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Friday, 28 December 2007

List of Irregular Verbs

Posted on 03:43 by Unknown

List of Irregular Verbs

InfinitivePast tensePast participle
abideabided, abodeabided, abode
arisearosearisen
awakeawokeawoken
bewas/werebeen
bearboreborne
beatbeatbeaten
becomebecamebecome
befallbefellbefallen
begetbegot, (archaic) begatbegotten
beginbeganbegun
beholdbeheldbeheld
bendbentbent
beseechbesought, beseechedbesought, beseeched
besetbesetbeset
betbet, bettedbet, betted
bidbid, badebidden, bid
bindboundbound
bitebitbitten
bleedbledbled
blessblessedblessed
blowblewblown
breakbrokebroken
breedbredbred
bringbroughtbrought
broadcastbroadcastbroadcast
browbeatbrowbeatbrowbeaten
buildbuiltbuilt
burnburnt, burnedburnt, burned
burstburstburst
bustbust, bustedbust, busted
buyboughtbought
castcastcast
catchcaughtcaught
chidechided, chidchided, chidden
choosechosechosen
cleave (1)cleaved, clove, cleftcleaved, cloven, cleft
cleave (2)cleaved, clavecleaved
clingclungclung
comecamecome
costcost, costedcost, costed
creepcreptcrept
cutcutcut
dealdealtdealt
digdugdug
divedived; (US) dovedived
dodiddone
drawdrewdrawn
dreamdreamt, dreameddreamt, dreamed
drinkdrankdrunk
drivedrovedriven
dwelldwelt; (US) dwelleddwelt
eatateeaten
fallfellfallen
feedfedfed
feelfeltfelt
fightfoughtfought
findfoundfound
fleefledfled
flingflungflung
floodlightfloodlighted, floodlitfloodlighted, floodlit
flyflewflown
forbearforboreforborne
forbidforbadeforbidden
forecastforecast, forecastedforecast, forecasted
foreseeforesawforeseen
foretellforetoldforetold
forgetforgotforgotten
forgiveforgaveforgiven
forgoforwentforgone
forsakeforsookforsaken
forswearforsworeforsworn
freezefrozefrozen
gainsaygainsaidgainsaid
getgotgot; (US) gotten
givegavegiven
gowentgone
grindgroundground
growgrewgrown
hamstringhamstrunghamstrung
hanghung, hangedhung, hanged
havehadhad
hearheardheard
heaveheaved, hoveheaved, hove
hewhewedhewed, hewn
hidehidhidden
hithithit
holdheldheld
hurthurthurt
inlayinlaidinlaid
inputinput, inputtedinput, inputted
insetinsetinset
interweaveinterwoveinterwoven
keepkeptkept
kneelknelt; (esp US) kneeledknelt; (esp US) kneeled
knitknitted, knitknitted, knit
knowknewknown
laylaidlaid
leadledled
leanleant, leanedleant, leaned
leapleapt, leapedleapt, leaped
learnlearnt, learnedlearnt, learned
leaveleftleft
lendlentlent
letletlet
lielaylain
lightlit, lightedlit, lighted
loselostlost
makemademade
meanmeantmeant
meetmetmet
miscastmiscastmiscast
mishearmisheardmisheard
mishitmishitmishit
mislaymislaidmislaid
misreadmisreadmisread
misspellmisspelled, misspeltmisspelled, misspelt
misspendmisspentmisspent
mistakemistookmistaken
misunderstandmisunderstoodmisunderstood
mowmowedmown, mowed
offsetoffsetoffset
outbidoutbidoutbid
outdooutdidoutdone
outfightoutfoughtoutfought
outgrowoutgrewoutgrown
outputoutputoutput
outrunoutrunoutrun
outselloutsoldoutsold
outshineoutshoneoutshone
overcomeovercameovercome
overdooverdidoverdone
overdrawoverdrewoverdrawn
