Have to: Expressing Obligation
Adverbs: Manner and Frequency
Comparative and Superlative Adverbs
Comparative and Superlative Adjectives
Imperatives: Ordering or Suggesting
Like / love + verb ending in "-ing"
Relative Clauses: Use, Components and Types
Adverbs: Expressions of Quantity
Personal Pronoun + Want to Do + Something
Prepositions: Connecting Ideas
Ordinal Numbers: Ordering Items
Jobs: When I grow up, I want to be...
Technology: Electronic Devices
Sports: To Play, To Do and To Go
Food and Containers
Health: Diseases and Symptoms
Exploration Activities: Discovering the World
Animals: Wild and Domestic
Appearance and Characters: Describing People
Body: Parts of the Human Body
Common Adjectives: Describing People, Places or Things
Crear una cuenta para empezar los ejercicios
Frases afirmativas (I like dancing), frases negativas (She doesn't like dancing) y frases interrogativas (Do you like dancing?). Además, puedes encontrar exclamaciones (I love dancing!) y frases imperativas (Dance right now).
Puede que veas una frase en inglés sin sujeto ("Shut up!"): es una frase imperativa, se usa para dar órdenes. El sujeto en este caso es "you" (tú), pero no se escribe.
Las frases en inglés siempre tienen sujeto y verbo: You look beautiful (You = Sujeto + look = verbo). Si son imperativas, puede que el sujeto no esté escrito.
Beta