Uncountable noun Music Art Love Happiness Advice Adjective Average Boiling Broad Ancient Brief Adverb Also Amazingly Always Ahead Angrily Preposition Past About Off Save With Verb Unite twist Untidy Rush Whirl Pronoun He Her Me Your They Infinitive (to + Infinitive) To sleep To eat To wash To love To hate Gerund (go + Gerund) go snorkeling go jogging go surfing go skiing go windsurfing Comparative adjective Most soccer players are
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Unit One Bell Work This work corresponds with the Language Handbook which begins on page 1499 in your textbook. January 17‚ 2012 Reminder: Write a sentence with the word of the day. For the following sentences‚ identify each noun and pronoun. 1. Anyone can see the complex emotions in that painting. 2. Follow the signs to Gators Galore! 3. Whom are you offering to take besides me? 4. Mrs. Burgess‚ we read The Life and Times of Frederick Douglass at the end of last year. 5. Well‚ my car
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Catcher in the Rye The Catcher in the Rye is set around the 1950s and is narrated by a young man named Holden Caulfield. Holden is not specific about his location while he’s telling the story‚ but he makes it clear that he is undergoing treatment in a mental hospital or sanatorium. The events he narrates take place in the few days between the end of the fall school term and Christmas‚ when Holden is sixteen years old. Alienation as a Form of Self-Protection: Throughout the novel‚ Holden seems
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as the cause of wars‚ and shows how flags have‚ throughout time‚ been manipulated to force others to conform to the beliefs of the ruling few. Agard uses key linguistic‚ structural and poetic devices to show this. Firstly‚ he makes a clear use of pronouns to describe the flag such as “that” and “piece of cloth”. This immediately takes away any cultural assumptions of the flag and reduces it to its base form. By using repeated interrogatives such as “what’s that fluttering in a breeze?”‚ “What’
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definite article) and the second place – by the rheme (new information marked with the indefinite article).Definite Article. As it was mentioned above‚ the definite article appeared from the OE demonstrative pronoun se (M‚ Sg‚ Nom) from the paradigm of the OE demonstrative pronoun “that” because it was often used to indicate a definite object or notion.Indefinite Article. The indefinite article appeared from the OE numeral ān (one) and had the meaning of “oneness” (it still indicates only
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игл*. Г 763 ГРАММАТИКА АНГЛИЙСКОГО ЯЗЫКА (на английском языке) ‚ Допущено Министерством просвещения СССР в качестве учебника для студентов педагогических институтов Б1бл1ятэка МДЛУ ЛЕНИНГРАД Издательстве «Проовэщенне» Ленинградское отделение 1(73 4И (Англ) К 30 В. Л. КАУШАНСКАЯ‚ Р. Л. КОВНЕР‚ О. Н. КОЖЕВНИКОВА‚ Е. В. ПРОКОФЬЕВА‚ 3. М. РАЙНЕС‚ С. Е. СКВИРСКАЯ. Ф. Я. ЦЫРЛИНА FOREWORD
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Determiner (a) + Pre-modifier (sixth) + Head (sense) + Post Modiefier (about her) | | Within her first month | Determiner (her) + Pre-modifier (first) + Head (month) | Table 1: Noun groups and their structures Three Pronouns | Pronouns | Types | | It was very hard | Personal Pronoun | | more than
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available. She doesn’t speak much Spanish. Demonstratives The demonstrative pronouns and demonstrative adjectives modify nouns. The most popular are this‚ that‚ these and those. The difference between demonstrative pronouns and adjectives is that demonstrative adjectives are followed by nouns while demonstrative pronouns are not. Demonstrative pronouns take the place of proper nouns. A: Choose the correct pronoun. 1. __________ car is too expensive. a) This b)
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Topic Sentences.) Show Connections Be sure your intended logic is clear. Often the simplest words do the most to pull together ideas. • • Pronouns such as it and they and this keep the focus on the ideas announced at the beginning of the paragraph—as long as they are clearly linked to specific nouns (see the Purdue University file on pronoun reference). Deliberate repetition of key words also helps. The paragraph below shows the interweaving
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1. THE GERM. LANGUAGES IN THE MOD. WORLD Languages can be classified acc. to different principles. The historical classification groups lang-s in accordance with their origin from a common linguistic ancestor. English belongs to the Germanic or Teutonic group of lang-s. The modern GL are 11 in number. They all go to ProtoGermanic. And protogerm. goes to the Indoeuropean tongues. The GL fall into: 1. East Germanic (The Gothic Lang.) – nowadays all of them are dead‚ 2. North Germanic : Swedish –
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