La tarea para esta semana es sumergirse en la creatividad y armar una historia o cuento en donde usemos los sentimientos que ya conocen y empecemos a describir las cosas y personas.
Puede ser en relación a nuestra vida actual, a la vida de otro, imaginativo, como quieran.
Ejemplo.
It was night time, the sky was full of stars and the moon was almost invisible. Mary was standing in the middle of the field waiting to see a shooting star. She was delighted to be there.
It was Autumn, so she had a thick jacket on. She was a gentle girl, full of imagination. Her passion was to write. She could spend hours and hours writing poems, stories and verses.
Every time she wrote something she felt excited and anxious at the same time. ... and so on
Les adjunto una lista de emociones y sus significados para que puedan sacar de ahí material para la historia.
La historia o cuento no puede ser mas corta que una plana y tan larga como quieran. Escrita en word ojalá para la corrección. La deben entregar el Viernes 5 de Junio hasta las 20 hrs.
Al final de la lista de emociones hay un quiz que si quieren pueden hacer para saber si están entendiendo como aplicar las palabras.
A
angry: “She was angry with her boss for criticising her work.”
annoyed: “I’m very annoyed with him. He hasn’t returned any of my calls.”
“She was annoyed by his comments.”
appalled = very shocked: “They were appalled to hear that they would lose their jobs.”
apprehensive = slightly worried: “I felt a little apprehensive before my interview.”
ashamed: “How could you say such a thing? You should be ashamed of yourself!”
at the end of your tether = completely fed up: “The children have been misbehaving all day – I’m at the end of my tether.”
B
bewildered = very confused: “He was bewildered by the choice of computers in the shop.”
betrayed = when someone breaks the trust you have in them: “He betrayed my trust when he repeated my secret to everyone.”
C
confused: “I’m sorry I forgot your birthday – I was confused about the dates.”
confident = sure of your abilities: “I’m confident that we can find a solution to this problem.”
cheated = when you don’t get something that you think you deserve: “Of course I feel cheated – I should have won that competition.”
cross = quite angry: “I was cross with him for not helping me, as he said he would.”
D
depressed = very sad: “After he failed his English exam, he was depressed for a week.”
delighted = very happy: “I’m delighted that I got the job. It’s just what I always wanted.”
down in the dumps = sad and fed up: “What’s the matter with him? He’s so down in the dumps these days.”
disappointed: “She was disappointed by her son’s poor results at school.”
E
ecstatic = extremely happy: “When he asked her to marry him she was ecstatic.”
excited: “I’m excited by the new opportunities that the internet brings.”
emotional = you have strong feelings (happy or sad) and you cry: “When he heard the news, he became quite emotional.”
envious = when you want something that someone else has: “I’m very envious of her happiness – I wish I was happy too.”
embarrassed = slightly ashamed: “I felt so embarrassed that I went bright red.”
F
furious =very angry: “I was furious with him for breaking my favourite vase.”
frightened: “As a child she was frightened of the dark.”
G
great = very good: “I feel great today!”
H
happy: “She was happy to hear the good news.”
horrified = very shocked: “I’m horrified by the amount of violence on television today.”
I
irritated = annoyed: “I get so irritated when he changes TV channels without asking me first.”
intrigued = being so interested in something you have to find out more: “I’m intrigued to hear about your safari in Kenya.”
J
jealous = envious: “She was jealous of her sister’s new toy.”
jaded = tired and having no interest: “After 10 years at this company, I just feel jaded.”
K
keen: “I’m keen to see your new house – I’ve heard lots about it.”
“I’m keen on keeping fit.”
L
lazy: “I can’t be bothered to do anything today – I feel really lazy!”
lucky: “I’m going to play the lottery – I feel lucky today!”
let down = disappointed: “When you didn’t turn up to the meeting, I felt really let down.”
M
maternal = feeling like a mother: “Looking at my sister’s new baby made me feel really maternal.”
