Saturday, 24 March 2012

Speaking Pairwork 18: Collect Information About Modern Technology


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Elicit from students a list of electric and electronic items and help them along until you have written on the board something like

mobile phones
smart phones
computers
printers
webcams
scanners
digital cameras
televisions
DVD players
microwaves
dish-washers
tablet computers
MP3 players
kettles
refrigerators
washing machines
hair dryers
toasters
vacuum cleaners
air conditioners
mixers
 

Then write on the board four categories
1) computers (hardware)
2) kitchen appliances
3) phones and cameras
4) TV, video & music


Ask each student/team to pick one and tell them they must write 5 survey questions for that category. This time they are trying to collect generally-known technical information, not just ask about personal usage habits. Give them possible questions like:

Do you know anything about _ _ _ _?
Do you know how to use/repair _ _ _ _?
Do you know how a  _ _ _ _ works?
What do you think of (brand)? How does it compare with (brand)?
Have you ever had any problems with _ _ _ _?


The goal is to get them to write questions along the lines of:
Do you know the specs of your computer?
Do you know the different kinds of television available now?
Do you know how a smart phone is different from a normal phone?
What would you tell someone using a microwave for the first time?
Can you explain the different features of a digital camera?


Help them along in this direction with suggestions if they’re having trouble.

When it comes time for the students to interview each other you may find that some still say ‘No, I have no idea’ but the point is for each student to share the information they collect and anything they know themselves or have learned during this exercise they can relate on to that student who knows nothing. Explain this to them before they start.





 

Speaking Pairwork 17: Role-play a Job Interview


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Tell the students to imagine a super-store is opening in the local area soon and looking to hire many new staff. Ask them to think of all the different jobs that could be available and help them along until you have written on the board something like:

accountant
baker
butcher
check-out counter staff
I.T. staff
manager
sales clerk in the _______ department
secretary
security guard
staff trainer


Ask each student to choose one job from this list. Then write on the board some typical job interview questions like:

What experience have you got?
What skills have you got?
What was your last job and salary?
What salary and benefits do you expect here?
Why do you think you’d be good for this job?
What can you offer this company?
What are your good points and bad points?
Tell me about a time you dealt with a difficult situation at work
Where do you see yourself in 5 years?


Give the students 10 minutes to prepare answers to all these questions for their particular job and then get them talking in pairs, with one person playing the interviewer and the other the interviewee. When that conversation is finished, they can swap roles.

Speaking Pairwork 16: Present Perfect - 3 Functions and 3 Sets of Survey Questions


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

These exercises are for students who are already familiar with the separate functions of the present perfect tense, and know their past participles and how to use ‘since’ and ‘for’. They should also be able to use the simple past tense with no problem since- as you must emphasise to them – often we switch from an initial present perfect question to asking for follow-up details in the past simple.

Function 1: Talking about experiences, with ‘ever’

Just write on the board ‘Have you ever  (+ past participle) + _ _ _ _?’ and tell the students to make up 5 questions. If there’s a verb table in their textbooks they can use that. You can split the table up into segments and assign each student a portion so as to get a wide variety of verbs and questions.

Survey questions here will be things like:

Have you ever been to Japan?
Have you ever seen a tiger?
Have you ever eaten anything weird?
Have you ever stayed up all night?
Have you ever failed an exam?


Function 2: Talking about how long something has been happening, with ‘since’ and ‘for’

Survey questions here will be things like:

How long have you lived in this town?
How long have you worked at your job? studied at your school/university?

How long has your father owned his car?
How long have you known your best friend?
How long have you had that shirt/that dress/those glasses/that hair-style? (pointing to the relevant thing belonging to the other student)

Emphasise to the students that they must write questions that anyone can answer.

Function 3:  Talking about recent events, using time-phrases or ‘yet’ or ‘since’

Survey questions here will be things like:

Have you had dinner yet?
Have you seen any movies this week?
Have you bought anything expensive this month?
Have you done anything interesting since the weekend?
Have you drunk more than one cup of coffee today?

