Sunday, May 30, 2010

Adverbs and adjectives

Adjectives qualify a noun while adverbs modify verbs. In fact, the word "adverb" means "next to a verb" in latin. 
Many adverbs derive from adjectives. Most of them are formed by adding the suffix -ly to the adjective. The adjectives ending in -ble just drop the final -e and add  -y, while those adjectives that end in -y drop it and add -ily. Some examples are:
quick   quickly
comfortable    comfortably
happy     happily
Exceptions:
good     well 
fast      fast
hard    hard*


*We shouldn't confuse the words hard  and hardly. They  are both adverbs but have different meanings: hard means rough or difficult, whereas hardly means barely or not much. Can you see the difference between "working hard" and "hardly working"?


Watch this presentation and do the exercises below:

Saturday, May 15, 2010

The present perfect tense

Watch this presentation and then do the exercises below:

Monday, May 10, 2010

Present perfect test

Friday, May 7, 2010

Countable and uncountable nouns

Watch this presentation about countable and uncountable nouns and then do the exercises below.



Decide which nouns are countable and which nouns are uncountable
Food partitive exercises
Partitive crossword
Choose the correct partitive
A /an / some /any

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