N
nonplussed = so surprised that you don’t know what to do next: “I was so nonplussed by his announcement that I couldn’t say anything.”
negative = when you can only see the disadvantages: “I feel very negative about my job – the pay is awful.”
O
overwhelmed = so much emotion that you don’t know what to say or do: “I was overwhelmed by the offer of promotion at work.”
over the moon = delighted: “She was over the moon with her new bicycle and rode it every day for a whole year.”
P
positive = opposite of negative – seeing the good side of something: “She’s a very positive person and never lets anything get her down.”
positive = very sure: “Are you sure that’s what you want? Yes – I’m positive.”
R
relaxed: “I was completely relaxed after I came back from holiday.”
reluctant = when you don’t want to do something: “I’m reluctant to buy a new car – the one we have is fine.”
S
seething = extremely angry, but hiding it: “She was seething after her boss criticised her.”
sad: “It makes me sad to see all those animals in cages at the zoo.”
scared = frightened: “Are you scared of heights?”
stressed = being worried or anxious about something so you can’t relax: “I feel really stressed at work – I need a break.”
“He was stressed out by all the travelling in his job.”
T
terrific = fantastic: “I feel terrific today!”
terrible = ill or tired: “I’ve got a blinding headache and I feel terrible.”
terrified = very scared: “She’s terrified of spiders and screams whenever she sees one.”
tense = not relaxed: “You look a bit tense. Did you have a bad day at work?”
U
upset = angry or unhappy: “I’m sorry you’re upset – I didn’t mean to be rude.”
unhappy = sad: “I was unhappy to hear that I hadn’t got the job.”
V
victimised = to feel you are the victim of someone or something: “My boss kept criticising me and not the others, so I felt quite victimised.”
W
wonderful = great: “I felt wonderful after such a relaxing weekend.”
Emotions Quiz
1. When she found out that her son failed a school test, she felt __ .
- confused
- annoyed
- bewildered
2. The teacher explained the exercise, but she was still __ .
- betrayed
- confused
- at the end of her tether
3. He was a little __ before his first date with Lucy.
- appalled
- apprehensive
- ashamed
4. He's __ because nobody told him about the party. He spent the whole evening at home alone.
- cheated
- cross
- depressed
5. Are you __ that you'll pass the exam?
- confident
- confused
- delighted
6. He was __ when he heard he got the job.
- depressed
- delighted
- down in the dumps
7. She felt a bit __ that she couldn't go to the theatre with the others.
- depressed
- down in the dumps
- disappointed
8. I'm not the __ type. I'm happy with what I've got.
- emotional
- envious
- embarrassed
9. He was really __ when he saw those terrible photos of himself. He hoped his parents wouldn't see them.
- excited
- emotional
- embarrassed
10. She was __ with her son for stealing money.
- furious
- happy
- horrified
11. Andrew always gets a bit __ when he sees politicians talking on the TV.
- furious
- horrified
- irritated
12. I was __ to hear about your experience working as a zoo keeper. It sounds a great job.
- intrigued
- jealous
- keen
13. He felt really __ by all his friends. Nobody helped him at all.
- lucky
- let down
- negative
14. He's __ with his new car. He's wanted one like this for ages.
- nonplussed
- overwhelmed
- over the moon
15. He's __ to help her with her homework too much. He thinks she should try to do it herself.
- reluctant
- scared
- stressed
16. We all felt __ after our relaxing holiday.
- seething
- terrific
- terrible
17. I was __ to hear about your cat.
- seething
- sad
- scared
18. It's not good to feel __ all the time. You should try to relax more.
- seething
- scared
- stressed
19. He's still __ of the dark. We have to leave the light on for him.
- terrible
- terrified
- tense
20. She felt very __ by his thoughtless comments.
- upset
- unhappy
- victimised
ZOOM ID: 645-234-204
No hay comentarios.:
Publicar un comentario