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martes, 21 de septiembre de 2021

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WORD FORMATION RAP


PRESENT AND PAST TENSES (SIMPLE AND CONTINUOUS)



PRESENT SIMPLE
PRESENT CONTINUOUS
TENSES
-s / -es /-ies  3rd person singular
don´t /doesn´t  / Do / Does ...? 
be in present + -ing form
-ing spelling rules:  having, running, beginning, travelling, dying…
FORM
 · routines, habits:
We rarely do homework at school
·general truths:
Water boils at 100ºC
·states (STATIVE VERBS):
Sorry, I don´t understand you
·future meaning with schedules /timetables:
The lesson starts in five minutes
·actions happening now:
We´re studying English right now
·a temporary situation:
This year, I´m doing ballet
·a complaint with the adverb always:
You´re always interrupting
·a plan for near future:
We´re going to the cinema this afternoon.
USES
· frequency adverbs (position):
I am never late at school / He seldom goes out at night.
·temporal expressions(position):
I play tennis twice a week / Everyday, they meet to chat
·How often?
·temporal expressions denoting the present:
now, at the moment, today, these days, at present...
·Stative verbs when denoting activity:
She is thinking about leaving the school.
EXPRESSIONS


   STATIVE VERBS

-feelings and emotions: like, dislike, love, hate, prefer, want, enjoy, hope

-opinion and thoughts: think, believe, know, remember, forget, understand, guess

-perception and senses: hear, see, smell, sound, taste, touch, feel

-prices and measures: cost, measure, weigh

-possession: have, own, possess

*Some of these verbs are used in the present simple and continuous:

       -I think this is a wonderful film.     (“think” means “believe”®STATE)

         -He´s thinking about leaving school. (“think” means “planning”®ACTIVITY)


PAST SIMPLE
PAST CONTINUOUS
TENSES
-ed  regular verbs / 2nd column irregular verbs
din´t  + infinitive/ Did + infinitive...? 
be in past + -ing form
-ing spelling rules:  having, running, beginning, travelling, dying…
FORM
 · completed actions in the past (states, facts, actions):
     I was very excited.
     I lived there for 6 years.
    The company made 100 people redundant last year.
· repeated actions in the past:
     They had a meeting every two days.
·completed action in the past to emphasize the continuity of the action:
    Everybody was talking about it all evening.
    They were really trying hard but couldn't do it.
USES
· When we use both pasts in the same sentence, we use the past continuous to talk about the "background action" or “interrupted action” and the past simple to talk about the shorter completed action (interrupting action).
It was raining hard when we left the building.
I was reading the report when you rang.
· When we use both pasts in the same sentence, we use the past continuous to talk about the "background action" or “interrupted action” and the past simple to talk about the shorter completed action (interrupting action).
As / While It was raining hard, we left the building.
As / While I was reading the report, you rang.
CONTRAST







USED TO

used to work there.

I didn´t use to work there.

Did you use to work there?

We use this structure to express something which usually happened in the past and no longer occurs now:

I used to play tennis a lot, but now I´m too lazy.

It is also used for past situations that no longer exist:

We used to live in a small village, but now we live in Milan.

Used to + verb is always past. For present, we use present simple:

Past He used to smoke we used to live there used to be.

Present He smokes we live there is.

BE/GET USED TO SOMETHING


Jane is American, but she has lived in Britain for three years. When she first drove a car in Britain, she found it very difficult because she had to drive on the left instead of on the right. Driving on the left was strange and difficult for her because:

She wasn´t used to it. (No estaba acostumbrada) She wasn´t used to driving on the left.(No estaba acostumbrada a conducir por la izquierda.)

After a lot of practice, driving on the left became less strange: She got used to driving on the left. (Se acostumbró a conducir por la izquierda)

Now after three years, driving on the left is no problem for her: She is used to driving on the left. (Está acostumbrada a conducir por la izquierda)


WOULD + INFINITIVE

This structure can be used to epress past habits but it is less frequent than the past simple and used to.

When I was younger, I would play tennis after school.

USED TO, BE/GET USED TO (www.englishexercises.org)

Practise these structures clicking HERE

FUTURE TIME

FUTURE TIME


 


Will + infinitive
Be going to + infinitive
A decision at the moment of speaking:
Julie: There’s no milk.
John: Really? In that case, I’ll go and get some.
A decision before the moment of speaking:
Julie: There’s no milk.
John: I know. I’m going to go and get some when this TV programme finishes.
A prediction based on opinion:
I think the Conservatives will win the next election.
A prediction based on something we can see (or hear) now:
The Conservatives are going to win the election. They already have most of the votes.
A future fact:
The sun will rise tomorrow.
For promises / requests / refusals / offers:
I’ll help you tomorrow, if you like.



Other points about the future:


-
We use the present continuous tense for definite future arrangements. Often, it doesn't really matter if we choose 'be going to' or the present continuous. In the following example, there is really very little difference in meaning:

  • I'm going to the cinema tonight.
  • I'm going to go to the cinema tonight.

-We use the present simple tense in two cases. First, we use it for a timetabled event in the future, like public transport or the start of a class:

  • My train leaves at six tonight.
  • His class starts at 9am tomorrow.



Second, we use it after certain words, when the sentence has a future meaning. These words are: before / after / as soon as / until / when:

  • I'll call you when I get home.
  • She's going to study after she finishes dinner.
  • Please drink some water as soon as you complete the race.


-We use the future continuous for:

  1. A continuous action in the future which is interrupted by a time or by another action.
    I’ll be waiting when you arrive.
    At eight o’clock, I’ll be eating dinner.

    (see the
    past continuous which is used in a similar way)
  2. A complete action in the future that will happen in the normal course of events.
    The Government will be making a statement later.
    Because this talks about something that will happen if everything is as we planned, we often use this tense to ask politely about what someone is going to do.
    Will you be taking your car to the meeting? (=I'm asking very indirectly and politely - perhaps I want to get a lift)
  3. To make a guess about the present.
    My mother will be working now. (= I think she is working now, but I’m not completely certain)


-We use the future perfect for:

  1. With a future time word, (and often with ‘by’) to talk about an action that will finish before a certain time in the future, but we don’t know exactly when.

    By 10 o’clock I will have finished my homework. (=I will finish my homework some time before 10, but we don’t know exactly when)
    By the time I’m sixty, I will have retired. (= I will retire sometime before I'm sixty. We don't know exactly when, but definitely before my sixtieth birthday)

PERFECT TENSES

FIND HERE all you need to know about form, uses and examples of perefct tenses