A sentence with every new word

Complete the sentences with the new words.
moved, appear, changing, fast, banks, columns, monuments, founded
1) Every river has two … .
2) In 1703 Tsar Peter … a new city near the Baltic Sea.
3) Moscow, the capital of the country, is … very fast.
4) The tall … make the theatre look very beautiful.
5) Do you know that there are … to animals in different places of the world?
6) The capital … from Moscow to St Petersburg and then back to Moscow.
7) More and more new theatres and museums … in our city every year.
8) Everything around us changes very … .

reshalka.com

ГДЗ Английский язык 6 класс (часть 1) Афанасьева. UNIT 1. Step 2. Номер №8

Решение

Перевод задания
Закончи предложения, используя новые слова.
передвигался, появляться, меняется, быстро, берега, колонны, памятники, основал
1) У каждой реки есть два …
2) В 1703 году царь Петр … новый город у Балтийского моря.
3) Москва, столица страны, … очень быстро.
4) Высокие … делают театр очень красивым.
5) Знаете ли вы, что есть … животным в разных местах мира?
6) Столица … из Москвы в Санкт−Петербург, а затем обратно в Москву.
7) Все больше новых театров и музеев … в нашем городе с каждым годом.
8) Все вокруг нас меняется очень …

 
ОТВЕТ
1) Every river has two banks.
2) In 1703 Tsar Peter founded a new city near the Baltic Sea.
3) Moscow, the capital of the country, is changing very fast.
4) The tall columns make the theatre look very beautiful.
5) Do you know that there are monuments to animals in different places of the world?
6) The capital moved from Moscow to St Petersburg and then back to Moscow.
7) More and more new theatres and museums appear in our city every year.
8) Everything around us changes very fast.
Перевод ответа
1) У каждой реки есть два берега.
2) В 1703 году царь Петр основал новый город у Балтийского моря.
3) Москва, столица страны, меняется очень быстро.
4) Высокие колонны делают театр очень красивым.
5) Знаете ли вы, что есть памятники животным в разных местах мира?
6) Столица передвигалась из Москвы в Санкт−Петербург, а затем обратно в Москву.
7) Все больше новых театров и музеев появляется в нашем городе с каждым годом.
8) Все вокруг нас меняется очень быстро.

By Robby

If you are new here please read this first.

Creating New English Sentences is Waste of Time

Does the following scenario ring a bell with you? ->

  • You’re looking at a list of new English words given to you by your English teacher
  • Your task is to use each of those words in a new sentence
  • You’re going mad trying to think of example sentences…
  • Eventually you create sentences in your native language containing those new words and then you translate them into English!

Needless to say, this entire exercise is a total waste of your precious time and chances are, you’re not going to be able to use those new English words even when you’ve managed to insert them into sentences!

Why?

Well, keep reading this article and you’ll learn a thing or two about such practice of creating new English sentences using new vocabulary words – and you’ll also find out why learning READY-TO-GO sentences instead of creating new ones is the BEST way of acquiring those new English words!

Creating Example Sentences is Exhausting and Drains Your Energy

Creating New Sentences Drains Energy

Surely there’ve been times when you’ve spent well over an hour just to come up with 5 or 10 example sentences.

Is that the most efficient way of learning the English language?

Not by a long shot!

You’re much better off spending those 60 minutes reading a piece of English writing that contains a few new vocabulary words, and then reading it out loud a good few times in order to embed those sentence structures into your mind.

Trying to come up with brand new sentences is hard work, it’s exhausting and it wastes your time.

Learning from content that someone has already created for you is smart – you’re using your time to actually LEARN something new!

Just think about it in terms of learning to drive a car, for example. You don’t have to assemble the car from individual parts yourself – it’s already done for you so that you can sit behind the wheel and start driving.

The very same goes with learning English. You don’t have to waste your time and energy trying to create a brand new sentence in order to fit in a new English word. Instead, take a sentence a native English speaker has already created for you and use it!

Another Problem – Referring to Your Native Language

Refering to Native Language

Here’s another problem you’ll inevitably run into when trying to create English sentences using new vocabulary words:

You’re going to refer to your NATIVE LANGUAGE.

