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This document provides instructions and examples for summarizing various verb tenses and structures in English, including reported speech, reported questions, talking hypothetically about the past, tag questions, the passive voice, linking ideas, the future continuous, and future perfect tenses. Examples are given for each to illustrate their uses. Key tenses and structures covered include reported speech, which relates what a person said before; the passive voice, which changes a sentence's focus; and future tenses like future continuous and future perfect, which refer to actions that will occur or be completed in the future.
This document provides instructions and examples for summarizing various verb tenses and structures in English, including reported speech, reported questions, talking hypothetically about the past, tag questions, the passive voice, linking ideas, the future continuous, and future perfect tenses. Examples are given for each to illustrate their uses. Key tenses and structures covered include reported speech, which relates what a person said before; the passive voice, which changes a sentence's focus; and future tenses like future continuous and future perfect, which refer to actions that will occur or be completed in the future.
This document provides instructions and examples for summarizing various verb tenses and structures in English, including reported speech, reported questions, talking hypothetically about the past, tag questions, the passive voice, linking ideas, the future continuous, and future perfect tenses. Examples are given for each to illustrate their uses. Key tenses and structures covered include reported speech, which relates what a person said before; the passive voice, which changes a sentence's focus; and future tenses like future continuous and future perfect, which refer to actions that will occur or be completed in the future.
INSTRUCTIONS: you will write down a small explanation on for what do we use for the following tenses, the explanation has to be in English, and you will write down examples of them. I need 2 examples from each tense. REPORTED SPEECH Is when you tell somebody else what you or a person said before. Distinction must be made between direct speech and reported speech EXAMPLES: 1.- He said (that) he liked pizza. 2.- He said (that) he was living in Tijuana. REPORTED QUESTION Is when we tell someone what another person asked. To do this, we can use direct speech or indirect speech EXAPMLES: 1.- Direct speech: “Where are you doing?” 2.- Reported speech: He asked me where I was going. TALKING HYPOTHETICALLY ABOUT THE PAST Are all used hypothetically, to talk about things that didn't really happen in the past. 1: Could have + past participle means that something was possible in the past, or you had the ability to do something in the past, but that you didn't do it. EXAMPLES: 1.- I wish I had gone to stadium. 2.- She wishes she had taken her friend’s advice and studied math. TAG QUESTIONS Turn a statement into a question. They are often used for checking information that we think we know is true. Usually if the main clause is positive, the question tag is negative, and if the main clause is negative, it's positive. EXAMPLES: 1.- You haven't seen this film, have you? 2.- She's a profesor, isn't she? THE PASSIVE We use the passive voice to change the focus of the sentence.
EXAMPLES:
1.- A cake is made (by me)
2.- A cake is being made (by me) LINKING IDEAS Linking words and phrases are used to show relationships between ideas. They can be used to join 2 or more sentences or clauses (a clause is a group of words which contains a subject and a verb). Linking words/phrases can be used to add ideas together, contrast them, or show the reason for something. EXAMPLES: 1.- It was raining however we still went to the park. 2.- Despite the rain we still went to the park THE FUTURE CONTINUOUS The future continuous tense, sometimes also referred to as the future progressive tense, is a verb tense that indicates that something will occur in the future and continue for an expected length of time. It is formed using the construction will + be + the present participle (the root verb + -ing). EXAMPLES: 1.- At three o'clock tomorrow, I’ll be working in my office 2.- At three o'clock tomorrow, you will be lying on the beach FUTURE PERFECT Is a verb tense used for actions that will be completed before some other point in the future. EXAMPLES: 1.- I will have finished this project. 2.- You will have studied the Spanish tenses
(SUNY Series in Contemporary Continental Philosophy) Jean-Luc Nancy, Philippe Lacoue-Labarthe - The Title of The Letter - A Reading of Lacan-State University of New York Press (1992)