The document provides structures to use when building sentences and answers, including connectors to link ideas, modal verbs to indicate possibility or necessity, passive voice to make messages more general, impersonal structures to discuss concepts objectively, conditional sentences to discuss consequences, and gerund verbs formed from verbs ending in -ing.
The document provides structures to use when building sentences and answers, including connectors to link ideas, modal verbs to indicate possibility or necessity, passive voice to make messages more general, impersonal structures to discuss concepts objectively, conditional sentences to discuss consequences, and gerund verbs formed from verbs ending in -ing.
The document provides structures to use when building sentences and answers, including connectors to link ideas, modal verbs to indicate possibility or necessity, passive voice to make messages more general, impersonal structures to discuss concepts objectively, conditional sentences to discuss consequences, and gerund verbs formed from verbs ending in -ing.
The document provides structures to use when building sentences and answers, including connectors to link ideas, modal verbs to indicate possibility or necessity, passive voice to make messages more general, impersonal structures to discuss concepts objectively, conditional sentences to discuss consequences, and gerund verbs formed from verbs ending in -ing.
1. Connectors/linking words (because, but, however, and, yet, so, where, which,..) 2. Modal verbs (could, should, Must, have to, may/might,..) 3. Passive voice – makes the message more general (People say that mobile phones are indispensable, yet I believe they are not. Mobile phones are overused.) 4. Impersonal structures – It is natural that we feel fear of the dark. 5. Conditional sentences – If/When/Unless - If people understood the importance of being informed, they would read more. 6. Gerund verbs – trying, getting