📖 Lesson A2 Grammar🎉 Fun & Culture

🏆 Explorers: The Most Amazing

A fully interactive A2.1 Kids grammar lesson that extends superlatives to long adjectives. Learners warm up with four opinion questions, then study three grammar blocks: the most + long adjective (the most interesting, the most exciting, the most beautiful) with a signal-words panel of long adjectives, the two irregular champions the best and the worst (with a clear never-say-goodest warning), and an -est-or-most decision table (short takes -est, long takes the most, good/bad are special). Ten key words (amazing, exciting, interesting, beautiful, important, expensive, famous, the best, the worst, prize) appear in a scrollable table with kid-friendly definitions, and six become review flashcards. The reading is a magazine-style Awards Night report starring Zeynep, Leo, Mia and Kofi, showing the most and best/worst in natural context with seven hover-tooltip words. Practice includes 8 fill-in-the-blank questions (most, best, worst) with live validation, hints and a running score; a My Favourites speaking task with five prompts and a model dialogue; a guided 25-45 word best-and-worst writing task built around a best-ever meal with a four-point checklist and a live word counter with auto-save; and a full 8-question multiple-choice quiz mixing long-adjective forms, best/worst and two reading questions, with a progress bar, per-question explanations, a conic-gradient result circle and localStorage persistence.

🧒 Kids (6–10) schedule 45 min signal_cellular_alt Medium
NEW🔒 PRO

view_agenda Lesson Plan

  • 4 opinion questions about the most exciting, best, most beautiful and worst
  • Silent thinking or pair-share format — no writing required

translate Key Vocabulary

amazingexcitinginterestingbeautifulimportantexpensivefamousthe bestthe worstprize

auto_fix_high Grammar Points

  • Long adjectives (2+ syllables): the most + adjective (the most exciting, the most beautiful)
  • Irregular superlatives: good to the best, bad to the worst
  • Common errors to avoid: 'the goodest', 'the most good'
  • Choosing the form: short adjective takes -est, long adjective takes the most, good/bad are special

arrow_upward Prerequisites

Join Our Classes!

We believe the right questions bring the right answers. Whether you have a question about your English-learning journey or need help with a specific language skill, we're always here for you.

route The FleyPath

Your child's personal roadmap — 3, 6 or 12 months

🚀Start
👋Hello
😊Body
🦁Animals
🔢Numbers
🏆Confident English
sports_esports Gamified English practice

Like a game — except they're really learning