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Title: Get Ready for taking the TOEFL, Proficiency Test


1
Get Ready for taking the TOEFL,Proficiency Test
  • Prepared and Presented by
  • Kartika Noez

2
GRAMMAR
  • Some Strategies to work with problems with
    grammar of English
  • Identify the Subject and Verb in the sentence,
    make sure if the sentence already contains
    Subject and verb, if No then try to locate the
    options that contain subject and Verb, then
    consider the agreement between the two.
  • If the problem lies on the Subject it must be
    dealt with noun so then check if the articles or
    determiners, plurality, or noun clause, or gerund
    or to infinitive is used properly. Or, if there
    is a blank space after subject, it means that we
    are going to deal with the adjective clause or
    appositive, when there are two commas.
  • If the problem is dealt with the verb, we need to
    check the agreement between subject and verb, and
    then go to see if the tense is used correctly.
  • If there is no problem with the Subject and Verb,
    the problems might be found in the object or the
    adverb of the sentence, so take a look and check.
    When dealing with object, it is probably dealing
    with the adjective clause or appositive.

3
Contd Expl-1
  • Examples
  • ----S V--- with their surroundings, or they
    hide in crevices for protection.

4
Contd Expl-2
  • ----S--- grow close to the ground in the short
    Artic summer.

5
Contd Expl-3
  • Liz Moses, ----N/NP---, grows beautiful
    vegetables in her garden.

6
Contd Expl-4
  • We do not ---V---- the bow drill was first
    developed for woodworking or fire making.

7
Contd Expll-5
  • Willa Cather is an author ---Adj Cl----for her
    evocative and memorable vision of frontier
    prairie life

8
Some Basic Points to Know
  • English Sentence What We Need to Know
  • A sentence contains at least one subject and one
    predicate
  • Peter eats at 500.
  • Peter is the Subject, the doer of the action
  • eat is the predicate, the action
  • Besides, S and P, a sentence might contain
    objects or noun complements.
  • a. Object (O)
  • 1. Direct receiver of the action of a sentence
    (DO)
  • 2. Indirect receiver of the action of a sentence
    (IO)
  • 3. Object of a preposition (O of Prep)
  • I gave Jane a book for her birthday
  • IO DO O of Prep

9
Contd(1)
  • b. Noun Complement ( C )
  • 1. Subject identifier after the verb BE (SC)
  • 2. Object Identifier after the direct object
    of a sentence (OC)
  • Jack is a doctor
  • doctor is the SC
  • They elected him president
  • president is the OC
  • The subjects, objects, and noun complements of
    English sentences normally occur as one of the
    five noun structure forms given below.
  • Noun (phrase) Roses are beautiful plants
  • subject SC

10
Contd (2)
  • Pronoun You like roses
  • S
  • You gave him the roses
  • S IO
  • Gerund (phrase) Growing roses is your favorite
    hobby (as S)
  • You relax by growing roses (as O of
    Prep)
  • Infinitive (phrase) You like to grow roses (O
    of Prep)
  • Noun clause Everyone says that you grow
    beautiful roses. (DO)

11
Contd
  • A sentence can contain more than one clause. This
    sentence contains a main clause that contains a
    subject and a verb and also a subordinate clause
    that also contains a subject and a verb. However,
    a subordinate clause cannot stand alone as a
    sentence.
  • There are three types of subordinate clauses
    noun clauses, adjective clauses, and adverb
    clauses.
  • A noun clause functions as a subject, object, or
    complement in a sentence.
  • I like what you said
  • An adjective clause functions as an adjective in
    a sentence.
  • I like the book that you gave me
  • An adverb clause functions as an adverb in a
    sentence.
  • Jack will call you as soon as he gets home.

12
Contd (3)
  • Clause markers (CM) are used to connect clauses
    in English
  • Coordinating conjunctions (CM that is used to
    connect main clause with other main clauses).
    These includes and, but, or, so, for, and yet.
  • Karina has a new coat, and Carolyn has new
    boots.
  • (a comma is usually placed just before the
    conjunction)
  • Other clause markers connecting main clauses
    include however, nevertheless, in addition, as a
    result, on the other hand, furthermore, and
    moreover.
  • Carolyn has new boots in addition, she has new
    gloves.
  • (a semicolon () usually precedes the CM but
    sometimes a period (.) can be used preceding the
    CM)

13
Contd (4)
  • The clause markers for noun clauses are that,
    how, how many (much), what, when, where, why,
    who, whom, whose, and which.
  • I am not sure that we will be able to take a
    vacation
  • The clause markers for adjective clauses are who,
    whom, whose, which, that, and sometimes, when,
    where, and why
  • I like the cat that has yellow stripes
  • The clause markers for adverb clauses, some, are
    after, as long as, because, as, if, unless,
    although, while, when, and since.
  • We will take a walk after we finish studying

14
Contd (5)
  • Appositive and Reduced Adjective Clause
  • Appositive a noun structure which comes just
    after or just before another noun structure. The
    appositive renames or has the same meaning as the
    noun structure it accompanies. They are often set
    off by commas. They come from adjective clauses.
  • Carol, who is my colleague, studies
    psycholinguistics. (Adj. Cl)
  • Carol, my colleague, studies psycholinguistics.
    (appositive)
  • Thus,
  • Adjective Clause that uses a reduced form can be
    written using an appositive.
  • Reduced Adjective Clause
  • Carol, who is my colleague, studies
    psycholinguistics, becoming
  • Carol, my colleague, studies psycholinguistics

