This presentation covers some important things to manage while you take English classes. A video of this presentation is available at:
http://petermangiaracina.com/videos/videos.html
2. What You Must Manage Well
Three basic formulas Tenses Modals
Active Sentence Meaning What are true modals?
Passive Sentence Auxiliaries What are their characteristics?
Question Time Markers
Peter Mangiaracina
4. Active Sentence
SUBJECT VERB OBJECT
•Subject is what does the action.
•Verb is the main verb in the sentence, the one that gets conjugated.
•Object receives the action.
Peter Mangiaracina
5. Passive Sentence
A Restructuring of the Active Sentence
PATIENT TO BE PARTICIPLE by + AGENT
• Patient (original Object) comes first, the thing to be acted upon.
•To Be Verb is the main verb in the sentence, the one that gets conjugated.
•The main verb of an active sentence is expressed as a participle in passive.
•Agent is the person who does the action, the subject of an active sentence
*When agent is needed, it is always preceded with “by.”
Peter Mangiaracina
6. Relationship of Active Sentence to Passive Sentence
Doctors use penicillin
SUBJECT VERB OBJECT
Conjugation of original verb Original verb in participle form
PATIENT TO BE PARTICIPLE by + AGENT
Penicillin is used by doctors
A passive sentence is rea'y just an active sentence that makes the object more important than the subject.
7. Question
Question Q-word
AUXILIARY SUBJECT VERB OBJECT
Word Object
Question word, such as what, when, where.
Question word object, such as what time or whose book.
Auxiliary sets the tense.
Subject does the action.
Verb is the action. In a question the auxiliary gets the conjugation.
Peter Mangiaracina
8. Structural Relationship of Question to Active Sentence
QW
Auxiliary Subject Verb (Object)
(+QWobj)
Conjugate from auxiliary
Subject Verb (Object)
10. Skills
Usage: When to use the tenses.
Auxiliaries: each tense has its own auxiliary verb(s) and are used for questions,
short answers, verb substitutions, tag questions and more.
Time Markers: used to fix a sentence in a particular tense.
Peter Mangiaracina
12. Tense Use Auxiliaries Markers
Present Stative existing present state (no action) is, am, are
usually, sometimes, ever? never,
Simple Present habit, custom do, does
frequently, seldom rarely...
now, these days; sometimes
Present Progressive ongoing action is, am, are
follows imperative (!)
Past Stative past state (no action) was, were
yesterday, last (week, month, etc.),
Simple Past completed action did
ago...
specific hour in past; interrupted
Past Progressive ongoing action in the past was, were
action
Peter Mangiaracina
13. Tense Use Auxiliaries Markers
Future Stative future state (no action) will (be)
Simple Future future action will, going to tomorrow, next (week, month, etc)
Future Progressive future ongoing action will + be + -ing specific hour in future
Present Perfect Stative unfinished time, no action have been
yet/already, recently, lately, so far,
unfinished time, time frame in
Present Perfect have + participle up to now, since+point in time, for
which an action occurs
+duration
unfinished time, ongoing,
Present Perfect Progressive have + been + -ing
uninterrupted
Peter Mangiaracina
14. Tense Use Auxiliaries Markers
Future event after other future
Future Perfect Stative will + have + been
event. No action.
Something that will happen in the
Future Perfect future after another action will + have + participle when, by the time, by (time)
(expressed as present)
Something that will be happening in
Future Perfect Progressive the future during another future action will + have + been + -ing when, by the time, by (time)
(expressed as present)
An state that occurs before
Past Perfect Stative had + been
another state or action in the past
An action that occurs before
Past Perfect had + been + participle when, by the time, by (time)
another action in the past
Progressive action before another
Past Perfect Progressive had + been + ing when, by the time, by (time)
action in the past.
Peter Mangiaracina
16. True Modal Auxiliaries
The true modals:
✴ Can/Could
✴ May
✴ Might
✴ Should
✴ Had Better
✴ Must
✴ (Wi', Would)
Peter Mangiaracina
17. Characteristics of True Modals
True modals never take infinitives, they take root forms
The negative of a true modal has a distinct meaning.
