标签:Verbs 相关文章
美语听力与发音技巧 第26期(不定式和动名词) Welcome to Daily Tips on learning English. Today’s tip is on verbs which are followed by infinitives or gerunds. Some verbs are follow
本单元是关于度假打算的对话。 Helen: So what are we all doing at Christmas? Tim, you've got a few days off work, haven't you? Tim: Indeed I have Helen, and I'm popping over to Poland for a few days. I'm looking forward to a nice cosy Christmas. Fancy
本单元是关于圣诞节购物的对话。 Alice: Hmm, what do you think, you two, how do I look? Helen: Ooh, it's a gorgeous dress, Alice, but the other one seemed nicer. Alice: Mmm, it is lovely, isn't it? But you're right, the blue dress looks better. Tim? T
15.句子中的重音问题 In general, content words are stressed, while Function words(虚词)are not stressed. These only make words dramatically correct. Content words(实词)are-----传递了句子的意思 n. main verbs. adj. adv. that th
Requirements of language One, if you want your audience to understand your massage, your language must be simple and clear. Two, use short words and short sentences. Three, do not use jargon(专门术语, 行话, 土语)unless you are certain that yo
美语听力与发音技巧 第32期(使役动词) Welcome to Daily Tips on Learning English. Today’s tip is on the causative verbs “make”, “have” and “get”, and the verb “let”.
ACT II Right this way, Mr. and Mrs. Stewart. 走这边 ,Stewart先生和太太。 Well, it's small, but clean. 噢 ,它是小了点 ,但是干净。 Clean? You call this clean? 干净?这样算干
本单元是关于来自波兰的信件的对话。 Helen: Dear Helen, I've been thinking about you a lot lately. Remembering our good and bad times. You coming into the kitchen and thinking something was going on with me and Alice. That huge fight we had about John
本单元是关于滴水的龙头的对话 Michal: Hey Tim, what are you doing? Tim: I'm fixing this tap. I can't put up with that drip-drip noise anymore. Michal: Have you turned off the water? Tim: I told you. That's what I'm working on. Michal: I mean the m
本单元是关于厨房里的风流韵事的对话 Michal: Oh Bronka! I'm so miserable! Alice doesn't want to go out with me. Helen: Oh sorry, Michal. Am I interrupting something here? Michal: No, no, I'm just pouring my heart out to Bronka. Helen: Oh yeah, I fou
本单元是关于坏消息的对话 Michal: What if it's her? Tim: You've got to talk to her. Michal: Hello? Dad: Michal? It's dad. Michal: Oh dzien dobry tatus. Dad: No, no, no you're in England, let's talk English. It's good for both of us to practise. Micha
本单元是关于再一次约会的对话 Paul: I'm pleased everything's out in the open now Alice. I didn't like hiding things from you. Alice: You should have told me right from the word go, Paul. It was the way I found out that made me so upset. Paul: I know
Pre-Listening Vocabulary verbing: the turning of a noun or adjective into a verb weird out: to make uncomfortable coin: to give something a name The Word Verb Is A Noun-词语动词是个名词 The most common definition of a noun is a person, place,
Grammar Girl here. Today, Julie Wildhaber, who trains writers and editors at Yahoo!, will explain a few strategies for keeping copy compact and for getting rid of deadwood: words and phrases that add length but not value. The podcast edition of this
[Note: I originally covered this topic September 16, 2006. The transcript you see now on the page is a new version that was updated March 5, 2009. Some of the reader comments at the bottom relate to the earlier version.] Grammar Girl here. Today's to
Today, Bonnie Trenga will help us figure out whether a fast-food chain is on the cutting edge of grammar, or its just being creative with verb tenses. Its time to dissect the McDonalds advertising slogan Im loving it. An ESL teacher named Devaki wrot
Everyday Grammar: Are Causatives Making You Crazy? 日常语法:使役动词把你搞疯了吗? his week's Everyday Grammar looks at the grammatical forms called causatives. Basically, causatives express how one actor causes another actor to do somet
Everyday Grammar: Our Top 10 Separable Phrasal Verbs 英语日常语法:十大可分动词 Welcome back to Everyday Grammar from VOA Learning English. Today we return to a very common verb form in English phrasal verbs. You will find one phrasal verb
Exercise 1-47: Regular Transitions of Adjectives and Verbs CD 2 Track n A different change occurs when you go from an adjective or a noun to a verb. The stress stays in thesame place, but the -mate in an adjective is completely reduced [-m't], wherea
I was checking the comments on my blog today, hoping to get some feedback from my lovely podlisteners, when I came across one that was a bit worrying. Huy Mai very kindly complimented my podcast and informed me that I had made a couple of spelling mi