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Cybercrimes

  •  English    16     Public
    Cybercrimes
  •   Study   Slideshow
  • (usually abbreviated to ©) the sole right to reproduce literary, musical or artistic work
    copyright
  •  15
  • They attached documents to the email that looked official, so eventually I sent them $8,000 to pay the legal f____s.
    fees
  •  15
  • I clicked on one item and bought what was advertised as a ‘PlayStation 4 original box and r_____t’
    receipt
  •  15
  • I clicked on an advert for a PlayStation 4. It was only €150, I thought "what a b_____n!"
    bargain
  •  15
  • I got a call from my bank. They said someone was trying to take money from my account without my p______n.
    permission
  •  15
  • I got my credit card s______t and found someone had spent over £11,000 on flights and luxury hotels!
    statement
  •  15
  • This is a b___ g_____ (2 words)
    bar graph
  •  15
  • This is a p_____ c_____ (2 words)
    pie chart
  •  15
  • BONUS QUESTION (25 POINTS): What is a collocation? Can you think of one example from the last lesson?
    When two or more words are often used together in a way that sounds correct to mothertongue speakers but might not be expected from the meaning
  •  25
  • Is this information r_______e? Can we trust it?
    reliable
  •  15
  • Has this information been verified? Can we trust the s____e of this information?
    source
  •  15
  • If you’re anything like most people, you probably enjoy _____ on social media.
    -ing
    infinitive with to
  •  15
  • They said someone was trying to take money from my account without my permission and that they needed _____ my personal details to stop it.
    infintive with to
    -ing
  •  15
  • Most of us avoid ______ too much about ourselves face to face, but for some reason, we don’t mind doing this online!
    -ing
    infinitive with to
  •  15
  • Identity t______t is the deliberate use of someone else’s identity, usually to gain a financial advantage
    theft
  •  15
  • This is an a_______n
    auction
  •  15