【E36】-10 Do, Does, Negative form, Positive statement

【E36】-10 Do, Does, Negative form, Positive statement

2017-11-15    23'00''

主播: 启哲英语

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介绍:
It was hectic. The day was hectic. The weekend was hectic. The work was hectic. These are all correct. We don't say 'I was hectic'. Example conversation: A: Hi, how are you? B: I am well. How about you? A: I'm well too. How was your weekend? B: It was good. How about your weekend? GRAMMAR REMINDER 1: The Present Simple Tense— Affirmative Statements The present simple tense is used to talk about things that happen all the time or usually. The verb is used in its base form. Don’t forget to add the letter s in the third person (he, she, it)! Examples: •I live •You live •He, she, or it lives •We live •They live 3 important points about Simple Present Tense: - It is used to talk about things that happen all the time / usually. - The original form of the verb does not change. - We add 's' to the end of the verb for He, She and It. Do Does This is the word that changes with I, You, We, They What time do I come? What time do you come? What time do we come? What time do they come? To form the negative, just add the contraction form of not between does and the base verb. •It doesn’t come late. •It doesn’t cost too much. For I, You, We and They, we do the same thing, but we use 'do'. For example: If the verb is 'run', we can say: I run. I don't run. You run. You don't run. We run. We don't run. They run. They don't run. Here is an example that I want you to remember. I have a question. Here the verb is 'have'. So the negative should be: I DON'T have a question. He DOESN'T have a question. GRAMMAR REMINDER 3: The Future Simple Tense - Affirmative Statements, and Negatives Use will (or the short form/contraction) for the future simple tense when talking about a fact. •You’ll have to catch the B9. (You will have to . . .) •You’ll need $2 in change. (You will need . . .) This is the future tense. This is talking about a fact (something that is true) Use the short form of will not (won’t) for the negative. •The driver won’t take dollar bills and he won’t take change. Positive form: will + verb will take Negative form: will + not + verb will + not + take won't take Positive statement: I have a question. I have some questions. Negative statement: I don't have a question. I don't have any questions. 'Some' is used in positive statements. 'Any' is used in negative statements. Please use these 4 grammar rules to make some sentences! This is your homework for tomorrow!