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13895701
REVIEW 2
Description
Mind Map on REVIEW 2, created by Veronica Pinacho on 23/05/2018.
Mind Map by
Veronica Pinacho
, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by
Veronica Pinacho
almost 6 years ago
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Resource summary
REVIEW 2
Gerunds and Infinitives
Gerunds "ING"
After a preposition (Except TO)
Prepositions
about before, for, from, in, on, over, etc
Some exceptions to this rule are
Look forward to, object to, get used to, be used to
As a Noun
Swimming is good for your health
After certain expressions
Have difficulty in, Be goo at, It's no worth, It's/There's no use, There's no point.
After certain verbs
admit, avoid, consider, delau, deny, discuss, dislike, enjoy, finish, go, go on, hate, imagine, involve, keep, like, mention, miss, postpone, practice, prefer, propose, recomend, report, risk, suggest.
Instead of relative Pronoun + main verb
There are new commercials advertising their products.
Infinitives
After some adjetives
able, amazed, bound, difficult, disappointed, due, easy, happy, liable, likely, prepared. suprised, unable, unlikely, unwilling, willing.
Estructure
Subject + be + adjetive + infinitive
They are unlikely to bon the advert
Show a porpuse
The company is spomsuring extreme sport even to raise their profile
After certain verbs
afford, agree, aim, arrange, attempt, choose, decide, demand, expect, fail, forget, hate, hope, learn, like, manage, need, offer, plan, prepare, promise, refuse, seem, tend, threaten, train, volunteer, want,
They have decided not to run the cimmercial before 10 pm.
After certain: Verbs + objects
advise, allow, ask, cause, enable, expect, help, invite, lead, permit, persuade, remind, teach, tell, train, urge, use, warn
I'll allow you to use you mobile in class.
Relative Clauses
Defining relative clauses define or differentiate the person or thing they refer to.
I'm talking about the phone that takes photos.
The following relative pronouns are used to introduce a defining relative clause.
Who, That (for people); Which, That (for things); Whose (possessive)
The relative pronoun can be omitted when it is the object of the clause.
Non-defining relative clauses add non-essential information to a sentence.
The phone, which has been on the market for a month, is our latest model.
The relative pronoun can never be omitted and that cannot be used
We usually use commas to separate the non-defining clause from the rest of the sentence.
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