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QUIZ II

&
TEST 1
LEVEL 1
REVIEW
SIMPLE PAST
With VERB BE
We have two forms of the verb be in past: WAS and WERE.

I
SHE
HE
IT

YOU
WE
THEY
POSITIVE SENTENCES:
SUBJECT+ VERB BE (WAS-WERE)+ COMPLEMENT.
I was at home yesterday.
She was in Rome last year.
He was with Anne.
It was in the garage.
You were beautiful as a kid.
They were a bit taller in the past.
We were very young when we met.
NEGATIVE SENTENCES
SUBJECT+ VERB BE NEGATIVE (WASN’T-WEREN’T)+ COMPLEMENT.
I wasn’t at home yesterday.
She wasn’t in Rome last year.
He wasn’t with Anne.
It wasn’t in the garage.
You weren’t beautiful as a kid.
They weren’t a bit taller in the past.
We weren’t very young when we met.
YES/NO QUESTIONS:
VERB BE IN PAST (WAS-WERE)+ SUBJECT+ COMPLEMENT?
Were you at home yesterday?
Was she in Rome last year?
Was he with Anne?
Was it in the garage?
Were you beautiful as a kid?
Were they a bit taller in the past?
Were we very young when we met?
WH- QUESTIONS:
WH-Question + VERB BE IN PAST (WAS-WERE)+ SUBJECT+
COMPLEMENT?
When were you at home?
Where was she last year?
Who was he with?
Where was it?
When were you beautiful?
How were they in the past?
Where were we very young?
SIMPLE PAST
WITH REGULAR AND IRREGULAR VERBS
We use the simple past to talk about completed actions, order of
events and repeated actions.
POSITIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+ VERB IN PAST (REGULAR OR IRREGULAR)+ COMPLEMENT.
Laura worked the whole weekend.
Alonso bought a new motorcycle.
Roinner played videogames during at night.
Stacey graduated from school last month.
Pamela and Karla studied together for the test.
The students and I had fun last class.
NEGATIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+ DIDN’T+ VERB IN PRESENT+ COMPLEMENT.
Laura didn’t work the whole weekend.
Alonso didn’t buy a new motorcycle.
Roinner didn’t play videogames during at night.
Stacey didn’t graduate from school last month.
Pamela and Karla didn’t study together for the test.
The students and I didn’t have fun last class.
YES/NO QUESTIONS STRUCTURE:
DID+ SUBJECT+ VERB IN PRESENT+ COMPLEMENT+?
Did Laura work the whole weekend?
Did Alonso buy a new motorcycle?
Did Roinner play videogames during at night?
Did Stacey graduate from school last month?
Did Pamela and Karla study together for the test?
Did the students and I have fun last class?
WH- QUESTIONS STRUCTURE:
WH-QUESTION+DID+ SUBJECT+ VERB IN PRESENT+
COMPLEMENT+?
When did Laura work?
What did Alonso buy?
Who played videogames during at night?
When did Stacey graduate from school?
What did Pamela and Karla study together for?
When did the students and I have fun?
PAST CONTINUOUS
We use past continuous to talk about an action that is happening or
to describe a scene.
POSITIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+ VERB BE(WAS-WERE)+ VERB ING+ COMPLEMENT.
I was watching T.V.
Marisol was having a party today.
Luis Alejandro was playing videogames at home.
The dog was running in the backyard.
The students were writing an essay.
My mom and I were cooking pasta yesterday.
You were talking about science during your presentation.
NEGATIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+ VERB BE(WASN’T-WEREN’T)+ VERB ING+ COMPLEMENT.
I wasn’t watching T.V.
Marisol wasn’t having a party today.
Luis Alejandro wasn’t playing videogames at home.
The dog wasn’t running in the backyard.
The students weren’t writing an essay.
My mom and I weren’t cooking pasta yesterday.
You weren’t talking about science during your presentation.
YES/NO QUESTIONS STRUCTURE:
VERB BE(WAS-WERE)+ SUBJECT+ VERB ING+ COMPLEMENT+?
Were you watching T.V. ?
Was Marisol having a party today?
Was Luis Alejandro playing videogames at home?
Was the dog running in the backyard?
Were the students writing an essay?
Were my mom and I cooking pasta yesterday?
Were you talking about science during your presentation?
WH- QUESTIONS STRUCTURE:
WH-Question+ VERB BE(WAS-WERE)+ SUBJECT+ VERB ING+
COMPLEMENT+?
What were you watching?
When was Marisol having a party?
Where was Luis Alejandro playing videogames?
Where was the dog running?
What were the students writing?
When were my mom and I cooking pasta?
What were you talking about during your presentation?
USED TO

POSITIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+USED TO+ INFINITIVE+ COMPLEMENT.
Lorraine used to go to the beach on weekends.
NEGATIVE STRUCTURE:
SUBJECT+DIDN’T +USE TO+ INFINITIVE+ COMPLEMENT.
Lorraine didn’t use to go to the beach on weekends.
YES/NO QUESTION STRUCTURE:
DID+ SUBJECT+USE TO+ INFINITIVE+ COMPLEMENT+ ?
Did Lorraine use to go to the beach on weekends?
WH- QUESTION STRUCTURE:
WH-QUESTION +DID+ SUBJECT+USE TO+ INFINITIVE+
COMPLEMENT+ ?
Where did Lorraine use to go on weekends?
PRESENT PERFECT

HAS/ HAVE

DEPENDE
DEL SUJETO

I have just arrived from work.

I haven’t finished my homework yet.

Lorraine has already written the essay.

Harry still hasn’t received the money.

Have you ever eaten tajin?

Tina has never shown us her drawings.


PHRASAL VERBS
https://www.gingersoftware.com/content/grammar-
rules/verbs/list-of-phrasal-verbs/

FUTURE TENSES
COMPARISON
QUANTIFIERS
ADVERBS OF MANNER
An adverb of manner describes how you do an action. For
example:
They dress elegantly.
Some elderly people drive slowly.
She works very hard.

Adverbs of manner are really useful because they let us add a


lot of extra details to descriptions, to make what we say more
interesting and dynamic to the listener or reader.

How to create an adverb of manner


To make adverbs of manner, we usually add -ly to the
adjective. For example,
quick – quickly
careful – carefully
gentle – gently
When an adjective ends in -y we change the -y to -i then add -
ly. For example,
happy – happily
greedy – greedily
easy – easily
However, there are also some irregular adverbs:
good – well
hard – hard
fast – fast
late – late
straight – straight
high – high
Here are some examples:
You speak English fluently.
I slept badly last night.
The children did really well in their test.
He worked hard and got a promotion.
The nurse picked up the baby gently.
Try to do it carefully so we don’t have to redo it.
A car suddenly came round the corner and nearly hit us!
Julie tearfully said goodbye to her boyfriend.
Go straight down this road then turn left.
I hate getting up late.
My brother drives very fast and aggressively.
Kids, try to do your homework quietly, please.
She dresses very elegantly, doesn’t she?
Shall I close the lid tightly?
It rained heavily all through the night.

RECOMMENDATION:

TRY TO REVIEW LINKING


WORDS, THERE ARE GOING
TO BE PLENTY OF THEM…

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