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Nivel 4 | Tarea 10 | Act 6 Asking for nd giving an opinion You can use certain expressions to ask for and

give opinions. You can use these expressions to ask someone's opinion. "What do you think (about) ..." and "How do you feel about ..." must be followed by a gerund (V + "-ing") or other noun phrase. Use these expressions to give a positive opinion. Use "That's a great idea," or "I like that idea" if you have a very strong positive opinion about something. Use these expressions to give a negative opinion. Use "I don't like that idea" or "Definitely not!" if you have a very strong negative opinion about something. You can use these expressions to explain your opinion. Both expressions must be followed by S + V. Use "I think..." or "In my opinion..."

Nivel 4 | Tarea 12 | Act 2

"Quantifiers" are words that describe the amount of something. Quantifiers come before nouns. Ej. Should we buy some more coffe? Good idea. We dont have much coffee "Many" and "much" mean a large number or amount. Use "many" with plural countable nouns in all types of statements and questions. Ej. Do we have many spoons?-Yes, we have many spoons, we have about 100. Use"much" with uncountable nouns in negative statements and questions. Ej. Do we have much sugar?-Yes, we have a lot of sugar. Don't use "much" in positive statements. Use "a lot of" instead."There isn't much/aren't many" means there's a small number or amount. "A lot of" means a large number or amount.

Use"a lot of" with plural countable and uncountable nouns in positive and negative statements and questions. Ej. Do we have a lot of oranges? Yes, we have many oranges / we have a lot of many oranges.

"Some" means an indefinite number or amount. Use "some" before plural countable nouns and uncountable nouns in positive statements and questions. Don't use "some" in negative statements.

"Any" means an unknown number or amount. Use it for even the smallest number or amount. Use "any" before plural countable nouns and uncountable nouns in negative statements and questions. Don't use "any" in positive statements. "There isn't any" means there is none. Use "a few" with plural countable nouns. Use "a little" with uncountable nouns.

"A few" and "a little" mean a small amount. Now practice the grammar you've learned. Go on to the exercises below.
Ej. What did we buy?

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