Speaking Pairwork 15: 5 Survey Questions About Places


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

The students simple have to compose and then ask each other 5 survey questions about places. Do some examples on the board first like:

What place would you like to go to? Not like to go to?
What place would you like to go back to? Not like to go back to?
What place is important for your family?
What place in the world do you think is unique? glamourous? depressing?
What do you think is the coldest/ most expensive/ most fashionable/ most dangerous place in the world?
What beach have you been to most often in your life?
What’s your favourite big city?
Where did your parents meet? Have you ever been there?
What’s your home-town? Tell me about it.

Tell the students to think of cities, towns, villages, resorts, tourist attractions.

As ever, they should also ask follow-up questions.

Speaking Pairwork 14: 5 Survey Questions About Friends


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

The students simple have to compose and then ask each other 5 survey questions about friends. Do some examples on the board first like:

Who’s your best friend? Tell me about them.
Who’s your richest/funniest/kindest/loudest friend?
What friends do you remember from high school? primary school?
Which of your friends went to university? has a car? is married?
What do your friends usually talk about?
When was the last time you met up with a large group of friends?


As ever, once they're working in pairs, they should also ask follow-up questions.

Speaking Pairwork 13: Stem Sentences


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Write on the board 5 stem sentences i.e. sentence beginnings. They could be anything, for example:

I like to _ _ _ _
My mother never _ _ _ _
Last week I saw  _ _ _ _
I think my country  _ _ _ _
My bathroom is  _ _ _ _


As an example, ask students individually to complete each sentence and then ask follow-up questions. If they say ‘ I like to play computer games’ ask them ‘What games?’ ‘How many hours a day?’ etc

Get every student to write 5 stem sentences of their own. When they’re finished check the sentences to make sure they are correct so far and can be completed by any other student, then get them to speak in pairs. They simply read out their stem, listen to how the other student completes it, and ask follow-up questions.

Saturday, 17 March 2012

Speaking Pairwork 12: Role-play an Exciting and/or Unusual Job


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Tell students to think of an exciting and/or unusual job. Give them examples like astronaut, stuntman, pop singer, prime minister. Get them to say their job straight-out so that there are no repeats.

Elicit from them and prompt them until you have a lot of questions on the board like:

What do you do?
Where do you work?
How long have you worked there?
What qualifications do you have?
What hours do you work?
What’s your normal routine?
What’s the best/worst thing about your job?
What are your colleagues like?
How much do you earn?


Give them time to copy these questions into their notebooks and prepare imagined answers to these questions. Then they interview each other. As ever they can ask other questions of their own making.

Speaking Pairwork 11: Compare Men and Women


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

This is a fun exercise as long as you have students who get on well together and have a sense of humour about themselves. It’s supposed to provoke disagreements but not serious ones!

Simply ask the students to write 5 survey questions comparing men and women. Write on the board the kind of sentence structures they can use but emphasise these are just examples and they can use other formats if they want.

Who is more _ _ _ _?
Who’s better at _ _ _ _?
Who spends more time on _ _ _ _?
Who spends more money on _ _ _ _?


Ask a student or three a few examples- things like:

‘Who spends more money on electronics?’ ‘on clothes?’ ‘on furniture?’ 'Men or women?'
‘Who is more polite?’ ‘more conservative?’ ‘more interested in politics?’ 'Men or women?'
‘Who’s better at driving?’ ‘at maths?’ ‘at English?’ ‘at art?’ 'Men or women?'


Also write on the board follow-up questions they can ask of each other like:

Why do you say that?
Give me an example
But what about _ _ _ _?

Speaking Pairwork 10: Have You Ever Said/Done Anything _ _ _ _?

Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Write on the board:
‘Have You Ever Said/Done Anything + ADJECTIVE or PHRASE’

under ADJECTIVE write examples like:

stupid, brave, funny, kind, rude, dangerous, exciting, boring

To show the students how this structure can be used, ask one of them ‘have you ever said anything funny?’ and a few follow-up questions to their answer, then ask another ‘have you ever done anything dangerous?’and again a few follow-up questions.

under PHRASE write examples like:

that you regretted
that made someone angry/cry/proud of you
that made you popular
that cost a lot of money
that got you into trouble
that caused a fight
that was very lucky


Tell them there are many, many other phrases they can use.

