Revision: Student's Book page 14

1. Complete the table.
\begin{tabular}{|l|l|}
\hline
\multicolumn{2}{|l|}{Accidents and injuries} \\
\hline
Noun / Phrase & Verb \\
\hline
1. blood & \\
\hline
2. a burn & burn yourself \\
\hline
3. a cut & \\
\hline
4. a sprain & sprain your ankle \\
\hline
5. an injury & \\
\hline
6. a break & break your arm \\
\hline
\end{tabular}



Answer :

Certainly. Let's complete the table step-by-step by matching each noun or phrase with the corresponding verb.

1. First, if we look at the noun "blood," the associated verb will be "bleed."

2. For "a burn," the phrase provided is "burn yourself," so we do not need to add anything to this cell. It's already complete.

3. Next, the noun "a cut" should be paired with the verb "cut yourself."

4. For "a sprain," the phrase is "sprain your ankle," which means this cell is already complete as well.

5. The noun "an injury" should be paired with the verb "injure yourself."

6. Lastly, "a break" should be paired with the verb "break your arm."

Let's put it all together:

\begin{tabular}{|l|l|}
\hline \multicolumn{2}{|l|}{ Accidents and Injuries } \\
\hline Noun / Phrase & Verb \\
\hline 1. blood & bleed \\
\hline 2. a burn & burn yourself \\
\hline 3. a cut & cut yourself \\
\hline 4. a sprain & sprain your ankle \\
\hline 5. an injury & injure yourself \\
\hline 6. a break & break your arm \\
\hline
\end{tabular}

This completes the table with the correct verbs for each noun or phrase related to accidents and injuries.