Effective Writing Strategies: Steps for Writing
Effective Writing Strategies: Tips for Improvement
Putting into practice: Writing a Paragraph
Putting into practice: Writing an Essay
Putting into practice: Writing a For and Against Essay
Putting into practice: Writing an Opinion Essay
Putting into practice: Writing Letters and Emails
Putting into practice: Writing a Report
Putting into practice: Writing a Review
Putting into practice: Writing a CV
Compound Adjectives: Creating New Words
Collocations: To Get, To Take and To Run
Irregular Verbs: Infinitive, Past and Participle
Phrasal Verbs: Transitive and Intransitive
Gerund and Infinitive: Meaning according to the context
Prepositions + Noun/Adjective/Verb
Conditionals, Time and Wish Clauses
Defining and Non-defining Relative Clauses
Passive Voice: Impersonal and Modal Verb Constructions
Causative: Have/Get, Made and Let
Modal Verbs: Obligation, Advice, or Prohibition
Reported Speech: Statements and Questions
Culture: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
Science Fiction
Work: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
Sport: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
Crime: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
Money: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
Extra Vocabulary for Daily Life II
Word Families: Nouns, verbs, adjectives and idioms
False Friends: The Secrets of Similar-Sounding Words
British vs American: Different ways of saying the same thing
Son oraciones de relativo que proporcionan información adicional sobre el sujeto de la oración innecesaria para entender el significado general, como si fuese un apunte. Por ejemplo, "El Prado, where Las Meninas is displayed, is my favourite museum".
Son oraciones de relativo que portan información esencial para comprender el significado de las frases. Por ejemplo, "September is the month when summer ends".
Las "relative clauses" son oraciones subordinadas encabezadas por un pronombre relativo. Sirven para dar información adicional sobre algo que ya se ha mencionado sin repetir elementos, como el sujeto.
Beta