📚 7th Grade English Study Guide: Comprehensive Review for Your Exam
Welcome to your comprehensive study guide for the upcoming 7th-grade English exam! This material is designed to help you review and master key vocabulary, reading comprehension, and grammar points. It combines information from your homework assignment and lecture notes to provide a clear, organized, and easy-to-understand resource.
Source Information: This study guide has been compiled from your 2025-2026 Academic Year Antalya Toplum College Middle School 7th Grade English Homework assignment (copy-pasted text) and related lecture transcripts.
🎯 Overview of Exam Topics
Your exam will cover the following main areas:
- Vocabulary: Words related to "Daily Life," "Great Places to Visit," and "The Natural World."
- Reading Comprehension: Understanding a text and identifying key information, including grammar points within it.
- Grammar:
- Second Conditional (If, Unless, I wish, If only)
- Present Continuous Passive
- Present & Past Simple Passive
- Reflexive Pronouns
- Compound Adjectives
- Application: Using grammar in open-ended questions and critical thinking scenarios.
Let's dive into each topic!
1. 📖 Vocabulary Review
Understanding these words will help you with both the vocabulary section and the comprehension text.
- Sustainability: The ability to maintain something at a certain rate or level without harming the environment. ✅
- Example: Eco-villages promote sustainability by using renewable energy.
- Biodiversity: The variety of plant and animal life in a particular habitat. ✅
- Example: Protecting rainforests is crucial for preserving global biodiversity.
- Infrastructure: The basic physical and organizational structures (e.g., buildings, roads, power) needed for a society. ✅
- Example: Good public transport is part of a city's essential infrastructure.
- Hospitality: The friendly and generous reception and entertainment of guests or strangers. ✅
- Example: The hotel is known for its excellent hospitality.
- Spectacular: Beautiful in a dramatic and eye-catching way. ✅
- Example: The view from the mountain top was absolutely spectacular.
- Endangered: (Of a species) Seriously at risk of extinction. ✅
- Example: Many efforts are made to save endangered animals like pandas.
- Renovate: To restore something old (especially a building) to a good state of repair. ✅
- Example: They decided to renovate their old house to make it modern.
- Commute: To travel some distance between one's home and place of work on a regular basis. ✅
- Example: Many people commute to the city for work every day.
2. 📝 Comprehension Text: The Eco-Village Project
This text is important because it integrates all the grammar points you'll be tested on and uses the vocabulary words.
Key Points from the Text:
- Theme: Harmony between humans and nature, sustainable living.
- Location: Cloud-covered mountains.
- Current Activities: A water-supply system is being installed, and an old community center is being renovated using recycled materials.
- Past vs. Present: Forests were destroyed by illegal logging, and rare-breed animals were lost. Now, the land is protected, and biodiversity is well-preserved.
- Grammar in Context: Look for examples of conditionals ("If everyone lived like this..."), passives ("were destroyed," "is being built"), reflexives ("find themselves amazed," "taught ourselves"), and compound adjectives ("state-of-the-art," "solar-powered").
- Challenge: Balancing tourism with preserving the village's peace.
- Pride: Residents are proud of their self-made achievements.
💡 Study Tip: Read the text carefully, then try to summarize it in your own words. Identify sentences that use the grammar points you've studied.
3. 🧠 Grammar Focus: Detailed Explanations & Examples
This is a critical section for your exam. Pay close attention to the structure and usage of each grammar point.
3.1. 🚦 Second Conditional (If, Unless, I wish, If only)
The Second Conditional is used to talk about unreal or hypothetical situations in the present or future and their probable results. It describes things that are unlikely to happen or are impossible.
-
Form:
If + Subject + Past Simple, Subject + would/could/might + Base Verb- Example: If I had more time, I would volunteer at the animal shelter. (I don't have more time, so I can't volunteer.)
- Example: If she were the president, she would improve the schools. (She is not the president.)
- ⚠️ Note: For "to be" in the "if" clause, we often use "were" for all subjects (I, he, she, it) in formal English, though "was" is common for I/he/she/it in informal speech.
-
"Unless": Means "if not."
- Form:
Unless + Subject + Present Simple, Subject + will/won't + Base Verb(for first conditional) ORUnless + Subject + Past Simple, Subject + would/wouldn't + Base Verb(for second conditional, though less common). - Example: Unless it stops raining, we won't go on the hike. (If it doesn't stop raining, we won't go.)
- Example (Second Conditional): We wouldn't get lost unless we used a map. (If we didn't use a map, we would get lost.)
- Form:
-
"I wish" / "If only": Used to express regret or a strong desire for a situation to be different (usually impossible or unlikely).
- Form:
I wish / If only + Subject + Past Simple - Example: I wish I spoke Japanese. (I don't speak Japanese, and I regret it.)