You see, when your teacher gives you a new English word, let’s say “DISMAY” (it means shock, distress) and asks you to use it in a sentence, you have no choice but to start thinking in terms of your native language.

The new word “DISMAY” doesn’t have any associations with other English words in your head yet, so you’re thinking of something you could say in your native language that contains the equivalent of “DISMAY”.

Let me do it by translating from Latvian which is my native language…

(I’ve been actually thinking for 3 minutes now, and still nothing!)

Seriously, I can’t come up with anything!

Isn’t that mad? Well, not really! You see – the thing is, every time I think of how I’d use the Latvian equivalent of the word “DISMAY”, it doesn’t make much sense when translated back into English.

But the real problem here is that those beginner English learners who haven’t developed such a good “gut feeling” for correct English WILL end up creating sentences that don’t make much sense for native English speakers!

Artificially Created Sentences Don’t Sound Well and Sometimes Don’t Even Make Sense!

Artificial English Sentences Don't Make Sense

OK, let me show you an English sentence with the word “DISMAY” which I created by translating from my native language:

“The latest terror act was a complete dismay for the entire society”.

It kind of makes sense, but it doesn’t sound well in English. Native English speakers would understand you if you said it to them, but it sounds a bit awkward; you don’t really say that something results in a “complete dismay”.

Here’s how native English speakers speak:

“To my utter dismay…”

Now that’s a perfect way of using the new English word “DISMAY”!

If your English teacher knew what they were doing, they would have given you this ready-to-use phrase instead of asking you to come up with a sentence containing this word on your own.

And if you think about it, this useless exercise of creating new sentences incorporating specific English words makes even less sense considering that on most occasions the student is given some written content where those words can be found.

I mean – what’s the point in racking your brain while trying to come up with something that’s already created?

As they say – why re-invent the wheel?

All The Hard Work Has Already Been Done For You!

All Hard Work Has Already Been Done for You

Whichever new English word you look at, someone’s already created a sentence containing that particular word – be it the passage in your textbook, news article online or a sample sentence in a dictionary.

All you’ve got to do is – FIND THAT SENTENCE.

Simple as that!

Let’s take the following English word as an example: “PURSUE”.

Now, if I didn’t know this English word and I wouldn’t have a clue as to how it’s used by English speakers, I would have a hard time thinking of a sample sentence. I would probably come up with something like this (if I went by a definition of the word “pursue” in Latvian):

“I want to pursue studying after high school”.

The above sentence does make sense, but it doesn’t sound well. The word I should have actually used instead of “pursue” is “continue”; “pursue” doesn’t really fit this sentence.

Here’s a much better sample sentence: “I want to pursue an engineering degree after high school”.

Basically the key is to know what CONTEXT the new English word is used!

Take an existing sentence – obviously, the easiest way of doing that is either using the text you’ve been given OR finding a sample sentence online (here’s a detailed instruction on how to do it) and then either:

  • Use the exact sentence or phrase containing the new English word

or

  • Use it in a SIMILAR context!

Any questions?

Post them in the comments section below!

Cheers,

Robby

P.S. Would you like to find out why I’m highlighting some of the text in red? Read this article and you’ll learn why it’s so important to learn idiomatic expressions and how it will help you to improve your spoken English!

P.S.S. Are you serious about your spoken English improvement? Check out my English Harmony System HERE!

English Harmony System

P.S. Are you serious about your spoken English improvement? Check out the English Harmony System HERE!

English Harmony System

New English words occur day by day. Some become popular, and some sink or disappear in months or years. Here we collect 100 hot new words, including meanings and sentences, to show you the alive English in today’s media and communications.

The 100 new words with sentence are not limited to 100 words. Our editors maintain the list monthly and keep it 100 words around; they add or remove words, definitions, and examples to cover the latest hot words.

