; semi-colon. A semi-colon is a short pause in a sentence. It is not as
long a pause as a full stop, but it's longer than a comma. For example,
if you read the following piece of text out loud, you could count two
beats for a full stop, one beat for a semi-colon and half a beat for a
comma: "The boys started running, but they were soon out of breath; it
wasn't long before the gang caught up with them".
: colon. A colon is similar to a semi-colon in that it helps to divide a
sentence and provides a longer pause than a comma, but about half
the pause of a full stop. It is used differently because it shows that the
clause which comes after it follows on from the clause before it. For
example, in the sentence: "The children opened their present: they
couldn't believe what they found!" the idea in the second clause ("they
couldn't believe ...") follows on from the action in the first clause ("The
children opened their present ..."). Using a colon is like saying, "There's
more to come in the next part of the sentence". It provides a short
pause in a sentence and points the way to a continuing thought or
action.
( ) brackets. We can use brackets to slip extra information into a
sentence, without disturbing the flow of the sentence too much. For
example: "It had been John's idea to invite Becky (who was secretly in
love with him) to Heather's birthday party". Brackets are known as
parentheses in American English.
- hyphen. We use a hyphen to join together two related words (for
example: "post-Impressionism" and "south-west") and to write numbers
as words (for example "35" becomes "thirty-five"). It is also used at the
end of a line to show that a word continues on the next line, e.g. "fre-
quently", and to indicate distances between times ("1914-1918") and
places ("London-Brighton").
- dash. A dash is longer than a hyphen and has a different job. We use it
to separate a particular clause from the rest of a sentence, for example:
"We had been to Frankfurt four times five if you count
changing flights once on the way to Sydney but had never spent New
Year's Eve there". It is also used to indicate a pause or a change in the
sentence's train of thought, for example: "Roger took off his socks
thoughtfully it had been an extremely trying day". A dash is sometimes represented by two hyphens together.
/ forward slash. We use the forward slash when writing the address of a
page on the internet, for example:
www.englishbanana.com/index.html
A question form is used to make a sentence that asks a question, for
example: "What time is it?" These sentences end with a question mark
instead of a full stop. Question forms often begin with "wh-" question words,
like "who", "what", "where", "when", "why", "which" and "how". "How" can be
considered an honorary "wh-" question word because it contains both the
letters "w" and "h"!
A sentence is a self-contained group of words which begins with a capital
letter ("A", "B", "C", etc.) and ends with a full stop ("."), question mark ("?") or
exclamation mark ("!"). For example:
Derby County's astonishing unbeaten run at home continued unabated.
We use the singular form of a noun when there is just one of it. For
example, one "table" ("tables" would be the regular plural form) and one
"tooth" ("teeth" is the irregular plural form).
Subject-Verb-Object is the phrase used to describe a common
sentence structure in English. In the sentence: "The child is eating an ice-cream",
"The child" is the subject, "is eating" is the verb form (the action
what the subject is doing) and "an ice-cream" is the object (the thing that is
having the action done to it).
We use the term upper case to describe capital letters (or big letters). We
normally start a sentence with a capital letter, but then use small letters for the
rest of the words, apart from abbreviations and words which always start with
a capital letter, like names of people, places and companies.
Verbs are action words, or doing words. They tell us what somebody or
something is doing in a sentence. For example, in the sentence "John washed
his car", "washed" is the verb, or action, John is the person doing the action
(the subject), and "his car" is the thing that is having the action done to it (the
object). Verbs can be regular and irregular. Most verbs are regular, which
means that they all follow the same rules, for example when forming the past
tense all regular verbs end with "ed" ("walk" becomes "walked" and "play"
becomes "played", and so on). However, some very common verbs are
irregular, which means they don't follow the same rules as regular verbs and
you have to learn their forms separately. Common irregular verbs are: "to
be", "to do", "to have" and "to go". These four verbs are also the most
common auxiliary verbs. Auxiliary verbs are helping verbs: they help a main
verb to form a verb phrase. In this sentence: "Ricky and Jessica are teaching
their daughter to swim", "are" is an auxiliary verb (from verb "to be") which
helps the main verb "teaching" (from verb "to teach").
There are several different verb tenses in the English language. It is
worth being aware of (or, better still, learning) some common verb tables in
each of the following tenses: present simple, present continuous, present
perfect, past simple, past continuous, past perfect and future forms (e.g.
"going to"). For example, let's look at the verb "to eat", which is an irregular
verb:
(Note: these verb tables do not cover negative and question forms for each
tense, which can also be studied, e.g. "I eat / I don't eat / Do I eat?" and so
on.)
present simple tense verb table:
I eat, You eat, He eats, She eats, It eats, We eat, They eat
present continuous tense verb table (with verb "to be" in the present tense as
an auxiliary verb):
I am eating, You are eating, He is eating, She is eating, It is eating,
We are eating, They are eating
present perfect tense verb table (with verb "to have" in the present tense as
an auxiliary verb):
I have eaten, You have eaten, He has eaten, She has eaten, It has eaten,
We have eaten, They have eaten
past simple tense verb table:
I ate, You ate, He ate, She ate, It ate, We ate, They ate
past continuous tense verb table (with verb "to be" in the past tense as an
auxiliary verb):
I was eating, You were eating, He was eating, She was eating, It was eating,
We were eating, They were eating
past perfect tense verb table (with verb "to have" in the past tense as an
auxiliary verb):
I had eaten, You had eaten, He had eaten, She had eaten, It had eaten,
We had eaten, They had eaten
future form with "going to" and verb "to be" in the present tense as an auxiliary
verb:
I'm going to eat, You're going to eat, He's going to eat, She's going to eat,
It's going to eat, We're going to eat, They're going to eat
future form with "will" in the present tense as an auxiliary verb:
I will eat, You will eat, He will eat, She will eat, It will eat, We will eat,
They will eat
There are 5 vowels in the English alphabet: a, e, i, o and u. The other 21
letters of the alphabet are called consonants.
A vowel sound is the sound made by a vowel or group of vowels in a word,
for example: "animal", "education", "India", "orange" and "umbrella".
A word is a part of a sentence made up of one or more letters. Words in a
sentence are separated by a single space on either side. A sentence is formed by putting together several words, with a capital letter at the beginning of the first one and a full stop, question mark or exclamation mark after the last one.
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