Monday, October 09, 2017

NB1 9/10/17


My name’s = my name is
My name’s is
What’s (What is) your name?
What’s is

1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
11, 12, 13, 14, 15, 16, 17, 18 ,19, 20
30, 40, 50, 60, 70, 80, 90, 100
21, 31, 41, 52, 42, 32, 33, 64, 74, ...

How are you? Fine, so so, very well
I’m fine, thank you.
How old are you?

What’s your /jɔː(r)/
 telephone number?

It’s 633448 009

It is (it’s) ... / My telephone/ˈteləfəʊn/
(phone) number is


number /ˈnʌmbə/

zero /ˈzɪərəʊ/ UK  US  número (plural -os o -oes) cero

O, o /əʊ/ UK  US  sustantivo
 (al leer un número) cero

double /ˈdʌbəl/ UK  US  
My number is two nine double five.
Mi número es el dos, nueve, cinco, cinco.


triple /ˈtrɪpəl/ UK  US  adjetivo, sustantivo & verbo
 •  adjetivo
triple

What’s your name/surname/full name?

surname /ˈsɜːneɪm/ UK  US  sustantivo
apellido

What’s your e-mail address?
frnssn@gmail.com

@ at
. dot (.es/.co.uk/.com. ...)
/slash
-dash
_ underscore


photographfəʊtəgrɑːf/ UK  US  sustantivo & verbo
  sustantivo
fotografía
to take a photograph sacar una fotografía


                    
Contracción del verbo to be en inglés

ldoceonline.com


TYPES OF PUNCTUATION MARK

apostrophe
the sign (') that is used to show that one or more letters or numbers have been left out, as in dont, or used before ‘s’ to show that something belongs to someone or something, as in Mark’s dog

brackets British English, parentheses American English and British English formal
a pair of signs ( ) used for enclosing information that interrupts a sentence

colon the sign :
that is used to introduce an explanation, example, quotation etc

semicolon the sign ;
that is used to separate words in a list, or different parts of a sentence that can be understood separately

comma
the sign , that is used to separate things in a list, or between two clauses in a sentence

hyphen
the sign that is used to join words or syllables

dash the sign that is used to separate two closely related parts of a sentence, especially in more informal English

full stop British English, period American English
the sign . that is used to mark the end of a sentence or the short form of a word

exclamation mark British English, exclamation point American English
the sign ! that is used after a sentence or word that expresses surprise, anger, or excitement

question mark
the sign ? that is used at the end of a question

quotation marks (also inverted commas British English) a pair of signs and that are put around words, especially to show that you are quoting what someone has said
OTHER MARKS USED IN WRITING

angle brackets British English a pair of signs <> used for enclosing information

slash a line / that is used to separate words, numbers, or letters

backslash a line \ that is used to separate words, numbers, or letters

asterisk the sign * that is used especially to mark something interesting or important

at sign the sign @ that is used especially in email addresses


ampersand the sign & that means ‘and’

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