Group 2: cool hunter — hangry

crema  n.  Speak
a brownish foam that forms on the top of freshly made coffe
Example sentences    Close

crowdfund  v.  Speak
fund a project from lots of people who usually donate a small amount.
Example sentences    Close

dark web  n.  Speak
part of the Internet intentionally hidden from search engines with masked IP addresses, usually illegal content
Example sentences    Close

ear tickler  n.  Speak
someone who pleases other people with paying lot of compliments or flattering
Example sentences    Close

echo chamber  n.  Speak
an environment in which a person encounters only beliefs or opinions that coincide with their own, especially in social media
Example sentences    Close

eggcorn  n.  Speak
word or phrase that results from a mishearing because of similar sounds
Example sentences    Close

emoji  n.  Speak
a small digital image or icon used to express an idea, emotion
Example sentences    Close

facepalm  v.  Speak
cover one’s face with the hand as an expression of embarrassment, dismay, or exasperation
Example sentences    Close

facerape  v.  Speak
hack someone’s social-media profile in order to fiddle with its personal information or to post fake status updates
Example sentences    Close

fast fashion  n.  Speak
an approach that emphasizes making fashion clothing trends quickly and cheaply available to consumers
Example sentences    Close

flash mob  n.  Speak
brief public gathering for a common purpose, typically organized by the Internet or social media.
Example sentences    Close

fomo  n.  Speak
the fear of missing out, the anxiety that an exciting or interesting event may currently be happening elsewhere
Example sentences    Close

freegan  n.  Speak
a person who rejects consumerism and seeks to help the environment by reducing waste
Example sentences    Close

frenemy  n.  Speak
a person with whom one is friendly despite a fundamental dislike
Example sentences    Close

frousin  n.  Speak
a friend that is a cousin or a cousin that is a friend, very close relationship as family members
Example sentences    Close

froyo  n.  Speak
frozen yogurt, a slightly sour thick food made from milk, and often sugar and fruit
Example sentences    Close

gig economy  n.  Speak
a labor market characterized by short-term contracts or work as opposed to permanent jobs
Example sentences    Close

glamping  n.  Speak
outdoor camping with amenities and comforts, such as beds and electricity, not usually used when camping
Example sentences    Close

Synonym: communicate, express, phrase, put, say, tell, voice. Similar words: in a word, in other words, cord, order, work, record, in order, border. Meaning: [wɜrd /wɜːd]  n. 1. a unit of language that native speakers can identify 2. a brief statement 3. new information about specific and timely events 4. the divine word of God; the second person in the Trinity (incarnate in Jesus) 5. a promise 6. a secret word or phrase known only to a restricted group 7. an exchange of views on some topic 8. the sacred writings of the Christian religions 9. a verbal command for action 10. a word is a string of bits stored in computer memory. v. put into words or an expression. 

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1. The word «Impossible» is not in my dictionary. 

2. A kind word is never lost. 

3. There is great difference between word and deed. 

4. One honest word is better than two oaths. 

5. Love rules his kingdom without a word

6. A word spoken is past recalling. 

7. Many a true word is spoken in jest. 

8. A word to the wise is enough. 

9. The word once spoken can never be realled. 

10. To a wise man one word is enough. 

11. Believe somebody on his bare word

12. A word in season is most precious. 

13. Every brave man is a man of his word

14. There is many a true word spoken in jest. 

15. A wise man hears one word and understand two. 

16. A word spoken is an arrow let fly. 

17. A word in time is worth two afterwards. 

17. Sentencedict.com try its best to collect and make good sentences.

18. A word spoken cannot be recalled. 

19. A word is enough to the wise. 

20. Suit the action to the word

21. A word and a stone let go cannot be recalled. 

22. An honest man’s word is as good as his bond. 

23. While the word is in your mouth, it is your own; when ’tis once spoken, ’tis another’s. 

24. A word is no arrow, but it can pierce the heart. 

25. The chinese word for crisis is divided into two characters, one meaning danger and the other meaning opportunity. 

26. Half a tale [word] is enough for a wise man. 

27. Education commences at the mother’s knee, andevery word spoken within the hearsay of children tends towards the formation of character. 

28. Life is a leaf of paper white, thereon each of us may write his word or two. 

29. Speak clearly if you speak at all, Carve every word before you let it fall. 

30. On the great clock of time there is but one word, «Now». 

More similar words: in a word, in other words, cord, order, work, record, in order, border, works, worth, worry, world, at work, can afford, afford to, work off, work at, work up, worthy, work out, at worst, worker, network, workout, in order to, out of order, border on, disorder, be worth, according. 

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