Personal Information: Basic Questions, Details and Meeting
Effective Speaking Strategies: Tips for Improvement
Preparing for Future Events: Plans and Arrangements
Expressing Regret: Conveying Sorrow and Apologies
Questions and Answers: Yes, No and Interrogative Pronouns
Speculating and Deductions: Expressing Possibilities
Used To: Expressing Habits
Modal Verbs: Would, May/Might, Will and Have to
Conditionals and Time Clauses: Use, Components and Types
Quantifiers: Some, Any, Much and Many
Reported Speech and Reporting Verbs
Passive Voice: Impersonal Construction
Causative: Have/Get Something
Relative Clauses: Use, Components and Types
Gerund and Infinitive: Meaning according to the context
Irregular Verbs: Infinitive, Past and Participle
Common Adjectives: Describing People, Places or Things
Food and Containers
Town: Typical Places in a City
Body: Parts of the Human Body
Recycling: Environment and Sources of Energy
City Life: Exploring the Urban Lifestyle
Relationships: Bulding Connections
Animals: Wild and Domestic
Consumers: Buying Habits and Marketing
Los "gerunds" son formas verbales a las que se les añade la terminación "-ing". En inglés funcionan como sustantivos.
Los "infinitives" son las formas del verbo a las que se les añade "to" al principio. Son las formas verbales más simples, que se adaptan para crear oraciones.
Los "gerunds" se usan como sujetos u objetos de las oraciones, detrás de preposiciones y después de verbos y estructuras como "can't stand" o "don't mind". Los "infinitives" se usan detrás de "question words", detrás de adjetivos, para expresar objetos y después de ciertos verbos como "To Choose", "To Learn", "To Agree" o "To Want".
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