1-Parts of Speech
1-Parts of Speech
1-Parts of Speech
pronoun She
verb loves
noun animals.
noun Animals
verb like
adjective kind
noun people.
noun Tara
verb speaks
noun English
Adverb well.
noun Tara
verb speaks
adjective good
noun English.
Pronoun She
verb ran
preposition to
adjective the
noun station
adverb quickly.
pron. She
verb likes
adj. Big
noun snakes
conjunction But
pron. I
verb hate
pron. them.
Here is a sentence that contains every part of speech: interjection Well, pron. She conj. and adj. young noun John verb walk prep. to noun school adverb slowly.
2-English Tenses System In some languages, verb tenses are not very important or do not even exist. In English, the concept of tense is very important. In this lesson we look at the idea behind tense, how to avoid confusing tense with time, and the structure of the basic tenses, with examples using a regular verb, an irregular verb and the verb be. What is Tense? Tense & Time Basic Tenses Regular Verbs Irregular Verbs Be What is Tense? tense (noun): a form of a verb used to indicate the time, and sometimes the continuation or completeness, of an action in relation to the time of speaking. (From Latin tempus = time). Tense is a method that we use in English to refer to time - past, present and future. Many languages use tenses to talk about time. Other languages have no tenses, but of course they can still talk about time, using different methods. So, we talk about time in English with tenses. But, and this is a very big but: we can also talk about time without using tenses (for example, going to is a special construction to talk about the future, it is not a tense) Present simple tense Structure of present simple I work in a bank. He works in a bank. Present simple - common mistakes Common mistakes I working in London. He work in London. He work in London? Work he in London? Correct version I work in London. He works in London. Does he work in London? Does he work in London? Why? The gerund ing form is not used in the present simple. The third person he, she, it adds the letter s. Questions third does + subject + All other do + subject + infinitive. Negatives third subject + doesn't + All other subject + don't + infinitive. person: infinitive. persons: I don't (do not) work in a bank. He doesn't (does not) work in a bank. Do you work in a bank? Does he work in a bank?
Past simple tense Structure of past simple I saw him yesterday. Past simple - common mistakes I didn't (did not) see him yesterday. Did you see him?
Common mistakes I was work in London. He worked in London? Worked he in London? Did he wrote a letter? He didn't wrote a letter. Present continuous tense Structure of present continuous I'm (I am) reading a book. He's (he is) reading a book.
Correct version I worked in London. Did he work in London? Did he work in London? Did he write a letter? He didn't write a letter.
Why? In positive sentences, a helping verb such as 'was' or 'did' is not used. The helping verb 'did' is used in past simple questions. The helping verb 'did' is used in past simple questions. The main verb is used in the infinitive form in questions and negatives. The main verb is used in the infinitive form in questions and negatives.
I'm (I am) not reading. He is not (he's not/he isn't) reading a book.
Present continuous - common mistakes Common mistakes They still waiting for you. They are still waiting for you? Do they still waiting for you? Where they are waiting for you? She doesn't watching TV. Correct version They are still waiting for you. Are they still waiting for you? Are they still waiting for you? Where are they waiting for you? She isn't watching TV. To form the negative we put not after the verb be (am not, is not = isn't, are not = aren't). Some verbs are not used in continuous tenses - these are called stative verbs (e.g. believe, come from, cost, depend, exist, feel, hate, like). In questions the subject (they) and the auxiliary verb (be) change places. Why? to form a continuous tense we use be + -ing.
I'm believing you. Past continuous tense Structure of past continuous I was reading a book. You were reading a book.
I believe you.
I wasn't (was not) reading. You weren't (were not) reading a book.
I waiting for him almost two I was waiting for him almost two hours. hours. What did he doing when you saw What was he doing when you saw him? him? We were playing tennis every We played tennis every morning.
morning. They watched TV when I came. Present perfect tense Structure of present perfect I've (I have) seen him. He's (he has) gone. I haven't (have not) seen him. He hasn't (has not) gone. They were watching TV when I came.
the past. We use the past continuous when we want to say what was happening (what was in progress) at a particular time in the past.
Present perfect simple - common mistakes Common mistakes Steven has wrote a new book. Correct version Steven has written a new book. Why? The past participle of the verb must be used - wrote is past simple, written is the past participle. The helping verb 'have' is used in the present perfect- it is inverted with the person (you have becomes have you). The helping verb 'have' is used in the present perfectto make it negative we simply add not (n't). The present perfect is used to show an action which continues to the present (an unfinished action). Verbs such as know, want, like, etc. (stative verbs) suggest permanent states, not actions, so are used in the simple form, NOT the -ing form.
I haven't seen him before. I have been here since last week.
I've been knowing him for 5 I've known him for 5 years. years.
Past perfect tense Structure of past perfect I'd (I had) seen him. Past perfect - common mistakes Common mistakes I didn't been to London. Correct version I hadn't been to London. Why? The helping verb had / hadn't is used in the past perfect. You hadn't (had not) seen him. Had you seen him?
