Your perfect complement! A series based on reading comprehension and writing skills. Read Right! helps students become better readers and writers and understand the characteristics of different types of texts. It’s a 6-level series that complements any primary to secondary textbook.
This application for Read Right is for use with an interactive whiteboard (IWB) or a computer with a projector. The application includes all material available in the Student's Book, enriched by Audio material, Visual Cue Cards, Teacher's Edition, and Teacher Resources.
8 AWAY Expressions in English: go away, run away, right away...with Quiz and Key
You may already know that “away” is an adjective that means something or someone is not there. But did you know that “away” often changes the meaning of another word in a sentence? Expressions with “away” are some of the most common in English. In this lesson, I will teach you eight of them. You will learn how to use “right away”, “take away”, “give away”, “fire away”, “go away”, “move away”, “run away”, and “turn away”....
A six-level American English course that empowers adult learners to join any conversation, and say the right thing at the right time.
Language Level: A1–C1 Wide Angle is the course that helps your adult learners to uncover and master the hidden rules of English, so when it comes to communicating in the real world, they know what to say and how to say it.
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The Right Word at the Right Time: A Guide to the English Language and How to Use It
Taking readers on a tour through the minefield of the English language, this book provides a guide to correct modern usage, both written and spoken. Frequent confusions are highlighted and explained, such as the difference between further and farther, and the distinction between similar words, such as credible, creditable and credulous. The discussions of controversial usages are illustrated with good and bad quotations taken from newspapers, magazines, books and radio programmes, and where a quotation or example features a misuse it is marked as wrong by means of a prominent cross printed in red...