Test your English level

viernes, 4 de mayo de 2018

STATIVE VERBS





VERBS WITH DIFFERENT MEANING WHEN THEY GO IN A SIMPLE OR CONTINUOUS TENSE

HAVE
  • POSSESS “ I have a new book” (*** “I´m having second thoughts about the journey”)
  • TOMAR, ETC “ We were having lunch when you rang”

FEEL
  • THINK, OPINION  “ I feel we shouldn’t do it”
  • FEEL- TOUCH “ I am feeling sick today” “ I feel my pockets every morning before leaving my house”

THINK
  • OPINION “What do you think of abortion?”
  • MENTAL PROCESS “What are you thinking about?” “ Do you still think about him?”

TASTE
  • GIVE OUT FLAVOUR “ The soup tastes delicious”
  • TASTE “I’m tasting my wine” “ He always tastes the food before serving it”

SMELL
  • GIVE OUT SMELL “The meat smells bad” “Why do you smell? Haven´t you had a shower?”
  • SMELL “ Why are you smelling the fish?”

WEIGHT
  • TO TELL HOW MUCH YOU WEIGHT “ I weight 70 Kgr”
  • TO WEIGHT SOMETHING “I am weighting the sugar for the cake” “ He never weights the ingredients.”

LOOK
  • TO SEE “I am looking through the window” “ You can look at that magazine”
  • PARECER “ You look nice with that hat”

LOVE
  • AMAR “ I love you”
  • ENJOY “ I am loving this sense of freedom”

MEAN
  • QUERER DECIR “ What do you mean’”
  • TENER LA INTENCION “ I have been meaning to tell you for a long time that I have failed my maths exam”

IMAGINE
  • OPINION “ I imagine that he must be tired after such a long journey”
  • MENTAL PROCESS “ You have been imagining things lately”

CONSIDER
  • BELIEVE “ Mike considers this course a waste of time”
  • VALORAR “ I am seriously considering his offer”


APPEAR
  • PARECER “ He appears to be tired”
  • APARECER “ He will be appearing in the latest James Bond film”

EXPECT
  • ASSUME “ I expect that you are tired”
  • WAIT “ Are you expecting visitors this evening?”
  • “WHAT TO EXPECT WHEN YOU ARE EXPECTING”

SEE
  • SEE , CAN SEE “ I can see the sea from here”
  • UNDERSTAND, “Ummm, I don´t see what you mean”
  • MEET  (Future) “ I’m seeing Paul tomorrow”
 (Present) “I’m seeing a lot of him these days”



Non-continuous Verbs
Non-continuous verbs are verbs that we do not normally use with continuous tenses. These "stative" verbs are about state, not action, and they cannot express the continuous or progressive aspect. Here are some of the most common non-continuous verbs:
  • feelinghate, like, love, prefer, want, wish
  • sensesappear, feel, hear, see, seem, smell, sound, taste
  • communicationagree, deny, disagree, mean, promise, satisfy, surprise
  • thinkingbelieve, imagine, know, mean, realize, recognize, remember, understand
  • other statesbe, belong, concern, depend, involve, matter, need, owe, own, possess, mind

REPORTED SPEECH BASIC


 

REPORTED SPEECH


CAMBIOS VERBALES


FUTURO                   -           CONDICIONAL SIMPLE
PRESENTE SIMPLE            PASADO SIMPLE
CAN                          -           COULD
PRESENTE PERF.    -           PASADO PERFECTO
PASADO SIMPLE    -           PASADO PERFECTO
MUST                        -           HAD TO
IMPERATIVO           -           INFINITIVO CON TO
PRESENTE CONT.   -           PASADO CONTINUO

PREGUNTAS

SE INVIERTE EL ORDEN DE LA PREGUNTA PARA FORMAR UNA AFIRMACIÓN:
“ HOW MUCH MONEY DO YOU NEED?” SHE ASKED
SHE ASKED HOW MUCH MONEY I NEEDED.