The action (haircut) which happened before When I saw him, I noticed that he When I saw him I noticed that he another past action must be put into the past had a haircut. had had a haircut. perfect to make the time order clear to the listener. His original words were: ''I have been to He told me he had been to London.'' However, in reported speech we move London. the tense back - present perfect (have been) becomes past perfect (had been).
The Present perfect Tense & The Past Perfect Tense The present perfect is used when the time period has NOT finished: I have seen three movies this week. (This week has not finished yet.)
The simple past is used when the time period HAS finished:
The present perfect is used with for and since, when the actions have not finished yet:
The simple past is used with for and since, when the actions have already finished: Future tense Structure of future simple I'll (I will) be there tomorrow. Common mistakes
I won't (will not) be there Will you be there tomorrow? tomorrow. Correct version Why? If the action is decided at the moment of speaking, we use will / will not (won't). When we say what we think or expect, we use will (won't). After promise we usually use will.
The phone's ringing. Ok -I'll answer it. - OK, I'm going to answer it. I'm sure he is going to help you. I promise I'm going to help. I'm sure he will help you. I promise I'll help.
When we refer to the future in adverbial clauses, I'll call you when I'll come to my I'll call you when I come to my we normally use present simple (after when, as office. office. soon as, until). If you will give me your address, If you give me your address, I'll When we refer to the future in conditional clauses, I'll send you a postcard. send you a postcard. we normally use the present simple. I can't see you next week. I am To show that the decision was made in the past, I can't see you next week. I will returning/am going to return to we use the present continuous or the 'going to' return to Paris. Paris. future. 'Going to' future tense Structure of 'going to' future
I'm (I am) going to take my I'm (I am) not going to take a holiday Are you going to take a holiday? holidays in August. this year. He's (he is) going to watch TV He isn't (is not) going to watch TV this Is he going to watch TV this evening? this evening. evening. 'going to' for future- common mistakes Common mistakes Correct version Why?
You know that I'll buy a new car, You know that I am going to buy a new We use going to for a future action that has don't you? car, don't you? been decided before the time of speaking. Look! You will drop your books. Look! You are going to drop your We use going to if we see (and are sure) books. that the action will happen.
Modal verbs >> Modal verbs and their negatives Modal verbs and their negatives Positive must (used for a personal opinion) He must be crazy. must / have to / has to (used for obligation) You must arrive by 8 o'clock. You have to arrive by 8 o'clock. can (used for ability) I can play the guitar. can (used for possibility) You can smoke here. Modal verbs >> Modal verbs in the past Modal verbs in the past Present should be could be will be may be might be would be Modal verbs >> Should (to express obligation) Should - to express obligation Structure: should + infinitive We use should for the present and the future. We use should to give advice to someone and to say that something is a good idea. Should is weaker than have to or must. Modal verbs >> Should have (to express past obligation) Past
Negative can't He can't be crazy. don't have to / needn't = something is not necessary You don't have to arrive by 8 o'clock. You needn't arrive by 8 o'clock. can't / cannot I can't play the guitar. can't / cannot / mustn't You can't smoke here. You mustn't smoke here.
should have been could have been would be may have been might have been would have been
You should tell them the truth. You shouldn't smoke, it's bad for you. I don't think you should do it.
Should have - to express unfulfilled past obligation Structure: should + have + past participle We use should have for the past. We use should have to say that someone didn't do something, but it would have been better to do it. Modal verbs >> Must / have to Must / have to Present I must go. / I have to go. (when we want to express obligation) He must be here. It must be great. (when we want to express a personal opinion) Modal verbs >> Must / have to Must / have to Present I must go. / I have to go. (when we want to express obligation) He must be here. It must be great. (when we want to express a personal opinion) Must / can't / couldn't have - to express probability in the past Structure: modal + have + past participle must have been, can't have gone, etc. We use must have to express that we feel sure that something was true. We use can't have / couldn't have to say that we believe something was impossible. May / might / could have - to express probability in the past Structure: modal + have + past participle may have been, could have gone, might have lost, etc. We use may / could / might have to say that it was possible that something happened in the past (but we are not 100% sure). The negatives are may not have and might not have. He may have missed the bus. The road might have been blocked. He may not have left yet. The assistant might not have received his message. They must have left early. He must have already gone. He can't have escaped through this window. It is too small. She can't have said that. She couldn't have said that. Past I had to go. He must have been here. It must have been great. Past I had to go. He must have been here. It must have been great. You should have told them the truth. You shouldn't have gone there - it was a mistake. I don't think you should have done it.
Modal verbs >> Past probability - must have / can't have / might have / may have
Nouns A noun is a person, place, thing, or idea. Every sentence must have a noun as its subject. Examples: The bear sleeps. Toronto is a city .
