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Geraldine Woods,Lesley J.Ward,Wendy M.Anderson

English Grammar For Dummies

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  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit7 jaar geleden
    linking verbs always need something after the verb to complete the idea.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    Helping verbs, as well as main verbs, have tenses. Some of the most common pairs are can/could and may/might.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    With the logic that we have come to know and love in English grammar, the events are always happening, even though Harry Potter is a fictional character and the events never happened.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    In the first sentence, tells and declares are in present tense, even though the sentence concerns events that occurred decades ago. Here the historical present makes the history more dramatic.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    Don’t change tenses in the middle of a story. And don’t bother celebrities either.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    The picnic has been cancelled due to? because of? the arrival of killer sparrows from their Southern nesting grounds.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    Matt vowed to really study if he ever got the chance to take the flight instructor exam again.
    This example is common, but incorrect.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    To find the verb, read the sentence and ask two questions:
    What’s happening?
    What is? (or, What word is a “giant equal sign”?)
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    You can’t do much wrong when you complete linking verb sentences with descriptions or with nouns.
  • Mikie Jonesciteerde uit8 jaar geleden
    You have three possible completions for a linking verb: a descriptive word, a noun, or a pronoun (a word that subs for a noun).
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