Ask them to write 5 questions using this structure, two with adjectives and 3 with phrases.  As usual, check the sentences when they’re finished writing and then get them talking in pairs.

 

Speaking Pairwork 9: 5 Survey Questions about Internet Surfing Habits


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

This is a simple but enjoyable exercise. Ask the students to think of questions they might ask people to find out about their internet habits and elicit/prompt them until you have a series of questions on the board, something like this.

Why do you like that site?
How often do you use it?

How long do you usually spend there?
When was the last time you used it? What content did you view?
Does it have photos? videos? a forum? user comments?


Ask them then to write down 5 websites they like and use often. I tell them to exclude Facebook and Youtube since they’re so popular and I want variation in their answers, and also exclude search engines and e-mail programs since I want to concentrate on sites with actual content. Once they’re ready they work in pairs telling each other about their 5 websites. This should take at least 10 minutes per pairing.

This exercise has the added benefit of being a ‘knowledge-share’; you can often see students writing down URLs as they learn from their classmates of new sites that sound interesting to them. So you can ask each student at the end ‘Did you learn about any new sites? What’s it about?’

Tuesday, 13 March 2012

Speaking Pairwork 8: ‘Which is Better?’ Survey Questions


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Write on the board ‘Which is Better?’ and something like

KFC/Macdonald’s
cats/dogs
pizza/spaghetti
Spanish football/British football
breakfast/dinner


Go through each pair asking one student to state their preference. Ask them why they think that and any follow-up questions that occur to you.

Then tell the students they must come up with 5 pairs of similarly comparable things which they are going to ask other students about.

Write on the board at least 10 categories which will help get them thinking – things like

Beach Resorts
Computer Games
Countries
Drinks
Festivals
Food
Movies
Newspapers
Pop Stars
Restaurants
Seasons
Shopping Centres


When everyone has 5 pairs ready and you’ve checked them to make sure they really are comparable things and there is no overlap with other students’ pairings, set them to talking in pairs. They should of course ask ‘Why’ etc. Though these are just simple questions each conversation about a pair should still be at least 2 minutes long.

If you want, you can ask the students to keep a score of who likes what in each pair and they can relate one or two of these scores back to the class at the end, with a general discussion of why one thing is more popular than the other.


 

Speaking Pairwork 7: Role-play Meeting Famous People at a Dinner Party

Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Ask the students to imagine they’re a famous person who’s still alive; it could be a  pop star, movie star, sportsperson, politician, business leader, anything. Go round the class and get them all to choose a different person. 

Try to elicit from them questions you might ask such a person if you bumped into them at a dinner-party. Help them along and prompt them until you have something like this written on the board:

What’s your name?
Where are you from?
Are you married?
Do you have any children?
What do you do?
Why are you famous?
Can you explain your work?
What’s the most recent thing you’ve done?
What’s your biggest success?
What’s your biggest mistake?


Tell the students they will be asking each other these questions in a moment and give them a few minutes to prepare answers. Then set them talking in pairs.

Encourage them to prolong each interview with questions of their own invention
Have you ever ____?
Do you like ____?
etc

Speaking Pairwork 6: Role-play a Tourist in Your Own Town


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Ask the students to imagine they’re a foreign tourist visiting the students’ town. Go round the class and get them all to choose a different country of origin for their tourist.

Try to elicit from them questions you might ask a tourist. Help them along and prompt them until you have something like this written on the board:

Where are you from?
How long have you been in _ _ _ _ _?
How long are you staying?
What places have you been to so far?
What’s your favourite thing so far?
Who are you travelling with?
Where are you staying?
Have you tried  _ _ _ _ _? (name a local activity or food)
Have you been to  _ _ _ _ _?  (name a local place of interest)


Tell the students they will be asking each other these questions in a moment and give them 5-10 minutes to prepare answers and dream up a persona. Then set them talking in pairs with one being the local and the other the tourist, swapping roles once they’ve finished. Encourage them to ask other questions of each other as if they were really interviewing a foreigner.