Types of Nouns : 1-Proper Nouns 2-Common Nouns Forms of Nouns : 1-Plural Nouns 2- Possessive Forms Proper Nouns A proper noun is the name of a person, place or thing. Proper nouns should always be capitalized. Examples: Toronto Mr. Brown Sally Common Nouns A common noun is any noun that is not a proper noun. Common nouns are not capitalized. Examples: the city a leader this woman Plural Forms The plural form of a noun indicates more than one. The plural form is usually formed by adding an s or es. Examples: one week, two weeks a house, many houses one box, two boxes Nouns that end in a consonant followed by a y are made plural by dropping the y and adding ies. Example: one country, two countries Nouns that end in a vowel followed by a y are made plural by adding s. Example: one toy, two toys Nouns that end in f or fe drop the f or fe and add ves. Example: one leaf, two leaves Certain irregular nouns have special plural forms. Examples: one foot, two feet a mouse, many mice Possessive Forms The possessive form of a noun indicates ownership or modifies another noun. The possessive form is usually formed by adding 's to the end of a noun. Examples: the player's equipment the woman's job Canada's government Articles First the good news:There are only three articles in English: a, an and the. There are two types of articles indefinite 'a' and 'an' or definite 'the'. You also need to know when not to use an article. The bad news is that their proper use is complex, especially when you get into the advanced use of English. Quite often you have to work it out by what sounds right, which can be frustrating for a learner. Indefinite articles - a and an (determiners) A and an are the indefinite articles. They refer to something not specifically known to the person you are communicating with. A and an are used before nouns that introduce something or someone you have not mentioned before:For example: "I saw an elephant this morning." "I ate a banana for lunch."
A and an are also used when talking about your profession:"I am an English teacher." "I am a builder." You use a when the noun you are referring to begins with a consonant (b, c, d, f, g, h, j, k, l, m, n, p, q, r, s, t, v, w, x, y or z), for example, "a city", "a factory", and "a hotel". -You use an when the noun you are referring to begins with a vowel (a, e, i, o, u) -Pronunciation changes this rule. It's the sound that matters, not the spelling. -If the next word begins with a consonant sound when we say it, for example, "university" then we use a. If the next word begins
with a vowel sound when we say it, for example "hour" then we use an. -We say "university" with a "y" sound at the beginning as though it were spelt "youniversity". So, "a university" IS correct. -We say "hour" with a silent h as though it were spelt "our". So, "an hour" IS correct. (Lots of people get this wrong - including native speakers.) Definite Article - the (determiners)
Strong pronunciation Weak pronunciation You use the when you know that the listener knows or can work out what particular person/thing you are talking about. For example: For example: "The apple you ate was rotten." "Did you lock the car?"
You should also use the when you have already mentioned the thing you are talking about. "She's got two children; a girl and a boy. The girl's eight and the boy's fourteen."
We use the to talk about geographical points on the globe. For example: the North Pole, the equator
We use the to talk about rivers, oceans and seas For example: For example: For example: the Nile, the Pacific, the English channel
We also use the before certain nouns when we know there is only one of a particular thing. the rain, the sun, the wind, the world, the earth, the White House etc..
However if you want to describe a particular instance of these you should use a/an. "I could hear the wind." / "There's a cold wind blowing." "What are your plans for the future?" / "She has a promising future ahead of her."
The is also used to say that a particular person or thing being mentioned is the best, most famous, etc. In this use, 'the' is usually given strong pronunciation: For example: For example: "Harry's Bar is the place to go." "You don't mean you met the Tony Blair, do you?" "The books are expensive." = (Not all books are expensive, just the ones I'm talking about.) "Books are expensive." = (All books are expensive.)
No article We usually use no article to talk about things in general:Inflation is rising. People are worried about rising crime. (Note! People generally, so no article) You do not use an article when talking about sports. For example: For example: My son plays football. Tennis is expensive. Information is important to any organization. Coffee is bad for you.
You do not use an article before uncountable nouns when talking about them generally.
You do not use an article before the names of countries except where they indicate multiple areas or contain the words (state(s), kingdom, republic, union). Kingdom, state, republic and union are nouns, so they need an article.
For example:
No article - Italy, Mexico, Bolivia, England Use the - the UK (United Kingdom), the USA (United States of America), the Irish Republic Multiple areas! the Netherlands, the Philippines, the British Isles
Prepositions >> Prepositions of place Prepositions of place IN inside an area or space in the city, in the sky, in bed ON in contact with a surface on the wall, on the table on a line on the river, on the equator arrive in a city arrive in London, in Amsterdam AT close to at the table, at the bus stop before nouns referring to a place or position at the top, at the front, at the end but in the middle arrive at a small place arrive at the station, at the meeting when expressing 'towards' point at something, smile at someone Prepositions >> Prepositions of time Prepositions of time IN years (in 1998) months (in January) seasons (in summer) parts of the day (in the afternoon, in the morning BUT at night) Prepositions of time (during, for, over, or, by, until)
We use during to talk about something that happens within a particular period of time, to say when something takes place. We use during to talk about something that happens within the same time as another event. We use over or in to talk about something that has been happening continuously up until the present, or will happen continuously in the future. We use for to say how long something continues. We use by to say that something will happen or be achieved before a particular time. We use until to say that something will continue up to a particular time. During my time in London I visited a lot of interesting places. He came to work during the morning meeting. We've had a lot of problems over / in the last few months. We expect a rise in sales over / in the next few months. I can only come for a few minutes. I was waiting for him for two hours. It has to be finished by two o'clock. He should return by the end of March. We have to stay here until he comes. The concert went on until eleven o'clock.
