Unit 19: A place to live
Goldilocks
Select a unit
- 1Nice to meet you!
- 2What to wear
- 3Like this, like that
- 4The daily grind
- 5Christmas every day
- 6Great achievers
- 7The Titanic
- 8Travel
- 9The big wedding
- 10Sunny's job hunt
- 11The bucket list
- 12Moving and migration
- 13Welcome to BBC Broadcasting House
- 14New Year, New Project
- 15From Handel to Hendrix
- 16What's the weather like?
- 17The Digital Revolution
- 18A detective story
- 19A place to live
- 20The Cult of Celebrity
- 21Welcome to your new job
- 22Beyond the planets
- 23Great expectations!
- 24Eco-tourism
- 25Moving house
- 26It must be love
- 27Job hunting success... and failure
- 28Speeding into the future
- 29Lost arts
- 30Tales of survival
Vocabulary Reference
Goldilocks
6 Minute Vocabulary
Normal adjectives - Strong adjectives
funny - hilarious
bad - terrible
good - wonderful, amazing, fantastic, fabulous
Intensifiers for normal adjectives
very, quite, not so, just a little bit
Intensifier for strong adjectives
absolutely
London's housing crisis
Londoners
people who live in London
first-time buyers
people buying their first home
the property ladder
the stages in owning property, when you first buy a small house or flat, then a bigger one, then an even bigger one, and so on
properties
(here) houses, flats, apartments
house-hunters
people looking for a house to buy
family housing
housing built especially for families
green belt
the name for an area of fields and trees and no city development around London
rural
relating to the countryside, not the city
affordable
reasonably priced; not too expensive
expanding
(here) getting bigger
unusable
not good enough to be used
industrial
used for industry and factories
commercial
used for shops and stores
the Treasury
the UK government department responsible for deciding how the government spends money
critics
(here) people who disagree strongly with something
residential
used for housing
Problems at home and at work
judging
(here) deciding
hot
(here) very spicy
throw away
(here) put in the rubbish bin
takeaway
food cooked in a restaurant that is eaten somewhere else
open-plan
having a large room that is not divided into smaller rooms or areas
hot-desking
a practice where workers do not have their own desk - instead they use whichever desk is free
News Report
head teacher
the teacher who is in charge of a school
county
an area of a country (the UK is divided into 86 counties)
to claim
to say that something is true
strain
stress or pressure
overcrowded
containing too many people
capacity
enough space
to turn people away
not to allow people to enter
prospect
possibility of something happening in the future
cash
money
Drama
guest list
names of people who are asked to come to a party
banquet
large formal meal
merry
happy and animated
catching up
discussing what happened since the last time you met someone
honeymoon
a holiday for the new husband and wife after the wedding