Actually more than a month’s supply as it’s been a while since I’ve done one of these posts, but with most recent top:
Making Arrangements Phone Calls Game
Analyse and write IELTS Speaking Part Two Tasks
Past or Present? Used to/Would Speaking Game
Present Simple Routines Pairwork Information Gap
Present Simple Third Person Guessing Game
Present Simple Taboo Questions Game
Present Simple Matchmakers Game
Present Simple Job Interviews Roleplay Game
Present Simple Personalised Board Game
Present Simple Sentence Completion Bluffing game
Present Simple Ask and Tell Taboo Questions Game
Adverbs of Frequency Describe the Jobs Game
Adverbs of Frequency Bluffing Card Game
Different Stress and Intonation in Negotiations
Cambridge First Certificate (FCE) Writing Part Two Review Tasks
Paragraphing Mistakes in Emails
Opening & Closing Emails Jigsaw Puzzle Game
Negotiating Saying Yes, No & Maybe
IELTS Speaking Parts One, Two and Three Dice Game
Ask and analyse 100 IELTS Speaking Part One Typical Questions
Social Issues Numbers Pairwork
Email formal and informal functional language review
IELTS Speaking Part One Board Game & Useful Language
‘Have Something Done’ Speaking Practice
There is/ There are How Many Board Game
Infinitives of Purpose Adventure Board Game
Determiners with Countable and Uncountable Nouns
Imperative for Offers and Commands in Presentations
“Have You Ever” Job Interview Questions Games
Emailing Politeness Competition Game
Apologies and giving bad news key words speaking game
Longer requests phrases card game
Turn taking functions card game
Business Result Pre-Intermediate rotating revision board game
The stress & intonation in negotiations activity looks really interesting. I was wondering if there were any guidelines that went it – as in intonation patterns or shifts you’d expect in these utterances. Thanks.
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I’m afraid I completely unmusical and so incapable of either understanding or teaching actual intonation patterns (and so take comfort in those experts who say it’s basically unteachable…) I think the main thing is mostly more extreme intonation in the right ones.
Here’s the same thing for presentations:
Click to access business-english-presentations-good-and-bad-stress-and-intonation.pdf
Click to access business-english-presentations-shifting-stress-in-phrases.pdf
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Thanks you!
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Here’s why I shouldn’t reply from my phone. Apologies about the typo!
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