Speaking Pairwork 5: 5 Survey Questions Using Superlatives


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

The questions this time all use superlatives. Give the students plenty of examples on the board e.g.

What’s the biggest city you’ve been to?
Who’s the tallest person you know?
Who’s the most famous person in your country’s history?
What’s the longest journey you’ve ever been on?
What’s the most expensive thing you’ve bought this year?


If they need more help write adjectives on the board such as

long/short/fast/slow/busy/good/bad/spicy/rich/cheap/beautiful/interesting

and/or ask them to think of places, electronics, clothes, music, movies, TV programs, people, food and drink, etc

Monday, 12 March 2012

Speaking Pairwork 4: 5 Survey Questions Using ‘Going To’ and Time-Phrases

Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

The questions this time all use ‘going to’ and basic time-phrases.  This is a very structured exercise suitable for real beginners.

Write on the board:

tomorrow
at the weekend
next month
next year
when you’re__________


Each student/pair writes 5 survey questions using these phrases and ‘going to’ e.g.

What is your father going to do tomorrow?
Are you going to watch a movie at the weekend?
Are you going to buy anything expensive next month?
What are you going to study next year?
Do you think you’re going to have children when you’re 40?


Note that you could also do - on a separate occasion - a similar but not identical lesson using the ‘present continuous as future’ but the questions then would be a bit different e.g.

Are you meeting anyone tonight?
Are you planning anything this weekend?


Since it’s only for imminent plans you wouldn’t use ‘when you’re__________’ and there are certain phrases that don’t work. ‘What is your father doing tomorrow?’ is OK but ‘Are you buying anything expensive next month?’ doesn’t sound natural.

 

Speaking Pairwork 3: Think of a real story in your life and 4 words connected with it


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Tell the students you want them to think of real stories in their lives and write 4 words connected with each one. Do an example from your own life on the board first e.g. write: 
21/Pyramids/Paul/horses

Get students to ask questions like
‘Did you go to the Pyramids?’
‘Who is Paul?’
‘Why did you write ‘horses’?’


If the students have trouble give them the question beginnings; write on the board
‘Who is _____?’
‘What is_____?’
‘Why is _____ important?’


Answer the questions- tell them the whole story- e.g. that you went to the Pyramids when you were 21 with your friend Paul and you rode horses there etc.

Then tell them to write 3 x 4 words each- to convey the gist of 3 stories from their own lives. They then work in pairs, showing their words to other students, who ask questions. Tell them they should discuss only one story with one person and make that conversation last at least 3 minutes by asking lots of follow-up questions (e.g. why were you in Egypt? How long did you stay there? How did you get there?)

When the students have prepared their words and just before the actual speaking stage begins, do an example with one of the brightest students in the class where she tells you her 4 words and you ask her many questions to demonstrate how the conversation can go on and on.


Speaking Pairwork 2: 5 Easy Survey Questions Using ‘Can’


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Tell the students they’re going to write 5 survey questions using ‘can’. This exercise is very useful for real beginners.

Assign each student/pair a general subject-area or ask them to think of one themselves or select from some choices you write on the board

e.g. Sport/Food & Drink/Computers/Vehicles

Give each student/pair one question to begin with e.g
Sport-Can you play tennis?
Food & Drink -Can you cook spaghetti bolognaise?
Computers-Can you use Mirosoft Access?
Vehicles-Can you change the oil in a car?


Tell them they have to write a further 4 questions. You don’t want each question to follow exactly the same structure but with a little imagination it’s easy enough for the students to come up with 5 varied questions for any category. (Though It’s also a good idea for you to have some stand-bys in mind in case they get stuck.)

For Vehicles it might be:
Can you change the oil in a car?
Can you ride a motorbike?
Can your mother drive a car?
Can you change a flat tyre?
Do you know anyone who can drive a bus or truck?


For Food & Drink it might be:
Can you cook spaghetti bolognaise?
Can you make fried rice?
Can you eat a Big Mac and fries in 5 minutes?
Can you drink whisky?
Do you know anyone who can cook a roast dinner?

Speaking Pairwork 1: 5 Survey Questions on General Topics


Click here for ‘The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork’

Tell the students they’re going to write 5 survey questions. This particular exercise is a good way to ease them into the idea and I often use it at the start of a course with a new set of students.

