Vocabulary: Technology and Progress

February 2, 2017

Technology and Progress

From the moment we are born we have no other choice but to to deal with technology, therefore, some basis vocabulary is something really useful for our survival in real life, hence, here we go:

Progress Words

When you write and speak about computers and technology, very often you will be asked to say how technology has changed or progressed.

notes

Progress is an uncountable word, while advance is countable. So you say that "digital technology is an advance" but you cannot say that "digital technology is a progress".

Impact Words

Another common topic is to talk about what effect computer technology has had on our lives.

Quizz: Airbus crisis over

Quizz: Airbus Crisis Over

Grammar: Reflexive verbs

REFLEXIVE VERBS

Reflexive verbs are notional/link verbs with their activity doer/agent and recipient/patient/addressee being the same and expressed by subjects and direct objects correspondingly. 

We use a reflexive pronoun after a transitive verb when the direct object is the same as the subject of the verb. E.g: He blamed himself for the accident.


Some verbs change their meaning slightly when they have a reflexive pronoun as direct object: amuse, apply, busy, content, behave, blame, distance, express, find, help, see.


Reciprocal Reflexives

Reciprocal reflexives denote mutual doer/addressee activity. They are mostly transitive. E.g: She and I kissed [each other].

Autocausatives

Autocausative reflexives denote animate doer passivity. E.g: She got depressed.

Anticausatives

Anticausative reflexives denote inanimate subject passivity. E.g: The door (was/got) opened.

Impersonals/Mediopassives

Impersonal/mediopassive reflexives are intransitive verbs with doers implied. E.g:[They] relax well here. It’s thought that…


Proper Reflexives

Proper/inherent reflexives lack corresponding non-reflexives from which they can be synchronically derived. These are pure intransitive reflexive verbs. Eg:They laugh.

Exercises

Pronunciation: Irregular Verbs

IRREGULAR VERBS


Infinitive
Simple Past
Past Participle
A
arise
arose
arisen
awake
awakened / awoke
awakened / awoken
B
backslide
backslid
backslidden / backslid
be
was, were
been
bear
bore
born / borne
beat
beat
beaten / beat
become
became
become
begin
began
begun
bend
bent
bent
bet
bet / betted 
bet / betted 
bid (farewell)
bid / bade
Bidden
bid (offer amount)
bid
Bid
bind
bound
Bound
bite
bit
Bitten
bleed
bled
Bled
blow
blew
Blown
break
broke
Broken
breed
bred
Bred
bring
brought
Brought
broadcast
broadcast / broadcasted
broadcast / broadcasted
browbeat
browbeat
browbeaten / browbeat
build
built
Built
burn
burned / burnt
burned / burnt
burst
burst
burst
bust
busted / bust
busted / bust
buy
bought
bought
C
cast
cast
cast
catch
caught
caught
choose
chose
chosen
cling
clung
clung
clothe
clothed / clad 
clothed / clad
come
came
come
cost
cost
cost
creep
crept
crept
crossbreed
crossbred
crossbred
cut
cut
cut
D

Reading Comprehension: Airbus crisis over

Airbus crisis over

Instructions: Read through the text below, answer the questions that follow, then click on 'Grade Me!' to view your score.

Airbus says it has turned the corner after a crisis connected to production problems and turmoil in the boardroom at its A380 super-jumbo project that has gone on for the past year. Speaking at the Paris air show, Louis Gallois, CEO of the European planemaker, said, "Airbus is back."

Airbus, which announced a raft of orders on the first day of the show, is competing with Boeing, its American rival, for the title of the largest planemaker in the world.

Boeing is expected to reveal the numbers of orders for its 787 Dreamliner soon. Airbus orders unveiled on Monday included Qatar Airways confirming a $16bn order for 80 A350 Airbus planes and ordering three A380 super-jumbos for about $750m.

Boeing and Airbus are also competing for orders from aircraft leasing firms. Orders from these companies - who rank highly among the biggest global buyers of aircraft - are often regarded as an indication of how successful a model will be in the long term.

Airbus also secured orders from US Airways that are worth $10bn for 22 of its A350 jets, 60 A320s and ten of its A330-200 wide-body planes.