A blog to help secondary school students improve English. You can find mind maps, worksheets, videos and songs as well as some of the project works and activities done by the students.
Hello! My name's Liliana. I'm a teacher of English (Language and Literature) to Italian teenage stu
Ascolta la canzone e completa la tabella con la forma del passato che senti.
Base Form
Simple Past (Canzone)
1. Be
__________ / __________
2. Have
__________
3. Do
__________
4. Say
__________
5. Go
__________
6. Get
__________
7. Make
__________
8. Know
__________
9. Think
__________
10. Take
__________
2. Reading & Grammar Exercise
Testo:Yesterday was a busy day. I had a big breakfast and did my homework early. I said goodbye to my mom and went to school. I got a good grade on my test because I knew all the answers. I made a new friend and thought about our next game. Finally, I took the bus home.
3. Task-Based Activity: "The Story Chain" (Speaking)
Dividi la classe in piccoli gruppi.
Il primo studente inizia una storia con: "Yesterday, I went to the park."
Il secondo studente deve continuare usando un altro verbo della lista: "At the park, I made a sandwich."
Il terzo continua: "I thought it was delicious."
L'obiettivo รจ usare tutti e 10 i verbi per completare una storia di gruppo coerente.
4. Writing Activity: My Weekend
Scrivi un breve paragrafo (50-80 parole) su cosa hai fatto lo scorso fine settimana. Devi utilizzare almeno 5 dei 10 verbi irregolari imparati oggi.
Esempio di inizio: "Last Saturday, I got up at 9 o'clock. I had a coffee and..."
5. Games: Verb Bingo
Consegna agli studenti una griglia 3x3. Chiedi loro di scrivere 9 forme base a scelta tra le 10 studiate. Tu (l'insegnante) chiamerai i verbi al passato (es: "WENT!"). Se lo studente ha la forma base corrispondente ("GO"), la segna. Chi fa riga o colonna grida "BINGO!".
The Incommunicability of Language: Words fail to convey true meaning. Conversations are circular and often leave the characters more isolated than before.
The "Trapped" Condition: Characters are stuck in a loop. Pirandello’s characters are trapped in their "script" (trauma); Beckett’s characters are trapped in "waiting" (the void).
The Breakdown of Reason: Traditional logic and "well-made play" structures are abandoned in favor of fragmentation and chaos.
Comparative Analysis: Key Works
Feature
Samuel Beckett (Waiting for Godot)
Luigi Pirandello (Sei personaggi...)
The Nature of Reality
The Absurd: Life has no inherent meaning. The reality is a barren stage where "nothing happens."
Relativism: Reality is subjective. Everyone has their own "truth," and objective reality is an illusion.
Identity
The Liquid Self: Vladimir and Estragon struggle to remember who they are or what they did yesterday. Identity is eroding.
The Multiple Self: A person is "one, no one, and a hundred thousand." Characters are fixed in a single, painful moment.
The Conflict
Man vs. Silence: The struggle is to fill the silence while waiting for a "Godot" who never arrives.
Art vs. Life: The struggle of "living" beings trying to be represented by "actors" who can never truly become them.
The "Action"
Stasis: Time is a circle. The play ends exactly where it began. "Let’s go." (They do not move).
Rupture: The intrusion of the "Characters" into the "Actors'" rehearsal creates a violent collision between fiction and reality.
Key Differences: The "How" and "Why"
1. Philosophy of the Mask
Pirandello: Focuses on the Social Mask. Characters suffer because they are forced into roles by society or by a specific moment in time (the "Form"). They want to escape the mask to be "Life," but Life without Form is chaos.
Beckett: Focuses on the Ontological Nakedness. His characters have already lost their social masks. They are reduced to their most basic biological and spiritual needs (boots, hats, carrots, and the need for a savior).
2. The Role of the Audience
Pirandello: Actively provokes the audience by breaking the boundary between the stage and the theater house. He wants the audience to feel the intellectual vertigo of questioning what is "real."
Beckett: Submerges the audience in the same boredom and anxiety as the characters. The audience waits with Vladimir and Estragon, making the experience visceral rather than just intellectual.
3. The Resolution (or Lack Thereof)
Pirandello: Ends in a tragic "shattering." The distinction between the stage-death and the real-death of the child remains blurred, leaving the "Actors" confused and the "Characters" still seeking their author.
