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Conditional sentences |
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Learn how to express conditions in English depending on the situation |
How to give more information about a word (relative connectors) |
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When we need to give more information about a word, we use relative clauses. A relative clause is functioning like an adjective |
How to express contrast |
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Different ways of expressing contrast in English with different kinds of connectors and prepositions |
How to express result |
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Different ways of expressing result, and the relationship between result and reason. |
How to express reason |
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Different ways of expressing reason in English, in a formal and informal style. |
Correlative Connectors |
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Some sentences use two connectors for emphasis. We call these double connectors "correlative connectors" |
The compound sentence: connectors |
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There are three ways of expressing a complex idea. We can use conjunctions, free connectors or even prepositions |
Question Tags |
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Question tags: what they are, how to form them and when to use them. |
Question Tags: special cases |
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Question tags: special cases when they are formed in different and unexpected way. |
DURING vs FOR |
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The difference between DURING and FOR to talk about time |
SINCE vs FOR |
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Difference between FOR and SINCE (and FROM) to talk about time. |
Prepositions of Time: at, on, in |
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When to use AT, ON, IN as prepositions of time, General rules and exceptions. |
VERY, TOO / VERY MUCH, TOO MUCH |
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Learn the difference between: Very / Too, Very much / Too much and when to use them |
ALREADY / YET |
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The difference between ALREADY and YET. When and how to use them. |
STILL / YET |
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The difference between STILL and YET as an adverb. Meaning and usage. |
EVERY vs EACH / Everyone vs Every one |
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The difference between EVERY and EACH. Also the difference between EVERYONE and EVERY ONE. |
EVERY vs ALL / BOTH |
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The difference in use between the words: Every, All and Both |
I want him to go |
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The verb TO WANT and some others use the construction verb + object + infinitive with to |
Enough |
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Learn the use of enough with nouns and with adjectives |
Other / Another |
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Let's learn and practise when to use OTHER, ANOTHER, OTHERS or ANOTHER ONE |
One as a pronoun |
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We can use ONE as a pronoun so we do not need to repeat the noun |
Impersonal sentences: ONE / YOU / THEY |
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We can use ONE, YOU and They, when we talk about a situation in general and not about any person in particular |
Each other / One another: Reciprocal actions |
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Learn how to express the idea that an action is reciprocal: A does to B and B does to A |
Myself, yourself...: Reflexive pronouns |
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The use of the emphatic pronouns in English: Myself, yourself, himself... |
Myself, yourself...: Emphatic pronouns |
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Myself, yourself, etc. used as emphatic pronouns, to highlight the subject of the sentence |