Contractions
I’ll
leave
later.
You’ll
He’ll
She’ll
It’ll
You’ll
We’ll
They’ll
Contractions
I
won’t
leave
later.
You
He
She
It
You
We
They
Note: Do not use contractions with short answers that are afirmative.
Yes,
I will
.
(Correct)
Yes,
I’ll
.
(Incorrect)
Sickness and Health
|
151
B.
Use the grammar
Rewrite each sentence using the correct contraction.
1.
I will not be able to go shopping today.
2.
We will bring snacks to feed the children.
3.
You will have more energy if you eat more consistently throughout the day.
4.
We will eat a family meal once a day.
5.
She will only buy produce that has been grown locally.
6.
He will eat organic food whenever it’s possible.
7.
You will increase your iber intake by eating black beans.
8.
She will try to drink more water.
VI. READ IT AGAIN
Read the rules again. Answer the questions.
1.
Describe the kinds of food that make up a healthy diet.
2.
Why is it important to drink a lot of water?
HAPPINESS BOOSTERS
I. PRE-READING
A.
Background information
Mental Health
This excerpt is from the book
Happier
,
by Dr. Ben-Shahar
.
He has studied the
nature of happiness and its effects on mental health. He claims that getting
involved in meaningful activities can lead to a happier, more fulilling life.
152
|
Better Reading English
B.
Words to know before you read
Match the words to their definitions.
_____ 1.
boost
a. spend time doing things that don’t
require thought or effort
_____ 2.
impacts
b. lacking in energy or will
_____ 3.
mindless
c. to have a direct effect on
_____ 4.
conidence
d. to make weak
_____ 5.
passion
e. strong feeling of enthusiasm
_____ 6.
passive
f. not intellectually challenging
_____ 7.
engaged
g. belief that you can do something well
_____ 8.
vegetate
h. to make full
_____ 9.
replenish
i. to increase
_____ 10.
enervate
j. greatly interested and involved
II. READ
Read the text. Mark the words you don’t know, but don’t stop reading to look
them up.
Happiness Boosters: The Value of Free Time
Engaging in activities that are personally meaningful, impacts our experience in
other areas, not directly related to these activities. The conidence, the passion,
the sense of fulillment gained from such experiences spills over to other areas
of our lives.
Meaningful and pleasurable activities can function like a candle in a dark
room—and just as it takes a small lame or two to light up an entire physical
space, one or two happy experiences during an otherwise uninspiring period
can transform our general state (of mind). I call these brief but transforming
experiences
happiness boosters
—activities, lasting anywhere from a few
minutes to a few hours, that provide us with both meaning and pleasure, both
future and present beneit.
Happiness boosters can inspire and invigorate us, acting as both a
motivational pull and a motivational push. For example, a meaningful weekend
outing can change a person’s overall experience of life—including the hours
spent at work. The outing can be motivating and pull the person through the
week, giving her something to look forward to when she gets up for work in the
morning. The same happiness booster can then energize her, providing her the
push she needs by recharging her motivational stores for the following week.
Ideally, we want our entire day to be illed with happy experiences. This
kind of life is not always attainable, though, and it might be that we need to
wait until evenings or weekends to pursue activities that provide present and
future beneit. One of the common mistakes people make is that in their free
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