True modals cannot be conjugated for the past
True modals have different meanings in different contexts
True modals have alternate forms that can be conjugated.
For more information on modals, visit my website
www.petermangiaracina.com in the presentation section.
Peter Mangiaracina
18. Conclusions
Sentences and questions are contro'ed by formulas.
Tenses are contro'ed by use, auxiliaries, and markers.
True modals are idiosyncratic, but fo'ow some general rules.
Peter Mangiaracina
I’m going to give you some information about what an intermediate/advanced student needs to know in order to communicate better. These will not be the only things you’ll need to learn, but if you use this information as a foundation for learning, you will find that the whole process will go easier for you.\n\nAt your level the process isn’t so much about learning vocabulary or grammar, it’s about communicating effectively with the English you already know. Here I will go into three important elements to help you achieve that end.\n
First, communicating well in English requires that you structure your sentences and questions well. I’m going to teach you two formulas that will help you with that. \n\nSecondly, you have to have a good handle on tenses. You should know what each tense means, what their auxiliaries are, and which time markers signal which tenses. I’ve got some tools you will find very useful for that.\n\nFinally, it seems to me after many years as an instructor, that students don’t learn modals well, and wind up using the modal auxiliary “must” too often when there are many more, and many more appropriate options available. Modal auxiliaries are very idiosyncratic, which probably explains why most students fail to use them properly. I’m going to touch on the weird world of modals and tell you where to go to get more info about them.\n\nDuring this presentation I will go through these three main points and give you some rules, tips, and charts. If you master this information, you will find that speaking and comprehension will be much easier.\n
\nBecause English does not have verb endings that express the person who does an action - except in the case of the third person singular - he goes, he works, etc, English relies on structure to express who does an action.\n\nMost sentences, therefore, must have a set structure to convey that meaning and to separate them from questions, which have a different form.\n\nWe can express nearly every sentence and every question in English as two formulas. These formulas can be repeated multiple times to create a very long sentence.\n\nNo matter how long the sentence is, it will almost always fit in one of the two formulas. With a little adjustment we can create another, special sentence, which I will include here because it is important for medical professionals.\n\n\n\n
This is the most basic sentence.\n\nHere we see that the person who does the action in the sentence comes first. We call it the Subject. Then, the action is expressed as a conjugated verb and finally, in the event that the verb is transitive, the object follows. The object is what receives the action\n\nNote that I said immediately after. Normally, you cannot put things after the verb unless they are objects. For example, you cannot say "I went with my friend to the store," because the object of where you go is the place you go. You say "I went to the store with my friend." \n\nAnother common mistake is when you say, "Tomorrow comes my friend." I've heard that so many times, and it is wrong in so many ways! First of all, where's the subject? it's not "tomorrow." Tomorrow is an adverb (except in sentences like that). Also, the object of the verb (comes) in that sentence (my friend) is the person who does the action, so it's in the wrong place.\n\nThe correct way to say it would be, "My friend comes tomorrow," or even better, "My friend will come (is going to come) tomorrow," because we're dealing with a future event here.\n\nWhen you are speaking, try to start with a subject for now. Don’t put words in front of the subject. For example, Put time expressions on the end of the sentence (tomorrow, next week, etc.) to avoid confusion and to conceptualize the relationship between subjects and verbs better.\n
I am including this structure in my introduction because it is important for medical professionals. It is a kind of sentence you will always see in medical journals.\n
Let me show you how this looks graphically. Here is a standard sentence. We talked about this already. The subject comes 1st, followed by the verb. In this particular sentence the verb is conjugated for the past tense. After the verb, comes the object.\n\n The passive begins with the object of the sentence. That is followed by the “to be” verb, which is the verb that gets conjugated. In this case, the verb is conjugated for the past tense, because it was past in the original standard sentence. The “to be” verb is always followed by a participle. The participle was the original verb in the standard sentence. The actual subject of the sentence goes on the end, and is preceded by the word “by.” We call it “the agent.”\n
