Transcript Wordorder

Wordorder
What goes where?
Wordorder positive sentence
indirect direct
subject verb(s)* object object
I
will tell
place
time**
(meew.vw)
(lijd.vw)
you
the story at school tomorrow
* Houd de werkwoorden bij elkaar!
** Tijdsbepaling mag ook vooraan de zin.
Wordorder negative sentence
Verbs +
subject
‘not’
I
indirect direct
object object
will not tell you
the story
place
time
at school tomorrow.
Exercise negative
our holiday / will / at home / we / not / spend / next year →
did / I / him / see / not / last night / at the disco →
will / a letter / not / next week / send / you / she →
to the cinema / we / want / not / do / tonight / to go →
play / in the bar / did / he / last week / not / the piano →
Exercise negative
our holiday / will / at home / we / not / spend / next year →
We will not (won’t) spend our holiday at home next year.
did / I / him / see / not / last night / at the disco →
I did not (didn’t) see him at the disco last night.
will / a letter / not / next week / send / you / she →
She will not (won’t) send you a letter next week.
to the cinema / we / want / not / do / tonight / to go →
We do not (don’t) want to go to the cinema tonight.
play / in the bar / did / he / last week / not / the piano →
He did not play the piano in the bar last week.
Wordorder in questions
interrogative
auxiliary
verb
subject
other
verb(s)
indirect direct
object
object
What
would
you
like to tell
me
Did
(tijd!!)
you
Have
(hele ww!)
were
you
When
a party
place
time
in your
flat
yesterday?
here?
Exercise questions
play / at / you / the weekends / do / tennis →
go / last night / out / you / did →
the train / when / leave / does →
him / she / did / the truth / tell / why →
Exercise questions
play / at / you / the weekends / do / tennis →
Do you play tennis at the weekends?
go / last night / out / you / did →
Did you go out last night?
the train / when / leave / does →
When does the train leave?
him / she / did / the truth / tell / why →
Why did she tell him the truth?
Wordorder adverbs (bijwoorden)
VOOR een hoofdwerkwoord
He carefully opened the door.
NA een vorm van ‘to be’
The man was always on time.
Bij hulpwerkwoorden: na het eerste
hulpwerkwoord
She had happily worked with him all those years.
Exercise adverbs
He walks his dog. (rarely) →
My father goes fishing. (always) →
Your bedroom is decorated. (nicely) →
I can remember his name. (never)→
Ann doesn’t usually smoke. (usually)→
Exercise adverbs
He walks his dog. (rarely) →
He rarely walks his dog.
My father goes fishing. (always) →
My father always goes fishing.
Your bedroom is decorated. (nicely) →
Your bedroom is nicely decorated.
I can remember his name. (never)→
I can never remember his name.
Ann doesn’t usually smoke. (usually)→
Ann doesn’t usually smoke.