Interchange of one part of speech with anotherThe same word or the basic idea can exist in several different forms. For example, the word success is a noun. Ithas two other forms: successful (adjective), succeed (verb). By using different forms of the same word, we canexpress th[r]
(noun).reputable (adjective) having a good reputation; respected. Find a reputable automechanic by asking your friends for recommendations based on their own experiences.reputation (noun), repute (noun).resilient (adjective) able to recover from difficulty. A pro a[r]
27. John writes so ___________________. Look at these mistakes.(careless)28. You’d better have a _________________ reason for your _____________ behavior.(good, strange)29. Hank drives ___________________. I’m worried about him.(dangerous)30. Melissa ___________________ displayed her portraits.(prou[r]
Furniture, equipment, machinery, traffic, information, knowledge, money, advice, progress, luggage, homework, housework, merchandise There is much traffic during rush hours. ● A title of a book, story > Verb (singular) The name of a country, town, place > Verb (singular)[r]
Different uses of thatThat is one of the commonest words in English. It is used in the following ways.As a demonstrative adjectiveAs a demonstrative adjective, that is used to point out people or things. It is followed by singular noun.Who is that boy?Give me that book.What was that no[r]
A. Choose the correct item from the choices in parentheses:1. He ___________ defined the terms. The answer sounded ___________.(CORRECT,CORRECTLY)2. She ___________ adjusted the fees. She adapted ___________ to any situation.(QUICK,QUICKLY)3. He measured the floor ___________. They proved to be ____[r]
_ TRANG 6 iv LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS Adj: Adjective Adv: Adverb CDs: Cohesive Devices N: Noun Prep: Preposition V: Verb TRANG 7 v LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES Table 01 : Types of Cohesion Ta[r]
(POPULARITY).11. Teachers are fed up with…………………………… pupils (POLITENESS).12. MY grandma is the most…………………………… person I’ve ever known(GENEROSITY).13. Tim can be nice and the next minute he getsangry. He’s really ……………………………(MOOD).14. Don’t sit there, Tina! It’s the most………………………………… chair of the liv[r]
Each of these sentences has a mistake in it. Write the correct sentence. ► I didn't want the fridge so I sold him. I didn't want the fridge, so I sold it. 1 It's-a-train leaving in ten-minutes, 2 I think someone-are coming-up the stairs. 3 Let's meet ourselves at-eight-o’clock shall-we? 4 We haven't[r]
Joining two sentences using a noun clauseMake one of the simple sentences the principal clause and change the other clauses into subordinate clauses.Note that the subordinate clause can be a noun clause, an adverb clause or an adjective clause.A noun clause acts as[r]
Whose, which Possessive Whose book is on the desk?(i-viiiB,001-328B) whl bk.indd 226 3/16/09 12:34:22 PMQuestions and Negatives 227 Noun phrase Which book do you want?Where Adverb of place Where are you going?When Adverb of time When will you get there?Why Adverb of reas[r]
- Sigh (n) : long deep breath 2. Revision of adverbs : - Ask : “ How are adverbs formed ? / What do we use adverbs for ? “ + Formation : Adjective + ly = adverb Ask Ss to look at the table and read them aloud Adjective Adverb Extreme Extremely Good Well Happy H[r]
More about adjective clausesWe have already seen that an adjective clause is a subordinate clause that does the work of an adjective. Itqualifies a noun or pronoun in the main clause.An adjective clause is introduced by a relative pronoun or a relativ[r]
Neither/Nor + Auxiliary Verb + Pronoun hoặc Pronoun + Auxiliary Verb + not + either Ví dụ: ỎI'm feeling tierd.' ỎSo am I' (Tôi cảm thấy mệt. Tôi cũng thế.) ỎI never read newspapers.' ỎNeither do I' (Tôi không bao giờ đọc báo. Tôi cũng không.) ỎI can't remember his name[r]
7. None / The majority of/ Fractions + of + Noun + Verb > Verb tùy thuộc vào Noun sau giới từ.Eg : Half of the money is stolen. Half of the students are English. None of the money is mine. The majority of students speak English.8. Nouns plural in form (luôn có 's')[r]
dressy casual adjective of style or fashion, informal yet smart and/orexpensiveUS, 1999drib noun an unskilled poker player US, 1967dribble noun small, weak waves US, 1991dribble verb 1 to cause a car to bounce up and down by use ofhydraulic lifts. To ‘dribble’ a basketbal[r]
LANGUAGE FOCUS_ TRANG 3 1 2 3 4 5 6 MORE ACTIVELY BETTER THE MOST EXPENSIVE THE MOST ACTIVELY MORE DIFFICULT THE BEST ADJECTIVE/ADVERB ADJECTIVE/ADVERB COMPARATIVE COMPARATIVE SUPERLATIV[r]
unfettered free markets and their preference for traditional social values. dissonant(adjective).distillation (noun) Something distilled, an essence or extract. In chemistry, a process thatdrives gas or vapor from liquids or solids. Sharon Olds’s poems are powerful distillationsof moth[r]