CBTis 122. English I Module 3 How do I get home? T O P I C S:

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T O P I C S: o Countable (C) and Uncountable (U) nouns. o Many & Much / (How many?) & (How much?). o This/That (singular) & These/Those (plural). o There is (singular) & There are (plural). o Irregular plurals. o Possessive Pronouns. o Likes and Dislikes. o The verb Can (ability). o Be able to. R. R. R. AD2014 CBTis 122 1 English I Module 3 How do I get home?

2 COMPETENCIAS A EVALUAR: Genérica: 2 Se expresa y se comunica. Disciplinares: 4 comunicación. 4.- Escucha interpreta y emite mensajes pertinentes en distintos contextos mediante la utilización de medios, códigos y herramientas apropiados). 6.- Participa con responsabilidad en la sociedad(10 10.2). 1.- Identifica, ordena e interpreta las ideas, datos y conceptos explícitos e implícitos en un texto. 11.- Aplica estrategias de lectura y escritura. 12.- Utiliza tecnologías de la información y comunicación.

3 Countable (C) and Uncountable (U) nouns. COUNTABLE (C) They have a singular and a plural form. In plural, these nouns can be used with a number- they can be counted. Example: 1 friend, 2 friends, 3 friends... 1 book, 2 books, 3 books... Countable nouns take many. Example: 100 friends many friends. UNCOUNTABLE (U) They can only be used in singular. These nouns cannot be used with a number- they can't be counted. Examples: I have a lot of money. (Not 1000 money) You say I drink a lot of milk. (Not 5 milk). Uncountable nouns take much. Example: 100 money much money Note: Of course you can count money, milk, meat; but then you would use the currency, liter, kilo, glass,...and say that you have got: 5 euros or dollars... (but not 5 money). 2 liters, pints, glasses... of milk (but not 2 milk) 3 kilos... of meat (but not 3 meat) 10 bottles of mineral water... (but not 10 mineral water)

Examples. 4 Homework #29 SINGULAR COUNTABLE NOUN UNCOUNTABLE NOUN a book/one book one car a man/one man Money Some Money A lot of Money Much money A little money PLURAL books two books a lot of books many books a few books two cars the cars some cars three men six men a few men NONE COMMENTS SINGULAR: a + noun / one + noun PLURAL: noun + (s, es, ies) / (irregular) SINGULAR: Don t use a. Don t use one. PLURAL: A uncountable noun does not have a plural form. COMMON UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS advice mail bread pepper furniture money cheese rice help music coffee salt homework peace food soup information traffic fruit sugar jewelry weather meat tea luck work milk water

5 HOW MANY? Countable (C) & HOW MUCH? Uncountable (U). How many? (C) many with countable nouns. (students, desks, windows...) How much? (U) much with uncountable nouns. (money, bread, water...) Questions: How many friends/students/dogs... are there? Answers: Jenny has (30)many friends." The teacher has (55)many students. They have (8)many dogs." Questions: How much money/bread/water...is there? Answers: I have much money." They have much bread. The pool has much water."

6 THIS THAT & THESE THOSE. We can use THIS map Look at THAT boat THOSE pieces are mine!!! Check it out THESE TVs...!!!

7 Comparations NOUNS S I N G U L A R Here!!! CLOSER THIS marker is FAR... is THAT marker Over there P L U R A L CLOSER THESE markers Here!!! are are FAR... Over there THOSE markers

8 Correct form of the There is/there are VIDEO http://goo.gl/1urh1

9 THERE IS (singular) AFFIRMATIVE THERE IS Examples: There is a book on my desk. There is a dog in her house. There is a spider in the room. There is a balcony in my house. NEGATIVE (Not) THERE ISN T (IS NOT) Examples: There is not a book on my desk. There isn t a dog in her house. There is not a spider in the room. There isn t a balcony in my house.

10 THERE IS (singular) QUESTION? IS THERE? Examples: Is there a book on your desk? Is there a dog in her house? Is there a spider in the room? SHORT ANSWER YES/NO Examples: YES, THERE IS. NO, THERE ISN T. Is there a balcony in my house?

