Reading Barefoot Bandit slide 107, ex-es 3a, b
ex. 3a
- crimes involving entering a building illegally in order to steal — burglaries
- thought to be guilty of a crime — suspected
- people who are killed or hurt by someone else — victims
- catch someone you have been following or looking for — capture
- a building where criminals are kept as a punishment — prison
- taken without permission — stolen
- crimes involving stealing from a place or person, especially using violence — robberies
- given a punishment (of) — sentenced
- got away — escaped
- making someone a prisoner — arresting
- crimes involving stealing something — thefts
- a person who has done something illegal and is hiding to avoid being caught — outlaw
ex. 3b
thief — theft — to steal
burglar — burglary — to burgle
robber — robbery — to rob
thief — stealing — to steal
Voxpop — watch the video and answer the questions in written form
Do you enjoy reading crime fiction or watching thrillers?
Honestly, I don’t know, because the essence of the question isn’t understandable. There are many YouTube channels that are telling audience about the most popular crimes and explaining how each step has been done.
Do you have a favourite?
In my opinion, the question isn’t right. Definitely no. But if I change the essence of the question, the most favourite will be Sherlock Holmes at least only because he shows his talent to be a detective and solve crimes step by step.