Grammar: Pronouns Present Simple Present Continuous
Grammar: Pronouns Present Simple Present Continuous
Grammar: Pronouns Present Simple Present Continuous
pronouns
Present simple
Present continuous
Pronouns
1. I want the book
2. The book is mine. It is not yours
3. They helped us
4. Us helps they*
5. She likes her
6. Her knows I*
Subject Possessive Possessive
Object pronouns
pronouns adjectives pronouns
I me my mine
it it its
we us our ours
Singular a / an the
3. For habits
c. I wash my hands before I eat.
d. We travel to Casablanca every weekend.
Note:
go→goes; catch→catches; wash→washes; passe→passes;
buzz→buzzes marry→marries; worry→worries;
study→studies
say→says; enjoy→enjoys; play→plays
Negative:
She doesn’t play chess.
We don’t have time for a rest.
They don’t like music.
It doesn’t matter.
Exercises
A/ Put the verb into the correct tense form:
Example:
engineer / William Is William an engineer? Yes, he is an engineer.
(+)
A/ examples
____________ (talk) about the weather. It seems that the summer is over and
think that the best thing about autumn and winter is that spring and summer are
soon to follow.
C/Fill in the blanks with PRESENT CONTINUOUS or SIMPLE PRESENT:
The Simple Past
We use the past simple to talk about a finished
action in the past.
A) Fill in the blanks with a verb from the box in the SIMPLE PAST:
break swim have make write
spend buy drink lose wash
e.g., I have seen; The cat has gone; They have travelled;
The boy has played
The present perfect is used for these reasons:
1. To talk about an unfinished action:
I’m tired, because I …… have been working ………. (work) very hard.
He ………………………………………… (write) letters all morning.
Catherina is getting fatter because she …………………………………… (eat) too
much.
My mother ………………………………………….. (peel) the potatoes all afternoon.
Cathy …………………………………………… (attend) a cookery course since March.
How long …………… you ………………………………………….. (learn) English?
Where are my eye-glasses? I …………………………………………….. (look) for
them for an hour.
Charles ………………………………………………. (escape) from the police for years.
How long …………… you ………………………………………… (use) a computer?
Elizabeth ………………………………………….. (live) with Mike for three years.
She ………………………………………………. (earn) quite a lot of money for the last
two years.
B) Use PRESENT PERFECT TENSE or PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS
Use "Will" when you want to talk about future facts or things you
believe to be true about the future.
"Be going to" expresses that something is a plan. It expresses the idea
that a person intends to do something in the future. It does not matter
whether the plan is realistic or not.
He is going to spend his vacation in Hawaii.
She is not going to spend her vacation in Hawaii.
A: When are we going to meet each other tonight?
Forms:
After I had revealed the news, I felt much better.
When I came, she had already gone.
She said she hadn't met him before.
Use:
For things that had already happened before an action took place in the past.
Forms:
She was tired because she had been running all day.
She had been wandering around for some time before she asked
someone the way.
Use:
For longer actions that had begun before a given time in the
past and that were still going on at this given time.
[The past perfect continuous relates to the past just as the present
perfect continuous relates to the present.]
When I arrived she had already been waiting for three
hours.
[she had begun waiting three hours before and she was
still waiting when I arrived]
A) Answer the following questions
Basic form
Subject + WILL HAVE BEEN + Verb + ing
Examples
By the next year, I will have been working as a teacher for
30 years.
We will be making a rest stop in half an hour, because you
will have been driving the car for 6 hours by then.
Before they come, we will have been cleaning the house for 5
hours.
By the next year, Ben and his wife will have been living together
for 50 years.
[ By the next month, I will have been saving money for a new
house for 4 years]
Common Time Expressions
Time expressions that are commonly used with the Future
Perfect Continuous:
By tomorrow / 8 o'clock
This year / month / week
Next year / month / week
USE 2: Cause
English speakers also use this tense when they want to
express certainty about the cause of some future situation.
Negative
Affirmative Negative Interrogative
Interrogative
I will have been I won't have been Will I have been Won't I have been
living living living? living?
You will have been You won't have Will you have been Won't you have
living been living living? been living?
He will have been He won't have been Will he have been Won't he have been
living living living? living?
We will have been We won't have been Will we have been Won't we have been
living living living? living?
They will have They won't have Will they have been Won't they have
been living been living living? been living?
Note
If duration of an activity (e.g. "since April", "for three
hours") is unknown then the Future Continuous should
be used instead of the Perfect Form.
Example:
I will be taking a bath.
I will have been taking a bath.
Fill in the blanks using FUTURE PERFECT CONTINUOUS TENSE:
Use Examples
Use Examples
Use Examples
Use Examples
Use Examples
advice, recommendation You must see the new film with Brad Pitt.
6. must not/may not
Use Examples
7. need not
Use Examples
Use Examples
9. ought to
simliar to should – ought to sounds a little less
subjective
Use Examples
Use Examples
wish, request, demand, order (less polite
Will you please shut the door?
than would)
prediction, assumption I think it will rain on Friday.
promise I will stop smoking.
Can somebody drive me to the station? - I
spontaneous decision
will.
She's strange, she'll sit for hours without
Habits
talking.
11. should
Use Examples
Use Examples
wish, request (more polite than will) Would you shut the door, please?