
Here, you may glance upon some of my self-wrought materials that will be available during our lessons.
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Tense cards:
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As can be seen, I have designed my tense cards to serve as crystal-clear guides in all aspects: visualisation, configuration, and notion all facilitate an efficient and swift memorisational process. Bear in mind that these are only the present tenses (marked in green); the past tenses (marked in red) and future tenses (marked in blue) are excluded from the complete series.
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A patterned chart of irregular verbs' conjugations:
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A most useful pattern in the chaotic nature of the irregular English verbs, which took me a great deal of time to complete. Have a peek and realise that there is more order amongst such verbs than first meets the eye.
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Nouns functioning both as countable and uncountable:
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What is the difference between 'a lot of fish in the lake' and 'a lot of fishes in the lake'? What about 'some glass', 'a glass', and 'a pair of glasses'? Are 'dye a hair' and 'dye the hair' the same cup of tea? Why is 'cow' countable but 'beef' is not? You will find all the answers in the aboveseen illustration.
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English auxiliaries:
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These are solely two of the nineteen modal verbs that English has to offer us. The explanations are rather succinct so that the entire list can be used as a handy-dandy chart. Note that 'cannot' is described in a different section, which is why it cannot be found in the picture above.
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A brief intro about future simple tense:
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Future simple tense is not as easy as you assumed it to be. This brief illustration is meant to prove that point. Further details are - of course - available in the full curriculum.
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A chart about back-shift in reported speech:
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