Beckett: Ends in a "hollow loop." There is no climax or tragedy in the traditional sense, only the realization that tomorrow will be exactly like today.
Summary Note: Pirandello’s theater is about the agony of being someone, whereas Beckett’s theater is about the agony of being at all.
The characters (Vladimir and Estragon) must create their own meaning in a world where Godot never arrives and instructions are unclear.
The Absurd
Life is seen as a search for meaning that ultimately fails. The dialogue often loops or leads nowhere because language itself is "broken."
Time & Stagnation
Time is distorted. The characters can't remember if it's Monday or Saturday. "Nothing happens, nobody comes, nobody goes, it's awful!"
The Dual Nature
The characters come in pairs (Vladimir/Estragon, Pozzo/Lucky). This suggests that human connection is the only thing that makes the "waiting" bearable.
2. Symbolic Scheme: Who or What is Godot?
Beckett famously said, "If I knew who Godot was, I would have said so in the play." However, Godot functions as a symbol for several concepts:
Religious: A representation of God (the name "God-ot"). People wait for salvation that never comes.
Political/Social: A revolutionary change or a "strong leader" who will finally fix society’s problems.
Personal: The "hope" or "distraction" we use to avoid facing the emptiness of our own lives.
3. The Structural Scheme
The play is famous for its symmetrical structure. Act II is almost a mirror of Act I, emphasizing that the characters are trapped in a cycle:
Arrival: The characters arrive at the tree.
Distraction: They talk, eat, argue, and contemplate suicide to pass the time.
The Interruption: Pozzo and Lucky pass through (representing physical power and intellectual slavery).
The Messenger: A boy arrives to say Godot isn't coming today, but "surely tomorrow."
Resolution (or lack thereof): They say "Let's go," but they do not move.
4. The Human Condition
The "meaning" isn't in who Godot is, but in what the characters do while they wait.
Vladimir (Didi): Represents the intellectual/spiritual side. He remembers the past and seeks philosophical answers.
Estragon (Gogo): Represents the physical/instinctual side. He focuses on his boots, his hunger, and his physical pain.
Together, they represent the whole of humanity: stuck between the needs of the body and the questions of the mind, waiting for an answer that may not exist.
Waiting for Godot: Multiple Choice Questionnaire
This quiz tests your knowledge of Samuel Beckett's masterpiece of Absurdist theatre.
1. Who are the two main protagonists of the play?
A) Pozzo and Lucky
B) Vladimir and Estragon
C) Godot and the Boy
D) Cain and Abel
2. What is the primary setting of the play?
A) A busy city street
B) A country road with a tree
C) A room in a decaying mansion
D) A desert island
3. What are Vladimir and Estragon’s nicknames for each other?
A) Gogo and Didi
B) Vlady and Esty
C) Pozzo and Lucky
D) Pip and Zip
4. What physical ailment frequently bothers Estragon?
A) A chronic cough
B) Sore feet and tight boots
C) Poor eyesight
D) A prostate condition
5. What physical ailment frequently bothers Vladimir?
A) Migraines
B) Back pain
C) A bladder problem (frequent urination)
D) Deafness
6. What does Pozzo use to control Lucky?
A) A whip and a rope
B) A gun
C) Money
D) Promises of food
7. What is the only thing Lucky does when he is told to "think"?
A) Recites a coherent philosophical lecture
B) Sings a melancholic opera
C) Delivers a long, nonsensical, repetitive monologue
D) Draws a map in the dirt
8. What does Lucky carry in Pozzo’s bag that turns out to be surprisingly heavy?
A) Gold coins
B) Sand
C) Books
D) Stones
9. When the Boy arrives, who does he say he works for?
A) Mr. Pozzo
B) Mr. Godot
C) The Government
D) He is self-employed
10. What is the Boy's specific job?
A) He minds the sheep
B) He minds the goats
C) He is a messenger for the local village
D) He is a woodcutter
11. In Act II, how has the setting changed?
A) The tree is dead
B) The tree has four or five leaves
C) The road is paved
D) A house has been built in the background
12. In Act II, what significant change has happened to Pozzo?
A) He has become wealthy
B) He has become blind
C) He has set Lucky free
D) He has forgotten how to speak
13. What has happened to Lucky in Act II?
A) He has become dumb (mute)
