martes, 5 de mayo de 2015

lunes, 4 de mayo de 2015

EXPERIENCIES


                                                                                                                       APRIL 27TH OF 2015



HI PAME:

HOW ARE YOU? I'M FINE, RIGHT NOW I'M IN LOS ANGELES I'LL STAY HERE FOR 2 WEEKS, THIS PLACE IS FANTASTIC AND INCREDIBLE. I'M STAYING IN A 3 STARS HOTEL AND IT'S BEAUTIFUL AND SIMPLE, BUT STILL VERY LARGE. THE HOTEL IN LOCATED IN THE CENTER AND THE STREETS ARE VERY SIMILAR TO THE CABO, THE DAYS ARE SUNNY AND VERY HOT. WITH THE WEATHER SO GOOD I COULD NOT AVOID GOING TO THE BEACH TO SWIM A BIT, AND I ALSO WENT SHOOPING AT THE MALL IS HUGE AND COOL THERE ARE VERY SHOPS. ALSO HAVE VISITED SEVERAL RESTAURANTS AND FOOD STALLS AND THE FOOD AND DRINKS ARE FABULOUS. WELL NO MORE SAY FOR NOW, I SAY GOODBAY.

                                                                                                SEE YOU SOON. I LOVE YOU
                                                                                                                   LESLIE.

SHAMEFUL


SHAMEFUL

  1. WALK INTO A GLASS DOOR.
  2. FALL ASLEEP IN CLASS.
  3. SAY THE WRONG NAME.
  4. SPILL SAUCE ON YOUR SHIRT.
  5. WEAR SLIPPERS TO CLASS.
  6. SIT ON WET PAINT.
  7. WEAR CLOTHES INSIDE OUT.


viernes, 1 de mayo de 2015

SUCH AS, LIKE AND AS



SUCH AS

  1. JILL WAS SUCH AS UPSET WHEN SHE MISSED HER FLIGHT THAT SHE CRIED.
  2. IT WAS SUCH AS COLD DAY THAT I HAD TO WEAR A SCARF.
  3. THIS RESTAURANT HAS SUCH AS DELICIOUS FOOD.

LIKE


  1. IT LOOKS LIKE IT'S GOING TO RAIN.
  2. THE HERO FEELS LIKE HE'S THE MOST POWERFUL MAN ON EARTH.
  3. HE LOOKS LIKE HE HAS HAD A ROUGH NIGHT.

AS

  1. IT LOOKS AS IF IT'S GOING TO RAIN.
  2. THE HERO FEELS AS IF HE'S THE MOST POWERFUL MAN ON EARTH.
  3. HE LOOKS AS IF HE HAS HAD A ROUGH NIGHT,

NOTE: LIKE IS A PREPOSITION (DON'T PANIC), WHICH MEANS THAT IT CAN COME BEFORE A NOUN BUT IT SHOULD NOT COME BEFORE A WHOLE CLAUSE CONTAINING A VERB. AS IS A CONJUNCTION, AND CAN BE USED BEFORE A CLAUSE CONTAINING A VERB.

perfect present vs simple past


Simple PastPresent Perfect Simple
irregular verbs: see 2nd column of irregular verbs
Example:
I spoke
irregular verbs: form of 'have' + 3rd column of irregular verbs
Example:
I / you / we / they have spoken
he / she / it has spoken
regular verbs: infinitive + ed
Example:
I worked
regular verbs: form of 'have' + infinitive + ed
Example:
I / you / we / they have worked
he / she / it has worked
Exceptions
Exceptions when adding 'ed':
  • when the final letter is e, only add d
    Example:
    love - loved
  • after a short, stressed vowel, the final consonant is doubled
    Example:
    admit - admitted
  • final l is always doubled in British English (not in American English)
    Example:
    travel - travelled
  • after a consonant, final y becomes i (but: not after a vowel)
    Example:
    worry - worried
    but: play - played