English


                                                        VERB TO BE

I
n English, verbs have a very important place in communication, they are the ones responsible for expressing actions. Words like jump, run, speak… all are common and clear examples of verbs that describe an action that a subject does. However, there is one verb that’s the most used in the English language: the verb to be.


T
he “to be” is a verb used to describe something or someone. In English, it can be used to say different things according to the context. However, the most common use of the to be verb is to talk about names, age, feeling, nationalities, and professions, especially when talking in the present tense.




                                                 SINGULAR AND PLURAL NOUNS


SINGULAR
T
he unique role of farmers as environmental managers must also be fully recognised, appreciated and rewarded.The unique intellectual and professional potential of the CD was confirmed for all to see.A settled apathy, a gradual wasting away of the person, and frequent although transient affections of a partially cataleptical character were the unusual diagno.


PLURAL
P
lural noun sare words used to indicate that there is more than one person, animal, place, thing, or idea. The difference between singular and plural nouns is simple once you know what to look for. Here, we take a look at singular and plural nouns, providing both singular nouns examples and plural noun examples to help you recognize plural nouns when you see them.






                                                          REGULAR VERB

A

 regular verb is one that is conjugated in a traditional form. For example, "bake" is a regular verb because the past tense is "baked" and the future tense is "will bake." However, a word such as "write" is an irregular verb, because the past tense form is not "writed," but is rather "wrote." 



                                                       IRREGULAR VERB


T
hey are the ones who construct the past and the past participle in an irregular way: no they add "ED" to the infinitive, but they form it with a word that can be completely different to the infinitive. We will say that these irregular verbs do use the "S" for the third one’s people of singular of the indicative and use "ING" to form the continuous times.Therefore, they are only irregular because they do not use "ED" to form the past and the past participle.


                                                            COLORS


No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario

Karla de Lara