B) He has died
C) He has become the master
D) He has run away
14. What do Vladimir and Estragon contemplate doing to end their wait?
A) Walking to the next town
B) Fighting each other
C) Hanging themselves from the tree
D) Stealing Pozzo's horse
15. Why do they decide NOT to hang themselves?
A) They are afraid of ghosts
B) They don't have a sturdy enough rope or the tree might break
C) They think Godot is watching
D) They find a reason to be happy
16. What food does Vladimir often offer Estragon?
A) Apples and oranges
B) Turnips and carrots
C) Bread and wine
D) Chicken bones
17. To which philosophical/theatrical movement does this play belong?
A) Realism
B) Romanticism
C) Theatre of the Absurd
D) Neoclassicism
18. What is the famous final line of both Act I and Act II?
A) "Let's go." (They do not move)
B) "He's coming."
C) "Godot is dead."
D) "Where are we?"
19. How many characters actually appear on stage throughout the play?
A) 2
B) 4
C) 5
D) 6
20. Who is Godot?
A) A local landowner
B) A representation of God
C) A revolutionary leader
D) His identity is never revealed and he never appears
Answer Key
B | 2. B | 3. A | 4. B | 5. C | 6. A | 7. C | 8. B | 9. B | 10. A
B | 12. B | 13. A | 14. C | 15. B | 16. B | 17. C | 18. A | 19. C | 20. D
Summary Quote:"We wait. We are bored. No, don't protest, we are bored to death, there's no denying it. A diversion comes along and what do we do? We let it go to waste." — Vladimir
The Past Perfect Continuous (also known as the Past Perfect Progressive) is the "storyteller's tense." It’s used to describe an action that was ongoing up until a specific point in the past. Think of it as looking back from one point in the past at a process that had been happening before it.
1. The Structure
To form this tense, we use the auxiliary verb had been + the present participle (verb + -ing).
Sentence Type
Structure
Example
Affirmative
Subject + had been + V-ing
They had been waiting for an hour.
Negative
Subject + had not (hadn't) been + V-ing
I hadn't been sleeping well lately.
Interrogative
Had + subject + been + V-ing?
Had you been working there long?
2. When to Use It?
A. Duration Before Something in the Past
We use it to show that something started in the past and continued up until another time in the past.
"The orchestra had been playing for twenty minutes when the lights went out."
B. Cause of a Past Result
We use it to explain the reason for a state or situation in the past.
"He was out of breath because he had been running."
C. Contrast: Past Perfect vs. Past Perfect Continuous
Past Perfect: Focuses on the completion of an action (The result).
Example: "I had finished the report by 5 PM."
Past Perfect Continuous: Focuses on the duration/process (The activity).
Example: "I had been writing the report all afternoon."
3. Worksheet: Putting it into Practice
Activity 1: Fill in the Blanks
Complete the sentences using the Past Perfect Continuous form of the verb in brackets.
When I finally arrived, they ________ (wait) for me for over two hours.
The ground was wet because it ________ (rain) all night.
She was exhausted because she ________ (study) for her finals since 6 AM.
We ________ (not / live) in London very long when the company closed down.
How long ________ (you / practice) the piano before the concert started?
Activity 2: The "Why?" Game (Task-Based)
Look at the following past situations and provide a logical reason using the Past Perfect Continuous.
Situation: Marcus had red, itchy eyes.
Reason: He had been staring at the computer screen for ten hours.
Situation: The kitchen smelled amazing when I walked in.
Mastering the pronunciation of the -ed suffix is a game-changer for sounding more natural. The trick isn't just memorizing the words, but understanding the final sound of the base verb before you add the suffix.
There are three distinct ways to pronounce the "-ed" ending: /ษชd/, /t/, and /d/.
1. The /ษชd/ Sound (The Extra Syllable)
Rule: Use this only when the verb ends in the sounds /t/ or /d/.
This is the only time you add an extra syllable to the word.
Started (star-ted)
Wanted (wan-ted)
Ended (en-ded)
Decided (de-ci-ded)
Needed (nee-ded)
Visited (vi-si-ted)
Waited (wai-ted)
Shouted (shou-ted)
Invited (in-vi-ted)
Painted (pain-ted)
2. The /t/ Sound (The Voiceless Ending)
Rule: Use this when the verb ends in "quiet" (voiceless) sounds: /p, k, f, s, sh, ch, x/.