ON days of the week (on Thursday) dates (on 5 August) on Monday morning
AT hours of the clock (at 7.30) religious festivals (at Easter) points in time (at the end of the week)
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Prepositions >> Examples of some prepositional verbs Prepositional verbs to agree to something to apologize for something to accept I don't think he will ever agree to such a plan. to say you are sorry for something I apologize for not replying to your letter sooner. to formally ask someone for something such as a job or permission to do something Why didn't you apply for a bank loan? to say you are annoyed about something If the service is not satisfactory, you should complain to the customer service about it. to be in accordance with something This signal system doesn't conform to the official safety standards. to mention all of the things that something contains The delegation consists of over 200 people, including interpreters and journalists. when someone, especially someone you know well, writes to you or telephones you When was the last time you heard from him? to say that something must happen or somebody must do something I insist on speaking to the head of the office. to talk about somebody or something in a conversation, speech or a piece of writing Everyone knows who she was referring to in her speech. Prepositions >> Prepositions after adjectives (1) Prepositions after adjectives afraid of something afraid of doing something angry about something angry with somebody concerned about something pleased with someone / something sorry about something sorry for doing something good at something Prepositions >> Prepositions after adjectives (2) Prepositions after adjectives (un)aware of something Is he aware of the problem? She is afraid of driving on motorways. Are you afraid of the dark? I am really angry about what she did. Why did she do it? I am really angry with her. I'm concerned about his exam results. I was very pleased with his performance. Was she sorry about the mistake? I'm sorry for being late. He is good at languages.
to conform to something
to consist of something
to insist on something
to refer to something
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dependent on something famous for something impressed by/with something similar to something upset about something
She is still dependent on her parents. He is famous for his sporting achievements. I was very impressed by his performance. His interests are similar to those of his brother. I was really upset about it.
The office is being cleaned at the The office isn't (is not) being cleaned at Is the office being cleaned at the moment? moment. the moment. The office has already been The office hasn't (has not) been cleaned Has the office been cleaned? cleaned. yet. The office will be cleaned next The office won't (will not) be cleaned next Will the office be cleaned next week? week. week. The office can be cleaned. The office cannot be cleaned. we use Can the office be cleaned? the prepositional phrase with by:
When we want to include the agent (who), The play An Ideal Husband was written by Oscar Wilde.
Passive forms - common mistakes Common mistakes This problem will discussed next week. This problem will be discuss next week. My car is repairing at the moment. Correct version This problem will be discussed next week. This problem will be discussed next week. My car is being repaired at the moment. Why?
To make a passive form of a continuous tense we use be + being + past participle. To make a passive form of the perfect tense we use have/has/had + been + past participle
Conjunctions A conjunction is a word used to connect words, phrases or clauses in a sentence. The principal coordinate conjunctions are and, but, or, nor. Conjunctions connecting Subjects: 1. You or she may erase the chalkboard.
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2. The mother cat and her kittens snuggled in their cozy box. 3. Did Clare or Charles finish cleaning the closet? 4. Adam and Eve were our first parents. Conjunctions connecting Predicates: 1.The kitty pawed and pulled the string. 2. The rickety boat creaked and groaned as it rocked on the rough sea. 3. The boys whooped and hollered as their favorite team scored a touchdown. 4. Jesus suffered and died for us. Conjunctions connecting Modifiers: 1. Always do your assignment neatly and promptly. 2.She wore her red and blue dress to the party. 3.The bell rang loudly but joyfully. 4.Dad is a skillful and careful driver.
Sentence Types
English has four main sentence types: Declarative Sentences are used to form statements. Examples: "Mary is here.", "My name is Mary." Interrogative Sentences are used to ask questions. Examples: "Where is Mary?", "What is your name?" Imperative Sentences are used for commands. Examples: "Come here.", "Tell me your name." Conditional Sentences are used to indicate dependencies between events or conditions. Example: "If you cut all the trees, there will be no forest."
