1 / 12

Facoltà di Scienze Economiche, Giuridiche e Politiche

CdL Economia e Gestione Aziendale UNIT 8. Facoltà di Scienze Economiche, Giuridiche e Politiche. a.a. 2013/2014. Review of Unit 7: pp. 86-87 Unit 8: Comparative & superlative forms Personality adjectives The weather Would like to / like Adverbs. Outline.

kiora
Télécharger la présentation

Facoltà di Scienze Economiche, Giuridiche e Politiche

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. CdL Economia e Gestione Aziendale UNIT 8 Facoltà di Scienze Economiche, Giuridiche e Politiche a.a. 2013/2014

  2. Review of Unit 7: pp. 86-87 Unit 8: • Comparative & superlative forms • Personality adjectives • The weather • Would like to / like • Adverbs Outline

  3. Comparative & superlative forms 1

  4. Irregular comparatives and superlatives GOOD – BETTER – THE BEST BAD – WORSE – THE WORST FAR – FURTHER – THE FURTHEST MUCH/MANY – MORE – THE MOST Remember: we ALWAYS have to use than after the comparative to introduce the person or thing we compare to. E.g., John is taller than Jim. London is more expensive than Cagliari. Superlatives are used to compare one person or thing to a group COMPARATIVE AND SUPERLATIVE forms 2

  5. Lower degree comparatives & superlatives: they are introduced by less and the least E.g., she is less tall than her brother, that is the least bright colour Same degree comparatives: as … as, so … as E.g., Tom is as intelligent as his sister Comparative and superlative forms 3

  6. Careful Serious Quiet Generous Stylish Aggressive Friendly Rude Personalityadjectives • Careless • Funny • Nervous • Kind • Polite • Ruthless • Unfriendly • Fashionable

  7. Adjectives: cold, hot, cool, warm, good, bad, nice, rainy, sunny, cloudy, windy, snowy, wet, dry, foggy, misty, humid Q.: What’s the weather like? A.: It’s … The weather

  8. A. Would you like to go to a pizzeria? B. I love eating pizza!!! I’d like to drink a cup of coffee v I like drinking (a cup of) coffee : what is the difference? I’d like to expresses something I’d like to do in the future or now while I like to expresses a general statement In the interrogative form, would like to expresses offer – e.g., Would you like to go shopping? Would like to / like

  9. We use adverbs to express manner (how): quickly, slowly While adjectives qualify nouns, adverbs qualify verbs: e.g., I speak English very well We form adverbs by adding –lyto the adjective: e.g., sad-ly, bad-ly Some adjectives go through a morphological change: e.g., happy – happily Irregular adverbs: fast-fast, good-well, hard-hard adverbs

  10. COMPLETE THE TABLE

  11. Making a reservation: complete the three exercises on p. 97 & write an email homework

More Related