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
Crear una cuenta para empezar los ejercicios
Aunque existe el participio "could", este no puede usarse en formas verbales como el "present perfect". En este caso, se emplea el sinónimo "to be able to", como en "I have been able to drive the car".
Existen muchos verbos irregulares y hay que aprenderlos de memoria. Pero pueden agruparse según el número de formas que tengan iguales, por ejemplo: 3 formas iguales ("cost, cost, cost") 2 formas iguales ("run, ran, run") 0 formas iguales ("go, went, gone")
Son aquellos cuyas formas en pasado y participio no sigue la regla de formación de añadir "-ed" al infinitivo.
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