It is not polite to use imperative sentences without the word "Please". It is better to say "Please, come here." than just "Come here." The simplest English sentences are imperative sentences with a single verb (Example: "Help!"). Sentences may be simple or compound. Compound sentences consist of two or more simple sentences joined by conjunctions. Examples: "Come here and sit down.", "My name is Mary and I live in New York.", "What is your name and where do you live?", "Either John will go to New York or Mary will come here." It is not correct to combine different sentence types in a compound sentence. Wrong: "Mary lives in New York and come here." <English Sentence> = <Simple Sentence> | <Compound Sentence> <Simple Sentence> = <Declarative Sentence> | <Interrogative Sentence> | <Imperative Sentence> | <Conditional Sentence> <Compound Sentence> = <Simple Sentence> <conjunction> <Simple Sentence> |
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"Either" <Declarative Sentence> "or" <Declarative Sentence> | "Either" <Imperative Sentence> "or" <Imperative Sentence>
avoid all three: use "since" or "because" Since you asked me, I'll help. instead verb: to take with the intention of I borrowed a book from the library. returning verb: to give with the expectation of I lent a book to my friend. getting back verb: to carry toward the speaker verb: to carry away from the speaker noun: that which completes verb: to praise noun: moral sense of right and wrong mentally awake She brought it to me. She took it away. The scarf complements the outfit. She complimented him on his success. He had a strong conscience. He was conscious during surgery.
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COUNSEL COUNCIL DISINTERESTED UNINTERESTED EMIGRATE IMMIGRATE ETC. FEWER LESS GOOD WELL HUNG HE/SHE HEALTHY HEALTHFUL IN INTO ITS IT'S LEAD LED LEARN TEACH LIE
verb: to give advice noun: group of advisors fair, without prejudice not concerned verb: to leave a country verb: to enter a country abbreviation of et cetera individual units uncountable quantity adjective adverb: in a good manner suspended, held up Avoid this construction. possessing good health bringing about good health place or position action toward possessive meaning A belonging to it" contraction for "it is" noun: a metal past tense of the verb "to lead" to acquire knowledge to give knowledge to to recline
Gamblers Anonymous counsels recovering gamblers. The union council disbanded. disinterested judge uninterested in sports She emigrated from France. My German father immigrated to the U.S. Avoid in formal writing; give the entire list instead. fewer items less patience Joe looks good (attractive). He writes well. The pictures were hung. Reconstruct the sentence in the third person plural (they), or use either "he" or "she" consistently. healthy individual healthful climate in the heart into the box Its nose is cold. It's a nice day. Pipes are made of lead. He led his followers. He learned fast. She taught well. present: The cat lies down. future: The cat will lie down. past: The cat lay down. perfect: The cat has lain down. present: The player lays his dice down. future: The player will lay his dice down. past: The player laid his dice down. perfect: The player has laid his dice down. The dog was loose. He will lose his keys.
to put down Adjective: free and unattached Verb: to part with unintentionally
"Of"' is not a substitute for "'ve." (There is no such expression as "would of" or He would have gone on "could of."). Use neutral terms. adj.: private Consider using people, humans, humanity. The diary was personal.
noun: people employed in a business or Attention, all personnel! the military noun: rule, general truth adjective: main noun: main teacher Religion teaches important principles. The principal ingredient is sugar. The principal of the school is very strict.
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REAL REALLY STATIONARY STATIONERY THAN THEN TO TWO TOO THAT WHICH WHO/WHOM THEIR THEY'RE THERE UNIQUE WEATHER WHETHER WHO'S WHOSE WOMAN WOMEN YOUR YOU'RE
adjective: genuine adverb: actually staying in one place letter paper conjunction: comparisons adverb: at that time, consequently preposition number adverb refers to things or people refers only to things refers only to people belonging to them contraction for "they are" in that place
The platypus hardly looked real. Did it really happen? The satellite appeared stationary. Hotels often provide stationery. New York is bigger than Boston. Then I will send it. Give the knife to him. He has two sisters. She wears too much make-up. Here is the pen that you need. Here is the pen which you need. He is a person who works hard. Their house is new. They=re not at home. There is the page.
one of a kind (do not use That is a unique book. with a modifier such as "very", "most") atmospheric conditions in either case contraction for "who is" possessive singular noun plural noun possessive "belonging to you" contraction for "you are" The weather was foul. whether or not Who's the teacher? Whose book is this.? a woman three women Your coat is here. You're going home.
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640 acres = 1 sq mi. 1 mile square = 1 section (of land) 6 miles square = 1 township = 36 sections = 36 sq mi. Liquid Measure When necessary to distinguish the liquid pint or quart from the dry pint or quart, the word liquid or the abbreviation liq should be used in combination with the name or abbreviation of the liquid unit. 4 gills (gi) = 1 pint (pt) (= 28.875 cu in.) 2 pints = 1 quart (qt) (= 57.75 cu in.) 4 quarts = 1 gallon (gal) (= 231 cu in.) = 8 pts = 32 gills Units of Circular Measure Second ('') = Minute (') = 60 seconds Degree () = 60 minutes Right angle = 90 degrees Straight angle = 180 degrees Circle = 360 degrees Measuring Motion Speed is the measure of motion. You can find it by dividing the distance covered by the time it takes to travel that distance. Speed of Light If a star is 10 light-years away, it is about 60 trillion miles distant. Light travels through space at 186,000 miles per second. Light-Year A light ray travels 5.88 trillion miles a year in space. Measuring Power Here is information about non-metric units of power. *Horsepower: A workhorse can lift 550 pounds 1 foot in the air in 1 second; that is 1 horsepower. Engines are measured in horsepower. A 10-horsepower engine can do the work of ten horses. *Manpower: An average man lifts 55 pounds 1 foot high in 1 second. *Candlepower: The amount of light given off by a candle of a specific size, shape, type of tallow, and type of wick. The brightness of an electric light is measured in candlepower. *Megaton: A megaton is the blasting power of a hydrogen bomb. One megaton has the power of 1 million tons of TNT.
