HOW MUCH LAND DOES A MAN REQUIRE?
Leo Tolstoy
Starter
Students can write the answers on a piece of paper and share their answers with their shoulder partner.
An elder sister came from the town to visit a younger one. The elder one was married to a tradesman and the younger to a peasant. As the two drank tea and talked, the elder sister began to boast and make much of her life in town—how she lived and went about in ease and comfort, dressed her children well, had nice things to eat and drink, and went skating, walking and to the theatre.
The younger sister was vexed at this and retorted by running down the life of a tradesman’s wife and exalting her own in the country.
“For my part, I would never care to exchange my life for yours. I grant you that ours is an uneventful existence; yet you, with all your fine living, must either do a very large trade or be ruined. You may be rich today but tomorrow you may find yourself in the street. We have a better way in the country. The peasant may never be rich but he will always have enough.”
“Enough!” retorted the elder sister. “Enough with nothing but your wretched pigs and cows! Enough with no fine dresses or company? Why, however hard your man may work, you have to live in mud and die there—and your children after you.”
“Oh, no,” replied the younger. “Though we may live in hardship, the land at least is our own and we have no need to bow and scrape before anyone. But you in town you may live in comfort today and find yourselves ruined tomorrow.”
COMPREHENSION
Students will discuss in groups answers to the following questions:
1. An elder sister ___ the town came ___visit a younger one. The elder was married ___a tradesman and the younger ___a peasant.
2. I would never care ___exchange my life ___ yours.
3. We have a better way ___the country.
Q 1. Why did the elder sister come to the country?
Q 2. What made the younger sister angry?
Q 3. What did the younger sister tell the elder sister?
Q 4. How did the elder sister react?
Q5.What would you have said to your brother or sister at home if s/he had blamed you for breaking the window pane ?
VOCABULARY
Meaning:
Vexed at: very angry at someone
Retorted by: to answer back angrily
Life of: the way of living
Examples:
My mother was vexed at me because I did not finish the housework.
The angry passenger retorted by pointing out the actual bus fare to the driver.
The old woman led a life of suffering and misery.
The students will make three sentences from each phrase.
GRAMMAR
May and might: permission
Asking for permission:
May and might are used to ask permission. They are more formal than can and would. Might is very polite and formal, and is not common.
Examples of may
May I put the TV on?
May I leave the room?
May I go and see my friend?
May I borrow your book?
Examples of might
I wonder if I might have a little more butter.
I was thinking if I might join you for the trip.
I wonder if I could take a look at your book.
Use may or might
1.______I go to the library?
2. I wonder if I _______ have a word with you.
3.______I share my sandwich with you?
4. I wonder if I _____come by your house this afternoon.
5._______ I speak with you for a minute?
Giving and refusing permission
May is used to give permission. May not is used to refuse permission and to forbid.
May I put the TV on? , ‘Yes, of course you may’.
‘ No, you may not’.
Writing
Look at the picture and write a story in one or two paragraphs.
Key words:
ball bat run-out my turn fight quarrel
Students will work in groups. Only one student will read the story to represent the whole group. Students will review their work by reading to the whole group. Changes will be made before the story is read to the whole class.
Students will have to perform two activities.
Dialogue: Students will work in groups. The students in each group will work in pairs and write down a dialogue between a teacher and a student by using may when giving and refusing permission. The students will use the dialogue in conversation with each other. They will shift their roles until they know have comprehended how may is used when giving and refusing permission.
Debate
Students will work in groups to discuss on what they think of the two sisters. They will take sides with any of the two sisters and argue why they feel so strongly about her views.
Debate
Students will work in groups to discuss on what they think of the two sisters. They will take sides with any of the two sisters and argue why they feel so strongly about her views.
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