C1

Viral trends: discussing fads and habits

Viral trends — a C1 English lesson. Practise using idiomatic expressions and expand vocabulary around fads, games, and daily routines.

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Contents

Summary

This 90-minute ESL lesson for C1 learners explores Viral trends: discussing fads and habits through a real video. Across 9 interactive exercises, you'll develop listening comprehension, vocabulary, speaking skills — all built around authentic English content.

What you'll practise:

  • 5 key vocabulary items with definitions and usage notes
  • Gap-fill and cloze exercises to test vocabulary in context
  • Matching exercise to connect terms with their meanings

Lesson activities (9 exercises)

Each exercise builds on the previous one. Work through them in order for the best learning experience.

  1. Warm-up — Discussion questions to activate what you already know about the topic.
  2. Watch — Watch the video and note the main arguments and examples.
  3. Comprehension — Answer questions to check your understanding of the main ideas and supporting details.
  4. Vocabulary — Learn key words and expressions from the video, with definitions and usage notes.
  5. True / False — Test your detailed understanding — decide if each statement matches the source.
  6. Fill the gaps — Complete sentences with the correct vocabulary. Drag and drop or type your answers.
  7. Multiple choice — Choose the correct answer from four options — testing comprehension and language use.
  8. Matching — Connect words, phrases, or concepts to their correct counterparts.
  9. Discussion — Reflect on the topic and share your opinions using the language you've learned.

Vocabulary

This lesson introduces 5 key terms drawn directly from the video:

  • To jump on the bandwagon — to start doing or supporting something that is already popular or successful.
  • A flash in the pan — something that is successful or popular for only a very short period.
  • To gain traction — to become more popular, accepted, or established.
  • The novelty wears off — the initial feeling of excitement and newness about something disappears over time.
  • To be a creature of habit — to be a person who prefers to do the same things at the same time and in the same way every day.

Grammar

This lesson includes a grammar focus with clear explanations and practice exercises.