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82 2 Apr

Official Secrets

Rewrite these sentences so that they do not use the word ‘if’.

1. If the terms of the treaty were made public, it would mean disaster.

2. If that does not succeed, don’t be discouraged.

3. If you get yourselves into trouble with the police, I can’t officially help you out of it.

For example

We have plenty of time to get there if we take the tube.

By taking the tube, we can get there in plenty of time.

Let’s take the tube, so we don’t need to worry about getting there in time.

Provided we take the tube...

Unless we take the tube, we’ll be cutting it a bit fine.

Sentences taken from the novels of Agatha Christie. Based on an exercise in Advanced English Exercises (1939) by NL Clay.

83 Yesterday

To the Town

Use each phrase below in two sentences, once adjectivally, so that it qualifies a noun (e.g. to the town → The road to the town was flooded), and once adverbially, so that it qualifies a verb (e.g. Bob walked to the town). You may like to use the words indicated underneath each phrase.

1 At the corner.
Shop (n). Wait (vb).

2 Under the floorboards.
Strongbox (n). Look (vb).

3 By Charles Dickens.
Story (n). Write (vb).

Adapted from an exercise in Exercises 12-13 (1933) by NL Clay.

84 Sunday

A ’Tivity Trick

Thomas Hardy

Introduction — In Tess of the d’Urbervilles, Tess is milking a cow for dairy farmer Mr Crick (he remembered her mother, herself a dairymaid) and finding it rather restful. As she milks, the dairy lads and maids begin a song. ‘You should get your harp, sir’ ventures one lad, a little out of breath; ‘not but what a fiddle is best.’ And Mr Crick shares a story that shows just how right he is.

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85 11 Mar

Working Hypothesis

Join the following ideas together to form a single sentence:

Your desk is untidy. I know your character.

Try to do this in at least two different ways. You can change anything you like so long as the underlying ideas remain the same. See if you can include one of more of these words:

Mess. Sort. Tell.

This exercise appeared in Exercises 12-13 (1933) by NL Clay.

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86 10 Mar

The Minstrel Boy

Thomas Moore

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87 10 Mar

Train

Introduction — A Polyword is a game with words and letters. Make words of four letters or more from the letters of a nine-letter word, using each letter only once. Include the highlighted letter in every word you make. Can you beat our score?

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88 10 Mar

Window Scene

The words of the following sentence have been jumbled up; can you restore the original order, and add suitable punctuation?

the the window to crowded bridesmaids

Original

Can you do it with these sentences as well?

1. another to hoped have I you with dance

2. said why start elizabeth a with

3. the he artful woman smiling said little

Originals

Sentences taken from the novels of Thomas Hardy.

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