This worksheet is about two people who talk about their family and where they live. Students practice answering comprehension questions. The text has simple present tense, plurals, have/has, verb to be,
adverbs of frequency, love/like+v-ing, and, but and possessive adjective.
This post explains the use of the passive in the past, present, and the future. I'll explain when to use and why. We often use the passive in formal writing to sound impersonal.
This post explains the use of relative clauses /pronouns and how they link sentences. Explanations are also in pdf along with an exercise in a quiz and pdf formats.
Use the present perfect to talk about recent events or a past event which the speaker feels s is connected with
the present. Use the past simple to talk about a finished action.
Certain n time expressions may be used with the past simple.
Basically, a sentence is a combination of two grammatical units—the subject and the predicate.
Subject
The subject of a sentence refers to what the sentence is about, often the
person or thing that carries out the action of the verb. The subject usually gives
a clear idea of what the sentence is about.
The subject can be a noun—either a common noun or a proper noun or a
verbal noun; a noun phrase; a pronoun; a subordinate clause; an infinitive.
In the following sentences, the underlined words form the subject of the sentence
and the subjects are nouns.