11 THERE ARE (plural) AFFIRMATIVE NEGATIVE (Not) THERE ARE Examples: There are many books on my desk. There are three dogs in her house. There are five spiders in the room. There are two balconies in my house. THERE AREN T (ARE NOT) Examples: There are not many books on my desk. There aren t three dogs in her house. There are not five spiders in the room. There aren t two balconies in my house.

12 THERE ARE (plural) QUESTION? ARE THERE? Examples: Are there many books on your desk? Are there three dogs in her house? Are there five spiders in the room? SHORT ANSWER YES/NO Examples: YES, THERE ARE. NO, THERE AREN T. Are there two balconies in my house?

PLURAL NOUNS Apples Tomatoes Keys Babies Boxes Wolves

Plural nouns REGULAR Singular >>> Plural. Dog >>> dogs. Watch >>> watches. City >>> cities. Wife >>> wives. Car >>> cars. Match >>> matches. Potato >>> potatoes. Lion >>> lions. IRREGULAR Singular >>> Plural. Man >>> men. Woman >>> women. Child >>> children. Foot >>> feet. Tooth >>> teeth. Fish >>> fish. Mouse >>> mice. Person >>> people.

15 Irregular plural nouns IRREGULAR NOUNS SINGULAR PLURAL man men woman women foot feet child children person people tooth teeth mouse mice sheep sheep deer deer fish fish ox oxen goose geese louse lice

IRREGULAR PLURAL FORMS. Examples: Man >>> men. Woman >>> women. Child >>> children. Foot >>> feet. Tooth >>> teeth. Fish >>> fish. Mouse >>> mice. Person >>> people. Mr. Smith has one child. Mr. Lee has two children. I have a right foot and a left foot. I have two feet. I see a man on the street. I see ten men on the street. The cats see a mouse. Cats like to catch mice. My tooth hurts. My teeth are white. There is a woman in your class. There are twenty women in your class. Bob has an aquarium. He has one fish only. Katy has an aquarium. She has seven fish.

POSSESSIVE PRONOUNS 17 A possessive pronoun is a part of speech that attributes ownership to someone or something. Like any other pronoun, it substitutes a noun phrase and can prevent its repetition. For example, in the phrase, "These glasses are mine, not yours", the words "mine" and "yours" are possessive pronouns and stand for "my glasses" and "your glasses," respectively.

18 Possessive Pronouns. This is our house. It's ours. The words "mine, yours, his, hers, its, ours, theirs" are possessive pronouns. This is my bedroom. It's mine. This is my brother's bike. It's his.

Answer the exercise. 19

20 Like (+/-), Enjoy, Hate +ing. She hates cleaning the kitchen He likes playing in the park He likes to play in the park. She enjoys listening music She enjoys to listen music She hates to clean the kitchen I, You, We, They He, She, It. Personal Pronouns VERB Like(+/-) Enjoy Hate NOUN (People, Things, Places) VERB(ing)/+ to (VERB) (see rules) Verb /Noun

21 Formation Rules to ing form. RULE END OF THE VERB: Base form - ing Form. VERB-ING 1 CONSONANT + e Smile Write 2 VOWEL + CONSONANT* 2.1 Exception - w, -x, - y. Do not doble cte. 3 2 VOWELS + CONSONANT Run Swim Snow Fix Say Read Sleep 4 2 CONSONANTS Work Watch Drop (e) x and ADD ing DOUBLE THE CTE. + ADD ing ADD ing ADD ing ADD ing Smiling Writing Running Swimming Snowing Fixing Saying Reading Sleeping Working Watching

22 EXAMPLES: Like(s) (+), don t like (-), Enjoy(s), Hate(s). P.P.+ LIKE+ A NOUN*. I like my family, you, etc. You don t like the school. We enjoy English class. They hate homework. He likes rock music. She enjoys basketball. My cat hates fish. *NOUN: People, Things, Places.

EXAMPLES: 23 Like(s) (+), don t like (-) Enjoy(s) Hate(s) *INFINITIVE: to + verb (base form). P.P.+ VERB 4 + AN INFINITIVE*. I like to listen music. You don t like to play the guitar. We enjoy to dance at night. They hate to eat vegetables. He likes to swim. She enjoys to talk on the cell. My dog hates to walk. P.P.+ VERB 4 + ING FORM. I like listening music. You don t like playing the guitar. We enjoy dancing at night. They hate eating vegetables. He likes swimming. She enjoys talking on the cell. My dog hates walking.

