Gerund and Infinitive Forms: C. They Will Consider Granting You Money
Gerund and Infinitive Forms: C. They Will Consider Granting You Money
Gerund and Infinitive Forms: C. They Will Consider Granting You Money
• After the verbs hear, listen to, notice, see, watch, and feel to
describe an incomplete action.
E.g. a. I heard you talking to Louise from the other room.
b. I noticed Emily using your t-shirt. Looks adorable!
c. I saw them kissing in the park.
An infinitive is a verb form that acts as other parts of speech in a
sentence. It is formed with to + base form of the verb. E.g.: to buy, to
work.
The infinitive (to + infinitive) form is used:
• To express purpose
E.g. a. I want to visit my grandmother to know she is doing fine.
b. Adrian and Lynn will enroll in an online course this week to
have a certificate.
c. She went to the nearest shop to buy a new dress for the
reception.
• After too/enough
E.g. a. It is too cloudy to have a picnic outdoors.
b. Your love would be enough to get me out of the darkness.
c. It isn’t warm enough to go out without a coat.
• With it + be + adjective/noun
E.g. a. It is amazing to teach English to a group like you!
b. It is great to be learning German, even though I don't
understand most of it.
c. It was easy to find the house after all.
• After be + first/second/next/last/etc.
E.g. a. Pastor Maldonado was the last to the finish line in that race.
b. My mom is always the first person to wish me a happy
birthday.
c. She was the first person to congratulate me on my
promotion.
HAVE works as an auxiliary verb and not as the main verb of the
sentence. That means that we do not have to use DO, DOES, or DID
as auxiliary verbs.
The verb that comes next (past participle) is the main verb and the
one in charge to indicate the action or state. This verb can be
regular or irregular.
now that I am
this week/month/year
today 18
E.g. Have you seen her today?
E.g. We have bought a new car this week.
The present perfect continuous/progressive is formed with
have/has been and the -ing form of the verb.
As you could notice, this tense is almost the same concerning
structure. The difference remains on the fact that we always need to
use the verb BE in its past participle form after HAVE. Furthermore, it
is necessary to have another verb in -ING form that will work as the
main verb.
In order to write proper affirmative & negative sentences, or even
questions. You should follow the same patterns that were mentioned
before.
If we are going to make negative sentences or questions, we have to do
as follows:
• For a negative strucuture, we have to add the negative particle
NOT after the verb HAVE.
she has NOT been studying her lessons.
We have NOT been watching a lot of TV.
Examples:
FOR SINCE
She has not visited her parents for more I have worked for Banesco as an
than 5 years. Accountant since 2011.
Summary and comparison...
Music Preferences
For many of us, our taste in music is an integral part of our identity –
so as to say that, what we listen to is who we are. The songs of our
youth, heard a thousand times, fill our headspace with stray lyrics and
infectious grooves, creating a filter for the way we see, hear, and
understand the world from then on.
According to the researcher, Adrian North people do define themselves
through music and use it as a means for relating to other people.
Types of personality according to people's music
tastes:
Your music taste is far more than just songs you enjoy listening to, it is
an in-depth look as to who you are. Music taste can affect one’s style,
attitude, personality, and culture. We can predict people’s
personalities from their musical preferences.
REMEMBER!
If we are going to make negative sentences or questions, we have to do as follows:
• For a negative strucuture, we have to add the negative particle NOT after
the verb HAVE.
she has NOT prepared our food.
We have NOT eaten healthy food during our entire life.
• We can contract verb HAVE and the particle NOT.
have not= haven´t
has not= hasn´t
• Whe making a question, we only need to move the auxiliary verb HAVE to
the beginning of the sentence and add a question mark at the end of it.
Sentence: Some thieves HAVE stolen my car.
Question: HAVE some thieves stolen my car?
• If you are concerned about answering a question. Here you have the way to
do it.
Maria: Has your father worked as a police officer all his life?
2) If there is no connection between the action and the present moment, the
past simple is used:
E.g.: Someone opened the window to let in some fresh air. (The window is now
closed, or we do not know whether it is closed or not).
On the day before the match, Tom broke his leg (His leg is not broken
anymore).
3) Although the present perfect expresses a past event or state, it is used to
convey information that has relevance to the present. The specific moment
when you did it does not have relevance:
E.g.: I love animals and the outdoors, so I have decided to become a naturalist (it
is not important when I decided it).
4) The following adverbs and expressions are often used with the present
perfect: ever, never, already, yet, so far, still (with the negative), once,
twice, three times:
E.g.: Have you ever thought about a career in law?
We have never considered that course of action.
She has already decided on a career in business.
I still have not made up my mind about what I will do after school.
He has been rejected by the medical school three times.
I have not finished my career yet.
Have you learned English yet?
5) The adverbs just, recently, and lately describe past events that have
occurred in recent a moment:
E.g.: She has just been accepted to a top business school.
They have recently made plans to get married.
Have you made any progress with your job search lately?
NOTE: the adverb lately is rarely used in affirmative statements in the present
perfect.
REMEMBER! Use the simple past, not the present perfect, to talk about a specific
time in the past. Example:
Correct: She applied for the position at the Science Institute last week.
Incorrect: She has applied for the position at the Science Institute last week.
WORDS AND EXPRESSIONS
Expressions to describe life choices or plans
Please, read the definition of the following expressions and pay special
attention to each one of the examples.
b.- Decide on: elegir algo después de pensar en las opciones posibles.
• She decided on Translation as her professional career.
c.- Apply for: cuando una persona solicita ser aceptado como estudiante en un
colegio o universidad llenando y enviando solicitudes.
• My father applied for a job as an English teacher.
e.- Be rejected by: when you are not given the opportunity to enter a school or
program.
g.- Enroll in: cuando te pones a ti mismo o a alguien más en la lista oficial de
miembros de un curso, universidad o grupo.
• I could not enroll in the UCV because I felt sick and could not go the due
date.
h.- Switch to: cuando una persona cambia o adopta una cosa en lugar de otra.
• I had to switch to English because German is very difficult.
Summarizing...
Examples: