1 / 15

Para ver esta presentación, ten en cuenta:

Para ver esta presentación, ten en cuenta:. Es para ir a la traducción de la diapositiva. Para ver la diapositiva anterior o siguiente. Volver a la diapositiva en inglés. English Grammar. Present Continuous – Present Perfect. Present Continuous Tense. Present Continuous Tense.

ainslie
Download Presentation

Para ver esta presentación, ten en cuenta:

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. Para ver esta presentación, ten en cuenta: Es para ir a la traducción de la diapositiva Para ver la diapositiva anterior o siguiente Volver a la diapositiva en inglés Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  2. EnglishGrammar Present Continuous – Present Perfect Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  3. PresentContinuous Tense Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  4. Present Continuous Tense • Used to refer to actions done at the moment of speaking • Used to refer to future actions • Used, also, to refer to actions that are happening, maybe not at the same moment, but at a determined time. Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  5. Presente Continuo o Progresivo • Se usa para referirse a las acciones realizadas al momento de hablar. • Lo utilizamos cuando nos referimos a acciones futuras. • También nos sirve para referirnos a acciones que están sucediendo, quizás no en el mismo momento, pero en un tiempo determinado. Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  6. Affirmative sentences Subject Verb TO BE Verbgerund (Verb + ing) Complement EXAMPLE: Rebecca is making a cake Rebecca ismaking a Cake Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  7. Negative Sentences Subject Verb TO BE Not Verbgerund (Verb + ing) Complement EXAMPLE: Rebecca is not making a cake Rebecca isn’tmaking a Cake Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  8. Interrogativesentences: Questions ? Wh- (exceptwho) Verb TO BE Subject Verbgerund (Verb + ing) Complement EXAMPLE: ? is Rebecca making A cake Why Why Rebecca ismaking a cake? Rebecca is making a cake, because today is your birthday Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  9. PresentPerfect Tense Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  10. Present Perfect Tense • We use the Present Perfect tense to talk about actions that are happening now / happenned in the past but we don’t know when they happened. • It is used to refer to actions related to past things • In this tense we use the verb ‘to have’ like an auxiliar verb. In spanish it’s meaning ‘haber’. Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  11. Presente Perfecto • Utilizamos el Presente Perfecto para hablar de acciones que están sucediendo ahora / sucedieron en el pasado, pero no sabemos cuándo sucedieron. • Lo usamos para referirnos a acciones relacionadas con el pasado • En el Presente Perfecto usamos el verbo ‘to have’ como un verbo auxiliar. En español significa ‘haber’. Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  12. Affirmative sentences Subject Have or Has Pastparticiple Complement EXAMPLE: Rebecca has made a cake Rebecca has made a cake Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  13. Negative sentences Subject Have or has Not Pastparticiple Complement EXAMPLE: Rebecca has not made A cake Rebecca hasn’tmade a cake Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  14. Interrogativesentences: Questions ? Wh- (exceptwho) Have Or has Subject PastParticiple Complement EXAMPLE: ? has Rebecca made a cake Why Why has Rebecca made a cake? Rebecca has made a cake for your birthday party Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

  15. Also we can ask: ? Have or has Subject ever PastParticiple Complement ? Has Rebecca ever made A cake Has Rebecca evermade a cake? Diego Martínez T. dmartinez.396@gmail.com http://apuntesdemartinez.wordpress.com/

More Related