Write on the board a variety of possible subject-matters and tell them they can choose one or pick their own. I usually use

Computers
Education
Food & Drink
Movies
Music
Reading
Shopping
Sport
Travel
TV

When they have all chosen, use one of the leftover subjects as an example case and write at least 3 examples on the board.


For computers you might write:
What programs can you use?
Do you own a computer? What kind?
What websites do you use often?


For reading you might write:
Do you buy any magazine regularly?
How often do you go to a library?
What’s your favourite book?


For travel you might write:
What’s your favourite kind of transport?
Have you ever been to _ _ _ _ _ (name town in their country)?
When was the last time you went on a plane?


Also write out structures that will be useful to them in asking for people’s opinions, like:
• Do you like _ _ _ _ _?
• Have you ever _ _ _ _ _?
• How often do you _ _ _ _ _?
• What do you think of _ _ _ _ _?
• What’s your favourite _ _ _ _ _?
• Who’s your favourite _ _ _ _ _?
• When was the last time you _ _ _ _ _?
• Which is better  - _ _ _ _ _ or  _ _ _ _ _?



For more advanced classes you can just do the same thing as above with more serious/intellectual subjects, perhaps with an emphasis on how these things work in the students’ country- e.g. government, crime and the legal system, banking and finance, the military, property ownership. Students might ask survey questions like:

What do you know about your local M.P.? (government)
Do you know anyone who has ever used a lawyer? (crime and the legal system)
What bank do you use and why? (banking and finance)
What are the main military bases in your country? (the military)
Do you own a property? Was the process of buying it difficult? (property ownership)


  

The Basic Method for Speaking Pairwork


Note: The format described here is for all future posts on this blog with the prefix ‘Speaking Pairwork’. There are literally hundreds of ways you can adapt it to different subject-matters, grammar points and role-plays and in time I plan to post many, many examples.

These activities are best for classes with between 4 and 12 students but can be adapted for larger or smaller classes too.

I usually do my two-hour classes by working from a textbook for the first hour, where students are taking in a lot of new grammar and vocab. Then in the second half I do ‘free-style’ pairwork where things are more relaxed and students can just speak at length and uninhibitedly.

The emphasis is on fluency rather than correctness, with students working within private pairs where even the shy ones need have no fears. I go round listening in to each pair but mainly just to help them along if they get stuck, and with the minimum of error correction. The students always work with questions or sentences or word-groups they have produced themselves: I find that makes them more invested in the activity.

You give them a topic and basic guidelines and if they're writing up questions, you should emphasise that they must produce survey-like questions, asking for opinions or personal information, which anyone can answer and where everyone’s answer will be different.

Imagine the topic is ‘Survey questions using modal verbs’. After you give them examples and possible sentence-beginnings on the board, each student/pair prepares 5 questions.

e.g. ‘Should teenagers drink alcohol?’
‘Do you think aliens might exist?’
‘Is there anything you must do tomorrow?’
‘Can you swim?’


When they’re finished with their versions you check and correct their sentences to make sure they're grammatically correct and it's possible for the other students to answer them.

The basic format is that they speak to another student for about 5-10 minutes and then move on. Depending on the number of students in class you just have to get the mechanics right so that everyone can swap around frequently, talk to a new partner each time, and hopefully not get too bored.

Another important point for all these exercises is that you can stretch the students a little bit as the speaking pairwork process is repeated again and again by getting them to remember the questions. On the first and maybe the second round they can read from their notebooks but after that, tell them to close those notebooks and on the board rub out most of the words so that only a few keywords in each question are left. Finally rub out everything on the board: they should end up speaking to each other without any written prompts.


For 4 students named A, B, C, D
Each student prepares 5 questions individually and then A talks to B, while C talks to D. Swap around after a while so that it’s A with C and B with D, then finally on the last round A with D and B with C.


For 6 students named A, B, C, D, E, F make 3 pairs 1)A & B, 2)C & D, 3)E & F
Each pair prepares 5 questions and emphasise that both students in the pair must write the same 5 questions in their notebook. Then ask B, D and F to stand up and swap chairs, moving one place to their left or right so that for example B is with C, D is with E, and F is with A. After 10 minutes ask them to stand up and move round again- so that B is with E etc.


