Cover of the textbook Cutting Edge Intermediate - Student's Book

The key answer of exercise 2

The key to exercise solutions in chapter 06 - Preparation for the textbook Cutting Edge Intermediate - Student's Book with authors Sarah Cunningham, Peter Moor and Jonathan Bygrave from Pearson Education

Question

check the meaning of the key phrases below.

Answer

  • to find a body: to find the body of a dead person
  • a great tragedy: a very sad event (when something will be wasted, lost or harmed)
  • to go shooting: to take part in the sport of shooting animals and birds with guns
  • to sink in a bog: to go down below the surface of water, mud, etc., in this case, an area of low wet muddy ground, known, as a bog
  • to chase someone: to quickly follow someone in order to catch them
  • snarling dogs: if an animal snarls, it makes low angry sounds and shows its teeth
  • to see a ghost: to think that you see the image of a dead person
  • a letter of introduction: an important part of polite social interaction in the 18th and 19th centuries. A person would not interact socially with others unless they had been properly introduced, in person or by letter. A person of lower social status would request a patron of higher social status to write a letter of introduction to a third party.
  • French windows: a pair of doors made mostly of glass, usually opening onto a garden
  • to go insane with grief: to become mentally ill because of the extreme sadness you feel after someone you love has died
  • a cure for bad nerves: A cure is something (often a medicine) that solves a problem or illness. If someone has bad nerves, they are easily worried and frightened.
  • to have a nervous breakdown: to experience a mental illness in which someone becomes extremely anxious and cannot deal with the things they usually would
  • to knock someone off their bicycle: to cause someone to fall off their bicycle by getting in their way or hitting them with a vehicle you are driving