All Game articles – Page 10
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Article
Top Trumps London: How to play
Teach your students how to play the game in class with this handy guide to Top Trumps London.
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Article
Top Trumps London: Adult intermediate
In this lesson for adults, students speak about tourist attractions, learn vocabulary for describing attractions and practise the pronunciation of some famous places in London.
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Article
Top Trumps London: Playing cards
A full set of 30 Top Trumps London cards in our exclusive cut-out-and-keep format. Suitable for elementary to advanced level students, this game offers great ideas for vocabulary, speaking and pronunciation lessons.
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Article
Guessing game: Must, mustn’t, needn’t, don’t have to
A small-group card guessing game to practise must, mustn’t, needn’t and don’t have to.
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Article
Pairwork: Should have / shouldn’t have
A pairwork game to practise should have and shouldn’t have.
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Article
Guess: Defining relative clauses
A small-group guessing game to practise who, that/which and where.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 12—Making proposals
In this lesson, students learn about the language of corporate responsibility through future forms, conditionals, and modals.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 11—Presentations
In this lesson, students learn different ways of starting and giving a presentation.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 10—Setting personal goals
In this lesson, students can discuss setting and achieving work goals and what changes they can make to improve their performance.
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Article
100 years ago: Was / were
Students take part in a team competition to practise was, were, wasn’t and weren’t.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 9—Dilemmas
In this lesson, students learn about dealing with dilemmas at work and how to be objective.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 8—Negotiations
In this lesson, students can talk about various negotiation topics and experiences.
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Teaching tool
Business Top Trumps: Lesson 7—Networking and small talk
In this lesson, students talk about how to initiate and continue small talk and learn the language to introduce a third person into a conversation.
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Article
Have we met? Present perfect and past simple
Students take part in a whole-class role-play to practise using the present perfect, then switching to the past simple.
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Article
Imagine: Future perfect
Students write predictions about their partner. They use language such as ‘In ten year’s time’, ‘By this time tomorrow’ and ‘By 2050’ in order to practise the future perfect.
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Article
Holiday game: Future of can/can't
An activity where students receive an exciting holiday and must list all the things they will and won’t be able to do on their given holiday practising the future of can and can’t.