HILLSIDE SCHOOL
TEACHER’S NAME: MICHAEL BAYU
SUBJECT: ENGLISH WEEK: 2
GRADE: 10 PAGE: 178
UNIT: 10 LESSON: 1
TOPIC: USING MAKE AND DO
OBJECTIVE: By the end of this unit students will be able to compare pairs of sentences.
Compare these pairs of sentences. Are they the same or different?
1. People do thousands of things with wood.
People make thousands of things with wood.
2. . What are you doing?
Where are you making?
In the first pair, both sentences seem to mean the same thing but the second pair seems to mean
something different. Do means an action or activity, but make means creating or manufacturing
something. These are many collocations where make or do are used.
Example: make a mistake
do your homework
Exercise: put the words or phrases in the box in the correct list. Write the two lists in your
exercise book.
. a journey . a phone call . arrangement
.your hair . a complaint
.an excuse . the house work
. an exam .a decision
MAKE DO
a journey an exam
WEEK: 2 PAGE: 188 UNIT: 10 LESSON: 2
TOPIC: USING TOO AND ENOUGH
LESSON OBJECTIVES: By the end of this topic students will be able to explain the use of too
and enough.
USING TOO AND ENOUGH
Too and enough are used with adjectives and indicate degrees.
Too means more than necessary and it precedes the adjectives.
Enough means sufficient and usually follows the adjectives. Enough can also be used with
nouns. In such cases, enough usually precedes the word it modifies.
Example: I have enough money for the CD players.
I don’t have enough (money) for the computer.
Exercise
Choose the correct alternatives to complete each sentence.
1. It was _______________ so we didn’t get it.
A. expensive enough B. too expensive C. enough expensive
2. They didn’t sell ______________to make it worthwhile.
A. tickets enough B. enough tickets C. too tickets.
3. It’s ___________________ to pass.
A. enough difficult B. too difficult C. difficult enough
Conditional tense with will
Conditional sentence describe something that depends on something else. There are various
kinds of conditionals:
1. Zero conditional sentences can express general truth s that happen under certain
circumstances.
It uses the pattern:
If + present simple + will or can
2. The first condition expresses a possible future situation
It uses the pattern:
If + present simple + will or can
NOTE: we can use unless instead of “if … not” in conditional sentences. The two parts
of a conditional sentence can go either first or second in a sentence.