Chapitre Six
Le corps humain, les symptômes, les médicaments, les remèdes
Exercice 6.1 - 6.5
Le corps humain
Vocabulary: Les symptômes
Vocabulary: Les médicaments et les remèdes
Vocabulary: D’autres expressions
Exercice 6.1
Exercice 6.2
Exercice 6.3
Exercice 6.4
Exercice 6.5
Des modèles :
- Luc a le nez qui coule au printemps parce qu’il a le rhume des foins.
- Marc a la grippe. Il a de la fièvre et il est nauséeux.
the human body
body parts
face
eyes
eye
ears
nose
mouth
head
neck
back
arm
hand
wrist
shoulder
hip
leg
knee
ankle
foot
finger
toe
the organs and the internal parts of the body
throat
inner ear
stomach
abdomen
tummy/belly
heart
lung
bone (the "s" is pronounced)
bones (the "s" in os is silent)
blood
skin
a cough
a fever
an infection
an ear infection
the flu
a pain + a body part
painful menstrual cramps
stuffy nose
runny nose
ringing in the ear
motion sickness
a cold
under the weather with a cold
sick
pregnant
allergic
in good health
in good shape
nauseous
antibiotics
cough syrup
the pill; birth control pill
medicine; a pill; a tablet
eye drops
painkiller
to gargle
to stay in bed; to be on bedrest
chamomile tea
What's wrong (with you)?
I have a pain in + part of body
to injure (oneself); in French we use the reflexive but in English we would say "to get hurt"
to get sick; to fall ill
to vomit
to feel better
to feel worse
Get well soon!
to break + (a bone)
I broke my leg
has
during the spring
because
he has
hay fever
and
he is
nauseous