Tuesday, November 08, 2011

nb2 8/11/11

Homework p 23 ex 3 and 4



Look at the stars,
Look how they shine for you,
And everything you do,
Yeah, they were all yellow.
I came along,
I wrote a song for you,
And all the things you do,
And it was called "Yellow".
So then I took my turn,
Oh what a thing to have done,
And it was all "Yellow."
Your skin,
Oh yeah your skin and bones,
Turn into something beautiful,
You know, you know I love you so,
You know I love you so.
I swam across,
I jumped across for you,
Oh what a thing to do.
Cos you were all "Yellow",
I drew a line,
I drew a line for you,
Oh what a thing to do,
And it was all "Yellow."
Your skin,
Oh yeah your skin and bones,
Turn into something beautiful,
And you know,
For you I'd bleed myself dry,
For you I'd bleed myself dry.
It's true,
Look how they shine for you,
Look how they shine for you,
Look how they shine for,
Look how they shine for you,
Look how they shine for you,
Look how they shine.
Look at the stars,
Look how they shine for you,
And all the things that you do.


P 129 2c
A)
WHAT happened to you?
WHAT does this word mean?
HOW MANY PEOPLE came to this class?
WHICH BUS goes to the airport?
WHICH ACTOR won the Oscar this year?
WHAT did the teacher say?
B)
…did Ayrton Senna win?
…won…
…directed…
…did Nelson Mandela become…
…wrote…
…did Sting do…
-
HOW MANY CATS did you buy?
WHICH GIRL did you like the most?

Look at these two questions:
Question word - Auxiliary - Subject - Verb
Who - do - you - love?

Question word – verb - object
Who – loves - you?

The first question is a normal question and uses the form which we almost always use for a question:

Question word + auxiliary + subject + verb
In the second question, the question word is the subject. When the QUESTION WORD is the subject there is no auxiliary verb and the verb agrees with the subject.

Other examples:

Question word – verb - object

Who – wrote - Romeo and Juliet?
Who – won - the 2006 World Cup?
Which player – fouled - Ronaldo?
What – happened-?

Questions Without the Auxiliary Verb Exercise at Auto-English

When the interrogative is also the subject we don't use an auxiliary.

Make a question about the word in capital letter in each sentence. Sometimes you need an auxiliary and sometimes you don't.

1 Queen Elizabeth I became queen of England IN 1558.
___________________________________________
2 QUEEN ELIZABETH I became queen of England in 1558.
___________________________________________
3 LILITH was Adam's first wife.
___________________________________________
4 THE ATHENIANS sentenced Socrates to death in 399 BC.
___________________________________________
5 The Athenians sentenced Socrates to death IN 399 BC.
___________________________________________
6 ARISTOTLE taught Alexander the Great.
___________________________________________
7 Aristotle taught ALEXANDER THE GREAT.
___________________________________________
8 Apollo and Artemis were born IN DELOS, according to legend.
___________________________________________
9 THE ARCHBISHOP OF VALENCIA ordered the execution of an innocent school teacher in 1826.
_________________________________________________________
10 Gema saw A FOX CUB.
___________________________________________
11 GEMA saw a fox cub.
___________________________________________
12 TONY broke the video.
__________________________________________---
Mad = nuts
He is mad
He’s nuts

knew /nuː / ||/njuː/

It was raining cats and dogs
RUN INTO: to hit someone or something with a vehicle [= crash into]:
He ran into the back of another car.
Ac‧ro‧nym [countable]
A word made up from the first letters of the name of something such as an organization. For example NATO is an acronym for the North Atlantic Treaty Organization.
What colour is the pencil?
What is the colour of the pencil?

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