Module code: 139

📚 pathway 6874e74610a58

Talking about Deadlines & Progress – Essential Vocabulary

1 Set Overview

When we talk about deadlines and progress, we need words to explain when things must be finished and how our work is going. These words help us tell others if we are on time or late, and what we need to do with our tasks. We can use these words at school, at work, or when we make plans with friends.

Key Terms

on time
not late, at the correct time
late
after the expected time

💬 Dialogue 1: Discussing Homework Deadline

A student talks to their teacher about homework

Ms. Sarah: “Is your homework due today?”
Tom: “Yes, but I need to catch up with some exercises.”
Ms. Sarah: “You can't put off your work again.”
Tom: “I know. I will finish it today.”
Ms. Sarah: “When will you bring it to me?”
Tom: “I will bring it after lunch.”
Ms. Sarah: “Good. Don't be late this time.”
Tom: “I promise to hand it in on time.”

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2 Terms by Part of Speech

Here are the important words we use to talk about deadlines, organized by type:

Verbs:
manage: to succeed in doing something
remember: to not forget
stop: to end an activity
risk: to do something that might cause problems

Phrasal Verbs:
bring forward: to make something happen earlier
catch up: to do work you missed
put back: to delay to a later time
put off: to delay doing something

Adjectives:
due: expected to happen or finish at a certain time
late: after the expected time
spare: extra, available to use

Adverbs:
eventually: in the end, after some time

Other:
by: not later than a specific time
despite: even though something makes it difficult

Key Terms

manage
to succeed in doing something
remember
to not forget
stop
to end an activity

💬 Dialogue 2: Office Project Discussion

Two colleagues discuss project timing

John: “Can we bring forward the meeting?”
Lisa: “I don't have any spare time today.”
John: “We'll manage somehow.”
Lisa: “Let's put it back to next week.”
John: “Will we finish the project on time?”
Lisa: “Yes, despite the delay.”
John: “When should we meet?”
Lisa: “Tuesday at 2 PM.”

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📝 Key Vocabulary Recap

bring forwardto make something happen earlier
bynot later than a specific time
catch upto do work you missed
despiteeven though something makes it difficult
dueexpected to happen or finish at a certain time
eventuallyin the end, after some time
lateafter the expected time
manageto succeed in doing something
put backto delay to a later time
put offto delay doing something
rememberto not forget
riskto do something that might cause problems
spareextra, available to use
stopto end an activity
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