Transcript Section 5
Section 5: nouns &
pronouns
By: Areej Dawoud
5.1 Countable & uncountable nouns
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We can count some nouns (things) like book/ books:
They are countable nouns.
They have singular a/ an & plural –s
We cannot count other nouns like water:
They are uncountable nouns.
They don’t have a/ an, and they have no plural.
On the pizza there are tomatoes, peppers, garlic,
cheese, and olives.
Uncountable nouns take a singular verb.
Water is important.
5.2 a/ an & some
We use a/ an in front of singular countable
nouns a table / an umbrella.
We use some for the plural of countable nouns
some tables.
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We some in front of uncountable nouns some
milk.
5.3 a/ an & the
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We use the to talk about something has already been
mentioned.
We use the with:
Singular countable nouns: He has a car. The car is
black.
Plural countable nouns: I have 2 boys. The boys are at
school.
Uncountable nouns: I have some information. The
information is important.
We use a/ an when we mention something for the first
time.
There is a dog and a cat outside. The dog is chasing the
Generalization
We do not use the when we talk about
something in general:
I smell roses in the air.
Gold is expensive.
We use the when we are specific.
The roses in my garden are all read.
The gold in this jeweller’s is very expensive.
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Some & any
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Any:
We use any in negative statements and questions both
for countable and uncountable nouns.
Are there any flowers in the park? No, there are not
any. Yes, there are some.
In negative statements & questions we use any to show
a quantity when we do not know exactly how much or
how many.
Do you have any information.?
Sorry, I don’t have any information.
Some & any
Some:
We use some in affirmative statements with
countable plural nouns and with uncountable
singular nouns.
• I need some eggs and some sugar.
We use some to show a quantity when we do not
know exactly how much or how many.
Measurement words
Uncountable nouns can be measured by measured
words. They always have a prepositional phrase with
of.
A bar of soap
A can of tomatoes
A box of chocolates
A bunch of banana
A tube of tooth
paste
A glass of water
A carton of milk
A sheet of paper
A bottle of juice
A peace of fruit
A slice of cake
A cup of tea
A head of lettuce
A packet of
biscuits
A roll of toilet paper
A jar of jam
A loaf of bread
A bowel of soup
Countable nouns
(affirmative)
Negative
Uncountable
nouns
(affirmative)
There are many
eggs.
There aren't many
eggs.
There are a lot of
apples.
There aren’t a lot
of apples.
There is a lot
of juice.
There isn’t much
juice.
There are some
tomatoes.
There aren't any
tomatoes.
There is some
milk
There isn’t any
milk.
There are a few
onions.
There aren’t any
onions.
There is a little
cheese
There isn’t any
milk.
There are few
onions
There are no
onions.
There is little
cheese
There is no cheese.
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Negative
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Quantity questions
How many slices of bread do you eat for
breakfast? About six.
Lemons, friends, apples, …..
How much coffee do you drink? Juice do you
drink?
Money, sugar, milk,….
Whose & possessive nouns
Whose dog is that? That is Julia’s dog.
Whose books are these? They are his books.
The genitive:
Nouns
Singular nouns
(John)
Regular plural
nouns (boys)
Rules
(‘s)
Examples
It is John’s bag.
(‘)
They are the
boys’ bags.
They sell
women’s shoes
That’s Charles’s
wife.
That’s Charles’
Irregular plural
nouns (women)
(‘s)
Names & nouns
that already end in
–s (Charles)
(‘s) or (‘)
Section 6: The simple past
Regular verbs:
I, you, he, she, it, we, they → worked
We use the simple past to talk about actions and situations that
began and ended in the past.
We can use specific time expressions like yesterday, last week,
last month
yesterday
last
ago
Morning, afternoon,
night
Night, week, month,
year, summer, Tuesday
5 minutes 3 months , 1
year
Spelling of regular past verbs
Verb ending
Spelling rule
examples
Most regular verbs
add -ed
Rain -rained
Verbs ending -e
add -d
Arrive - arrived
Verbs ending in
consonant +y
Change y to i and add -ed Try - tried
Verbs ending in vowel +
y
add -ed
Enjoy - enjoyed
Verbs ending in w, x
add -ed
Show - showed
2 syllables ending in
vowel + consonant &
with stress on the first
syllable
add -ed
Visit - visited
1 or 2 syllables ending in double the consonant
vowel + consonant &
and add -ed
with stress on the second
syllable
Stop - stopped
Pronunciation of –ed
Verb ending
Pronunciation
Examples
/p/, /k/, /f/,
/s/, /sh/, /ch/
/t/
helped
washed
/b/, /g/, /v/,
/z/, /th/, /j/,
/m/, /n/, ng/,
/l/,/r/, or in a
vowel sound
/d/ or /t/
/d/
played
lived
rained
/id/
waited
wanted
The simple past: irregular verbs
She went to Africa last year. She saw a chimpanzee there.
I, you, he, she, it, we, they → went
Base form
come
teach
eat
put
fly
tell
Past form
came
taught
ate
put
flew
told
The simple past negative
subject
did not
base form
I
You
We
They
He, she, it
did not
didn’t
have
eat
a dishwasher
breakfast
The simple past: yes / no questions
Did
Did
Subject
I
You
He, she,
It
We
They
Base verb affirmative
work
Yes,
I did
You did
He did
It did
We did
negative
No,
I didn’t
You didn’t
He didn’t
She didn’t
It didn’t
The simple past wh- questions
Wh- word
What
When
What time
Where
Who
How
why
did
did
subject
Base verb
I
you
he
She
we
they
talk about?
go to the
beach?
stay?
call?
know the
place?
stay at the
beach?
Time clauses: before & after
Main clause
Time clause
I looked at my watch
She went home
before I called.
after she finished.
Time clause
Main clause
Before I had dinner,
I went for a walk.
After we ate,
we watched TV.