Download Editor In Chief - Cone's Chronicle

Survey
yes no Was this document useful for you?
   Thank you for your participation!

* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project

Document related concepts

Ojibwe grammar wikipedia , lookup

American Sign Language grammar wikipedia , lookup

Udmurt grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Old Irish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Germanic weak verb wikipedia , lookup

Malay grammar wikipedia , lookup

Esperanto grammar wikipedia , lookup

Inflection wikipedia , lookup

Germanic strong verb wikipedia , lookup

Chinese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Macedonian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Navajo grammar wikipedia , lookup

English clause syntax wikipedia , lookup

French grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lithuanian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Portuguese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Scottish Gaelic grammar wikipedia , lookup

Japanese grammar wikipedia , lookup

Kannada grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ukrainian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Lexical semantics wikipedia , lookup

Swedish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Sotho verbs wikipedia , lookup

Old English grammar wikipedia , lookup

Turkish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Modern Hebrew grammar wikipedia , lookup

Hungarian verbs wikipedia , lookup

Latin conjugation wikipedia , lookup

Russian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Georgian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek verbs wikipedia , lookup

Kagoshima verb conjugations wikipedia , lookup

Italian grammar wikipedia , lookup

Ancient Greek grammar wikipedia , lookup

Polish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Serbo-Croatian grammar wikipedia , lookup

German verbs wikipedia , lookup

Yiddish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Pipil grammar wikipedia , lookup

Spanish grammar wikipedia , lookup

Latin syntax wikipedia , lookup

Transcript
B2-Lesson 22
Archaeological Find

Verbs can be active or passive. In the passive
voice the action is being done to the subject.
(3.25)
Example:
Active: The dog chases the birds.
Passive: The birds are being chased by the dog.


Verb tense shows whether an action has already occurred, is
now occurring, or will occur in the future.
Irregular verbs are sometimes confused. (3.24)
Example:
did
have done had done will have done
went have gone had gone will have gone
spend have spent had spent will have spent

A helping verb (auxiliary verb) is part of a verb
phrase. Common helping verbs include: be,
can, could, do, have, may, might, must, shall,
should, will, would.

A comma is used after an introductory word
or an interjection. (5.14)
Example:
Unfortunately, she was too ill to perform in the recital.
Goodness, that class was totally out of control!
However, we decided to follow Dana’s plan anyway.

Use an apostrophe to form the singular
possessive. (5.3)
Example:
dog’s bone
Maria’s ball
car’s color

Infinitives (“plain verbs”) use the word will to
form the future tense. (3.24)
Example:
She will have to study for her test.

Be sure to STUDY the illustration and caption
before you read the text. Don’t forget to
analyze any facts or figures.

Be sure to use the correct homophone when
spelling the following:
are/our
where/were
Whose/who’s its/it’s
their/there/they’re
to/too/two
lose/loose

In EIC, correct a run-on sentence by creating
two sentences. The first sentence ends in
final punctuation. The second sentence
begins with a capital letter.


An adjective and the noun or pronoun it
modifies must agree in number. (4.5)
Demonstrative adjectives include:
this/these
that/those