Language II
Language II
Present perfect
● Action completed
● It centers in the result of an action
● Part of a permanent situation
VS
both happen after a point in the past; “the past of the past”. *PP/PPC ← ←
← *
PAST
Past perfect
● the action is completed
● emphasize the result
● Permanent or just 1 ocasión
So and such
So is used with adj, adverbs, and quantifiers plus a noun. (each one separately)
* we can use a that to explain or drop it in exclamation (both) // “such and such” refer a thing
Gerunds // ing-
4 forms
1) preposition + gerund
ex: afraid of, angry about, bad at, clever at, crazy about, disappointed about, excited
about, famous for, fed up with, glad about, happy about, interested in, proud of, sick
of, give up, good at, sorry about, tired of, worried about….. etc.
2) as subject: goes at the beginning of the sentence
ex: Learning is important
3) as object of a sentence
ex: I really enjoy swimming
Gerund vs infinitive
Tag questions are short questions following a statement, they are used to check information.
the aux agrees with the pronoun. except in the negative form of I am.
we give an answer to the statement, not the tag.
types
1. + statement, - tag
2. - statement, + tag
3. + statement, + tag
Special cases
Let's ---- Shall we?
Imperatives ---- Will you?
I am ---- aren't I
nothing / something----- pronoun is it
nobody / everybody / no one / someone / everyone ------ pronoun is they
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Affirmative statement
ex: He is resigning
Negative statement
ex: He isnt resigning
sim
● they need a aux and a pronoun
diff:
●
echo are responses, tag are part of the statement
●
echo have word order of a direct question, statement, or both and tag question have
only order of a direct question.
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sentence: form by 1 or more clauses, it contains a full idea with subj and predicate.
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Adverbial clauses are dependent clauses that gives an answer to adverbial question (how
when, where)
Adverbial clause of time are dependent clauses that answer the question “when”, it always
starts with a dependent conjunction (time word)
Structure
1. main clause + adv clause
2. adv clause + , + main clause
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modals of possibility
must (certainty)
might
may (formal)
could (past ability)
can’t (impossibility)
wish
wish something to someone (noun)
hope something to happen (verb)
sub + wish (es) + (that) + past simple → things are impossible or unlikely
sub + wish (es) + (that) + sub + could + inf → focus on the ability / to be
different
sub + wish (es) + that + sub + had + participle → past, have already
happened
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Conditionals
Zero → its a fact
● if + simple present , simple present
First → might happen in the future
● if + simple present , sub + will + inf
Second → might not happen in the future
● if + simple past , sub + would + inf
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Passive voice
Used when the agent/ doer is unknown or unimportant, and to emphasize the object of the
verb, used in formal writing.
If we want to say who or what did the action (the agent) we use “by” at the end of the
sentence. If we want to refer to the instrument that is being used to perform the action we
can add “with” to the sentence.
*You need a transitive verb because they need/have an obj to make sence.
*The object is affected by a verb, the object does not perform the action.
*You can't make passive voice with intransitive verbs → feelings, be,
become, etc.
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Reported Speech
Used to say what other people said. We have to consider 4 important points.
1. The verb usually changes from present to past, or past to past perfect. same with
continuous form, it goes backwards.
2. Pronouns change from 1st to 2 person (she, he, it, you, they)
3. Adverbs of time can also change, it depends when the message was said
and when we report. Ex: today → yesterday, the day before / tomorrow →
the next day /
last night→ the night before
4. modal verbs also can change to past form. Ex: will to would, can to could, must to
had to, shall to should, may to might.
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Indirect questions
They can be used to be polite in a conversation, they are inside a statement. Exists two
types
1. Reported questions
It's used in reported speech and they go with these introductory phrases on the main
clause.
● subj + asked
● subj + wanted to know
● …. would like to know
● …. wondered
● …. was asked
*if you are doing a yes/no question you are going to use an dependent if clause (whether).
* If we want to do a question-word question we will use why/when/where/what/how.
*you have to be careful with pronouns and time shifts of the sentence.
2. embedded questions
Is a question that is inside another question or statement. They use the form of an
introductory question phrase such as:
* After these introductory phrases they use a normal subject-verb-object pattern instead of a
typical inverted question pattern.
EX:
Do you know where Paula is?
I’d like to know where paula is.
* We use embedded questions to sound more polite, to give or want more information or to
change to reported speech.
*Don't use contractions at the end of the question.
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Relative clauses (dependent)
There exist two types of relative clauses
1. Defining relative clause
*Useful to give essential info about the object of the sentence.
*If we delete it is probable that people don't understand what you are referring to.
* who - which can be drop or replaced by that
*don't use commas
*don't use whom
Used to give extra or essential info, combine 2 sent into 1.Its function is to describe nouns
just as an adjective itself does.
Pronouns
who
whom
which → describe things → add extra info → non defining relative clause
that → describe things → add essential info → defining relative clause
whose
when → time
where
why
*with the rest of pronouns it will depend on the meaning to decide whether to use as defining
or non defining.
we can shorten an adj clause of time if the subject of both clauses is the same.
steps to follow:
1. keep the adverb / pronoun on the adjective clause
2. remove the subject of the adjective clause
3. change the verb into gerund
negative questions
Useed when we search for agreement or to show emotions such as surprise,
disappointment.
*they begin with doesn’t / don’t or isn't / aren't (aux)
*can also begin with a - form of a modal such as wont /can't or shouldn't / wouldn't