For 8-12 students Just repeat the method above, with 4, 5, 6 etc pairs, and get them to swap around more frequently- after only 5 minutes, say. And of course you don’t have to get them to talk to a member of every other pair if time doesn’t permit.

For larger groups Once the number of students gets to 9 you might start thinking it makes more sense to splitting them into 3 groups of 3. Certainly if you had say 16 students I would make 4 groups of 4.They prepare the questions together as before and all write the same thing. The logistics of matching everyone up by this stage become a bit of a headache so that I usually just tell them to go out and find 3 people from other groups to talk to, and I simply shout ‘OK, everyone change partners’ every 5 minutes.

For odd number of studentsFor any of these groupings if you have an odd number of students then two students must ‘pretend’ to be one student. If you have 7 students for example still think it as A, B, C, D, E, F in 3 pairs 1)A & B, 2)C & D, 3)E & F but two students must constitute ‘student A’ and actually the first ‘pair’ has 3 students.
 
For three students or less It doesn’t really make sense to do pairwork. You can still use the same topics and get students to prepare questions in the same way but the actual speaking phase should be just an open conversation between everyone present with one student asking the other two a question and you chiming in and prompting them if necessary to ask follow-up questions of each other, to make it as much as possible a flowing conversation involving all parties.


These activities usually take about 40 minutes- 5 minutes for your explanation and a few examples on the board, 10 minutes for their preparation of what they’re going to say and 25 minutes where the class should be very noisy from lots of people talking at once.

The students don’t have to – and indeed shouldn’t- take any notes during the speaking phase. It’s all about the talking.

 

Wednesday, 7 March 2012

Basic Vocab List- 500 Words in 10 Categories

This is just a bunch of words for quick reference: they can come in useful in all kinds of ways in the classroom

The categories are:

           Animals
           Clothes & Accessories
           Family Members
           Food & Drink
           Jobs
           Parts of the Body
           Places in a Town
           School & Office
           Sports
           Things In the House

Animals
1.         Alligator
2.         Ant
3.         Bat
4.         Bee
5.         Bird
6.         Buffalo
7.         Butterfly
8.         Camel
9.         Cat
10.       Chicken
11.       Cockroach
12.       Cow
13.       Crab
14.       Deer
15.       Dog
16.       Dolphin
17.       Dove
18.       Duck
19.       Eagle
20.       Elephant
21.       Fish
22.       Fly
23.       Fox
24.       Frog
25.       Goat
26.       Grasshopper
27.       Hamster
28.       Hippo
29.       Horse
30.       Iguana
31.       Jaguar
32.       Jackal
33.       Kangaroo
34.       Koala Bear
35.       Lion
36.       Lobster
37.       Monkey
38.       Moose
39.       Mosquito
40.       Octopus
41.       Orangutan
42.       Owl
43.       Ox
44.       Panda
45.       Parrot
46.       Penguin
47.       Pig
48.       Pigeon
49.       Prawn
50.       Quail
51.       Rabbit
52.       Rhino
53.       Seal
54.       Shark
55.       Sheep
56.       Snail
57.       Snake
58.       Spider
59.       Squid
60.       Squirrel
61.       Tiger
62.       Turtle
63.       Vulture
64.       Whale
65.       Wolf
66.       Yak
67.       Zebra

Clothes & Accessories
68.       Belt
69.       Bikini
70.       Blouse
71.       Boot
72.       Bow
73.       Bracelet
74.       Cap
75.       Cardigan
76.       Coat
77.       Dress
78.       Earrings
79.       Gloves
80.       Hat
81.       Helmet
82.       Jacket
83.       Jeans
84.       Jewellry
85.       Jumper
86.       Necklace
87.       Pants
88.       Ribbon
89.       Ring
90.       Sandals
91.       Shirt
92.       Shoes
93.       Skirt
94.       Slippers
95.       Sneakers
96.       Socks
97.       Suit
98.       Sunglasses
99.       Sweater
100.     Swimsuit
101.     Track-Suit
102.     Trainers
103.     Trousers
104.     T-Shirt
105.     Underwear
106.     Vest
107.     Wallet
108.     Watch

