Mar 2, 2017
- Study box. Read these sentences carefully.
1. Is this where we get off? 2. Your bike’s got a flat tyre. You’d better get off and walk. 3. The teenager was last seen getting off a train in Liverpool. 4. The bus stopped and three people got off it. - Use the sentences in the study box to help you do these exercises.
- Which one of the following means the same as to ‘get off a train’?
- to leave a train
- to board a train
- to travel on a train
- Which of the following can you get off?
- a horse
- a train
- a car
- a plane
- a bicycle
- a ship
- a truck
- a tram
- Which of these are grammatically possible?
- He got off.
- He got the train off.
- He got off the train.
- He got it off.
- He got off it.
- The train was got off.
- Which one of the following means the same as to ‘get off a train’?
- Complete these sentences with the correct form of ‘get off’ and an object (a noun or a pronoun) where necessary:
- There was a problem at the airport when we landed, and they wouldn’t let us
(plane) - You can ask the driver where (you, should)
- Sorry I’m late. I at the wrong stop, and had to walk. (bus)
- You can’t cycle here! at once! (your buke)
- There was a problem at the airport when we landed, and they wouldn’t let us
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