Wednesday, March 26, 2014
SPEAKING
COMPARATIVES AND SUPERLATIVES
Two-syllable adjectives ending in -y have -ier and -iest as their comparative and superlative. For example:
pretty | prettier | prettiest |
happy | happier | happiest |
dirty | dirtier | dirtiest |
messy | messier | messiest |
- Yours is the messiest room I have ever seen.
- She was the prettiest and happiest girl at the party.
simple | simpler | simplest |
clever | cleverer | cleverest |
- The cleverest solution to any problem is usually the simplest one.
Others,
particularly participial adjectives formed with -ing and
-ed and those ending in -ious and -ful form
their comparatives and superlatives with more and most:
With some two-syllable adjectives, er/est and more/most are both possible:
|
Three
or more syllable adjectives take more or most in the comparative
and superlative except for two-syllable adjectives ending in -y
and prefixed with un-:
|
(c) Adapted from http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammar/learnit/learnitv140.shtml |
A good song to revise comparatives is the following one:
Harder, Better, Faster, Stronger by Daft Punk
If you want to revise superlatives,
listen to The Hardest Part by Coldplay
Etiquetas:
2013/2014,
Comparatives and Superlatives,
Grammar,
Pre-intermediate
FILMS
Guess the movie from eoi.soraya
Do you remember when Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem won the Academy Awards for best supporting actress and actor respectively?
Do you remember when Penélope Cruz and Javier Bardem won the Academy Awards for best supporting actress and actor respectively?
Tuesday, March 25, 2014
CLOTHES
You can read the following picture book about clothes.
Click on the following link to fill in the gaps with the suitable word:
Are you a shopaholic?
Do the following quiz and find it out!
SHOPAHOLIC QUIZ
Etiquetas:
2013/2014,
Clothes,
Pre-intermediate,
Shopping
PRESENT PERFECT
Etiquetas:
2013/2014,
Pre-intermediate,
Present perfect
PAST TENSES: PAST SIMPLE, PAST CONTINUOUS AND PRESENT PERFECT
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