overeatoverateovereaten
overflyoverflewoverflown
overhangoverhungoverhung
overhearoverheardoverheard
overlayoverlaidoverlaid
overpayoverpaidoverpaid
overrideoverrodeoverridden
overrunoverranoverrun
overseeoversawoverseen
overshootovershotovershot
oversleepoversleptoverslept
overspendoverspentoverspent
overtakeovertookovertaken
overthrowoverthrewoverthrown
overwriteoverwroteoverwritten
partakepartookpartaken
paypaidpaid
pleadpleaded; (US) pledpleaded; (US) pled
proofreadproofreadproofread
proveprovedproved; (US) proven
putputput
quitquit; (Brit also) quittedquit; (Brit also) quitted
readreadread
rebuildrebuiltrebuilt
recastrecastrecast
redoredidredone
rehearreheardreheard
remakeremaderemade
rendrentrent
repayrepaidrepaid
rerunreranrerun
resellresoldresold
resetresetreset
resitresatresat
retakeretookretaken
retellretoldretold
rewindrewoundrewound
rewriterewroterewritten
ridridrid
rideroderidden
ringrangrung
riseroserisen
runranrun
sawsawedsawn; (US) sawed
saysaidsaid
seesawseen
seeksoughtsought
sellsoldsold
sendsentsent
setsetset
sewsewedsewn, sewed
shakeshookshaken
shearshearedshorn, sheared
shedshedshed
shineshone, shinedshone, shined
shitshitted, shatshitted, shat
shoeshodshod
shootshotshot
showshowedshown, showed
shrinkshrank, shrunkshrunk
shutshutshut
singsangsung
sinksanksunk
sitsatsat
slayslewslain
sleepsleptslept
slideslidslid
slingslungslung
slinkslunkslunk
slitslitslit
smellsmelt, smelledsmelt, smelled
smitesmotesmitten
sowsowedsown, sowed
speakspokespoken
speedsped, speededsped, speeded
spellspelt, spelledspelt, spelled
spendspentspent
spillspilt, spilledspilt, spilled
spinspun, (archaic) spanspun
spitspat; (esp US) spitspat; (esp US) spit
splitsplitsplit
spoilspoilt, spoiledspoilt, spoiled
spotlightspotlit, spotlightedspotlit, spotlighted
spreadspreadspread
springsprangsprung
standstoodstood
stavestaved, stovestaved, stove
stealstolestolen
stickstuckstuck
stingstungstung
stinkstank, stunkstunk
strewstrewedstrewed, strewn
stridestrode-
strikestruckstruck
stringstrungstrung
strivestrove, strivedstriven
subletsubletsublet
swearsworesworn
sweepsweptswept
swellswelledswollen, swelled
swimswamswum
swingswungswung
taketooktaken
teachtaughttaught
teartoretorn
telltoldtold
thinkthoughtthought
throwthrewthrown
thrustthrustthrust
treadtrodtrodden, trod
typecasttypecasttypecast
unbendunbentunbent
underbidunderbidunderbid
undercutundercutundercut
undergounderwentundergone
underlieunderlayunderlain
underpayunderpaidunderpaid
undersellundersoldundersold
understandunderstoodunderstood
undertakeundertookundertaken
underwriteunderwroteunderwritten
undoundidundone
unfreezeunfrozeunfrozen
unwindunwoundunwound
upholdupheldupheld
upsetupsetupset
wakewokewoken
waylaywaylaidwaylaid
wearworeworn
weavewove, weavedwoven, weaved
wedwedded, wedwedded, wed
weepweptwept
wetwet, wettedwet, wetted
winwonwon
windwoundwound
withdrawwithdrewwithdrawn
withholdwithheldwithheld
withstandwithstoodwithstood
wringwrungwrung
writewrotewritten

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Thursday, 27 December 2007

The Future Perfect Continuous Tense

Posted on 03:07 by Unknown

The Future Perfect Continuous Tense

The future perfect continuous tense is used to express a duration of an action up to a point of time in the future.

Examples:

Next month, Tom will have been working in this office for ten years. ○ When the teacher comes back, we shall have been practising for two hours. ○ On July 15th, 1987, we shall have been living in this city for twenty years.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
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The Future Perfect Tense

Posted on 03:03 by Unknown

The Future Perfect Tense

The future perfect tense is used to express an action that will have been completed before another future action or before a point of time in the future.

Examples:

You will have learnt much about the weakness of man when you are my age. ○ I shall have finished my work by eight o'clock tonight.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Past Perfect Continuous Tense

Posted on 03:00 by Unknown

The Past Perfect Continuous Tense

The past perfect continuous tense is similar in use to the past perfect tense. It emphasizes the uninterrupted nature of the action.

Examples:

The telephone had been ringing for five minutes before it was answered. ○ They told me you had been living in Moscow before the war.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Past Perfect Tense

Posted on 02:56 by Unknown

The Past Perfect Tense

The past perfect tense is used to express an action that occurred or completed either before another past action or before a fixed point of time in the past.

Examples:

When I arrived, the thief had already escaped. ○ He had written this novel before the Revolution. ○ Mr. Brown had just left when the telephone rang.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Present Perfect Continuous Tense

Posted on 02:50 by Unknown

The Present Perfect Continuous Tense

The present perfect continuous tense is similar in use to the present perfect. It expresses an action which began in the past but has continued up to the present and possibly to the future. The present perfect continuous tense, however, emphasizes the uninterrupted nature of the action.

Examples:

They have been staying here nearly a month. ○ I have been thinking about your project.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Present Perfect Tense

Posted on 01:09 by Unknown

The Present Perfect Tense

The present perfect tense is used to express:
  1. An action that has existed or has occurred some time in the past but the exact time of the action is either not known or not indicated.
  2. An action with an incomplete period of time.
  3. An action that began in the past and has continued up to the present and possibly to the future.
  4. An action that was repeated several times in the past.
  5. An action that has been completed a relatively short time before the moment speaking.
Examples:
  1. I have read that book before. ○ Have you ever been to London? - Yes, I have been there twice.
  2. I have written three letters this morning.
  3. They have lived here for five years. ○ I have learnt French since 1970.
  4. She has seen that film many times. ○ I have studied my lessons over and over before the examination.
  5. He has just gone out. ○ She has just bought this car.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Future Continuous Tense

Posted on 01:04 by Unknown

The Future Continuous Tense

The future continuous tense is used to express an action that will be in progress at a point of time or that will extend over a limited period of time in the future.

Examples:

I'll be probably watching television at 8 o'clock this evening. ○ This time next week I shall be flying to France. ○ We'll be asking you for suggestions soon.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Simple Future Tense

Posted on 00:57 by Unknown

The Simple Future Tense

The simple future tense is used to express:
  1. An action or state that will exist or occur in the future.
  2. Requests or invitations.
Examples:
  1. The teacher will ask you a few questions. ○ I shall answer the phone for you.
  2. Will you repeat your question? ○ Will you go to the movies with me?

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Past Continuous Tense

Posted on 00:49 by Unknown

The Past Continuous Tense

The past continuous tense is used to express:
  1. An action that was in progress at a point of time in the past.
  2. An action happening in parallel with another action in the past.
  3. An action which was happening when another action happened in the past.
Examples:
  1. He was sitting there fifteen minutes ago. ○ John was still reading at midnight.
  2. They were watching television while I was doing my work. ○ While I was living in Germany, the war was going on.
  3. I was eating breakfast when the phone rang. ○ I was driving on the highway when the accident happened.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Simple Past Tense

Posted on 00:43 by Unknown

The Simple Past Tense

The simple past tense is used to express:
  1. An action or state which existed at a definite time in the past.
  2. An action which happened over a period of time in the past.
  3. A habit in the past.
Examples:
  1. I bought this car a week ago.
  2. I was in the army from 1965 to 1970. ○ He lived in Moscow during last summer.
  3. Whenever he went abroad, he took his wife with him. ○ We went swimming every Sunday morning last year.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Present Continuous Tense

Posted on 00:33 by Unknown

The Present Continuous Tense

The present continuous tense is used to express:
  1. An action happening at the moment of speaking.
  2. An action happening at the same time as another action in the present.
  3. An action that will take place in the near future.
Examples:
  1. Miss Janet is practising the piano. ○ They are talking about a football match in this afternoon.
  2. Anybody who looks at his passenger while he is driving a car is a danger.
  3. Dr. Brown is coming here next week. ○ He is leaving for London tomorrow.

Other Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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The Simple Present Tense

Posted on 00:10 by Unknown

The Simple Present Tense

The simple present tense is used to express:
  1. An action or state in the present.
  2. A repeated action or habit in the present.
  3. A general truth or a natural law.
  4. An automatic result.
  5. A planned action in the future accompanied by an expression of time.
Examples:
  1. She loves her children very much. ○ This medicine tastes bitter to me.
  2. Mary goes to the cinema every Sunday. ○ John drinks coffee before he goes to work.
  3. Oil floats on water. ○ The sun rises in the East.
  4. Ice turns to water when we heat it. ○ We shiver when we are cold.
  5. When does the play begin? - It begins at 7:30. ○ We set out tomorrow morning.

Other Tenses

  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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Wednesday, 26 December 2007

The Tenses

Posted on 03:15 by Unknown

The Tenses

  • The Simple Present Tense
  • The Present Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Past Tense
  • The Past Continuous Tense
  • The Simple Future Tense
  • The Future Continuous Tense
  • The Present Perfect Tense
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Past Perfect Tense
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
  • The Future Perfect Tense
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
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Wednesday, 21 November 2007

English for Special Purposes

Posted on 08:24 by Unknown

English for Special Purposes

  • Business English
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Survival English

Posted on 08:22 by Unknown

Survival English

  • Practical English (AudioEnglish.net)
  • Travel English (AudioEnglish.net)
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Sunday, 18 November 2007

Writing Letters

Posted on 08:48 by Unknown

Writing Letters

Resources from English Works! (Gallaudet University)
  • Letter Formats
    • Writing Letters
    • Business Letter Formats
  • Personal Letters
    • Apologies
    • Appreciation Letters
    • Complaints
    • Congratulations
    • Invitations
    • Offering Condolences
    • Advocacy
  • School Related Letters
    • Clubs and Organizations
  • Deaf Related Letters
    • Interpreter Related Information
    • Social Security
    • Vocational Rehabilitation
  • Work Related Letters
    • Cover Letters
    • How to Write a Cover Letter
    • Sample Cover Letter I
    • Sample Cover Letter II
    • Follow-up Letters
    • What to Do After the Interview?
    • Job Offers
    • References and Recommendations
  • Resumes
    • Resumes
    • Resume Checklist
    • Guide to Revising Your Resume
    • Resume Sample I
    • Resume Sample II
  • Memos
    • How to Write Memos!
    • Memo Sample
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Writing Research Papers

Posted on 08:25 by Unknown

Writing Research Papers

Resources from English Works! (Gallaudet University)
  • Researching
    • Process of Doing a Research Paper
    • Researching and Organizing Your Paper: The Note Card System
    • Timetable/Checklist for a Research Paper
  • APA Style
    • APA Style General Guidelines
    • Introducing a Quote: Sample Sentences
    • APA Sample Reference Page
  • MLA Style
    • MLA Style General Guidelines
    • Introducing a Quote: Sample Sentences
    • Sample MLA Style Works Cited Page
    • Sample MLA Style Research Paper
  • Chicago/Turabian Style
    • Chicago/Turabian Style General Guidelines
  • ASA Style
    • American Sociological Association (ASA) General Guidelines
  • I-Search Papers
    • I-Search Paper Format Guide
    • Sample I-Search Paper 1
    • Sample I-Search Paper 2
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Writing Essays

Posted on 07:37 by Unknown

Writing Essays

Resources from Advanced Composition for Non-Native Speakers of English (Erlyn Baack)
  • How to Write Academic Essays
    • Introduction to Writing in English for an English Academic Audience
    • Writing Giving Instructions Essays
    • Writing Cause or Effect Essays
    • Writing Effective Comparison or Contrast Essays
    • Writing Essays to Persuade
    • Test of Written English (TWE) Practice Writing Topics
  • Students' Essays
    • Students' Giving Instructions Essays - Models
    • Students' Cause or Effect Essays - Models
    • Students' Comparison or Contrast Essays - Models
    • Students' Essays to Persuade - Models
Resources from Argument and Opinion Essay Writing (Enda Tuomey)
  • How to Write Argument Essays
    • How to Write an Argument Essay
    • Vocabulary
    • Ideas
    • Layout of Your Essay
    • Two Sides of an Argument
  • Parts of an Essay
    • Parts of an Essay
    • Introduction
    • Thesis Sentence
    • Body
    • Conclusion
  • Argument Essay Topics
    • TWE (Test of Written English) Topics
  • Model Argument Essays
  • Step-by-Step Sample Essays
    • Step-by-Step Sample Essay in Flash
    • Step-by-Step Sample Essay in PowerPoint
Resources from English Works! (Gallaudet University)
  • The Structure of an Essay
    • The Structure of an Essay
    • Structure of an Essay: Outline
  • Parts of an Essay
    • One Paragraph Essay Sample 1
    • One Paragraph Essay Sample 2
    • Five Paragraph Essay Sample 1
    • Five Paragraph Essay Sample 2
  • Common Types of Essays
    • Guide to Different Kinds of Essays
  • Argumentative Essays
    • Argumentative Essays
    • Guidelines for Writing Argumentative Essays (ENG 203)
    • Argumentative (Opinion) Essays that Answer a "Should?" Question
  • Comparison/Contrast Essays
    • Comparison/Contrast Essays
    • Comparison and Contrast Essays: Two Patterns
  • Definition Essays
    • Definition Essays
    • Sample Definition Essay
  • Descriptive Essays
    • Descriptive Essays
    • Sample Descriptive Essay 1
    • Sample Descriptive Essay 2
  • Narrative Essays
    • Narrative Essays
    • Sample Narrative Essay 1
    • Sample Narrative Essay 2
  • Cause-Effect Essays
    • Cause-Effect Essays
    • Sample Cause/Effect Essay
  • Process Essays
    • Process Essays
  • Critical Essays
    • Critical Essays
    • Writing Critical Essays: Essays about Literature
    • Writing a Critical Analysis of a Painting
    • Writing a Book Review
    • Guidelines for Abstracts and Critiques in Social Work and Related Disciplines
Resources from Guide to Grammar and Writing (The Capital Community College Foundation)
  • Structural Considerations
    • The Thesis Statement
    • Coherence: Transitions between Ideas
    • A Proper Introduction
    • Concluding Paragraphs
    • The Five-Paragraph Essay
  • Patterns of Organization
    • Principles of Organization
    • Introduction: Mixing the Patterns
    • The Personal Essay
    • Narrative and Descriptive
    • The Process Essay
    • Comparison and Contrast
    • Using Examples
    • Classification and Analysis
    • Developing a Definition
    • Evaluative Essays (Reviews)
    • Cause and Effect
    • Developing an Argument
    • Writing about Literature
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The Writing Process

Posted on 06:38 by Unknown

The Writing Process

Resources from English Works! (Gallaudet University)
  • Pre-Writing
    • Pre-Writing Strategies
    • Guide to Mapping
    • Sample of a Tree Generated through the Questioning Method
    • Using Questions as a Pre-Writing and Organizational Technique
    • Formal Three-Part Outline: Introduction, Body & Conclusion
    • Sample Outline
  • Writing the First Draft
    • Guide to Developing a Thesis Statement
    • Guide to Writing Introductions and Conclusions
    • Guide to Transitions with Sample Sentences
    • Sample Essay on William E. Hoy with Some Transition Words
  • Revising and Proofreading
    • Evaluation Checklist for Essay Writing
    • Punctuation and Grammar Review
    • Gallaudet Writer's Handbook
  • Paraphrasing and Quoting
    • How to Avoid Plagiarism
    • Guide to Paraphrasing
    • Words that Introduce Quotes or Paraphrases
Resources from Guide to Grammar and Writing (The Capital Community College Foundation)
  • Overcoming Writer's Block
  • Getting Started: Freewriting
  • Getting Started: Clustering Ideas
  • Getting Started: Outlining
  • Writing with a Sense of Purpose
  • Tone: A Matter of Attitude
  • Maintaining Objectivity
  • Abstract, Concrete, General, and Specific Terms
  • Using Unbiased Language
  • Building a Better Vocabulary
  • Formatting Your Paper
  • The Editing and Rewriting Process
  • Computer as Writing Assistant
  • The Deadly Sins Checklist
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Saturday, 17 November 2007

Phrasal Verbs

Posted on 07:05 by Unknown

Phrasal Verbs

  • Phrasal Verbs in Alphabetical Order
  • Phrasal Verbs by Category
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Slang

Posted on 07:04 by Unknown

Slang

  • Dictionary of English Slang and Colloquialisms of the UK (Ted Duckworth)
  • American Slang for ESL Students
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Idioms

Posted on 07:03 by Unknown

Idioms

  • Idioms in Alphabetical Order
  • Idioms by Category
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Thursday, 15 November 2007

Podcasts

Posted on 10:27 by Unknown

Podcasts

  • English as a Second Language Podcast (Lucy Tse & Jeff McQuillan)
  • Podcasts on business, daily life, dining, entertainment, health/medicine, relationships, shopping, transportation and travel. Slow-speed conversations and explanations of everyday phrases and expressions.
  • Grammar Girl (Mignon Fogarty)
  • Podcasts on general grammar, business writing, word choice, style, punctuation, abbreviations.
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Linguistics

Posted on 10:16 by Unknown

Linguistics

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Literature

Posted on 10:16 by Unknown

Literature

  • Aesop's Fables (John R. Long)
  • More than 600 fables, many in Real audio format.
    • Fables of Jean De La Fontaine
    • Fairy Tales of Hans Christian Andersen
  • Repeat After Us (Ellie Wen)
  • Copyright-free English texts. A wide variety of genres including poetry, drama, prose fiction/non-fiction, children's stories, nursery rhymes/tongue twisters, memorable quotes.
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Dictionaries

Posted on 09:31 by Unknown

Dictionaries

  • Cambridge Dictionaries Online
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Business English

Posted on 09:30 by Unknown

Business English

  • English for Banking (AudioEnglish.net)
  • English for Accounting (AudioEnglish.net)
  • Telephoning in English (AudioEnglish.net)
  • Talking Business (BBC Learning English)
  • English for telephoning, meetings, presentations and negotiations. Audio, scripts, useful phrases, quizzes.
  • Get That Job (BBC Learning English)
  • Activities focusing on job search, CVs, covering letters, interviews.
  • Working Abroad (BBC Learning English)
  • Issues and personal experiences connected with working abroad. Vocabulary pages, exercises, quizzes.
  • Ten Days in Manchester (BBC Learning English)
  • Interactive intermediate business English course.
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Tuesday, 6 November 2007

Translation

Posted on 03:33 by Unknown

Translation

  • Translation Articles (Applied Language Solutions)
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Pronunciation

Posted on 03:31 by Unknown

Pronunciation

  • How to Pronounce Sounds in English (Sounds of English)
  • How to Pronounce Names of People and Places in English (inogolo)
  • Word Stress (Sounds of English)
  • Pronunciation Exercises and Activities (Sounds of English)
  • Pronunciation Practice (AudioEnglish.net)
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Speaking

Posted on 03:29 by Unknown

Speaking

  • Greeting People and Responding to Greetings
  • Making and Responding to Introductions
  • Saying Goodbye
  • Making, Accepting and Refusing Invitations
  • Thanking People and Responding to Thanks
  • Apologizing and Responding to Apologies
  • Complimenting and Responding to Compliments
  • Getting Attention and Interrupting a Conversation
  • Asking for Information and Giving Directions
  • Making and Responding to Requests
  • Offering to Help and Responding
  • Expressing Sympathy and Responding
  • Expressing Opinions
  • Agreeing and Disagreeing
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Reading

Posted on 03:29 by Unknown

Reading

  • News Stories (California Distance Learning Project)
    • Working
    • Law and Government
    • Family
    • School
    • Health and Safety
    • Housing
    • Money
    • Science and Technology
    • Services
    • Going Places
    • Nature
  • 200 Reading Exercises (ELC Study Zone)
  • 330 Reading Exercises (ELC Study Zone)
  • 410 Reading Exercises (ELC Study Zone)
  • Articles for English Learners (Penguin Dossiers)
  • Articles for English Learners (with Audio) (Penguin Dossiers)
  • TOPICS Online Magazine (Sandy and Thomas Peters)
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Writing

Posted on 03:29 by Unknown

Writing

  • The Writing Process
  • Writing Essays
  • Writing Research Papers
  • Writing Letters
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Vocabulary

Posted on 03:28 by Unknown

Vocabulary

  • Phrasal Verbs
  • Idioms
  • Slang
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Listening

Posted on 03:28 by Unknown

Listening

  • Podcasts
Listening Exercises
  • Listening Exercises (English On-Line)
  • Interactive dictation/text reconstruction exercises from elementary to advanced level. Based on real-life interviews, telephone conversations, stories, TV commercials, movie trailers.
  • Listening Exercises (Eastbourne School of English)
  • Interactive exercises at different levels.
Sample Dialogues
  • Sample Dialogues (OM Personal Multimedia English)
  • American and British English conversations at elementary, intermediate and advanced levels. 15 extra pages of listening comprehension exercises.
  • Sample Dialogues (Peter's ESL Page for Sookmyung University)
  • Supplementary materials for Springboard English II.
  • 101 Useful English Phrases (Peter's ESL Page for Sookmyung University)
  • Supplementary materials for Springboard English II.
Radio Programs
  • Spotlight Radio Programs (Spotlight)
  • 15-minute specialized programs using a simple vocabulary of 1,500 words and read at a slow speed of 90 words per minute.
Others
  • Video News Stories (California Distance Learning Project)
  • Listening Practice on Phrasal Verbs (Phrasal Verb Demon)
  • Recordings of Classic English Texts (Repeat After Us)
  • Narrations of Texts on Accounting English (AudioEnglish.net)
  • Listening Games for Children (British Council)
  • English Listening Language Lab Online (ELLLO)
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Grammar

Posted on 03:27 by Unknown

Grammar

  • The Tenses
  • List of Irregular Verbs
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Monday, 5 November 2007

Sitemap

Posted on 03:00 by Unknown

Sitemap

  • Grammar
    • The Tenses
      • The Simple Present Tense
      • The Present Continuous Tense
      • The Simple Past Tense
      • The Past Continuous Tense
      • The Simple Future Tense
      • The Future Continuous Tense
      • The Present Perfect Tense
      • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
      • The Past Perfect Tense
      • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
      • The Future Perfect Tense
      • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
    • List of Irregular Verbs
  • Vocabulary
    • Phrasal Verbs
      • Phrasal Verbs in Alphabetical Order
      • Phrasal Verbs by Category
    • Idioms
      • Idioms in Alphabetical Order
      • Idioms by Category
    • Slang
  • Listening
    • Podcasts
  • Speaking
    • Greeting People and Responding to Greetings
    • Making and Responding to Introductions
    • Saying Goodbye
    • Making, Accepting and Refusing Invitations
    • Thanking People and Responding to Thanks
    • Apologizing and Responding to Apologies
    • Complimenting and Responding to Compliments
    • Getting Attention and Interrupting a Conversation
    • Asking for Information and Giving Directions
    • Making and Responding to Requests
    • Offering to Help and Responding
    • Expressing Sympathy and Responding
    • Expressing Opinions
    • Agreeing and Disagreeing
  • Reading
  • Writing
    • The Writing Process
    • Writing Essays
    • Writing Research Papers
    • Writing Letters
  • Pronunciation
  • Translation
  • English for Special Purposes
    • Business English
  • Literature
  • Linguistics
  • Examinations
    • TOEFL (Test of English as a Foreign Language)
      • TOEFL Downloadable Materials
    • TOEIC (Test of English for International Communication)
      • TOEIC Downloadable Materials
    • IELTS (International English Language Testing System)
      • IELTS Downloadable Materials
    • KET (Key English Test)
      • KET Downloadable Materials
    • PET (Preliminary English Test)
      • PET Downloadable Materials
    • FCE (First Certificate in English)
      • FCE Downloadable Materials
    • CAE (Certificate in Advanced English)
      • CAE Downloadable Materials
    • CPE (Certificate of Proficiency in English)
      • CPE Downloadable Materials
    • SAT (Scholastic Aptitude Test)
      • SAT Downloadable Materials
    • GRE (Graduate Record Examination)
      • GRE Downloadable Materials
    • GMAT (Graduate Management Admission Test)
      • GMAT Downloadable Materials
    • BEC (Business English Certificates)
      • BEC Downloadable Materials
  • Dictionaries
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Popular Posts

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  • The Simple Present Tense
    The Simple Present Tense The simple present tense is used to express: An action or state in the present. A repeated action or habit in the p...
  • The Past Perfect Tense
    The Past Perfect Tense The past perfect tense is used to express an action that occurred or completed either before another past action or b...
  • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
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  • The Simple Future Tense
    The Simple Future Tense The simple future tense is used to express: An action or state that will exist or occur in the future. Requests or i...
  • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
    The Future Perfect Continuous Tense The future perfect continuous tense is used to express a duration of an action up to a point of time in ...
  • The Past Continuous Tense
    The Past Continuous Tense The past continuous tense is used to express: An action that was in progress at a point of time in the past. An ac...
  • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
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  • The Tenses
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Blog Archive

  • ►  2008 (43)
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  • ▼  2007 (37)
    • ▼  December (14)
      • List of Irregular Verbs
      • The Future Perfect Continuous Tense
      • The Future Perfect Tense
      • The Past Perfect Continuous Tense
      • The Past Perfect Tense
      • The Present Perfect Continuous Tense
      • The Present Perfect Tense
      • The Future Continuous Tense
      • The Simple Future Tense
      • The Past Continuous Tense
      • The Simple Past Tense
      • The Present Continuous Tense
      • The Simple Present Tense
      • The Tenses
    • ►  November (23)
      • English for Special Purposes
      • Survival English
      • Writing Letters
      • Writing Research Papers
      • Writing Essays
      • The Writing Process
      • Phrasal Verbs
      • Slang
      • Idioms
      • Podcasts
      • Linguistics
      • Literature
      • Dictionaries
      • Business English
      • Translation
      • Pronunciation
      • Speaking
      • Reading
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      • Vocabulary
      • Listening
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