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List of interrogative pronouns Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): question words – who, which, how, what, where ex. 1 Elementary grammar exercise (A2 level): question words – who, which, how, what, where ex. 2
Interrogative pronouns English has five interrogative pronouns: who, whom, whose, what, and which. Whom or who? Whom is formal and is not used very often in spoken British English. It is, however, common in American English: Whom did you ask? [formal written, formal spoken British English] Who did you ask? [standard spoken British English ...
Elementary grammar exercise (A2 level): question words – who, which, how, what, where ex. 2; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): present simple ex. 2; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): present simple questions ex. 2; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): using ‘a’ and ‘an’ (indefinite articles) ex. 1
Elementary vocabulary exercise (A1 level): town and city words; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): present simple questions, negatives (do, does, don’t) ex. 1; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): ‘a’ or ‘an’? ex. 2; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): some, any difference; Elementary grammar exercise (A1 level): the verb ...
When to use the first conditional. We use the first conditional to express a possible condition and its result in the future: [possible condition] [result] If you study hard, . . . you’ll pass your exams. If I find his number, . . . I’ll call him. The first conditional – common mistakes.
Pronouns are words that replace nouns. He, she, I, myself, yourself, these, who and what are all examples of pronouns. A pronoun saves us from repeating a noun. Compare: Anthony lives in London. Anthony works in a shop near Anthony's brother's house. Anthony lives in London. He works in a shop near his brother's house. [He and his are pronouns.…
The blue car is my brother’s; the red car is mine. is my. I bought the house – it’s mine. mine house. Possessive adjectives, possessive pronouns. Singular. my, mine. It's my dog. This dog is mine.
Compare the words in bold in these pairs of sentences: Liz saw me. I saw myself in the mirror. Tom saved her. She saved herself. They blamed us. We blamed ourselves. We sent you an email. You sent yourself an email. We looked after them. They looked after themselves. Practise this grammar (pre-intermediate level) Reflexive…
Short forms (contractions): I’m, he’s, she’s, don’t, let’s, etc. We often use short forms (called contractions) in spoken English. For instance, instead of saying I am here, we often say I’m here. Instead of he is late, we say he’s late. When we write a short form, we replace the missing letter with ’ (called an apostrophe).
The four demonstrative pronouns in English are this, that, these, those. A demonstrative pronoun represents a thing (or things) and also tells us whether the thing is near to us or far from us. (Near and far can refer to either distance or time.) This is my book. That is my house.