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Culture Documents
John ......... his bicycle every day. (a) (b) (c) (d) ride ridden rides to ride
I ......... to school every day. (a) (b) (c) (d) walk walks walking to walk
......... play guitar all the time. (a) (b) (c) (d) She He Us They
Do you like .........? (a) (b) (c) (d) dance of dance to dance danced
When I was a child I ......... to climb trees. (a) (b) (c) (d) liked would like was liking like 1
It is a good idea ......... every day. (a) (b) (c) (d) to exercise exercise exercising exercises
We went ......... every day in our neighbors' swimming pool. (a) (b) (c) (d) swim swam had swam swimming
There ......... a race next week. (a) to be (b) was (c) will be (d) are 1) go - - 2) say - - 3) do - - 4) come - - 5) have - - 6) stand - - 7) make - - 8) buy - - 9) sit - - 10) swim - - 11) speak - - 12) see - - 13) write - - 14) sing - - 15) run - Words
to be happy
to be sad
to be shy
to be in love
to doubt
to be angry
to be embarrassed
to be surprised
to be in pain
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I work You work He works She works It works We work You work They work I do not work You do not work He does not work She does not work It does not work You do not work We do not work They do not work Do I work ?
Do you work ? Does he work ? Does she work ? Does it work ? Do we work ? Do you work ? Do they work ? Contracted forms: do not = don't / does not = doesn't
2. Spelling of 3rd person singular (he, she, it) General rule: infinitive without 'to' + S to work ==> works to play ==> plays Verbs ending in O, SS, X, CH, SH : infinitive without 'to' + ES to go ==> goes to kiss ==> kisses Verbs ending in Y, preceded by a consonant: Y changes into IES to cry ==> cries to fly ==> flies 1. Conjugation
Affirmative I worked You worked He worked She worked It worked We worked You worked They worked
Contracted forms: 2.
Negative I did not work You did not work He did not work She did not work It did not work We did not work You did not work They did not work
did not = didn't
Interrogative Did I work? Did you work? Did he work? Did she work? Did it work? Did we work? Did you work? Did they work?
Spelling General rule: infinitive without 'to' + ED to work --> I worked Verbs ending in E or IE: infinitive without 'to' + D to die --> He died Verbs ending in Y, preceded by a consonant: the Y changes into IED to try --> She tried
Verbs ending in L, preceded by a short vowel: the L is doubled + ED to travel --> We travelled Verbs ending in IC: the C is followed by K + ED to panic --> They panicked Verbs of one syllable, ending in a single consonant, preceded by a short vowel: the end consonant is doubled + ED to plan --> You planned
Fill in the affirmative form of the verb.
I ... (to clean) my teeth two times yesterday. The concert ... (to finish) at 11 2. o'clock. Annie's grandfather ... (to die) 3. when he was 90. We ... (to enjoy) our holiday last 4. summer. 5. He ... (to try) to put out the fire. The accident ... (to happen) last 6. Monday morning. When I was young, I ... (to want) 7. to be a doctor. They ... (to travel) to Rome last 8. year. 1.
Fill in the affirmative form of the (irregular) verb: to buy - to catch - to drink - to fall - to sell - to teach - to throw - to write
Mozart ... more than 600 pieces of music. 2. My father ... me how to drive. We can't afford to keep a car, so 3. we ... it. I was thirsty, so I ... the water 4. quickly. 5. Don ... down the stairs this 1.
morning. 6. Jane ... the ball at Jim. 7. Jim ... the ball. 8. Tina ... a new dress yesterday. Complete the newspaper story about a fire. Two people 1. (to die) in a fire in Church Street, Hastings yesterday evening. They 2. (to be) Maggie and Dennis Humes, a couple in their sixties. The fire 3. (to start) at 4.40 a.m. A neighbour 4. (to see) the flames and 5. (to call) the fire brigade. He also 6. (to try) to get into the house and rescue his neighbours, but the heat 7. (to be) to great. The fire brigade 8. (to arrive) in seven minutes. Fifteen fire-fighters 9. (to fight) the fire and finally they 10. (to bring) it under control. Two fire-fighters 11. (to enter) the building but they 12. (to find) the couple dead. 1. Affirmative and negative sentences In English, the order of words in a statement is subject + verb + object. Subject I Mike She Verb Object am a doctor. is watching a film. does not drinkcoffee.
Some verbs do not have an object. Subject Ann We Verb is swimming. are walking.
After the verb 'to be', we can also use an adjective. Subject She Paul Verb is feels Adjective tired. happy.
After some verbs, we can talk about a person and an object. Subject Peter She Verb is making is writing Person Tom him Object a cup of tea. a letter.
We usually put information about times or places at the end of a sentence. If both are in the sentence: we usually put 'place' before 'time' Subject He She Paul they week a we at in her is Verb has reads to Scotland Object a holiday a book travelling for I match every we this Places in Spain. Times every year. every week.
7 o'clock eat dinner we stayed a Turkey week sent win she summer last not brings visited letter the day them did a
yesterday him
coffee in
Italy