Inversion
Inversion
Inversion
.next year
Not only (the girl/be/hungry) was the girl hungry, she was also .4
.very tired
Little (I/do/imagine) did I imagine that it was the last time I would .5
.see him
The girls who had seen the accident were questioned by the
police. restrictive, only those were questioned, not the
.others
The girls(, who were all from Germany,) were questioned by
.the police. non restrictive
1- My sister, who is now living in New York, has just had a baby.
That can only be used in defining relative clauses (without comas).
We can only omit the relative pronoun (who, which, that) in
defining relative clauses (without comas).
2- Can you give me the number of the plumber which repaired
your shower?
We can use who and that for people in defining relative clauses
(without comas).
We can't leave out the relative pronoun (who, that, which) when it
is followed by a verb, we can only omit it when it is followed by
subject + verb in defining relative clauses.
4- The painting, ______ was finished in 1850, is one of the most
representative works of that time.
a. which correct
b. -
c. that
Study the situations and then decide whether the following relative
clauses are defining or non-defining.
defining – no commas
non-defining – commas
1. I have three brothers.
2. I have one sister. As I have only one sister, I need not which
sister I am talking about.
1- There ……an accident in the town centre and the road is closed
to traffic.
has been\ was
2- Oh no! I …..my phone. Have you seen it anywhere?
Lost \ have lost
3- 'How long …….in London?'
For two years - from 2000 - 2002.
did you live \ have you lived
I ………here since I left school.
Worked \ have worked
8- I wish I'd known about the noise before I booked the hotel.
10- Had we taken the train, we would never have got there in time
for the wedding.
Expressing regrets
1- 'Are you coming to the party?'
'I can't. I told Tim and Kate I'd babysit for them. I …..to do it now.'
shouldn't agree
couldn't
wouldn't
shouldn't
should stay
hadn't kept
wouldn't keep
8- 'Have you seen this job ad? It looks perfect for you but they
want someone who can speak Japanese.'
'Yes I saw it. ……Japanese.'
I should've spoken
Tenses exercise
1. When I got to the party
everybody was drinking and dancing.
2. I was sunburned because
I had been sunbathing all day.
3. The film
had already started by the time I got to the cinema.
4. As soon as she closed the door
she realized she had left the keys inside.
5. Before he won the Mark Six
he had never thought he would be rich.
6. When the rescuers found them
they had been waiting for 8 hours and had eaten all their food.
7. Don't call at nine as
we'll be having dinner then.
8. Watch out!
Wayne's spilled his custard on the floor and Sally has already
trodden in it.
9. Your face is red
and you've forgotten your brief case. You've been drinking again!
10. Which is correct?
I've been working here for three years but I've only seen the boss
once.
were to have
were going to
would
to have dived
going to dive
would meet
were on the point of meeting
was about to be
were going to
were supposed to
would
was meant to be
would be
was supposed to
would
was about to
Would
was meant to
was about to
would
was to have
was meant to
were to go
would go
look like \ as if
Are you OK? You look _____________ .
really pale \ like pale \ as if pale
Her eyes were red and she looked _____________.
(Two answers are possible.)
been crying
Singular or plural.
Singular or plural.
B/ Some nouns end in -ics but are not usually plural. For example:
athletics/ gymnastics/ mathematics (or maths)/ physics/
electronics/ economics/ politics
• Gymnastics is my favourite sport.
News is not plural.
• What time is the news on television? (not 'are the news')
C/ Some singular nouns are often used with a plural verb. For
example:
government/ staff/ team/ family/ audience/ committee/ company/
firm
In the same way, we often use a plural verb after the name of a
sports team or a company:
• Scotland are playing France next week (in a football match).
• Shell have increased the price of petrol.