|
 |
What's new |
 |
|
|
 |
Jack the Ripper
|
 |
|
Jack the Ripper
Peter Foreman
Crime
Since the autumn of 1888, when he terrorised London, Jack the Ripper has become famous all over the world. Who was he? There have been hundreds of suspects and theories but nobody has yet discovered his identity. Jack the Ripper takes you back to the dark streets of Victorian London, to investigate the story of the most mysterious killer in the history of crime.
Dossiers within the reader: Life in the East End, Immigrants in the East End
Features: - aimed at teenagers and adults
- introduction about the author and his/her times
- wide variety of motivating activities
- activities in the style of the Cambridge ESOL and Trinity exams
- fascinating cross-curricular dossiers, which explore the historical and cultural background of the text
- a recording on CD of the text in British or American English, with extra listening activities
- extensive vocabulary footnotes
- exit tests
- guided Internet projects
The list below shows the main grammatical structures used at level B2.1: Present Perfect Simple with the first/second/etc. time that … – Present Perfect Continuous with for & since – Passive forms with the Present Perfect Simple – Reported speech with precise reporting verbs (e.g. suggest, promise, apologise, etc.) – 3rd Conditional: if + past perfect, … would(n’t) have – All conditionals with may & might – Non-defining relative clauses with which & whose – Clauses of concession with even though, in spite of & despite Answer key is available online (please contact us for password)
|
|
|
 |
 |
|
 |
|
|
 |
Jack the Ripper |
 |
- Register to our mailing list to receive our latest news
The field "Country" is required
Required field
This is not a valid email address
|
|
|
|