Making Sense of GrammarPearson Longman, 2004 - 399 σελίδες
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Αποτελέσματα 1 - 3 από τα 42.
Σελίδα 112
... seen in the ' third person ' rule for verbs in the present tense : a singular subject requires a singular verb form , ending in -s ( for singular vs. plural , see Chapter 31 ) : he / she / it says vs. they say the curtain closes vs. the ...
... seen in the ' third person ' rule for verbs in the present tense : a singular subject requires a singular verb form , ending in -s ( for singular vs. plural , see Chapter 31 ) : he / she / it says vs. they say the curtain closes vs. the ...
Σελίδα 301
... seen as extensions of the two basic meanings , where up is seen as operating at or towards the higher end of a vertical scale , and down at or towards the lower end . The notion of physical height naturally extends to notions of size ...
... seen as extensions of the two basic meanings , where up is seen as operating at or towards the higher end of a vertical scale , and down at or towards the lower end . The notion of physical height naturally extends to notions of size ...
Σελίδα 368
... seen in this nine - year - old's story : One day I was walking along the road and I saw a little dog and it was whining because there was nobody taking any notice of it and so I went over to it and said you are my dog and then it took ...
... seen in this nine - year - old's story : One day I was walking along the road and I saw a little dog and it was whining because there was nobody taking any notice of it and so I went over to it and said you are my dog and then it took ...
Περιεχόμενα
Introduction | 6 |
Theory into practice | 10 |
Grammar and vocabulary | 16 |
Πνευματικά δικαιώματα | |
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Συχνά εμφανιζόμενοι όροι και φράσεις
academic writing action addressee adjectives adverbials advertising ambiguity American English answer appear asked auxiliaries auxiliary verbs avoid British English CALIFORNIA/SANTA CRUZ Charles Dickens clause element clause types clauses Chapter cleft sentence common conjunctions construction context contrast conversation convey coordination CRUZ The University direct direct object effect ellipsis English entity especially event example EXPLANATION express fiction finite clause focus formal function genitive going happened identify Jane John kind language leave main verb Mary meaning minor sentences modals nonfinite clause nonpersonal noun phrase nouns Chapter object omitted Oslo accords paragraph passive past tense person plural postmodifiers premodifiers present tense Pro-forms pronouns punctuation question refer relationship relative clause reporting clauses semantic sequence singular someone speaker speech structure style stylistic subjunctive subordinate clause talk University Library UNIVERSITY UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA/SANTA usage usually verb phrase vocative words