kiosk ['kɪɔsk] -- köşk; telephone kiosk telefon budkası
senior ['si:njə] -- 1. a. böyük, yaşlı, baş. 2. n. yuxarı kurs tələbəsi
Vocabulary Practice:
Task: Type the appropriate word or phrase into each blank line: (chores, eat out, energy, household, mature, popular, prepare, resident, the Northeast, type)
I didn’t _____ dinner yet. I’ll go make it now.
A typical _____ in the U.S. consists of parents and their children.
Almost everyone likes pizza. It’s a very _____ food.
I don’t want to eat at home today. Let’s _____.
What _____ of soup do you want: chicken or vegetable?
She used the elevator because she didn’t have the _____ to climb stairs.
We can’t play until we finish our _____.
A _____ of New York is a New Yorker.
Grammar:
Prepositions of Place: In, At, On.
In the passage did you notice a lot of prepositions to indicate the location of things?
There were several prepositions in sentences like these:
Besides dining at traditional restaurants, people are eating at fast-food outlets, bringing home take-out food, having complete meals as they drive in their cars, and even eating on the street.
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Two of the prepositions found in this reading, at and in, can frequently be confusing. Let’s take a closer look at each one of them.
One way to distinguish in from at is to visualize a room or other enclosure. If you want to talk about something inside this room or enclosure, you usually use the word in to describe its location:
We usually have breakfast in our kitchen.
Mary put her package in her car.
Mr. Jones is in the elevator.
At refers to a point in a general area, or just inside or just outside of this area:
Meet me at the airport.
I ran into Helen at the store.
John said “good-bye” to Mary at the door; he didn’t follow into the house.
You can also use at to describe being next to or in front of something:
She was standing at the sink, peeling onions.
Elizabeth is sitting at her desk.
You also use at when you want to indicate that you are just visiting a place rather than staying inside of it:
We’re going to have Grandma’s birthday dinner at a restaurant.
Dr. Bonilla is staying at the Hilton Hotel.
After the verb arrive, and some other verbs that do not express action, use at to refer to a place that is smaller than a city or a town:
Even though Anne left home late, she arrived at her officeon time.
There was a lot of traffic at the airport.
Use in to refer to a place that is as large as or larger than a city or a town:
After ten days of driving, we finally arrived in California.
His brothers are working in South America.
Another common preposition is on. In the reading, you should note a common idiomatic use of on:
…even eating on the street.
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While in the phrase above on refers to a location, typically on indicates the surface of something: a wall, a desk, a table, etc.
This simple chart will help clarify some basic uses of in, on, and at when you use them to express location:
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