teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Verbs : Present Perfect Tense
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/present-perfect-tense.html
Verbs : Present Perfect Tense. Today's grammar item is the present perfect tense . The present perfect tense is used to show the following;. Ø An action that has just happened or happened recently. Ø An action that began in the past but is still continuing. Ø An action that happened at an unspecified time in the past. Examples of the present perfect tense;. Mary has just arrived from school. Lina has lived in Ipoh since 1997. Elina has been to New Zealand. Posted by Suhaila Bt Musa. Check out this too.
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Modifiers : Superlative Form
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/superlative.html
Modifiers : Superlative Form. On previous post, we have learned about comparative, right? So now we are going to learn superlative. A superlative adjective expresses the extreme or highest degree of a quality. We use a superlative adjective to describe the extreme quality of one thing in a group of things. In the example below, "biggest" is the superlative form of the adjective "big" :. A is the biggest. The right one is the tallest. Words of one syllable ending in " e. To the end of the word. To help th...
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Verbs : Modals
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/verbs-modals.html
Everyone can understand Modal Verbs! What are model verbs? Model verbs are also called auxiliary verbs, helping verbs and model auxiliaries. Model verbs are not complete verbs, and they can only be used with a verb. Modal auxiliary verbs may sound difficult but in fact they're easy. Need can be a full verb, too). The usage of model verbs:. Model verbs stay in the base form - bare infinitive - the bare infinitive is the infinitive without "to" before the verb. Can, will, shall, ought to, must, need, may.
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Modifiers : Comparative Form
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/comparative.html
Modifiers : Comparative Form. When we talk about two things, we can "compare" them. We can see if they are the same or different. Perhaps they are the same in some ways and different in other ways. We can use comparative adjectives to describe the differences. In the example below, "bigger" is the comparative form of the adjective "big":. Same goes to when we compare the physical size of two peoples. Lets see this :. The boy at the right side is fatter. Than the boy at the left side. To equip learners wi...
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: January 2011
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011_01_01_archive.html
Everyone can understand Modal Verbs! What are model verbs? Model verbs are also called auxiliary verbs, helping verbs and model auxiliaries. Model verbs are not complete verbs, and they can only be used with a verb. Modal auxiliary verbs may sound difficult but in fact they're easy. Need can be a full verb, too). The usage of model verbs:. Model verbs stay in the base form - bare infinitive - the bare infinitive is the infinitive without "to" before the verb. Can, will, shall, ought to, must, need, may.
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Connectors : Sequence Connecters
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/connectors-sequence-connecters.html
Connectors : Sequence Connecters. Connectors are used to join or connect two ideas that have particular relationship. These relationships can be sequential, reason and purpose, adversative and condition. It also joins words and sentences in logical manner. The examples of sequence connectors are :. To practice and get more fun exercise check this out yup! Http:/ www.englishdaily626.com/sentence connectors.php? Posted by : Munira Bt Roslan. February 21, 2013 at 11:23 PM. January 11, 2014 at 2:53 PM. Nur A...
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Verbs : Present Continuous Tense
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/suitable-and-exciting-exercise-brings.html
Verbs : Present Continuous Tense. We often use the present continuous tense in English. It is very different from the simple present tense, both in structure and in use. Tenses are also called. Tenses. So the present progressive tense is the same as the present continuous tense. We use the Present Continuous Tense to talk about activities happening now.For example :. The kids are watching TV. Who are you writing to? Sally is studying really hard for her exams this week. I am seeing my dentist on Wednesday.
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Verbs : Simple Future Tense
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/verbs-simple-future-tense.html
Verbs : Simple Future Tense. I am going to share about Simple Future Tense on this post. Check out this, learners! Because we make the simple future tense with the modal auxiliary. How do we use the Simple Future Tense? We use the simple future tense when there is no plan or decision to do something before we speak. We make the decision spontaneously at the time of speaking. Look at these examples:. Hold on. I 'll get. What we can do to help you. Maybe we 'll stay in. I'll go to the gym tomorrow. We prov...
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: Word Order : Punctuation
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2011/01/f-r-i-e-n-d-s.html
Word Order : Punctuation. Can you see this picture learners? What are the symbols in this square? All of the symbols in the square are punctuations. Now, I am going to share with all of you about punctuation marks. Is the name for marks used in writing. These marks help with understanding. There are many kinds of punctuation. Some of them can do many things. These are some common punctuation marks used in English:. Or full stop,. Used to end a sentence. It shows when an idea is finished. So please give u...
teslunited.blogspot.com
English Educational's Blog: December 2010
http://teslunited.blogspot.com/2010_12_01_archive.html
Noun Forms : Countable and Uncountable Collective. Countable nouns are easy to recognize. They are things that we can count. For example: "pen". We can count pens. We can have one, two, three or more pens. Here are some more countable nouns:. Dog, cat, animal, man, person. Bottle, box, litre. Coin, note, dollar. Cup, plate, fork. Table, chair, suitcase, bag. Countable nouns can be singular or plural:. We can use the indefinite article a/an. Orange. ( not. I want orange.). We can use some. Have you got any.