Lastsegn- —

Name of person reporting: __ Relationship to missing person:

b Change roles and repeat. This time use the pictures on page 130.


Pronoun one/ones

Use one or ones to avoid repeating a noun. Use one after this, that or an adjective. A: Do you want the black pen or the blue one? B: The blue one.

Use ones to replace plural nouns. Use ones after these, those or an adjective.

A: Did you buy the brown shoes or the black ones? В: I bought the black ones.

Possessive pronouns

Possessive pronouns show the person something is for, or who it belongs to. Use them in the place of a possessive adjective and a noun.

7 Reference

This is my coat. = This is mine.

Phrasal verbs

Some verbs in English have two or three parts, usually a verb and a preposition. These verbs are very common. The phrasal verbs in Unit 7 are: look at, give back, hand in, put together and pick up.

Other phrasal verbs in Units 1-6 of Total English Elementary are: get up (Unit 2, Lead-in) and look after (Unit 6, Lesson 1).

Ordinal numbers

Use these numbers with nouns and when we talk

About dates.

My first child was a boy.

The third of September/September the third.

We can write dates in different ways.

September 3rd September September 3rd


 


Subject pronoun Possessive adjectives Possessive pronouns
/ my mine
he his his
she her hers
it its its
we our ours
you your yours
they their theirs
That book is his.

(See also page 13) That book is John's (book). That book is for John. That book belongs to John.

% first   eighteenth
  second   nineteenth
  third   twentieth
  fourth   twenty-first
  fifth   twenty-second
  sixth   twenty-third
  seventh   twenty-fourth
  eighth   thirtieth
  ninth   thirty-first
  tenth   fortieth
  eleventh   fiftieth
  twelfth   sixtieth
  thirteenth   seventieth
  fourteenth   eightieth
  fifteenth   ninetieth
  sixteenth   one hundredth
  seventeenth    

 


Past Simple: irregular verbs

(See also page 63)

Many common verbs in English have an irregular past form, i.e. they do not end in -ed in the past. have had do -> did go -> went make -> made I gave my mother some flowers last week. There are no general rules for the formation of the Past Simple of irregular verbs. See page 149 for a list of irregular Past Simple forms.

These verbs are irregular only in the affirmative. They form the negative and questions with did and the infinitive, like regular verbs. He went to Australia on holiday last year. He didn't go to Australia on holiday last year. Did he go to Australia on holiday last year?

We often write ordinal numbers like this, first = 1st second = 2nd third = 3rd fourth fifth «5th, etc.

Key vocabulary


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