유닛 26: Our future on Mars?
Future perfect
유닛 고르세요
- 1Pop-ups
- 2Hidden talents
- 3Can't buy me love
- 4Travellers' tales
- 5The colleague from hell
- 6Jurassic mystery: unpacking the past
- 7Career changes
- 8Art
- 9Project management
- 10The dog ate my homework!
- 11The diary of a double agent
- 12Fashion forward
- 13Flat pack skyscrapers
- 14Extreme sports
- 15Food fads
- 16Me, my selfie and I
- 17Endangered animals
- 18A nip and a tuck: cosmetic surgery
- 19I'm really sorry...
- 20Telling stories
- 21Fakes and phrasals
- 22Looking to the future
- 23Becoming familiar with things
- 24From rags to riches
- 25Against the odds
- 26Our future on Mars?
- 27Where is it illegal to get a fish drunk?
- 28Dodgy dating
- 29Annoying advice
- 30I'll have been studying English for thirty weeks
세션 1
Would you follow a Thatcherite, Blairite or Stalinist leader? Would any of these be preferable to an Orwellian society? Learn more about adjectives that come from the names of famous people in this session.
-esque
The suffix -esque is another one that is used in eponymous adjectives. It's simply added to the end of the name.
These examples all come from the arts. Do you who they refer to?
Daliesque
In the style of Salvador Dali, the Spanish surrealist painter.
Capraesque
In the style of Frank Capra, the Italian-American film director.
Rubenesque
In the style of Peter Paul Rubens, the Flemish painter.
Dylanesque
In the style of Bob Dylan, the musician from the US.
Kafkaesque
In the style of Franz Kafka, the writer. Also used to describe a nightmarish situation with complex bureaucracy and a feeling of oppression.
- When I arrived at the airport they arrested me, a case of mistaken identity. When they finally realised their mistake they let me go but then arrested me again because my visa had run out. It had only run out because they had kept me in jail! What a Kafkaesque nightmare.
Pythonesque
In the style of Monty Python, the British comedy group.
문서 읽고 엑티비티를 하세요

Not just for eponymous adjectives
There are a few common adjectives ending in -esque that are not eponymous.
picturesque - a place that is attractive and charming
- There are hundreds of picturesque villages in rural France.
statuesque - a description of someone tall, dignified and graceful: usually used about a woman.
- The princess looked statuesque in her stunning dress.
grotesque - looking disgusting and ugly or shockingly inappropriate
- At Halloween he went out in a grotesque mask that was really scary.
- When he was chairman of the company he earnt a grotesque amount of money.
To do
Can you use these -esque words the correct way? Try the quiz to find out.
-esque adjectives
5 Questions
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
도움
엑티비티
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
힌트
Do you think the missing word is something positive or negative?Question 1 of 5
도움
엑티비티
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
힌트
Which adjective can refer to the oppressive feeling of bureaucracy?Question 2 of 5
도움
엑티비티
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
힌트
This adjective means something that look disgusting and horrible.Question 3 of 5
도움
엑티비티
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
힌트
This adjective refers to the way someone looks, in a positive way.Question 4 of 5
도움
엑티비티
In each question choose the best adjective to complete the sentence.
힌트
This adjective refers to extremely offensive and inappropriate behaviour.Question 5 of 5
Excellent!Great job!네 안타깝군요이번 점수입니다:
End of Session 1
That's the end of the vocabulary session. Coming up in Session 2 it's grammar and a look at the future perfect.
Session Vocabulary
Eponymous adjectives with -esque
Daliesque
Capraesque
Rubenesque
Dylanesque
Kafkaesque
Pinteresque
Pythonesque
Non-eponymous adjectives with -esque
picturesque
statuesque
grotesque