Quarter 3 Review

Units 21 – 30

Commerce, Culture, and Corporate Deceit

Mastering the Narrative.

Over the last ten units, we have examined the intersections of money, morality, and the law. To debate corruption, systemic failure, and societal hypocrisy, you must prove your command of advanced English sentence structures and high-level vocabulary.


Section 1: The Vocabulary of Exploitation

Drag the correct terms from Units 21-30 into the statements below.

parasocial
liability
whistleblower
gentrification
perjury
censorship
monopoly
hypocrisy

U21 (Adult Economy): Fans often spend thousands of dollars because they develop an unhealthy relationship with the creator.

U22 (Lawsuits): The corporation used a massive legal team to avoid taking any for the chemical spill.

U24 (Sports Corruption): The risked their entire career to leak the documents proving the referee was bribed.

U25 (Poverty Trap): Rapid caused rent prices to double, pushing low-income families onto the streets.

U27 (Deceit): Lying under oath in a court of law is a serious crime known as .

U28 (Public Decency): Covering up the classic Renaissance statue with a black bar was an absurd act of .

U29 (Big Pharma): Because the pharmaceutical giant held a on the cure, they could charge $1,000 per pill.

U30 (Legalising Vices): It is pure for the state to arrest street gamblers while spending millions promoting the state lottery.


[IMAGE PLACEHOLDER: Q3 Symbolic Collage]

Designer Prompt: A gritty, high-contrast 1990s pop-art collage featuring stark, symbolic objects: a digital glowing padlock, an Olympic gold medal, a spilling prescription pill bottle, and a heavy wooden gavel. The composition is chaotic and intense. Deep blacks, stark whites, and harsh neon green and crimson accents. Absolutely no human figures, hands, or faces are present. Clean, striking, provocative image.

Section 2: The Grammar Gauntlet

Test your mastery of the advanced structures needed to debate these topics.

1. Causative Verbs (Unit 22 - Lawsuits)

Which sentence correctly describes a court forcing an action?

2. Past Modals of Deduction (Passive) (Unit 24 - Sports Corruption)

You are 99% sure a crime happened to the referee. How do you express this?

3. Wishes and Regrets (Unit 25 - Poverty Trap)

How do you correctly express a regret about a past mistake?

4. Future in the Past (Unit 27 - Morality of Deceit)

Which sentence correctly reports a broken promise from the past?

5. Passive Reporting Verbs (Unit 28 - Public Decency)

How do you formally report that an artist broke the law in the past?

6. Mixed Conditionals (Unit 30 - Legalising Vices)

How do you criticise a general philosophy based on a past action?

Section 3: Heavy Idioms

Type the missing words to complete these conversational phrases.

1. The CEO refused to take the blame for the defective brakes; he just tried to pass the to the engineers.

2. Because of the aggressive cancel culture online, everyone feels like they are walking on .