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ENGLISH II

Lecturer : Riryn Novianty, M.Si

The Syllabus
NO

TOPICS

GRAMMAR

The Universe I

Tenses: present perfect

The Universe II

Tenses: past perfect and


future perfect

The Element I

Modal Auxiliaries

The Element II

The use of like and as

TEST

TOPIC 1-4

UAS

ALL TOPICS

EVALUATE :
20% Task&quiz + 20% Lecture 1 + 20% Lecture 2 + 20% Lecture 3 + 20% UAS

What should you PREPARE &


CARE ?
Most Science books and materials

English for science & English


for chemists etc
Advanced Scientific Journals
Journal of chemistry,

Journal of applied science research etc

DICTIONARY
http://www.azargrammar.com/

WHAT ELSE???
Is once a week 2 hours of classes
enough?

So what do you do to improve


your English ?
Speak

English with your friends


STUDY HARD!!!
Make a note
Always repeat at home
Watching english movies
Listen to english music
Take extra classes : ENGLISH CLUB

What are the goals of this class?


Writing
Listening
Reading

Pronounciation

Get an A
Good Jobs
Best Schools
GO INTERNATIONAL

The rules in this class


Be

on time
Be active
Be quite
Be polite
Silent your cell phone
Give a news by yourself
Get ready for the quiz!

MY CLASS WILL HAVE A QUIZ


EVERY TIME WE MEET
Makes

you review the previous class


Makes me know what you do not
understand
You can open your book/books for the
quiztest will be open book
But you must work alone!!!

1st LECTURE

THE UNIVERSE
I

Read the passage describing the sun and other stars

The Sun and Other Stars


The sun is a star. It is a flaming ball of
extremely hot gases. The surface temperature is
about 11.000oF, hot enough to turn every solid to
vapor, but relatively cool compared to the intense
heat at the center.
Located about 93 million miles from the
earth. The sun has a diameter is approximately
equal to 109 of our earths tined up like a row of
beach balls, and a mass that is about 330.000
times the mass of the earth.

The sun is the original source of nearly


all our energy. It is mostly made of hydrogen
although it also contains nearly every other
kind of atom that exists on the earth. The sun
derives its energy from a process of fusing in
which hydrogen atoms are converted into
helium atoms under extreme hear and
pressure. This process creates a tremendous
noise but we cannot hear it because sound
does not travel through empty space.

Our sun is not even especially large


or bright compared to other stars. Stars
vary in size from smaller than the earth to
large enough to hold a good part of our
solar system! The color of a star indicates
its temperature. A star maybe red (The
hootest), yellow (like our sun) whiter or
blue (the coolest).

The nearest star is 4.3 light-years from


the earth. A light-year is the distance light
travels in one year or about 6 million miles.
The farthest stars are billions of lights years
away. Some are so far away that if they
were to blow up today. Their light would
continue to be seen from the earth for
million years!

Our sun is part of an enormous galaxy


of 30 billion star called the Milky way. In
addition there are billions of galaxies within
range of our telescopes and countless
billions beyond. The enormity of space is
quite beyond human comprehension. How
exciting it is to live an age when human
beings have begun to explore that space.

FIND OUT THE PHYSICAL, CHEMICAL


AND FUNCTIONAL DESCRIPTION OF THE
PASSAGE!!!

NOTE :
The present simple tense is used
most frequently when describing,
because descriptions in science
are usually universals. The most
commonly
used
verbs
are
to be (is/are) and have/has.

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