Family members
109.     Aunt
110.     Brother
111.     Brother-in-law etc
112.     Cousin
113.     Daughter
114.     Father
115.     Grand-daughter
116.     Grand-father
117.     Grand-mother
118.     Grand-son
119.     Mother
120.     Nephew
121.     Niece
122.     Sister
123.     Son
124.     Step-mother etc
125.     Uncle

Food & Drink
126.     Apple
127.     Asparagus
128.     Bacon
129.     Banana
130.     Beans
131.     Beef
132.     Beer
133.     Bread
134.     Broccoli
135.     Butter
136.     Cabbage
137.     Cake
138.     Carrot
139.     Cauliflower
140.     Cereal
141.     Champagne
142.     Cheese
143.     Chilli
144.     Chocolate
145.     Coconut
146.     Coffee
147.     Corn
148.     Crab
149.     Croissant
150.     Cucumber
151.     Curry
152.     Donut
153.     Egg
154.     Fish
155.     French Fries
156.     Garlic
157.     Grapes
158.     Ham
159.     Hamburger
160.     Hot Dog
161.     Ice Cream
162.     Jam
163.     Juice
164.     Kiwi Fruit
165.     Lamb
166.     Lasagna
167.     Lemon
168.     Lettuce
169.     Lobster
170.     Mango
171.     Marmalade
172.     Mayonnaise
173.     Melon
174.     Milk
175.     Mushroom
176.     Noodles
177.     Nuts
178.     Omelette
179.     Onion
180.     Orange
181.     Oysters
182.     Pasta
183.     Peach
184.     Peas
185.     Pepper
186.     Pineapple
187.     Pizza
188.     Pork
189.     Potato
190.     Prawn
191.     Shrimp
192.     Rice
193.     Salad
194.     Salami
195.     Salmon
196.     Salt
197.     Sandwich
198.     Sauce
199.     Sausage
200.     Soup
201.     Spaghetti
202.     Spinach
203.     Squid
204.     Steak
205.     Strawberry
206.     Sushi
207.     Tea
208.     Tomato
209.     Vegetable
210.     Water
211.     Watermelon
212.     Whisky
213.     Wine
214.     Vodka
215.     Yogurt

Jobs
216.     Accountant
217.     Actor
218.     Air Hostess
219.     Artist
220.     Astronaut
221.     Baker
222.     Banker
223.     Bus Driver
224.     Butcher
225.     Carpenter
226.     Chef
227.     Cleaner
228.     Dentist
229.     Director
230.     Doctor
231.     Doorman
232.     Electrician
233.     Engineer
234.     Factory Worker
235.     Judge
236.     Lawyer
237.     Maid
238.     Manager
239.     Musician
240.     Nurse
241.     Operator
242.     Optician
243.     Personal Assistant
244.     Pharmacist
245.     Pilot
246.     Plumber
247.     Policeman
248.     Radiologist
249.     Salesman
250.     Scientist
251.     Secretary
252.     Shop Assistant
253.     Singer
254.     Soldier
255.     Taxi Driver
256.     Teacher
257.     Vet
258.     Waiter
259.     Writer

Parts of the Body
260.     Adam’s Apple
261.     Ankle
262.     Arm
263.     Back
264.     Beard
265.     Belly Button
266.     Blood
267.     Bones
268.     Bottom
269.     Cheek
270.     Chest
271.     Chin
272.     Ear
273.     Elbow
274.     Eye
275.     Eyebrow
276.     Eyelash
277.     Face
278.     Finger
279.     Foot
280.     Forehead
281.     Hair
282.     Hand
283.     Heart
284.     Kidney
285.     Knee
286.     Leg
287.     Lips
288.     Liver
289.     Lungs
290.     Moustache
291.     Mouth
292.     Nails
293.     Neck
294.     Nose
295.     Shoulder
296.     Skeleton
297.     Skin
298.     Skull
299.     Stomach
300.     Thigh
301.     Thumb
302.     Toe
303.     Tongue
304.     Waist
305.     Wrist