NDERLINE the correct form MODE, and WRITE the verb in the right form ( ing) or (to ): 24 1. I [like/likes] (dance). 2. She don t [like/likes] to (lose) a game. 3. He [enjoy/enjoys] to (talk) to her. 4. You [hate/hates] (play) soccer. EXAMPLES: P.P. + MODE + Verb (ing) I like learning. Ann don t like cooking. Peter enjoys cleaning his car. I hate getting up in the morning. 5. My dog [like/likes] to (jump) in the street. 6. They don t [like/likes] (write) poems. 7. Kelly [enjoy/enjoys] (travel). 8. John and Sue [hate/hates] to (watch) TV. 9. The monkey [like/likes] (eat) bananas. 10. I don t [like/likes] to (eat) apples. P.P. + MODE + to + verb (base form) I like to learn. Ann don t like to cook. Peter enjoys to clean his car. I hate to get up in the morning.

ANSWERS: 25 1. I [like / likes] dancing. 2. She don t [like/likes] to lose a game. 3. He [enjoy/enjoys] to talk to her. 4. You [hate/hates]playing soccer. EXAMPLES: P.P. + MODE+ Verb (ing) I like learning. Ann likes cooking. Peter likes cleaning his car. I like getting up in the morning. 5. My dog [like/likes] to jump in the street. 6. They don t [like / likes] writing poems. 7. Kelly [enjoy/enjoys] traveling. 8. John and Sue [hate/hates] to watch TV. 9. The monkey [like/likes] eating bananas. 10. I don t [like / likes] to eat apples. P.P. + MODE + to + verb (base form) I like to learn. Ann likes to cook. Peter likes to clean his car. I like to get up in the morning.

Correct form of the VERB CAN Base form of the verb can (I, you, we, they, he, she, it) WE USE THE VERB CAN TO EXPRESS ABILITY. Can? Can t = cannot = can not (+)Yes, can. (-)No, can t

(+) AFFIRMATIVE (-) NEGATIVE (not) I can (yo puedo) You can (tu puedes) We can (nosotros podemos) They can (ellos pueden) He can (el puede) She can (ella puede) It can (eso/aquello puede) I can t (yo no puedo) You can not (tu no puedes) We can t (nosotros no podemos) They can t (ellos no pueden) He can t (el no puede) She can t (ella no puede) It cannot (eso/aquello no puede) a) One single group 7. b) can t =cannot = can not

(Q:) QUESTION? (s.a.) Short Answer: Can I study? Can *you swim? Can we run? Can they fix? Can he finish? Can she joke? Can it throw? (+)Yes, I can.(-)no, I can t. *(+) Yes, I can.*(-) No, I can t. (+) Yes, we can. (-) No, we can t. (+) Yes, they can. (-) No, they can t. (+) Yes, he can. (-) No, he can t. (+) Yes, she can. (-) No, she can t. (+) Yes, it can. (-) No, it can t. DO =Auxiliary to ask

REMEMBER Can + (verb) affirmative form (+) and there is only one group for (I, you, we, they, he she, it) Use can t + verb (base form) in negative form (-) To ask questions with Can (I, you, we, they, he, she, it) + verb (base form)? YOU CAN USE in neg. form. can t = cannot = can not LOOK THE CORRECT FORM EXAMPLES: The penguins can swim very fast. It (the computer) can use extra memory. My father can play the piano. We cannot fly, the eagles can. Mary can t drink regular milk. Can she eat fruit? Yes, she can. No, she can t. They can run 10 kilometers. My mother can speak four lenguages. Can I eat candies? Yes, I can. No, I can t. He can not come to the party. Can you change a $10 dollar bill? (your answer) You can t/can do it.

30 BE ABLE TO structure: BE ABLE TO (IT IS TO EXPRESS ABILITY) "Able" is an adjective meaning: having the power, skill or means to do something. Examples: I am able to swim. I can swim. You are able to dance. You can dance. She is not able to drive. She cannot (can t) drive. Although we look at be able to here, it is not a modal verb. It is simply the verb be plus an adjective (able) followed by the infinitive. We look at be able to here because we sometimes use it instead of can and could. The structure of be able to is: (P.P) subject + be + able + infinitive.