Lesson 9: Choose Your Sportsسبق 9:
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Video Script — Unit 9
Choose Your Sports
Subject: English | Class: 3 | Series: Leeds (SNC 2020)
Hello, students! Welcome to Unit 9 of your Leeds English textbook. Today we have a fun poem about sports called "Choose Your Sports."
This poem tells us to stop playing video games and go outside to play sports! Let me read it for you.
"Let us turn off our video games, and run outside. From many sports, we may choose and decide."
"Baseball, soccer, and basketball are fun. Let's grab some friends, and play in the sun."
"In baseball, you will be, running around. When you hit the ball, it's a beautiful sound."
"In soccer, you pass the ball, using your feet. Drinks lots of water, and watch out for the heat."
"In basketball, the best sound is a swish. Making ten in a row is a wonderful wish."
"Whatever sports you decide to play, enjoy them with friends, each and every day."
This poem was written by Martin Dejnicki. It talks about three sports: baseball, soccer, and basketball. The poem encourages us to go outside, choose a sport we like, and play with our friends every day.
Did you notice the rhyming words? Outside rhymes with decide. Fun rhymes with sun. Around rhymes with sound. Feet rhymes with heat. Swish rhymes with wish. Play rhymes with day.
Now let us learn some vocabulary from this unit.
"Turn off" means to switch off. The poet says turn off your video games and go play outside.
"Choose" means to select or pick. We can choose which sport we want to play.
"Around" means on all sides. In baseball, you will be running around.
Next, let us learn about alphabetical order. Alphabetical order means arranging words in the order of the alphabet, from A to Z.
When words start with different letters, we look at the first letter. For example: apple, bus, cat, dog. A comes before B, B comes before C, and C comes before D.
But what if words start with the same letter? Then we look at the second letter. For example: ball, bell, box, bus. All start with B, so we look at the second letter: A, E, O, U. So the order is: ball, bell, box, bus.
Now let us learn about prepositions. A preposition is a word that shows a relationship between two things. It tells us where something is.
Common prepositions are: on, in, under, beside, above, behind, between.
For example: "The ball is on the table." "The cat is under the bed." "The book is in the bag."
Next, let us learn about capitalization. Capitalization means using a capital letter.
Rule one: Capitalize the first word of every sentence. For example: "The children are at school."
Rule two: Capitalize proper nouns. Proper nouns are names of specific people, places, days, and months. For example: Aden, Friday, January, Pakistan.
Finally, let us learn about punctuation marks.
A full stop goes at the end of a sentence: "We are best friends."
An apostrophe is used to show possession: "The children's toys are in the box."
An exclamation mark is used for strong feelings like surprise, excitement, or anger: "Oh my Allah!" "How tragic!" "What a pretty doll!"
Let us recap what we learned today. We read a fun poem about choosing sports and playing with friends. We learned vocabulary words: turn off, choose, and around. We learned alphabetical order using first and second letters. We learned about prepositions that tell us where things are. We learned capitalization rules for sentences, proper nouns, days, and months. And we learned about punctuation marks: full stop, apostrophe, and exclamation mark.
Remember, turn off your screens and go play sports with your friends every day! Sports keep you healthy and fit.
Thank you for watching. See you in the next lesson!