SUGERENCIAS


LAS SUGERENCIAS PUEDEN SER SEGUIDAS DE UNA FORMA GERUNDIA O UN SHOULD + INF.
“ LET´S GO HOME” SHE SUGGESTED
SHE SUGGESTED GOING HOME
SHE SUGGESTED THAT THEY SHOULD GO HOME

OTROS PUNTOS IMPORTANTES


-          EL PRONOMBRE PERSONAL CAMBIA NORMALMENTE:
“ I´VE WASHED THE DISHES,” SHE SAID
            SHE SAID THAT SHE HAD WASHED THE DISHES
-          PALABRAS COMO “ PLEASE “ O “NOW “ DESAPARECEN:
“ PLEASE COMER IN”       -           HE ASKED ME TO COME IN
“ COME IN NOW “              -           HE TOLD ME TO COME IN
-          OTRAS PALABRAS QUE CAMBIAN SON:
TOMORROW           -           THE FOLLOWING DAY / THE NEXT DAY
            TODAY                     -           THE SAME DAY / THAT DAY
            YESTERDAY           -           THE DAY BEFORE / THE PREVIOUS DAY
            NEXT WEEK/YEAR           -           THE FOLLOWING WEEK / YEAR
            LAST WEEK/YEAR -          THE PREVIOUS WEEK / YEAR
            NOW                          -           THEN
            HERE                         -           THERE
            THIS                          -           THAT ( EN EXPRESIONES DE TIEMPO)
            THIS, THAT...           -           THE ( CUANDO SON ADJETIVOS)
            THIS, THAT ...          -           IT, THEY/THEM (CUANDO SON PRONB.)
           

PRESENT PERFECT SIMPLE VS PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS


PRESENT PERFECT SIMPLE

1.      CUANDO UNA ACCION OCURRE EN UN TIEMPO QUE NO HA TERMINADO
I HAVEN´T SEEN MY BOSS TODAY
2.      CUANDO NO SE MENCIONA CUANDO HA OCURRIDO LA ACCION, O BIEN PORQUE NO ES IMPORTANTE O PORQUE NO SE SABE
I HAVE LOST MY GLASSES
3.      CUANDO UNA ACCION OCURRIO EN EL PASADO PERO TIENE TRANSCENCIA EN EL PRESENTE
SUSAN HAS TIDIED UP HER BEDROOM, SO SHE IS NOT GROUNDED ANY MORE
4.      CUANDO LA ACCION NO HA TERMINADO
I HAVE STUDIED ENGLISH ALL MY LIFE
5.      CON ALREADY * (ESTA PISTA SOLO VALE CUANDO HAY QUE DIFERENCIAR ENTRE PRESENT PERFECT Y PAST SIMPLE)
I HAVE ALREADY FINISHED MY HOMEWORK
6.      CON JUST * (ESTA PISTA SOLO VALE CUANDO HAY QUE DIFERENCIAR ENTRE PRESENT PERFECT Y PAST SIMPLE)
I HAVE JUST CALLED THE DOCTOR.
7.      CON YET ( SIEMPRE NEGATIVA O INTERROGATIVA)
I HAVEN´T MET YOUR GIRLFRIEND YET
HAVE YOU FINISHED YET?
8.      CON EVER ( CASI SIEMPRE EN PREGUNTAS
HAVE YOU EVER BEEN TO LONDON?
9.      CON SINCE
I HAVEN´T SEEN PETER SINCE LAST SEPTEMBER
10.  CON FOR
I HAVE KNOWN RACHAEL FOR 20 YEARS

PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS

1.      PARA ACCIONES QUE OCURRIERON DE FORMA CONTINUA DURANTE UN PERIODO DE TIEMPO TODAVÍA ABIERTO
(YO LLEVO COCINANDO / YO HE ESTADO COCINANDO)
·         I HAVE BEEN COOKING ALL MORNING AND HAVEN´T FINISHED YET.
·         HE HAS BEEN STUDYING ENGLISH ALL HIS LIFE .

MODALES- SEMI MODALES -           NO SE PUEDEN PONER DOS MODALES JUNTOS -           LOS MODALES SIEMPRE VAN SEGUIDOS ...