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the Internet has it's pros it also comes with many cons; inappropriate text and pictures are readily available on the Internet and is a growing business for the Internet. The pornography business on the Internet is the largest and fastest growing part of E-Commerce. In 1998 in Silicon Valley there was an estimated 50 new millionaires a day. The most popular features of the Internet include electronic mail, discussion, on-line conversations, adventure and role-playing games, information retrieval, and electronic commerce are all the good things the Internet provides Internet users with. Electronic Commerce or E-Commerce is a growing industry and it would not be available without the Internet. Today, the number one technique of tying business into technology would be the use of the Internet. Since the Internet can be accessed by millions of people all the time, it would be a great incentive for businesses. The Internet can help businesses in a number of extraordinary ways. First, the Internet is an excellent way to make business information available to possible consumers. Say a person hears about a product that your business produces and would like to know more information about that product. Well, through Internet access, that person can easily locate your business web site and browse through the information needed. Included in the web sites found, there could be many documents, pictures, small movie flicks, and question and answer sections available. All of this can be gathered in the convenience of a person's home, twenty-four hours a day. A business can be very pleased with the amount of information they can readily have available to publish to the entire world.
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Nanotechnology
Nanotechnology, the creation and use of materials or devices at extremely small scales. These materials or devices fall in the range of 1 to 100 nanometers (nm). One nm is equal to one-billionth of a meter (.000000001 m), which is about 50,000 times smaller than the diameter of a human hair. Scientists refer to the dimensional range of 1 to 100 nm as the nanoscale, and materials at this scale are called nanocrystals or nanomaterials. The nanoscale is unique because nothing solid can be made any smaller. It is also unique because many of the mechanisms of the biological and physical world operate on length scales from 0.1 to 100 nm. At these dimensions materials exhibit different physical properties; thus scientists expect that many novel effects at the nanoscale will be discovered and used for breakthrough technologies. A number of important breakthroughs have already occurred in nanotechnology. These developments are found in products used throughout the world. Some examples are catalytic converters in automobiles that help remove air pollutants, devices in computers that read from and write to the hard disk, certain sunscreens and cosmetics that transparently block harmful radiation from the Sun, and special coatings for sports clothes and gear that help improve the gear and possibly enhance the athletes performance. Still, many scientists, engineers, and technologists believe they have only scratched the surface of nanotechnologys potential. Nanotechnology is in its infancy, and no one can predict with accuracy what will result from the full flowering of the field over the next several decades. Many scientists believe it can be said with confidence, however, that nanotechnology will have a major impact on medicine and health care; energy production and conservation; environmental cleanup and protection; electronics, computers, and sensors; and world security and defense. To grasp the size of the nanoscale, consider the diameter of an atom, the basic building block of matter. The hydrogen atom, one of the smallest naturally occurring atoms, is only 0.1 nm in diameter. In fact, nearly all atoms are roughly 0.1 nm in size, too small to be seen by human eyes. Atoms bond together to form molecules, the smallest part of a chemical compound. Molecules that consist of about 30 atoms are only about 1 nm in diameter. Molecules, in turn, compose cells, the basic units of life. Human cells range from 5,000 to 200,000 nm in size, which means that they are larger than the nanoscale. However, the proteins that carry out the internal operations of the cell are just 3 to 20 nm in size and so have nanoscale dimensions. Viruses that attack human cells are about 10 to 200 nm, and the molecules in drugs used to fight viruses are less than 5 nm in size. The possibility of building new materials and devices that operate at the same scale as the basic functions of nature explains why so much attention is being devoted to the world below 100 nm. But 100 nm is not some arbitrary dividing line. This is the length at which special properties have been observed in materials properties that are profoundly different at the nanoscale. Human beings have actually known about these special properties for some time, although they did not understand why they occurred. Glassworkers in the Middle Ages, for example, knew that by breaking down gold into extremely small particles and sprinkling these fine particles into glass the gold would change in color from yellow to blue or green or red, depending on the size of the particle. They used these particles to help create the beautiful stained glass windows found in cathedrals throughout Europe, such as the cathedral of Notre Dame in Paris, France. These glassworkers did not realize it at the time, but they had created gold nanocrystals. At scales above 100 nm gold appears yellow, but at scales below 100 nm it exhibits other colors. Nanotechnologists are intrigued by the possibility of creating human made devices at the molecular, or nanoscale, level. That is why the field is sometimes called molecular nanotechnology. Some nanotechnologists are also aiming for these devices to self-replicatethat is, to simultaneously carry out their function and increase their number, just as living organisms do. To some early proponents of the field, this aspect of nanotechnology is the most important. If tiny functional units could be assembled at the molecular level and made to self-replicate under controlled conditions, tremendous efficiencies could be realized. However, many scientists doubt the possibility of self-replicating nanostructures. TECHNOLOGY VOCABULARY Ability Advances Applications Businesses Accounting Analysis Architects Called Addition Analysts Area Carpal Adequate Analyze Arise Carriers Administrators Annual Associate Certification
