My 1,000
Ideas
e-Book

Breaking News English

HOME  |   HELP MY SITE  |  000s MORE FREE LESSONS
 
My 1,000
Ideas
e-Book
 

HOW TO PLAY:

 1. Click this link to listen.

 2. Listen and choose the correct word in the grey box with the "up / down" arrows.

 3. Check your answers.

 4. Press the "refresh" button on your browser to play again.

   areas      bacteria      covers      dirty      enough      ground      half      hygienic      inside      less      microbiologists      perfect      problems      public      rotting      there      tissues      true      vomit      wheels  
Some people believe going by car is of a risk for getting germs than travelling on transport. The opposite may be . A British survey found that most cars are so inside, they could be a breeding for bacteria such as the deadly E.Coli. The survey was carried out by at Nottingham University. They analysed steering , hand brakes and other to find out what bacteria might be there. They found that most cars were dirty to have bacteria. Most car owners gave very little thought to the importance of keeping their car interior .

Cars are a place for germs. Over of car owners have dropped food onto seats. A third have spilt drinks. Other owners spoke of and 'pet accidents'. Only a quarter of owners cleaned the of their cars regularly. Most drivers still eat and drink at the wheel. Common were drink bottles under seats, used in storage areas and food on seat . A spokeswoman said: "It's really worrying to see just how dirty people are letting their cars get….We didn't expect to find relating to E.coli in ."

Back to the lesson page

 

THE NEXT LEVEL


E-mail this lesson to someone who would like to use it in classroom or study with it. 000's more free lessons.

MORE ACTIVITIES:

QUIZZES MORE QUIZZES PRINT SEAN'S OTHER SITES

Sentence Jumble

No Spaces

No letters

Gap-Fill

Consonants

Missing Letters

Initals Only

Text Jumble - 15

Text Jumble - 24

Vowels

Handout

Two-Page Mini-Lesson

SPEED READING

3 different speeds

LISTEN

MP3

 



Copyright © 2004-2015 by Sean Banville | Links | About | Privacy Policy