Wh-question noun
Wh-questions start with a wh-word (except for How which is known as a Wh-question). Wh-questions begin with who, whom,
what, which, whose, how, why, where, when. Wh-questions expect information in reply, not just yes or no, e.g. Where do you live?
I live in France. See Wh-word.
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Wh-word noun
Wh-words introduce wh-questions and indirect questions. Wh-words include who, whom, what, which, whose, how, why, where,
when. See Wh-question.
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Whole class: see open class.
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Word bank noun
A list of key words learners need to know in order to understand a text or to talk about a topic. Teachers might use a word bank to
pre-teach vocabulary for a text, or they might provide learners with a word bank to use while they are reading a text as a way of
supporting their reading.
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Word boundary noun
Where one word ends and the next one begins, e.g. the word boundary in ice cream is the place between the e in ice and the c in
cream. Word boundaries are important in connected speech because we might drop a letter or join words together at a word
boundary. See connected speech, linking.
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Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |