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Ενότητες - Unit 3 Day in Day out!

Unit 3 Day in Day out!

Present simple form

In present simple verbs, we need to use the verb do/does in questions and don’t/doesn’t in negatives.

Grammar infographic showing the structure of the Present Simple tense in English, including positive forms, negative forms, questions, and short answers for A1 elementary learners.

Spelling of he/she/it

The form is the same for all the other persons except he/she/it. The spelling for he/she/it is different.

Grammar chart demonstrating Present Simple tense spelling rules for third-person singular subjects (he, she, it) with examples of verb conjugations and common mistakes.

Present simple use

Habits or actions that happen regularly

We use present simple for habits or actions that we repeat regularly:

  • wash my hair every day.
  • I never go to the library.
  • go to the library on Saturdays.

Permanent situations or things that are always or often true

  • don’t drink coffee.
  • She’s very tall.
  • have two brothers.
  • Water boils at 100 degrees.
  • like soup.
Σύνδεσμοι
Exercises Present Simple

Word order in questions – Grammar chart

Infographic explaining the word order in English questions, with examples for standard question order and questions using the auxiliary verb 'be'. The chart illustrates the placement of question words, auxiliary verbs, subjects, and main verbs or adjectives for forming questions in English.

Questions in general

If we want to ask a question in English, the order is QWASM: Question word, Auxiliary verb, Subject, Main verb. In Yes-No questions (questions where the answer is yes or no), there is no Question Word.

Questions with be as the main verb

When be is the main verb, it is used as the Auxiliary in the question, and then we don’t have a Main verb after the Subject.

Auxiliary verbs

In the position of Auxiliary, we can use be, do, have or any modal verb: can, could, will, would, should, etc.

Have is only an auxiliary verb in the form have got and in the present perfect.

  • Have you got any brothers or sisters?
  • What have you cooked for lunch?

For other uses of have, we need an auxiliary verb (do, did) for questions.

  • What time had you dinner yesterday? wrong.png
  • What time did you have dinner yesterday? correct.png
  • Have you to do it now? wrong.png
  • Do you have to do it now? correct.png

Have got only has a present form. It does not have a past form.

  • Had you got many toys when you were a child? wrong.png
  • Did you have many toys when you were a child? correct.png

 

Question words

Colorful educational chart of question words in English, categorized by their use such as 'WHO' for person, 'WHERE' for place, and 'HOW OLD' for age, with example dialogues for each word

How much

We can use how much to ask about the price of something.

  • How much is the jacket?

How + adjective

We can use how + adjective (any adjective) as a question word.

  • How tall are you?
  • How fast is your car?

Which vs what

We can use which + noun, and we can also use what + noun. We use which when there are a small number of possible answers. Look at the difference:

  • Which car do you like, the red or the blue? (there is a small number of possible answers)
  • What car have you got?’ ‘A Mercedes.’ (many possible answers)
Έγγραφα
Unit 3 glossary