Section A: Conversation Model
Grammar:
Present simple tense: "Do you live in an apartment?"
Use of "there is/there are": "There are two bathrooms."
Sentence Structure:
Questions: "Do you live in a [building]?"
Example: "Do you live in an apartment?"
Responses: "Actually, no I don't. I live in a [building]."
Example: "Actually, no I don't. I live in a house."
Descriptive questions: "What's it like?"
Example: "Well, there are two bedrooms, a living room, and a large kitchen."
Quantity questions: "And how many [plural noun] are there?"
Example: "And how many bathrooms are there?"
Responses: "It's [adjective]."
Example: "It's pretty small."
Section C: Conversation Pair Work
Sentence Structure:
"Do you live in a [building]?"
"Actually, [yes/no]."
"Well, there [is/are] [description]."
"And how many [plural noun] are there?"
"What about you? Do you live in a [building]?"
"Is it small or large?"
"It's [adjective]."
Keep Talking!
Sentence Structure:
Questions: "Is there a [part]?"
Example: "Is there a balcony?"
"Are there [plural noun]?"
Example: "Are there stairs?"
"How many [plural noun] are there?"
Example: "How many floors are there?"
"Does your house have a [part]?"
Example: "Does your house have a garage?"
"Is it [adjective]?"
Example: "Is it large?"
Section A: Conversation Model
Grammar:
Present simple tense: "Where do you live?"
Use of "there is/there are": "There's a park and a mall nearby."
Sentence Structure:
Questions: "Where do you live? Far from here?"
Example: "Where do you live? Far from here?"
Responses: "No, I live on [street]. Near the [place]."
Example: "No, I live on North Street. Near the train station."
Descriptive questions: "What's the neighborhood like?"
Example: "What's the neighborhood like?"
Responses: "It's awesome. There's a [place] and a [place] nearby. I take a walk in the [place] every weekend."
Example: "It's awesome. There's a park and a mall nearby. I take a walk in the park every weekend."
Positive response: "Sounds nice!"
Example: "Sounds nice!"
Section C: Conversation Pair Work
Terms:
Prepositions: near, far
Sentence Structure:
"Where do you [live/work/study]? Far from here?"
"No, I [live/work/study] [preposition] [place]. Near [place]."
"What's the neighborhood like?"
"It's [adjective]. There's a [place] [preposition] [place]."