Practice your English in context. Learn. Read. Listen. Pronounce. Play games...
Showing posts with label Verbs. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Verbs. Show all posts

Monday, 5 May 2014

THE PASSIVE: BASIC INFORMATION

Here's a post with basic information about the Passive Voice. You can link to previous posts on the passive in this blog HERE, where you can watch some video-lessons and links to exercises





Saturday, 15 March 2014

IRREGULAR VERBS PAST & PARTICIPLES ORGANIZED BY THEIR PRONUNCIATION


Including a chart that distributes irregular verbs past and participles organized by how they are pronounced. There are also videos with raps to practice their pronunciation through listening.

Video 1:

Video 2:


Video 3:

Wednesday, 8 May 2013

HOW TO EXPRESS FUTURE



Here are charts that summarise how you can express future in English.




Future certainty versus possibility:

Thursday, 7 February 2013

PRONUNCIATION OF THE "-ED" ENDING



Here's another video for you to check and practice how to pronunce correctly the "-ED" verb ending of the Past Simple regular form of English verbs. Watch it.

Video Pronunciation of "-ED" verb ending:


Video with many examples:

Tuesday, 5 February 2013

ENGLISH MODAL VERBS



On this post we are going to give basic information on ENGLISH MODAL VERBS:
MAIN CHARACTERISTICS:

1-Each verb has its different concept meaning or function. (Look at the chart above)

2- These verbs aren't conjugated. 
No "-S" in the third person singular present.  He can swim. (Not: *He cans swim)
They lack some verb forms, which are covered by semimodals of a similar meaning.
  He had to leave. (Not *He musted leave. Must doesn't have a simple past form)
  He will be able to do it. (Not *He will can do it. Can doesn't have a future form)
[Semi-modal verbs that are used instead of the modal are:
HAVE TO for MUST (obligation)
BE ABLE TO for CAN (ability)
BE ALLOWED TO for CAN, MAY (permission)]

3- They work as auxiliary verbs in the NEGATIVE and QUESTIONS.
  Can I open the window? No, you can't open the window, it's cold.

4-  These verbs are always followed by INFINITIVE WITHOUT TO.
  He can swim. (Not * He can to swim)
Except OUGHT TO.  You ought to go to the doctor's.

5- PERFECT MODALS: past modal verb+HAVE+Past Participle refer to the past.
She hasn't arrived yet. She might have missed the bus.
You failed the exam. You should have studied more.


Link to:
- +INFO & EXERCISES: Perfect English Grammar.
- +INFO @ EXERCISES:English Page.
- +EXERCISES (Modals & their substitutes): Ego4U.

Summary chart:




Sunday, 3 February 2013

MAKING ENGLISH IRREGULAR VERBS EASY (ORDERED IN GROUPS-1)



Trying to make learning English Irregular Past Verb forms easy, here you have a chart with the Irregular Pasts of English verbs not ordered alphabetically but in groups of similarities.

- The left column has the verbs which have the same past simple and past participle forms
- The right column has verbs with different past simple and past participle forms.

In each column there sub-groups ordered by spelling and/or  pronunciation similarities. See why each verb is in the corresponding group.

LINK to online exercises on IRREGULAR VERBS.

Saturday, 2 February 2013

ENGLISH VERB TENSE SYSTEM


Here's a chart which summarises the English Verb Tense system.










Tuesday, 29 January 2013

USES OF "GET"




- "GET" as a phrasal verb:



Get is one of the commonest words in English. It is used in many different ways. Note that get is sometimes avoided in very formal writing, but it is correct in most kinds of speech and writing.

Get + noun/pronoun
When get is followed by a direct object, it usually means ‘receive’, ‘fetch’, ‘obtain’, ‘catch’ or similar ideas.

He has got a prize.
I get a headache whenever I watch TV.

Get can be followed by two objects.

Can you get me a drink?

Get + adjective
Before an adjective, get usually means ‘become’.

My hands and feet were getting cold.

Get can also be followed by object + adjective.

Can you get the kids ready for school?

Get + adverb particle or preposition
When get is followed by an adverb particle or preposition.

I get up at 6 o’clock.

When I went to see him, he told me to get out.

Get + past participle
Get can be followed by a past participle. This structure is often used to talk about things that we do to ourselves.

I only take two minutes to get dressed.

Get + past participle is also used in passive structures.

My watch got broken while was playing.


Get + object + past participle
This structure can be used to talk about things that happen to us.

I got my car stolen last week.