Places in a Town
306.     Airport
307.     Apartments
308.     Bar
309.     Book Shop
310.     Bus Station
311.     Bus Stop
312.     Butcher’s
313.     CafĂ©
314.     Car Hire Firm
315.     Car Showroom
316.     Chemists
317.     Church
318.     Cinema
319.     Clinic
320.     Clothes Store
321.     Coffee Shop
322.     College
323.     Convenience Store
324.     Department Store
325.     Disco
326.     Drugstore
327.     Estate Agent
328.     Flats
329.     Grocer’s
330.     Harbour
331.     Hospital
332.     Hotel
333.     Jewellry Store
334.     Kindergarten
335.     Law Firm
336.     Liquor Store
337.     Mosque
338.     Movie Theater
339.     Music Store
340.     Newsagent
341.     Nightclub
342.     Nursery
343.     Office
344.     Off-License
345.     Pharmacy
346.     Pier
347.     Port
348.     Pub
349.     Realtor
350.     Restaurant
351.     School
352.     Stadium
353.     Supermarket
354.     Superstore
355.     Temple
356.     Toy Shop
357.     Train Station
358.     University

School & Office
359.     Bag
360.     Blackboard
361.     Book
362.     Briefcase
363.     Calculator
364.     Chalk
365.     Computer
366.     Eraser
367.     Folder
368.     Glue
369.     Hole-Punch
370.     Marker
371.     Notebook
372.     Paper
373.     Paper Clip
374.     Pen
375.     Pencil
376.     Ruler
377.     Sharpener
378.     Stapler
379.     Textbook
380.     Whiteboard

Sports
381.     American Football
382.     Archery
383.     Athletics
384.     Badminton
385.     Baseball
386.     Basketball
387.     Billiards
388.     Boxing
389.     Cricket
390.     Cycling
391.     Darts
392.     Diving
393.     Fencing
394.     Football
395.     Golf
396.     Gymnastics
397.     Hockey
398.     Horse-Racing
399.     Ice-Hockey
400.     Ice-Skating
401.     Karate
402.     Kung Fu
403.     Pool
404.     Rugby
405.     Running
406.     Sailing
407.     Skiing
408.     Snooker
409.     Snorkelling
410.     Snowboarding
411.     Surfing
412.     Swimming
413.     Taekwondo
414.     Tennis
415.     Volleyball
416.     Windsurfing
417.     Wrestling

Things in the House
418.     Air Conditioner
419.     Ball
420.     Bath
421.     Bed
422.     Bin
423.     Blanket
424.     Bottle
425.     Bowl
426.     Box
427.     Broom
428.     Bucket
429.     Camera
430.     Cards
431.     Carpet
432.     CD
433.     Chair
434.     Chimney
435.     Chopsticks
436.     Clock
437.     Computer
438.     Cooker
439.     Cup
440.     Cupboard
441.     Curtains
442.     Cushion
443.     Desk
444.     Dishwasher
445.     Doll
446.     Door
447.     Dressing Table
448.     Dustpan And Brush
449.     DVD Player
450.     Fan
451.     Fireplace
452.     Floor
453.     Fork
454.     Furniture
455.     Game
456.     Games Console
457.     Glass
458.     Hammer
459.     Heater
460.     Iron
461.     Ironing Board
462.     Jar
463.     Jug
464.     Kettle
465.     Knife
466.     Ladder
467.     Lamp
468.     Map
469.     Memory Stick
470.     Microwave
471.     Mirror
472.     Mop
473.     Oven
474.     Pan
475.     Picture
476.     Pillow
477.     Plant
478.     Plate
479.     Pot
480.     Radio
481.     Refrigerator
482.     Roof
483.     Saw
484.     Scissors
485.     Shelves
486.     Shower
487.     Sink
488.     Spoon
489.     Stairs
490.     Table
491.     Telephone
492.     Toilet
493.     Toothbrush
494.     Torch
495.     Tray
496.     Vase
497.     Wall
498.     Washing Machine
499.     Wardrobe
500.     Window