Common 1-1 English

        All Materials regarding to B.tech R-20 in Electrical and Electronics Engineering 1st  Year 1st Semester with unit wise for Every Subjects are available.

👇👇Scroll Down for Important Questions and Topics Unit Wise 👇👇

Common 1-1 English
S.NoChapters / UnitsDownload Link
1Unit 1Download
2Unit 2Download
3Unit 3Download
4Unit 4Download
5Unit 5Download

Common 1-1 English Important  Topics and Questions

Unit 1: 

👉 Lesson-1: A Drawer full of happiness from “Infotech English”, Maruthi Publications 
Lesson-2: Deliverance by Premchand from “The Individual Society”, Pearson Publications. 
(Non-detailed) 
Listening: Listening to short audio texts and identifying the topic. Listening to prose, prose and 
conversation. 
Speaking: Asking and answering general questions on familiar topics such as home, family, work, 
studies and interests. Self introductions and introducing others. 
Reading: Skimming text to get the main idea. Scanning to look for specific pieces of information. 
Reading for Writing: Paragraph writing (specific topics) using suitable cohesive devices; linkers, 
sign posts and transition signals; mechanics of writing - punctuation, capital letters. 
Vocabulary: Technical vocabulary from across technical branches (20) GRE Vocabulary (20) 
(Antonyms and Synonyms, Word applications) Verbal reasoning and sequencing of words. 
Grammar: Content words and function words; word forms: verbs, nouns, adjectives and adverbs; 
nouns: countables and uncountables; singular and plural basic sentence structures; simple question 
form - wh-questions; word order in sentences. 
Pronunciation: Vowels, Consonants, Plural markers and their realizations 

Unit 2: 

👉 Lesson-1: Nehru’s letter to his daughter Indira on her birthday from “Infotech English”,
Maruthi Publications 
Lesson-2: Bosom Friend by Hira Bansode from “The Individual Society”, Pearson 
Publications.(Non-detailed) 
Listening: Answering a series of questions about main idea and supporting ideas after listening to 
audio texts, both in speaking and writing. 
Speaking: Discussion in pairs/ small groups on specific topics followed by short structured talks. 
Functional English: Greetings and leave takings. Reading: Identifying sequence of ideas; 
recognizing verbal techniques that help to link the ideas in a paragraph together. 
Reading for Writing: Summarizing - identifying main idea/s and rephrasing what is read; avoiding 
redundancies and repetitions. 
Vocabulary: Technical vocabulary from across technical branches (20 words). GRE Vocabulary 
Analogies (20 words) (Antonyms and Synonyms, Word applications) 
Grammar: Use of articles and zero article; prepositions.

Unit 3: 

👉 Lesson-1: Stephen Hawking-Positivity ‘Benchmark’ from “Infotech English”, Maruthi 
Publications 
Lesson-2: Shakespeare’s Sister by Virginia Woolf from “The Individual Society”, Pearson 
Publications. (Non-detailed) 
Listening: Listening for global comprehension and summarizing what is listened to, both in 
speaking and writing. 
Speaking: Discussing specific topics in pairs or small groups and reporting what is discussed. 
Functional English: Complaining and Apologizing. 
Reading: Reading a text in detail by making basic inferences - recognizing and interpreting specific 
context clues; strategies to use text clues for comprehension. Critical reading. 
Reading for Writing: Summarizing - identifying main idea/s and rephrasing what is read; avoiding 
redundancies and repetitions. Letter writing-types, format and principles of letter writing. E-mail 
etiquette, Writing CV’s.
Vocabulary: Technical vocabulary from across technical branches (20 words). GRE Vocabulary 
(20 words) (Antonyms and Synonyms, Word applications) Association, sequencing of words 
Grammar: Verbs - tenses; subject-verb agreement; direct and indirect speech, reporting verbs for 
academic purposes. 
Pronunciation: word stress-poly-syllabic words. 

Unit 4: 

👉 Lesson-1: Liking a Tree, Unbowed: Wangari Maathai-biography from “Infotech English”,
Maruthi Publications 
Lesson-2: Telephone Conversation-Wole Soyinka from “The Individual Society”, Pearson 
Publications.(Non-detailed) 
Listening: Making predictions while listening to conversations/ transactional dialogues without 
video (only audio); listening to audio-visual texts. 
Speaking: Role plays for practice of conversational English in academic contexts (formal and 
informal) - asking for and giving information/directions. Functional English: Permissions, 
Requesting, Inviting. 
Reading: Studying the use of graphic elements in texts to convey information, reveal 
trends/patterns/relationships, communicative process or display complicated data.
Reading for Writing: Information transfer; describe, compare, contrast, identify significance/trends 
based on information provided in figures/charts/graphs/tables. Writing SOP, writing for media. 
Vocabulary: Technical vocabulary from across technical branches (20 words) GRE Vocabulary (20 
words) (Antonyms and Synonyms, Word applications) Cloze Encounters. 
Grammar: Quantifying expressions - adjectives and adverbs; comparing and contrasting; degrees of 
comparison; use of antonyms 
Pronunciation: Contrastive Stress 

Unit 5: 

👉 Lesson-1: Stay Hungry-Stay foolish from “Infotech English”, Maruthi Publications 
Lesson-2: Still I Rise by Maya Angelou from “The Individual Society”, Pearson Publications. 
(Non-detailed) 
Listening: Identifying key terms, understanding concepts and interpreting the concepts both in 
speaking and writing. 
Speaking: Formal oral presentations on topics from academic contexts - without the use of PPT 
slides. Functional English: Suggesting/Opinion giving. 
Reading: Reading for comprehension. RAP Strategy Intensive reading and Extensive reading 
techniques. 
Reading for Writing: Writing academic proposals- writing research articles: format and style. 
Vocabulary: Technical vocabulary from across technical branches (20 words) GRE Vocabulary (20 
words) (Antonyms and Synonyms, Word applications) Coherence, matching emotions. 
Grammar: Editing short texts – identifying and correcting common errors in grammar and usage 
(articles, prepositions, tenses, subject verb agreement)

Disclaimer :
We are not responsible for any loss of data /or any other information by visiting this website. We just providing previous papers to help the students who need previous papers to prepare themselves. This downloaded from internet source just to education purpose only. 
Thank you.



Feel free to contact us, if you want any other courses or Tutorials or any other information .
We'll always try to helps you better learn something

Post a Comment

Previous Post Next Post