
woman)
The boy selling garri is my brother (Participial phrase as adjective phrase as qualifying “boy”
We all admire a person of courage (adjectival phrase)
I know a girl who has strange appetites. (adjectival phrase qualifying the “girl”)
The student forgot to bring back the bag that I gave her. (Adjectival phrase qualifying bag)
The coat made of cotton is very lovely (Adjectival phrase qualifying coat)
Evaluation
Underline the adjectival phrases in the following sentences and state their functions
The man in the sitting room is my father
I love a student who reads his books.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Countdown in English page 209
EVALUATION
Write an essay, setting out your argument to justify the following topic: Patriotism Enhances the Growth
of a Nation.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Countdown page 28
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underlined words.
1. The boxer regained consciousness momentarily in the dressing room. (a) immediately ( b) permanent
(c) permanently (d) temporarily
2. The thief crept stealthily into the store (a) fast (b) quietly (c) loudly (d) slowly
3. Hussain faced the problem squarely (a) partially (b) roundly (c) impartially (d) fully
4. Effiong was meticulous in planning for the future. (a) careful (b) careless (c) tactful (d) sincere
5. Chinedu was satisfied with the results (a) qualified (b) enraged (c) contented (d) discouraged
WEEK NINE
TOPICS: COMPREHENSION: READING SKILLS: INTRODUCTION TO ANSWERING COMPREHENSION.
VOCABULARY DEVELOPMENT: WORDS ASSOCIATED WITH RELIGION.
SPEECH WORK: FORMAL AND INFORMAL CONVERSATION (EMPHATIC STRESS)
EVALUATION
Choose words of religion and use them in correct sentences.
READING ASSIGNMENT
More on religion unit 3of Effective English page 54
EXAMPLES
Consider the following sentences and notice how its meaning changes according to the word that has
been stressed
JAMES borrowed the novel (i.e. James, not anybody else borrowed the novel.)
James BORROWED the novel (i.e. James didn’t, for example, steak or buy the novel; he borrowed)
James borrowed the NOVEL. ( i.e. James borrowed the novel, not the magazine, not the journal e.t.c.
Test on emphatic stress requires the candidate to select the question to which the given sentence is the
appropriate answer. An example is given below:
Example: My mother’s FRIEND hates pets.
Does your mother’s boss hate pets?
Does your mother’s friend love pets?
Does your mother’s friend hate pets?
Does your father’s friend hate pets?
The correct answer is A.
Evaluation
Choose the correct answer
The man likes COFFEE on Sunday mornings
Does the man like coffee on Monday?
Does the man like tea on Sunday morning?
Adamu OPENLY disagrees with his principal.
Did Adamu secretly disagree with the principal?
Did Adamu openly agree with the principal?
READING ASSIGNMENT
More on emphatic stress page 310 of Countdown by Evans
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Complete each of the following sentences with one of the words in the brackets: (secular, ethics,
denomination, doctrine, pilgrimage, fanatics, worship, Bible, monotheist)
1. The Catholic ______ is very conservative
2. The ______ I made last year cost me a lot of money
3. The _____ destroyed cars and house
4. A place of _____ should remain sacred
5. The Muslims are _____ they believe in one God.
6. The ______ is the holy book of Christians
Theory
Write a letter to your friend who is abroad telling him about the political changes that have happened in
your country.
EVALUATION
Read the passage on page 77 of Effective English and answer the summary questions on page 79
READING ASSIGNMENT
Read the passage on page 113 of Countdown on English language
EVALUATION
Form five new words by adding prefixes to the root words.
Look up the meaning of each of the following morphemes and form five words with it.
Pseudo-
Across-
Intra-
De-
Dis-
Hyper-
Hypo-
READING ASSIGNMENT
Read more on suffixes and prefixes
EVALUATION
Indicate the adverbial phrases in the following sentences.
The car moved slowly towards the church.
My sister eats more slowly.
For all his experience, he was easily deceived by the students.
He worked hard to pass the examination.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Read more on Adverbial page 248-250 of Countdown by Evans
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Choose the option nearest in meaning to the underlined words
1. They decided to turn him down (a) refuse him (b) deny him (c) discredit him
2. She gave her candid opinion on every issue (a) good (b) frank (c) vague
3. The commentator described the recent event as catastrophic (a) disastrous (b) unfortunate (c) evil
4. The boy was proficient in whatever he did (a) inept (b) skilled (c) contented
5. I was warned against his erratic nature (a) immoral (b) insane (c) unpredictable
THEORY
Write five sentences and underline the adverbial phrases in them.
WEEK ELEVEN
TOPICS: ESSAY WRITING: INFORMAL LETTER- “A LETTER TO THE SISTER WHO PLANS TO DIVORCE HER
HUSBAND ADVISING HER AGAINST THE DECISION”
STRUCTURE: DEFINITE AND INDEFINITE ARTICLES
SPEECH WORK: MORE ON CONSONANTS.
Yours ever,
Lizzy
or Yours affectionately,
Andrew Scott
EVALUATION
Write a letter to your sister who plans to divorce her husband advising her against the decision.
READING ASSIGNMENT
Page 70-72 of Countdown by Evans
TYPES OF ARTICLES
Articles can be definite or indefinite
Descriptive Use
Here the definite article describes a noun.
The accused was acquitted for want of evidence.
She has the courage of Esther.
Generic Use
Here, the definite article is used to refer to what is normal or typical for a member of a class.
The banana is found mainly in the Southern Nigeria.
The tiger is a very ferocious animal.
It is used before the noun that indicates that there can be only one such thing or group of things.
The Soviet Union
The Principal
The Minister of Education
EVALUATION
Fill in the gap with the correct article
________ European woman was here before
I know that _______rich also cry.
I desire to become _______ heir of God’s kingdom.
Joseph dreamt that ______ sun, ____ moon and ____ star bowed to him.
Reading Assignment
EVALUATION
Pick out the odd items from the list of words from options A-D
(a) gentle (b) educate (c) jug (d) gear
(a) hope (b) whole (c) perhaps (d) honour
(a) gift (b) beggar (c) ghetto (d) germ
(a) barber (b) blood (c) blue (d) plumber
(a) junior (b) geography (c) government (d) gradual
Reading Assignment
/v/, / θ /, /ð/, /n/, /t/, /d/ on page 2-4 of Standard Speech 10 Book Diction in English Course:
WEEKEND ASSIGNMENT
Choose the right option:
1. I stayed with my cousin, the one ____husband is an engineer (a) who’s (b) whose (c) which
2. You can’t give alms ____ you have something to give(a) unless (b) while (c) if
3. I asked him how his promotion had come ____ (a) around (b) about (c) to
4. It isn’t easy to succeed in becoming an airline pilot, but I am sure you will ___ in the end. (a) make best
(b) make do (c) make it
5. You fill the application form so that ____ there is a vacancy, they will let you know (a) if and when (b)
although (c) only when
(iii) Choose one of the following each expression to fill the blank provided:
1. I will send a _____ to you (letter, mail)
2. The girl was given a ____ for her attitude (blame, rebuke)
3. She asked me to come for a (meal, lunch)
3. We experienced a terrible ___ this season ( harvest, weather)
4. She played a _____on me (fun, joke)