15
Contd (6)
  • Reduced Adverb Clauses
  • Some of the adverb clauses can be reduced.
  • Although he works very hard, he cannot earn more
    than what he spends for food
  • becoming,
  • Although working very hard, he cannot earn more
    than what he spends for food

16
READING
  • Some Common Strategies Used against Problems of
    Reading Comprehension
  • Recognize the types of the questions before
    starting to read the passage.
  • Start working with questions of word meanings in
    context.
  • Continue to work with questions about finding
    referents.
  • The next can be directed to search the answers of
    questions about detain and factual information.
  • Those types of questions will give us time to
    read at a glance the passage. It will help us to
    build our schemata that is worthwhile for helping
    us to understand in the second reading. The
    second reading is done for answering the rest
    types of questions including inferences, topic
    and main ideas, purpose and organizational
    patterns, and authors attitude and tone of the
    passage.

17
Reading Practices
  • Questions 1-9
  • Spiders produce three basic types of webs. The
    sheet web is a two-dimensional layer of threads
    seemingly laid out at random. The space web is a
    three-dimensional, wispy structure. The orb web,
    by far the most familiar, is the two-dimensional
    cartwheel pattern.
  • Of the 30,000 spider species, some 6,000 are
    orb spinners. For three decades Dr. Peter N. Witt
    has studied orb spinners, especially a species
    called Areneus diadematus, and their webs. Witt
    is a German-born medical doctor and self-taught
    arachnologist, whose passion is to understand the
    ways of spiders. Witt has delved deeply into the
    behavior of spiders and vastly expanded our
    knowledge about orb spinners and their webs. Some
    of his findings have even amazed other
    arachnologists.

18
Contd RP-1
  • We have actually compared human building
    activities to spider building, and we find an
    enormous amount of parallel between the two,
    Witt says. For one of thing, just like their
    human counterparts in the building traders, orb
    spinners erect a form of removable scaffolding as
    they weave their webs.
  • Orb spinners are solitary creatures who dwell
    one to a web. The web is home, food source, and
    mating ground, it is guarded aggressively. When a
    male arrives at mating time, the courtship ritual
    is an intricate set of advances and retreats
    until the female is finally won over and no
    longer tries to kill her would-be lover.

19
Contd RP-2
  • Orb spinners each weave a new web every day,
    working in the predawn darkness and executing the
    distinctive pattern of concentric circles and
    radial lines in a half hour or less. There is
    nothing important as web building, because
    without the web there is no food, Witt says.

20
Contd RP-3
  • The topic of this passage is
  • a. spiders
  • b. different types of webs spiders make
  • c. Dr. Peter N. Witt
  • d. Orb spinners and their webs
  • According to the passage, the difference between
    the sheet web and the orb web is
  • a. the pattern
  • b. the size
  • c, the texture
  • d. the length of threads spun by the spiders

21
Contd RP-4
  • The phrase at random in line two is closest in
    meaning to
  • a. arbitrarily
  • b. quickly
  • c. deftly
  • d. incongruously
  • We can infer from passage that an arachnologist
    is
  • a. a photographer
  • b. a medical doctor
  • c. a person who studies spiders
  • d. a person who intensely dislikes spiders

22
Contd RP-5
  • The word their in line 14 refers to
  • a. humans who build
  • b. other arachnologists
  • c. Witt and his associates
  • d. orb spinners
  • According to the passage, web-making by spiders
    and human building activities are
  • a. both dependent on removable scaffolding
  • b. hard to compare
  • c. simple to analyze
  • d. lengthy procedures

23
Contd RP-6
  • The word it in line 18 refers to
  • We can infer that the female or spinner is NOT
  • a. hard-working c. solitary
  • b. cautious d. easily wooed
  • We can conclude the passage that the purpose of
    webs is
  • a. to initiate courtship of spiders
  • b. to engage spiders in useful activity
  • c. to provide a way for spiders to entrap food
  • d. to display artistic talents of spiders.

24
Contd text 2
  • Questions 10 11
  • When a strong earthquake occurs on the ocean
    floor rather than on land, a tremendous force is
    exerted on the seawater and one or more large,
    destructive waves called tsunamis are commonly
    called tidal waves in the United States, but this
    is really an inappropriate name in that the cause
    of the tsunami is an underground earthquake
    rather than the oceans tides.
  • Far from land, a tsunami can move through the
    wide open vastness of the ocean at a speed of 600
    miles (900 kilometers) per hour and often can
    travel tremendous distances without losing height
    and strength. When a tsunami reaches shallow
    coastal water, it can reach a height of 100 feet
    (30 meters) or more and can cause tremendous
    flooding and damage to coastal areas.

25
Contd text 2
  • The paragraph preceding the passage most probably
    discusses
  • a. tsunami in various parts of the world
  • b. the negative effects of tsunamis
  • c. land-based earthquakes
  • d. the effect of tides on tsunamis
  • Which of the following is most likely the topic
    of the paragraph following the passage
  • a. the cause of tsunamis
  • b. the destructive effects of tsunamis on the
    coast
  • c. the differences between tsunamis and the
    tidal waves
  • d. the distances covered by tsunamis
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