"English Grammar made very easy"
angol nyelvkönyv elektronikus formátumban itt is megvásárolható mindössze 455 forintért.
Kattints a bal alsó sarokban lévő Buy Now gombra
Ezt az anyagot elsősorban azoknak ajánlom, akik értik, amit angolul olvasnak.
A módszert akkor dolgoztam ki, amikor a 80-as években Basel legnagyobb és ma is legnépszerűbb nyelviskolájában (Orsini Sprachschule) tanitottam.
A lényege egy alapképlet, minden logikusan erre épül, igy a nyelvtan szerkezeti felépitésének megértése leegyszerűsödik. Az összefüggések ismeretének
segitségével nehézség nélkül el tudjuk dönteni, melyik nyelvtani formát kell használnunk, és a mondatok helyes megszerkesztésével sem lesz problémánk.
Itt a módszerből egy rövid izelitő látható. Ha megnyeri tetszésedet, a lap alján lévő Buy Now gombra kattintva megveheted a teljes anyagot, amit elektronikusan tárolhatsz és bármikor újra felnyithatsz. A könyv nyomtatott formában is megvásárolható, de az 5,75 dolláros vételár mellett még szállitási költséget is kell fizetni:
https://www.amazon.com/dp/B078MV9K1H
Angol nyelvórák az Interneten (a Skype segitségével):
//english-lessons.gportal.hu/
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Time components
Time is a basic component of our communication. Anything we say or hear has a time component. The time
component dictates which of the following must be used:
1. Past Perfect
2. Past
3. Present Perfect
4. Present
5. Future Perfect
6. Future
We will learn a simple way to see which type of time component we have, so deciding which one of the above six we
need to use will be very easy.
Each of the above has a simple formula, and one (or more) of the above is present practically in every sentence of the
English language.
As for the formula: all we need to learn is the most important basic building block – which we will see shortly.
Everything else is logically derived from it.
Let’s start by dividing all the possible time components into 2 major groups:
Group 1. Time components that clearly answer to the question “when?”
Examples: “yesterday”, “in 1965”, “when I was a child”
Group 2. Time components that do not clearly answer to the question “when?” because they express periods of time.
These components answer to questions like “since when?”, “how long?”, etc.
Examples: “since I moved here”, “before he started his new job”, “during the last few weeks”, “until now”, “so far”,
“recently”, “lately”, “already”
** Time components that appear to have duration, such as “yesterday”, “last year”, etc. will belong to Group 2 only
when words in the sentence refer to a part of them as duration:
“during the first half of last year”
“before the postman came yesterday”
More words added can define the time period even more precisely:
“yesterday for fifteen minutes before the postman arrived”
“for a couple of more weeks this month”
“for years when I was a child”
The "to be” basic building block
1. “had been”
2. “was”/“were”
3. “have been”/“has been”
4. “am”/“is”/“are”
5. “will have been”
6. “will be”
1.) When what we want to say in a sentence relates to a Group 1 time component, we must use the “was” or “were”,
the “am” or “is” or “are”, or the “will be” form of “to be”.
Obviously,
1a.) when the Group 1 time component indicates Past, we use “was” or “were”.
I “was”, you “were”, he/she/it/the cat “was”
we/you/they/the cats “were”
Example: I was not there yesterday.
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