This is the structure of a question in English. At 1st glance, it may seem a little complicated, but take a look at the 2 elements that are not in parentheses.\n\nThe 1st element is the auxiliary, which sets the tense of the question. This always appears 1st if the question requires only a yes or no answer (Do you speak English?), and will appear 2nd if there is a question word involved with a few exceptions (when do you speak English?). The auxiliary is followed by the subject, and the subject is how you will begin when you answer the question.\n\nAt the very beginning of the question we have a question word, if you need a particular piece of information (what, when, where). A question word may be followed by a question word object (what time, which book). Don’t confuse question word objects with subjects. In the sentence what time is it? The subject is it. It is 5 o’clock.\n\nFinally, after the subject in a question there is frequently a verb. The verb does not get conjugated (where do you go, where did you go), except in the perfect tenses (where have you gone?). Now, there is much more to this, but those are the basics. We will go deeper into this class.\n
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Students do not learn the tenses very well because they lack a way to organize the many and often contradictory rules governing their use. In effect, they lack a system for organizing what they learn.\n\nWhen you learn a tense, you need to keep three aspects of the tenses in mind:\n\n- You need a clear idea of when to use the tense. for example, the present tense is used for habit and custom. The past tense is used for completed actions in the past.\n\n– Each tense has its own auxiliaries. the auxiliaries for the present tense are “do” and “does”. The auxiliary for the past tense is “did”\n\n– Every tense is associated with several adverbs of time. When you see these adverbs, they tend to fix a sentence in a particular tense. “Usually” is used for the present tense, “yesterday” is used for the past tense, however, “since yesterday” or “since 5 o’clock” is used with the present perfect.\n
I’m going to play through a few slides which comprise a chart of the tenses. This is a work in progress, so it’s not complete. If you are watching the video of this presentation, you can stop the video on each page to get a better look.\n\nThe simple and compound tenses are included.\n
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Modals are very complicated to learn; in fact, they are actually modal auxiliaries, which means they have more in common with auxiliaries like “do” “did” and “will” then they do with verbs.\n\nOne of the things that complicates learning models is the fact that every modal also has an alternative, for example the alternative of “can” is “to be able to”\n
So, in order to sort out what is a modal and what isn’t, we separate things that can act like a modal from things which are true modals.\n
So that you can identify a modal, here’s a list of characteristics which true modals share.\n\nTrue modals never take infinitives, they use the root form of the auxiliary. We say I must go and not I must to go.\n\nFrequently the negative of the true modal is not the opposite of its meaning. If I say please go, it means you should leave. If I say don’t go, it means you shouldn’t leave. However, if I say you must stop, you are obligated to stop. If I say you must not stop, it does not mean that you are not obligated to stop. It means you are prohibited from stopping. I hope you can see the difference. The actual opposite of “you must stop” is “you don’t have to stop.” This is a subtlety which I hope to teach you during our time together.\n\nTrue modals cannot be conjugated for the past - with one notable exception, “can.” Can is conjugated as could in the past. But that’s it. The past tense of must is not “musted” \n\nTrue modals have different meanings in different contexts. For example, if I say you must see a doctor, it means that it is a necessity, an obligation. But if you walk into my class and your clothes are wet, I might say, “Oh! It must be raining.” In this case, must is not an obligation or necessity, it is a conclusion that I draw from available evidence. Other examples: You must be tired after being on call all night (conclusion). You must eat healthy foods if you don’t want to get sick (obligation, necessity).\n\nTrue models have alternate forms that can be conjugated. I can’t conjugate can for the future, “I will can see you tomorrow.” I can, however, say, “I will be able to see you tomorrow.”\n\nI realize that all of this is quite a bit to take in all at once. We will get to the strange world of modals in due time. If you want to take a look at a presentation that’s a little bit more in depth, you can go to my website, in the presentation section, and look for a presentation called “introduction to moguls”.\n
In conclusion, it boils down to 3 things:\n\nSentences and questions are controlled by formula.\n\nTensions are controlled by use, auxiliaries, and time markers.\n\nTrue models are idiosyncratic, but do follow some general rules.\n
Number started for this presentation. I hope you have a little better idea of how to think about English, and what to expect to be taught during our time together. For more information about me and my classes, you can contact me on the web, subscribe to my twitter account, or go directly to my presentation area, why have short presentations introducing different grammar points.\n\n Thank you, and I’ll see you in class.\n