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English

End of Year Revision


Verbs

Verbs make things happen. They are doing/being words

E.g. I banged the door (doing)

I am happy (being)

The infinitive

With verbs we start with the infinitive. This is the verb before anything is done to it. The infinitive is
made up of:

To + basic form of the verb (to sleep, to eat)

Conjugating verbs (that means do something to them)

To make a verb tell us something specific about who/what is doing it and when it is being done, we
need to conjugate it.

To conjugate a verb either

1. Change the ending


e.g. I look in the mirror
I looked in the mirror
2. Add an auxiliary
e.g. I will look in the mirror
I had looked in the mirror

Tenses

Just remember there are four tenses

Past simple-I ran down the road

Present-I run down the road

Future-I will run down the road

Conditional-I could run down the road

There are a few more bits and pieces to remember. Each tense has different aspects

Past simple-I ran down the road

Past continuous-I was running down the road

Past perfect-I had run down the road

Past perfect continuous-I had been running down the road


And the list goes on. Just remember that different aspects of the tenses are formed by conjugating
the verb in different ways

1) Changing the ending

Regular verbs behave in regular ways

Irregular verbs

As with every rule, the exceptions outweigh it. You just have to learn the exceptions and that is that.

E.g. Drink/drank, speak/spoke, think/thought

2) Adding auxiliary

Auxiliary verbs help the main verb express something particular about who/what is doing it and
when it is being done. You can learn these by singing then to the tune of Jingle Bells.

May, might, must

Be, being, been

Am, are

Is, was, were

Should, could, would

Have, had, has

Will, can

Shall

Ought

The ones in green are special kinds of auxiliary verbs called modal verbs. The give information about
the mood.

Recap

I. Verbs are doing or being words


The infinitive is the basic form of the verb
The two ways of conjugating are adding an ending in to the verb or adding am auxiliary
There are 4 tense
Each tense has several aspects
Auxiliary verbs that express the mood of the verb is called modal verbs
All verbs have two participles. These are present and past.
Present participle end in ing

Finite and non finite

A finite verb has a subject and tense

A non finite verb has no subject or tense on its own.

The present participle-walking, losing, having


Past participle- walked, lost, had

The infinitive-to walk, to lose, to have

Phrases

Two or more without a finite verb

E.g. Going out

Clause

Two or more words with a finite verb

E.g. I stood

Sentence

A simple sentence has one finite verb. It makes complete sense in its own

The subordinate clause

It doesn't make sense in its own but is has a main clause as well

Compound sentence (to equal clauses)

I saw the man and he shouted at me

Complex sentence (main and subordinate clause)

I saw the man, who had visited the house

Participles

Every verb has two participles (past and present)

They are called participles, because they participate in forming the the whole verb. They usually
follow the auxiliary verbs to be or to have

The past participle

Helps make aspects of the past tense of verbs


Follows has, have or was

Katie was bitten by the dog

Was is the auxiliary verb

Bitten is the past participle

The underlined words are the whole verb

The present participle

Ends in ing
Is not a complete Verb but helps make aspects of all tenses with the help of to have and to
be
Doris has been cleaning the house all day

Can be used as an adjective


Can be used as a noun. When it is used as a noun it is called a gerund or verbal noun
Can be used on its own to add detail

Connectives

Who
Which
Although
On the other hand
On the contrary
And
When
But
In addition
Because
That
Never the less
Therefore
However
Henceforth
Meanwhile
Than
Moreover
Secondly
Otherwise
This leads to
This means
Whom
As a result
So
Hence
Since
Thus
Furthermore
Where as
As well as
Even though
Though
Yet
Despite
or

Sentence Structure

The present participle is never finite:

I am
Are

Was

Will be

Had been

Should be

A phrase is 2 words or more without a finite verb

A simple sentence has one verb. It makes complete sense on its own

Another name for a simple sentence is an independent clause

There are two finite verbs so there are two independent clauses, but there is one sentence

Punctuating direct speech

i. Words actually spoken are put out in inverted commas


ii. Every time there is a new speaker, start a new line and indent
iii. Each new speech begins with a capital letter, unless it is a continuation of a sentence the
speaker has already started
iv. Each piece of speech ends with one of the following: comma, full stop, question mark,
exclamation mark. These go inside the speech mark
v. If you put narration in the middle of the speech, follow it with either a comma or a full stop.
Come here John, said Sarah, and let me do your tie for you.

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