3291
Q484948
PPP stands for Presentation, Practice and Production and has been claimed to be specifically useful in a language lesson. Harmer (1998: 31) describes this to be:
3292
Q484946
Processes of word formation such as Derivation (“suitie” - (line 25)) and Clipping (“fave” - (line 45)) present in the source text suggest that it aims most specifically at:
3293
Q484944
Tag questions are short questions normally used to check information or ask for agreement. The right tag question for “Now let’s talk about diet” (line 29) is:
3294
Q484942
Text, paragraphs and sentences have purposes. The communicative purpose of the excerpt “Cardio can be anything that keeps your heart racing for the entire time, including biking, swimming, dancing… you name it!” (line 41-43) is to:
3295
Q484940
The combination of physical exercises which has been left out of the source text is:
3296
Q484938
In addition to skin cancer, the author shows two other major concerns in the text. These concerns are:
3297
Q484936
In reported speech, the speaker may choose a specific reporting verb to convey a different (and personal) purpose. The reported structure that presents a summary of “Fast food is fattening” (line 36), according to the text is: The author:
3298
Q484934
In the source text there is evidence of the writer´s assumption of what his/her target audience is like. The assumption behind the ´handy list´ is that readers:
3299
Q484932
A title which would best summarize the content of the text would be:
3300
Q479911
The main idea defended by the author in the text is that