Lesson 3.pptx

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Ms. Rasha Ali
(1) Grammar:
Present simple
Adverb of frequency
This / That
(2) Vocabulary:
Jobs and personal information
Family
Describing friends
Come
Comes
I work
He works
You work
They work
We work
She works
It works
A habit
a fact which is always
true
a fact which is true
for a long time
I come to school early.
She comes to school late
A habit
I get up at 6 clock.
a fact which is always
true
Vegetarian's don’t eat
meat.
a fact which is true
for a long time
I live in Jeddah.
She ___ four languages.
a. speak
b. speaks
The food in Japan is expensive. It ___ a lot
to live there.
a. cost
b. costs
Jane is a teacher. She ___ French. a. teach
b. teaches
He always ___ his car on Sundays. a. wash
I ___ to watch movies. a. love
b. loves
b. washes
She ___ four languages.
a. speak
b. speaks
The food in Japan is expensive. It ___ a lot
to live there.
a. cost
b. costs
Jane is a teacher. She ___ French. a. teach
b. teaches
He always ___ his car on Sundays. a. wash
I ___ to watch movies. a. love
b. loves
b. washes
Adverbs of frequency show you how often
something happens. This can be always = 100%,
or never = 0%.
These adverbs can go before the main verb.
Subject
Auxiliary
Adverb of
frequency
Main Verb
Rest
I
am
always
late
For classes.
She
-
sometimes
sleeps
Early.
Rewrite the complete sentence using the adverb of
frequency in brackets in its correct position.
(1) They go to the movies. (always)
(2) He reads the newspaper. (sometimes)
(3) Sara smiles. (never)
(4) I drink coffee. (sometimes)
(5) We watch television in the evening. (always)
(1) They always go to the movies.
(2) He sometimes reads the newspaper.
(3) Sara never smiles.
(4) I sometimes drink coffee.
(5) We always watch television in the evening.
We use this (singular)
(1) to talk about people or things near us, for
example:
This is a nice cup of tea.
(2) To introduce people, for example:
This is Janet.
(3) introduce ourselves to begin a conversation on
the, for example:
Hello, this is David, Can I speak to Sally?
We use that (singular)
(1) to talk about things that are not near us, for
example:
What’s that?
(2) to refer back to something someone said or
did, for example:
Shall we go to the cinema?
Yes, that’s a good idea.
What’s your surname? (family name)
What’s your first name? (your name)
What’s your country? OR where are you from?
What’s your address?
What’s your phone number?
How old are you?
What’s your job? OR What do you do?
Are you married or single?
children
Thank you
Enjoy the rest of your day
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