1. Write borrow or lend into the gaps:
Can I __________________
your pen, please?
Can you __________________ me your pen, please?
Would you like to __________________ my pen?
Shall I __________________ you my pen?
2. What’s the difference between borrow and lend?
Tip: It might help to draw pictures and translate the words into your own language.
3. In pairs, practise situations in which you lend and borrow things.
a.
b.
c.
d.
The week the crisis hit home
Level 1
Elementary
Warmer: Borrow and lend
1
Write in the missing vowels (a,e,i,o,u).
A legal agreement in which you borrow money from a bank to buy a house. Repayments are usually made
monthly.
m _ r t g _ g _
To remove an offer.
p _l l _ d_ _ l
What you have when your house has lost value and you are now paying more than what it’s worth.
n _ g _ t _ v _ _ q _ _ t y
A period when trade and industry are not successful and there is a lot of unemployment.
r _ c _ s s _ _ n
Someone who buys and uses goods and services.
c _ n s _ m _ r
An
amount of money that a person, business or country borrows, especially from a bank.
l _ _ n
An agreement with your bank that allows you to spend money when you have no money left in your account.
_v _ r d r _ f t
An
expert in financial matters, especially one who advises a government department,
business, or
organization.
_ c _ n _ m _ s t
The member of the British government who is responsible for taxes and for deciding how the government
spends its money.
c h _ n c _ l l _ r
An economic process in which prices increase so that money becomes less valuable.
_ n f l _ t _ _ n
Source: Macmillan English Dictionary Online
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