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people who have moved to her country
her experiences of moving to another country
why she prefers living in a different country
1 Doors graffiti-red auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
2 No one takes my hand. auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
3 I even miss the sewers. auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
4 chattering calls auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
5 the temple incense auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
6 the bright saris auditoryvisualolfactorytactile
positive
negative
neutral
1 With hydraulic fracturing, big machines drill a well down through the water table into the rocks –sometimes more than a kilometre down. abcdef
2 Fossil fuels have been relied on for a long time ... abcdef
3 There are also worries about the vast amounts of water needed for fracking … (not ‘People are worried about …’) abcdef
4 What is fracking? abcdef
5 The supporters of fracking believe that it is a safe and cheap way of getting essential energy … Opponents believe that fracking is dangerous. abcdef
6 Although the technique is not new … (not ‘Although the technique isn’t new …’) abcdef
1 Which pun uses a homophone of a word which means ‘to stop living’?
2 Which pun uses a word which sounds similar to a place where we have our hair cut?
3 Which pun uses a word which looks similar to a word which means ‘cut’?
4 Which pun uses two homophones?
;
5 Which pun uses a word with two meanings which can also mean ‘frightening’ or ‘dangerous’?
6 Which pun uses a word which looks similar to something we use to style our hair?
a man who changes his work
a man who starts a business
a boy who starts working
1 His mother washed clothes, and his father was a soldier who was always drunk. abcd
2 The room smelt of death. abcd
3 Mr Sowerberry had closed the shop, and he was writing by the light of a candle when they arrived. abcd
4 He kicked Oliver, … abcd
5 ‘Open the windows, you lazy boy …’ abcd
E in the f
1 The extract is using the idea of time travel to create a fictional scenario.
2 It is theorising how humans might evolve in the future.
3 The extract suggests what life might be like on other planets.
4 None of the characters, apart from the narrator, are human.
5 The narrator is curious as to how the Earth has become like this.
However, people's brains appear to age at different speeds.
Our brains are very complicated organs.
Some exercise such as table tennis, which is fast and competitive, and where you have to think very quickly, can increase the size of the cortex.
This might be because aerobic exercise can create new neurons.
Research has also shown that education plays a big part in protecting our brains as we get older.
Scientists believe that anthocyanins, natural plant colourings, help the brain stay young.
1 The play is about poorer people in society.
2 It gives the message that some people don’t get married because of love.
3 The writer of the play wants us to admire Lady Basildon.
4 Mabel Chiltern respects the people of London.
1 The poem uses an AA BB .
2 ‘At the flick of a switch, night becomes day’ is an example of imagery.
3 It talks about the art class being a ‘shelter away from life’s storm’ as a for it being a calm place.
1 Extract A is probably from a travel guide.
2 Extract A does not try to paint a picture for the reader.
3 Extract B is probably from an academic essay.
4 Extract C includes statistics.
5 Extract D aims to persuade the reader to do something.
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