Dec 18, 2016
- Barbara is going for a long walk in the country. She is going to take these things with her:
some chocolate ○ a map ○ an umbrella ○ her camera ○ some water ○ a towel She has decided to take these things because: ○ perhaps she’ll want to have a swim ○ it’s possible she’ll get lost ○ she might get hungry ○ she might want to take some photographs ○ perhaps she’ll get thirsty ○ perhaps it will rain - Write sentences with ‘in case’ saying why Barbara has decided to take these things with her.
- She’s going to take
She’s going to take
She’s going to take
She’s going to take
She’s going to take
She’s going to take
- She’s going to take
- What do you say in these situations? Use ‘in case’.
- It’s possible that Mary will need to contact you, so you give her your phone number.
You say:
Here’s my phone number - A friend of yours is going away for a long time. Maybe you won’t see her again before she goes, so you decide to say goodbye now.
You say:
I’ll say - You are shopping in a supermarket with a friend. You think you have everything you need but perhaps you’ve forgotten something. Your friend has the list. You ask him to check it.
You say:
Can you
- It’s possible that Mary will need to contact you, so you give her your phone number.
- Write sentences with ‘in case’.
- There was a possibility that Ann would phone. So I didn’t go out.
I didn’t go out - John thought that he might forget the name of the book. So he wrote it down.
He wrote down - I thought my parents might be worried about me. So I phoned them.
I phoned - I wrote a letter to Jane but I didn’t receive a reply. So I wrote to her again because I thought that perhaps she hadn’t received my first letter.
I - I met some people when I was on holiday in France. They said they might come to London one day. I live in London, so I gave them my address.
I
- There was a possibility that Ann would phone. So I didn’t go out.
- Put ‘in case’ or ‘if’.
- Ann might phone this evening. I don’t want to go out . . . she phones.
- if
- in case
- You should tell the police . . . your bicycle is stolen.
- if
- in case
- I hope you’ll come to London sometime. . . . you come, you can stay with us.
- If
- In case
- This letter is for Susan. Can you give it to her . . . you see her?
- if
- in case
- Write your name and address on your bag . . . you lose it.
- if
- in case
- Go to the lost property office . . . you lose your bag.
- if
- in case
- The burglar alarm will ring . . . somebody tries to break into the house.
- if
- in case
- I’ve just painted the door. I’ll put a WET PAINT notice next to it . . . somebody doesn’t realize it’s just been painted.
- if
- in case
- I was advised to arrange insurance . . . I needed medical treatment while I was abroad.
- if
- in case
- Ann might phone this evening. I don’t want to go out . . . she phones.
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