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Communication Concentrate Customer Deal Determine Efficiency Environment Firms Hours Instructions Keyboard Lead Mail Median Networks Outsourcing Plan Program Projects Rapidly Resources Scientists Software Specific Support Technicians Title Understanding Webmasters
Communications Considerable Customers Decline Developers Electronic Equipment Force Implementation Insurance Knowledge Leadership Maintain Mobile Officer Oversee Prevailing Programmer Promoted Reduce Respond Section Solving Spend Syndrome Technological Tools User Wireless
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Detail 2:____________________________________________________. Detail 3:____________________________________________________. V. BODY PARAGRAPH IV: Transition/Opening Sentence:_________________________________. Detail 1:____________________________________________________. Detail 2:____________________________________________________. Detail 3:____________________________________________________. VI. CONCLUSION: Reconfirmed Thesis:_________________________________________. Transition-sentences bring out the logical relation between ideas. You want your paper to read like a continuous argument which good transitions help to facilitate. Words like however, so, additionally do indicate a logical relation between parag raphs, but they are weak. A strong transition makes the relation explicit. A transitional sentence leads your reader from one paragraph to the next . Weaker transition: However, conflicts between principle and emotion more often occur when there is a conflict between the moral values of different cultures. Stronger transition: While conflict between morality and sympathy can occur in the context of a single cultural code, it more often arises in cross-cultural conflicts. How to Write an Essay: 10 Easy Steps Find a subject you care about and which you in your heart feel others should care about. It is this genuine caring, not your games with language, which will be the most compelling and seductive element in your style. -- Kurt VonnegutWhy is writing an essay so frustrating? Learning how to write an essay can be a maddening, exasperating process, but it doesn't have to be. If you know the steps and understand what to do, writing can be easy and even fun. This site, "How To Write an Essay: 10 Easy Steps," offers a ten-step process that teaches students how to write an essay. Links to the writing steps are found on the left, and additional writing resources are located across the top. Learning how to write an essay doesn't have to involve so much trial and error.
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5. Outline: Sketch out your essay before straightway writing it out. Use one-line sentences to describe paragraphs, and bullet points to describe what each paragraph will contain. Play with the essay's order. Map out the structure of your argument, and make sure each paragraph is unified. 6. Introduction: Now sit down and write the essay. The introduction should grab the reader's attention, set up the issue, and lead in to your thesis. Your intro is merely a buildup of the issue, a stage of bringing your reader into the essay's argument. (Note: The title and first paragraph are probably the most important elements in your essay. This is an essay-writing point that doesn't always sink in within the context of the classroom. In the first paragraph you either hook the reader's interest or lose it. Of course your teacher, who's getting paid to teach you how to write an essay, will read the essay you've written regardless, but in the real world, readers make up their minds about whether or not to read your essay by glancing at the title alone.) 7. Paragraphs: Each individual paragraph should be focused on a single idea that supports your thesis. Begin paragraphs with topic sentences, support assertions with evidence, and expound your ideas in the clearest, most sensible way you can. Speak to your reader as if he or she were sitting in front of you. In other words, instead of writing the essay, try talking the essay. 8. Conclusion: Gracefully exit your essay by making a quick wrap-up sentence, and then end on some memorable thought, perhaps a quotation, or an interesting twist of logic, or some call to action. Is there something you want the reader to walk away and do? Let him or her know exactly what. 9. Format your essay according to the correct guidelines for citation. All borrowed ideas and quotations should be correctly cited in the body of your text, followed up with a Works Cited (references) page listing the details of your sources. 10. Language: You're not done writing your essay until you've polished your language by correcting the grammar, making sentences flow, and making other intuitive edits. Proofread until it reads just how you want it to sound. Writing an essay can be tedious, but you don't want to bungle the hours of conceptual work you've put into writing your essay by leaving a few misspellings and poorly worded phrases..
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In this part, the main message of the essay should be stressed out, also in a simple term similarly applied in introduction part. It should be noted that the main message is different from the main points elaborated earlier in the body part. Although these two are related to each other, the former is more towards a suggestion for the readers to think about after reading your essay. Normally, introduction and conclusion should be written in one paragraph only, so that it would be easy to be recognized apart from other segment of the essay. Also, one more thing not to neglect is that a good essay should have a balance amount of words in each paragraph. This is why an essay should have a prior designed essay layout so that the author can make necessary arrangement in order to meet these conditions. The elements discussed above can be found in most essay examples, but would vary according to certain exception depending on the requirement of the essay itself.
