sábado, 17 de noviembre de 2012

WILL, COULD, MAY, MIGHT

MEANING                                                                                                                              
Use will to say you are sure about something in the future,

- People will do most of their shopping online in the future.

You can also use will to talk about now, or about things in general.

      A. Let's call Nathalie. 
      B. No, she'll be in the car.  

- He is always complaining so no one will listen to him.

Use might, may and could to say you're not sure about something now or in the future.

- Chinese might / may / could become the most important language in the world. (future)

      A. Where is Kimiko?
      B. I don't know. She might / may / could be at work. (now)

- There might / may / could be thousands of animal species we don't know about. (in general)

May is a little more formal than might. May is more common in formal kinds of writing, but might is most common in every day speech.

There is an important difference between could and can.

-The supermarket could be crowded on Saturday. (= It's possible that it will be crowded on Saturday)
-The supermarket can be crowded on Saturday. (= It's sometimes crowded on Saturday, almost sure)

Use will and may with other words to show that you are more or less sure.

- Nathalie will definitely be there for the meeting. (+++ sure)
- Nathalie will be there. (++ sure) 
- Nathalie will probably be there. Also: Nathalie may well be there. (+ sure)
- Possibly / Maybe / Perhaps Nathalie will be there. (? sure)

You can also use be likely to and be unlikely to to express probability. Use more or less to compare probabilities.

- Don't call Nathalie now. She's likely to be busy at work.
- She's unlikely to have her mobile switched on.
- Try her landline. She's more likely to be at home than at work.
- She's less likely to answer if you call her mobile.

FUENTE: English Unlimited Intermediate.

    

  



Aa

IT'S + ADJECTIVES











http://www.grammar-quizzes.com/infinitive4.html

EXPRESSIING OPINIONS













http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/grammar/learnit/learnitv281.shtml
http://www.topics-mag.com/language/give-opinions.html

domingo, 21 de octubre de 2012

RECURSOS PARA APRENDER IDIOMAS EN INTERNET


- http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk - Topics, vocabulary, grammar downloads
- http://www.teachingenglish.org.uk/try/resources/audio-bank/dialogues- Conversations and links to other related themes

- http://www.businessenglishonline.net- Resources for students and teachers
- http://www.berlitzpublishing.com/berlitz/online-content.asp - Downloads and extra material
- http://www.oup.es - Oxford University Press resources
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/quizzes/quiznet/quiznet_archive.shtml- Grammar, vocabulary and cultural tests. A lot of audio to download
- http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice - BBC World Service Learning English. Site for students by the BBC with links to a lot of material.
- http://www.usingenglish.com/reference/idioms/a-list.html - English idioms and tests
- http://learningenglish.voanews.com/ - Learning English with the Voice of America
- http://english2american.com/index.html#index - British and American English differences
- http://www.fonetiks.org/ - Everything on phonetics
- http://www.vaughanradio.com/reproductor - 24-hour radio English learning
- http://www.clssibiu.ro/self_study/index.htm - Comprehensive study of English and links (Military English)
- www.eslcafe.com - Dave´s ESL Café – A good place to start. Lots of online quizzes and exercises. Everything on this site is free
- http://grammar.ccc.commnet.edu/grammar/- Guide to Grammar and Writing. Stanford University online writing and grammar site, very helpful for developing students´ writing skills.
- http://a4esl.org/q/h/ - Idioms Quizzes (Self – study quizzes for ESL students) Site for learning and practicing idioms
- http://iteslj.org/links/ESL/Idioms_and_Slang - TESL-TEFL-TESOL-ESL-EFL-ESOL LINK- ESL Idioms and slang