English
Today's lesson
Start
CRITICAL THINKING
GRAMMAR
VOCABULARY
Used to and would
Sociability and enterteinment
Confusing words
Comparative and superlatives
When do we use "used to"?
We use it to talk about past habits and situation
We form it with "used to" + the base form of the verb in the sentence
As opposed to the past simple this form says that the habit has change in the present
When do we use "would"?
It is used to talk about habits o repetetive and predictable actions in the past
We form with "wuold" + the base form of the verb in the sentence
We don't use the negative of would to talk about past habits; we use "never" before would
Comparatives
MAJORITY - base form of the adjective/ adverb+ -er+ than
- more+ base form of adjectives/adverbs/nouns + than
- verb+ more+ than
MINORITY - less+ adjective/ adverb+ than
- less+ uncountable noun+ than
- fewer+ plural noun+ than
- verb+ less+ than
EQUALITY- as+ adjective/ adverb+ as
- as much+ uncountable noun+ as
- as many+ plural noun+ as
- the same+ noun+ as
- verb+ as much+ as
Ortographic variation in -er fine → finer nice → nicer big → bigger tall → taller happy → happier nasty → nastier
Superlatives
MAJORITY - the +base form of the adjective + -est + of/in
- the most+ adjective/ adverb+ of/in
- the most+ noun+ of/in
- verb+ most+ of/in
MINORITY - the least+ adjective/ adverb+ of/in
- the least+ uncountable noun+ of/it
- the fewest+ plural noun+ of/in
Particular cases of comparatives and superlatives
- good -> better/ the best
- bad -> worse/ the worst
- far -> further or farther/ the furthest or the farthest
- late-> later or the latter/ the latest or the last
- near-> nearer/ the nearest or the next
- old-> older or elder/ the oldest or the eldest
Critical thinking
If i could have an artistic talent I would chose the sculpture. I think that museums and art galleries shouldn't be free. Yes, I think that children nowadays are less sociable because of the technology
VOCABULARY
Confusing words
English words can be confusing for various reasons.
examples
because of the grammar and/or punctuation
their and they're
mail and male
because the pronunciation is the same but the meaning is different
boring and bored
because of the form of the word
because there are two similar words but they are different
hair and air
because you may have a similar word in your language but in English the meaning is different
parents, brave, education
english Lesson Plan
IRENE ZEMITI
Created on November 2, 2024
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Transcript
English
Today's lesson
Start
CRITICAL THINKING
GRAMMAR
VOCABULARY
Used to and would
Sociability and enterteinment
Confusing words
Comparative and superlatives
When do we use "used to"?
We use it to talk about past habits and situation
We form it with "used to" + the base form of the verb in the sentence
As opposed to the past simple this form says that the habit has change in the present
When do we use "would"?
It is used to talk about habits o repetetive and predictable actions in the past
We form with "wuold" + the base form of the verb in the sentence
We don't use the negative of would to talk about past habits; we use "never" before would
Comparatives
MAJORITY- base form of the adjective/ adverb+ -er+ than
- more+ base form of adjectives/adverbs/nouns + than
- verb+ more+ than
MINORITY- less+ adjective/ adverb+ than
- less+ uncountable noun+ than
- fewer+ plural noun+ than
- verb+ less+ than
EQUALITY- as+ adjective/ adverb+ as
- as much+ uncountable noun+ as
- as many+ plural noun+ as
- the same+ noun+ as
- verb+ as much+ as
Ortographic variation in -er fine → finer nice → nicer big → bigger tall → taller happy → happier nasty → nastier
Superlatives
MAJORITY- the +base form of the adjective + -est + of/in
- the most+ adjective/ adverb+ of/in
- the most+ noun+ of/in
- verb+ most+ of/in
MINORITY- the least+ adjective/ adverb+ of/in
- the least+ uncountable noun+ of/it
- the fewest+ plural noun+ of/in
- verb+ the least+ of/in
Particular cases of comparatives and superlatives
Critical thinking
If i could have an artistic talent I would chose the sculpture. I think that museums and art galleries shouldn't be free. Yes, I think that children nowadays are less sociable because of the technology
VOCABULARY
Confusing words
English words can be confusing for various reasons.
examples
because of the grammar and/or punctuation
their and they're
mail and male
because the pronunciation is the same but the meaning is different
boring and bored
because of the form of the word
because there are two similar words but they are different
hair and air
because you may have a similar word in your language but in English the meaning is different
parents, brave, education