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NHF6 Unit 7 Practice

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    A Baamboozle to practise the contents of New High Five 6 Unit 7
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  • This is something you do when you pay for things. After doing this you have less money than you started with.
    Spend money
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  • This is the person who wants to buy things in a shop or online.
    Customer
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  • This is the currency they use to pay in the United Kingdom
    Pounds (£)
  •  15
  • This is the currency they use to pay in the United States of America
    Dollars ($)
  •  15
  • This is a place where you keep your money. You usually keep it at home because it's too big and heavy to carry around with you.
    It's a moneybox
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  • This is somethig you put money into. It's usually quite small and fits into your pocket. You can keep coins, banknotes and credit cards in it.
    It's a purse/wallet.
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  • This is a piece of paper that a shop assistant or cashier gives you when you buy something. It's important to keep this safe in case there's a problem or you want to change what you bought.
    It's a receipt
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  • This is where you pay for your shopping. It's usually got a machine that scans the barcodes on the items you're buying and a place where the money is kept.
    It's a till
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  • This is the person who you pay in a shop. In a supermarket they usually pass every item through a scanning machine and tell you how much money you have to pay for all of your items.
    Cashier
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  • This is money that is made of a special kind of paper. They've got different values. One may be worth €10 and another may be worth €20.
    They're banknotes / bills
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  • This is the currency they use to pay in some countries of the European Union, including Spain, France, Italy, Germany or Ireland.
    Euros
  •  15
  • USE TOO/(NOT) ENOUGH + EXPENSIVE/CHEAP/MONEY: I've got €20. The thing I want to buy is €10.
    It's cheap enough. I've got enough money (to buy two of them).
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  • USE TOO/(NOT) ENOUGH + EXPENSIVE/CHEAP/MONEY: I've got €20. The thing I want to buy is €30.
    It's too expensive. I haven't got enough money.
  •  15
  • USE TOO/(NOT) ENOUGH + EXPENSIVE/CHEAP/MONEY: She's got €50. The thing she wants to buy is €30.
    It's cheap enough. She's got enough money (to buy one).
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  • USE TOO/(NOT) ENOUGH + EXPENSIVE/CHEAP/MONEY: She's got €10. The thing she wants to buy is €50.
    It's too expensive. She hasn't got enough money.
  •  15
  • USE TOO/(NOT) ENOUGH + EXPENSIVE/CHEAP/MONEY: He's got €3.50. The thing he wants to buy is €2.50.
    He's got enough money. It's cheap enough.
  •  15