Your vocal cords do not vibrate at the end of the base verb.
Walked (sounds like: walk-t)
Talked
Watched
Finished
Laughed (gh sounds like f)
Cooked
Stopped (double the 'p', but ends in 't' sound)
Helped
Kissed
Fixed
3. The /d/ Sound (The Voiced Ending)
Rule: Use this for all other "loud" (voiced) ending sounds (like /l, n, r, b, g, m, z, v/) and all vowels.
Your vocal cords vibrate at the end of the base verb.
The Past Perfect is the "past of the past." It’s our way of showing that one thing happened before another specific point in time or another action in the past.
Think of it as a way to organize a timeline so your listener knows exactly which event came first.
1. The Structure
To form the Past Perfect, we use the auxiliary verb had plus the past participle (the 3rd column of irregular verbs or -ed for regular verbs).
Sentence Type
Structure
Example
Affirmative
Subject + had + past participle
I had eaten.
Negative
Subject + had not (hadn't) + past participle
They hadn't finished.
Question
Had + subject + past participle?
Had you seen it?
2. When to Use It
We use the Past Perfect when we are already talking about the past and want to refer back to an even earlier period.
A. Completed Action Before Another Past Action
If you have two actions in the past, the one that happened first gets the Past Perfect treatment.
Action 1 (First): I forgot my keys.
Action 2 (Second): I arrived at the door.
Combined: When I arrived at the door, I realized I had forgotten my keys.
B. With Specific Time Markers
Common words used with Past Perfect include: already, before, after, by the time, just, never.
"By the time the movie started, we had already bought our popcorn."
3. Examples in Context
The Surprise: Sarah was nervous because she had never flown in a plane before.
The Mistake: The grass was yellow because it hadn't rained all summer.
The Job: By the time he turned 25, he had worked in three different countries.
Pro Tip: If the order of events is already very clear (using words like before or after), native speakers sometimes just use the Simple Past. However, using the Past Perfect makes your English sound much more precise and sophisticated!
4. Practice Exercises
Exercise 1: Fill in the Blanks
Complete the sentences using the Past Perfect form of the verb in parentheses.
The streets were wet because it __________ (rain) all night.
I didn't recognize him because he __________ (grow) a beard.
They arrived late to the party; everyone __________ (leave) by then.
We couldn't get a table because we __________ (not / make) a reservation.
Exercise 2: Combine the Sentences
Use "By the time" or "Before" to combine these two events. Use the Past Perfect for the first action.
Example: I finished my homework. My mom called me for dinner.
Answer: By the time my mom called me for dinner, I had finished my homework.
The thief escaped. The police arrived.
I saved enough money. I bought the new laptop.
The sun went down. We reached the top of the mountain.
The Key Connectors
1. Before
Usage: Used to show that the Past Perfect action was completed earlier than the second action.
Structure: [Past Perfect] + before + [Simple Past]
Example: "He had finished the report before the meeting started."
Meaning: First he finished the report; then the meeting started.
2. When
Usage: Used to show that one action was already finished at the moment another thing happened.
Structure:When + [Simple Past], [Past Perfect]
Example: "When I arrived at the station, the train had already left."
Meaning: I missed the train because it left before I got there.
3. By the time
Usage: Similar to "before," but emphasizes a deadline or a point where something was already true.
Structure:By the time + [Simple Past], [Past Perfect]
Example: "By the time the pizza arrived, I had fallen asleep."
Meaning: I was already sleeping when the doorbell rang.
4. Because
Usage: Used to give a reason for a past state or situation. The reason (the cause) always happened first.
Structure: [Simple Past] + because + [Past Perfect]
Example: "I was exhausted because I had stayed up all night studying."
Meaning: I studied all night first, which caused me to be tired later.
Comparison Table
Word
Focus
Example
Before
Sequence
They had eaten before I arrived.
When
Specific Point
When we got there, the show had started.
By the time
Deadline
By the time he called, she had sold the car.
Because
Cause/Effect
She was happy because she had won.
Quick Exercise: Choose the Connector
Pick the word that fits best (Before / When / By the time / Because).
___________ I got home, my brother had eaten all the cookies.
She failed the exam ___________ she hadn't studied at all.
I had already seen that movie ___________ you recommended it to me.
I saved enough money. I bought the new laptop.
The sun went down. We reached the top of the mountain.