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English for Everyone - English Grammar Guide - Practice Book (Tom Booth, Tim Bowen)

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Published by PLHS Library, 2023-12-01 21:46:30

English for Everyone - English Grammar Guide - Practice Book (Tom Booth, Tim Bowen)

English for Everyone - English Grammar Guide - Practice Book (Tom Booth, Tim Bowen)

151 MATCH THE CORRESPONDING SENTENCES TOGETHER FILL IN THE GAPS, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


152 Modal verbs can be used to talk about possibility, or to express uncertainty. “Might” is the most common modal verb used for this purpose. Possibility LOOK AT THE PICTURES AND COMPLETE THE SENTENCES USING THE PHRASES IN THE PANEL


153 MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


154 Articles are short words which come before nouns to show whether they refer to a general or a specific object. There are several rules telling which article, if any, should be used. Articles CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


155 REWRITE THE SENTENCES CORRECTING THE ERRORS REWRITE THE SENTENCES USING PLURALS


156 MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


157 MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT


158 The definite and indefinite articles are used in different situations, and this can depend on whether they are being used with a singular, plural, or uncountable noun. Articles review CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


159 FILL IN THE GAPS USING THE CORRECT ARTICLES, LEAVING A BLANK FOR THE ZERO ARTICLE


160 “This,” “that,” “these,” and “those” can be used as determiners before a noun to specify which noun is being talked about. They can also be used as pronouns to replace a noun in a sentence. “This / that / these / those” CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORD IN EACH SENTENCE MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


161 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS


162 “No” and “none” both show the absence or lack of something. “No” is always used with a noun, whereas “none” replaces a noun in a sentence. “No / none” MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


163 WRITE EACH SENTENCE IN ITS OTHER FORM CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


164 “Each” and “every” are words that go before singular nouns to refer to all members of a group of people or things. “Each / every” REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


165 MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


166 “Either,” “neither,” and “both” are used in situations where two options are being described. They indicate that one, two, or none of the options are possible. “Either / neither / both” CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


167 MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


168 MARK THE NOUN FROM EACH SENTENCE FIND SIX MORE NOUNS IN THE GRID AND WRITE THEM UNDER THE CORRECT HEADING COMMON NOUNS PROPER NOUNS Nouns in English do not have a gender. They change form depending on whether they are singular, meaning there is one, or plural, meaning there is more than one. Singular and plural nouns


169 CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT NOUNS IN EACH SENTENCE WRITE EACH SENTENCE IN ITS OTHER FORM


170 In English, nouns can be countable or uncountable. Countable nouns can be individually counted. Objects that aren’t counted are uncountable. Countable and uncountable nouns WRITE THE NOUNS FROM THE PANEL IN THE CORRECT GROUPS COUNTABLE UNCOUNTABLE MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


171 WRITE EACH SENTENCE IN ITS OTHER FORM MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT


172 One of the basic principles of English is that subjects and verbs must agree in number. Some subjects, however, can act like singular or plural nouns depending on the context. Subject-verb agreement LOOK AT THE PICTURES AND COMPLETE THE SENTENCES USING THE PHRASES IN THE PANEL


173 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, CORRECTING THE ERRORS REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


174 Most abstract nouns are uncountable. Some, however, can be either countable or uncountable, and the two forms often mean slightly different things. Abstract and concrete nouns MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS FIND SIX MORE NOUNS IN THE GRID AND WRITE THEM UNDER THE CORRECT HEADING CONCRETE NOUNS ABSTRACT NOUNS


175 CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


176 Compound nouns are two or more nouns that act as a single unit. The first noun(s) modifies the last, in a similar way to an adjective. Compound nouns MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


177 FILL IN THE GAPS USING THE PHRASES IN THE PANEL REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


178 Cardinal numbers are used for counting and saying how many of something there are. Ordinal numbers give the position of something in an ordered list. Numbers MARK WHETHER EACH NUMBER IS CARDINAL OR ORDINAL MATCH THE FIGURES TO THE CORRECT TEXT WRITE EACH NUMBER IN ITS OTHER FORM Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal Cardinal Ordinal


179 MATCH THE FRACTIONS, DECIMALS, AND PERCENTAGES TO THE CORRECT TEXT


180 In English there are many ways to express general or specific quantities, say whether quantities are adequate, and compare different quantities. Quantity CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE FILL IN THE GAPS USING THE PHRASES IN THE PANEL


181 CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


182 FILL IN THE GAPS USING “FEWER” OR “LESS” MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT


183 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, CORRECTING THE ERRORS


184 If specific figures are known, it can be useful to give them. However, more general terms may be needed if figures are not known or to avoid repetition. Approximate quantity MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT INSTRUCTIONS MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS


185 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


186 Personal pronouns are used to replace nouns in a sentence. They can refer to people or things and have different forms depending on whether they are a subject or an object. Personal pronouns WRITE EACH PRONOUN IN ITS OTHER FORM MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT SUBJECT OBJECT


187 MATCH THE CORRESPONDING SENTENCES REWRITE THE SENTENCES, REPLACING THE HIGHLIGHTED WORDS WITH THE CORRECT PRONOUNS


188 Reflexive pronouns show that the subject of a verb is the same as its object. They can also be used in other situations to add emphasis. Reflexive pronouns WRITE EACH PRONOUN IN ITS OTHER FORM OBJECT REFLEXIVE FILL IN THE GAPS USING THE PRONOUNS IN THE PANEL (singular) (plural)


189 CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT


190 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER MATCH THE CORRESPONDING SENTENCES


191 FILL IN THE GAPS USING REFLEXIVE PRONOUNS, LEAVING A BLANK IF ONE IS NOT NEEDED


192 Indefinite pronouns, such as “anyone,” “someone,” and “everyone,” are used to refer to a person or object, or a group of people or objects, without explaining who or what they are. Indefinite pronouns MATCH THE QUESTIONS TO THE CORRECT RESPONSES


193 MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES REWRITE THE SENTENCES, CORRECTING THE ERRORS


194 Possessive determiners, possessive pronouns, apostrophe with “s,” and the verbs “have” and “have got” are all used to express possession in English. Possession WRITE EACH WORD IN ITS OTHER FORMS SUBJECT PRONOUN POSSESSIVE DETERMINER POSSESSIVE PRONOUN MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES


195 REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


196 MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT REWRITE THE PHRASES USING THE POSSESSIVE “S”


197 MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS MARK THE BEST REPLY TO EACH QUESTION


198 A relative clause is a part of a sentence that gives more information about the subject. A defining, or restrictive, relative clause identifies the subject being talked about. Defining relative clauses REWRITE THE SENTENCES, PUTTING THE WORDS IN THE CORRECT ORDER


199 MARK THE SENTENCES THAT ARE CORRECT MATCH THE BEGINNINGS OF THE SENTENCES TO THE CORRECT ENDINGS


200 Like defining relative clauses, non-defining relative clauses add extra information about something. However, this simply gives extra detail, rather than changing the sentence’s meaning. Non-defining relative clauses MATCH THE PICTURES TO THE CORRECT SENTENCES CROSS OUT THE INCORRECT WORDS IN EACH SENTENCE


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