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"Pleased to meet you, John." Or "Nice to meet you, John." John could say: "Nice to meet you too, Sarah." Or "Hello, Sarah." Introducing clients "Mr Mitchell, I'd like to introduce you to my manager, Henry Lewis." Mr Mitchell could then say: "How do you do?" and Henry Lewis also says "How do you do?" Or Mr Mitchell could say: "Pleased to meet you." Or "Good to meet you." Speaking Tip "How do you do?" is quite formal for British English speakers and the reply to this question is to repeat the phrase, " How do you do?" (as strange as that may sound!) At a more informal party When you introduce two of your friends to each other, you can simply say, "John, this is Sarah." Cultural considerations At work, one person may have higher status your boss, or a client, for example. It's polite to address them as Mr / Ms until the situation becomes more informal. If someone says, "Please call me (Henry)", you know you can use first names. If someone uses your first name, you can use their first name too. People in European and English-speaking cultures often shake hands when they meet someone for the first time. * Don't forget to smile! :-
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0.4 (a number) = nought point four / zero point four 0C (temperature) = zero degrees Talking about calculations + (plus) 2 + 1 = 3 (two plus one equals three) - (minus / take away) 5 3 = 2 (five minus three equals two / five take away three equals two) x (multiplied by / times) 2 x 3 = 6 (two multiplied by three equals six / two times three equals six) / (divided by) 6 / 3 = 2 (six divided by three equals two)
Conversation Starters
Everyday Idioms Time Idioms
Colour idioms black and white thinking of everything or judging everything in a simple way and seeing it as either good or bad The situation isn't as black and white as it seems; it's much more complicated. to darken by putting out the electric lights or covering over the windows Londoners had to black out their windows during the war so that the enemy aircraft could not see the city. to lose consciousness
black out
black out
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Green
He blacked out after standing up for three hours in the parade. First aid staff attended to him. to be very angry or upset; to be excited and very emotional She argued with her husband until she was blue in the face but he wouldn't see her point of view. to be inexperienced and/or immature He's a bit green - he still believes that someone is going to come and help him out of his situation. He doesn't realize he has to do it himself. to be very jealous and full of envy I was green with envy when I heard that she was going on holiday to Spain for a week while I had to stay and work. to have debts The company has been in the red for two years now. We now owe over $500,000 to our suppliers and the bank. excessive bureaucracy Many businesses complain about the amount of red tape that they must deal with in former Eastern-bloc countries. when something happens without a warning, by surprise His decision to leave the company came completely out of the blue. No one expected it at all.
in the red
red tape
Telephone language and phrases in English How to answer and speak on the phone Answering the phone Good morning/afternoon/evening, York Enterprises, Elizabeth Jones speaking. Who's calling, please? Introducing yourself This is Paul Smith speaking. Hello, this is Paul Smith from Speak International. Asking for someone Could I speak to John Martin, please? I'd like to speak to John Martin, please. Could you put me through to John Martin, please? Could I speak to someone who Explaining I'm afraid Mr Martin isn't in at the moment. I'm sorry, he's in a meeting at the moment. I'm afraid he's on another line at the moment. Putting someone on hold Just a moment, please. Could you hold the line, please? Hold the line, please. Problems I'm sorry, I don't understand. Could you repeat that, please? I'm sorry, I can't hear you very well. Could you speak up a little, please? I'm afraid you've got the wrong number. I've tried to get through several times but it's always engaged. Could you spell that, please? Putting someone through One moment, please. I'll see if Mr Jones is available. I'll put you through. I'll connect you. I'm connecting you now. Taking a message Can I take a message? Would you like to leave a message? Can I give him/her a message? I'll tell Mr Jones that you called I'll ask him/her to call you as soon as possible.
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a trusted friend = someone you can trust a childhood friend = a friend from when you were very young a circle of friends = all the friends in your group: "She's got a great circle of friends." More casual friendships penpal / epal = someone you know from corresponding / writing: "Find a penpal on our Penpals forum!" someone you know from work (or another interest group): "Andy? Oh, he's someone I know from work." someone you know to pass the time of day with = someone you know to say "hello" to. casual acquaintance = someone you don't know very well: "She's just a casual acquaintance of mine." a friend of a friend = someone you only know because they're a friend of one of your friends. "Dave's a friend of a friend." a mutual friend = someone that two people know: "Karen's a mutual friend of both me and Rachel." Mates classmate = someone in your class at school. workmate = someone you work with flatmate (UK English) roommate (US English) = someone you share a flat or house with soul mate = someone you're very close to because you share the same opinions and beliefs Not good friends on-off relationship = where you're sometimes friendly, and sometimes not: "Cath and Liz have an on-off relationship." fair-weather friend = a friend who's never around when you need help: "She's only a fair-weather friend." a frenemy = someone who's a friend and an enemy at the same time. Other expressions strike up a friendship with = make friends with someone be no friend of = not like someone / something: "I'm no friend of his!" have friends in high places = know important / influential people: "Be careful what you say. He's got friends in high places."
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