- Example: If only we didn't have to take this exam tomorrow! (We have to take it, and I wish we didn't.)
- Example: I wish I had a dog. (I don't have a dog.)
- Form:
3.2. ⚙️ Present Continuous Passive
Used to describe an action that is happening right now and the focus is on the object or the action itself, not who is doing it.
- Form:
Subject + is/are + being + Past Participle- Active: They are building a new bridge.
- Passive: A new bridge is being built. (Focus on the bridge, not "they")
- Active: The chef is preparing the meal.
- Passive: The meal is being prepared.
- From the text: The local water-supply system is being installed.
- From the text: The old community center is being renovated.
3.3. 🕰️ Present & Past Simple Passive
Used when the doer of the action is unknown, unimportant, or obvious, and the focus is on the action or the object receiving the action.
-
Present Simple Passive: For general truths, habits, or actions that happen regularly.
- Form:
Subject + is/are + Past Participle - Active: People grow coffee in Brazil.
- Passive: Coffee is grown in Brazil.
- Active: They send millions of emails every day.
- Passive: Millions of emails are sent every day.
- Form:
-
Past Simple Passive: For actions completed in the past.
- Form:
Subject + was/were + Past Participle - Active: Edison invented the light bulb.
- Passive: The light bulb was invented by Edison.
- Active: The storm broke our windows last night.
- Passive: Our windows were broken by the storm last night.
- From the text: These forests were destroyed by illegal logging.
- Form:
3.4. 👤 Reflexive Pronouns
Used when the subject and object of a verb are the same person or thing. They can also be used for emphasis or to mean "alone" or "without help" (with "by").
-
List of Reflexive Pronouns:
- I -> myself
- You (singular) -> yourself
- He -> himself
- She -> herself
- It -> itself
- We -> ourselves
- You (plural) -> yourselves
- They -> themselves
-
Usage Examples:
- Subject and Object are the same: I cut myself while cooking.
- For emphasis: They did this themselves. (Meaning: without help)
- "By oneself": Did you do the homework by yourself? (Meaning: alone)
- From the text: Visitors often find themselves amazed...
- From the text: We taught ourselves how to farm...
3.5. 🔗 Compound Adjectives
Adjectives formed by two or more words, often joined by a hyphen, that act as a single descriptive unit before a noun.
- Form:
(Adjective/Noun/Number) + (Noun/Past Participle/Present Participle) - Examples:
well-preserved(adverb + past participle) -> The well-preserved biodiversity.solar-powered(noun + past participle) -> A solar-powered home.long-term(adjective + noun) -> A long-term plan.state-of-the-art(noun phrase acting as adjective) -> A state-of-the-art eco-village.cloud-covered(noun + past participle) -> The cloud-covered mountains.hand-made(noun + past participle) -> Hand-made signs.ten-year-old(number + noun + adjective) -> A ten-year-old boy.hard-working(adjective + present participle) -> A hard-working person.
💡 Study Tip: Remember to use hyphens when the compound adjective comes before the noun it describes.
- Correct: It's a well-known fact.
- Incorrect: The fact is well known. (No hyphen when it comes after the noun or verb)
4. 🤔 Application & Critical Thinking: Open-Ended Questions
These questions are designed to make you think and apply the Second Conditional in various scenarios. There are no single "correct" answers, but your responses should be logical and grammatically sound.
Categories of Questions:
- Personal Aspirations & Changes: Reflect on hypothetical changes to your life.
- Global & Environmental Issues: Consider the impact of actions on the world.
- Creative & "What If" Scenarios: Use your imagination to explore unlikely situations.
- Ethics & Decision Making: Think about moral dilemmas and choices.
💡 Study Tip: Practice answering these questions using the Second Conditional structure. For example, "If I were the leader of my country, I would pass a law to..."
✅ Key Takeaways for Your Exam
- Review Vocabulary: Go through the list multiple times. Try to use the words in sentences.
- Understand the Comprehension Text: Make sure you grasp the main idea and can identify examples of the grammar points within it.
- Master Grammar Structures:
- Second Conditional:
If + Past Simple, would + Base Verb(unreal situations). - Present Continuous Passive:
is/are being + Past Participle(action happening now, focus on object). - Simple Passive (Present/Past):
is/are + Past Participle(general truth) /was/were + Past Participle(past action), focus on object. - Reflexive Pronouns:
myself, yourself, etc.(subject and object are the same). - Compound Adjectives:
word-word(hyphenated when before a noun).
- Second Conditional:
- Practice, Practice, Practice: Go through the exercises in your homework. If you made mistakes, understand why they were mistakes.
- Think Critically: For open-ended questions, formulate clear, grammatically correct answers that directly address the prompt.
Good luck with your exam! You've got this! 🚀