We got our roof blown off in the storm.

Note that in American English, the past participle of get is gotten.
See some examples:

Collocations with GET:


LINKS:

- Uses of GET.
- Phrasal verbs with GET.
- Phrasal verbs with GET (+Spanish translation).
Exercises meanings of GET.
- Exercises GET (2).



Exercises / Ejercicios (gracias a basic grammar in use)

Videos "GET":


This site is used with a non-profit educational purpose only. If you find content (photo/video...) you think shouldn't have been included here, please tell me so I can delete it. Thanks.

Blog labels / Tabs

'-ED' '-ING' 'S €vision 1ºBac 1ºESO 2ºBac 2ºESO 3ºESO 4ºESO A(N) Abbreviations Ability Accents Adjectives Ads Adverbs Advicing Agreeing Alphabet Animals Animation Anniversaries Antonyms Apologizing AprilFool Art Articles Aux.Verbs Basics BE Behaviour BlackFriday Blog Body BonfireNight BrE/AmE Bullying Business BY Carnival Causative Celebration Christmas CINEMA ClassActivity ClassrooManagement ClassroomLanguage Collocations Colours Commitment Communicating Comparatives Competition Compounds Conditionals Confusing Connectors ContinuousTenses Contractions ConversationAssist Cooking Coruña Cosmos Countability Culture Curiosities CW Date Day Demonstratives Derivation Descriptions Design Determiners Directions DO EllenDGeneres Emails EngDepActivities EngEvolution Environment Exams Exclamations FalseFriends Family Feelings Films Food Formal FrequencyAdvs Fun Functions Furniture Future Galicia Game Gastronomy Gender Genitive Geography GET GO Graduation Grammar Greetings Halloween HandwritingHistory Harassment HAVE Health Help tips Heritage History Home Homographs Homophones Horoscopes HumanRights Hygiene ICT Idioms Imperative Infinitive Info Informal Instruments Interjections Internet Introducing Inviting Ireland IrregularVerbs Jobs Karaoke Kron19 Language learning Leisure Letterwriting LIKE Link Listening Literature London LoveActually MAKE Maps Maths Media MindMap Mistakes ModalVerbs Money Music MusicProject NaturalDisasters Nature Negative News Numbers Nürn18 Obit Obligation Offering Onomatopoeias Opinions Passive Past Peace Penpals PerfectTenses Permission Personality Phoning Photography PhrasalVerbs Pioneers Plurals Poetry Politeness Politics Poll Possessive Possibility Practice-exercise Preference Prefix Prepositions Present PresentPerfect Press Prohibition Projects Promising Pronouns Pronunciation Punctuation QTags Qualifications Quantifiers QuestionMaking Questionnaire Quiz Qwords RD25Years Reading Recipes Relatives ReportedSpeech Requesting Routines Royals Scholarships School activities SchoolActivities Science Senses Shopping Slang Slide Smileys Speaking Spelling Sport SportProject St.Patrick Storytelling Strategies StudentExchange StudentPics StudentRecipes Suffix Suffragette Suggestions Symbols Synonyms Teaching Technology Terrorism Thanksgiving THE Theatre Time Tools Traditions Translation Travel Tribute Trinity TV UK USA USED TO Valentine Vehicles Verbs VerbTenses Videos Vocabulary vs Wales Wearing Weather Wishing Women WordOrder Writing

PHONEMIC CHART

PHONEMIC CHART
Practice pronunciation

FIND OUT YOUR ENGLISH LEVEL

FIND OUT YOUR ENGLISH LEVEL
Click on image to do the test

AN APP TO LEARN ENGLISH

WRITING PRACTICE

English pronunciation

English pronunciation
Voice me: give voice to a text you write

AUTHENTIC SPEAKING PRACTICE

AUTHENTIC SPEAKING PRACTICE
WeSpeke

PERFORMANCE-1

PERFORMANCE-1
Link to website

Espazo ABALAR

Espazo ABALAR
Link

INCREDIBLE ENGLISH

Play the English Wizz

Play the English Wizz
Click on the photo, choose your level and have a go.

Play Face Match

Play the Quiz Show

Play SPIN & SPELL

Play SPIN & SPELL
Play spellings words

PLAY VERB MACHINE

CLICK TO MANY TV CHANNELS

CLICK TO MANY TV CHANNELS
Watch BBC, ITV & many more...

LEARN ENGLISH FROM FILMS

LEARN ENGLISH FROM FILMS
Speechyard

SCHOOL EMERGENCY RULES