segunda-feira, 5 de novembro de 2012

Curso de Inglês Conversação - Legendas em Inglês DVD 08

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Este Curso rápido de Inglês vai prepará-lo, em tempo recorde, para um futuro melhor.

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domingo, 4 de novembro de 2012

Verb Classification



We divide verbs into two broad classifications: 

1. Helping Verbs

Imagine that a stranger walks into your room and says:
  • can.
  • People must.
  • The Earth will.
Do you understand anything? Has this person communicated anything to you? Probably not! That's because these verbs are helping verbs and have no meaning on their own. They are necessary for the grammatical structure of the sentence, but they do not tell us very much alone. We usually use helping verbs with main verbs. They "help" the main verb. (The sentences in the above examples are therefore incomplete. They need at least a main verb to complete them.) There are only about 15 helping verbs.

2. Main Verbs

Now imagine that the same stranger walks into your room and says:
  • teach.
  • People eat.
  • The Earth rotates.
Do you understand something? Has this person communicated something to you? Probably yes! Not a lot, but something. That's because these verbs are main verbs and have meaning on their own. They tell us something. Of course, there are thousands of main verbs.
In the following table we see example sentences with helping verbs and main verbs. Notice that all of these sentences have a main verb. Only some of them have a helping verb.

helping verbmain verb
Johnlikescoffee.
Youliedto me.
Theyarehappy.
The childrenareplaying.
Wemustgonow.
Idonotwantany.


From: English Club - http://www.englishclub.com/

sábado, 3 de novembro de 2012

What are Verbs?


The verb is king in English. The shortest sentence contains a verb. You can make a one-word sentence with a verb, for example: "Stop!" You cannot make a one-word sentence with any other type of word.
Verbs are sometimes described as "action words". This is partly true. Many verbs give the idea of action, of "doing" something. For example, words like run, fight, do and work all convey action.
But some verbs do not give the idea of action; they give the idea of existence, of state, of "being". For example, verbs like be, exist, seem and belong all convey state.
A verb always has a subject. (In the sentence "John speaks English", John is the subject and speaks is the verb.) In simple terms, therefore, we can say that verbs are words that tell us what a subject doesor is; they describe:
  • action (Ram plays football.)
  • state (Anthony seems kind.)
There is something very special about verbs in English. Most other words (adjectives, adverbs, prepositions etc) do not change in form (although nouns can have singular and plural forms). But almost all verbs change in form. For example, the verb to work has five forms:
  • to work, work, works, worked, working
Of course, this is still very few forms compared to some languages which may have thirty or more forms for a single verb.


From: English Club - http://www.englishclub.com/