
Answer — Exercise 10
15 - What's cooking?·Outcomes Upper-Intermediate - Student's Book
Question
Read the Grammar box. Then choose the correct option to complete the recipe below.
Answer
- and (you could say and after that, but not just after)
- when (it can’t be then as there’s a connected clause: when you put the onion in, it should sizzle)
- Then (you could say after that, but not just after)
- as (here, as means ‘because’)
- so (this links to the result you want. It shows the reason for cooking the onion slowly.)
- although (however usually begins a sentence and is followed by a comma)
- while (while is often used with the present or past continuous; during is followed by a noun, e.g. during the war / the lesson, etc.)
- otherwise (= because if you don’t; unless = if not)
- Once (afterwards is usually followed by a comma and a whole new clause, once is followed by a subject + verb, often in the present perfect)
- until (use until to show the point to which you want an action to continue)
- provided (= as long as you do something / so long as you do it / if – and only if – you do it)
- if (= if you can avoid / help it are fixed chunks; in case = in order to be prepared for something that may happen, e.g. Take an umbrella in case it rains.)
- Then (starts the sentence, shows time sequence)
- for (for + period of time; during + noun)
- to (use to to show purpose, e.g. ‘Why did you do it?’ ‘To . . .)