Monday, February 10, 2014

The Writing Project

As I mentioned in class, we are starting our common writing project. So, here we go! Thanks so much for your collaboration :-)

TASK: Building up a story by adding a paragraph, sentence, even a word. You can contribute as many times as you want, as long as you follow others' threads. Make sure you keep the writing style, but of course feel free to let your imagination and inspiration grow. Our deadline to "close" the story will be March 1st. At the end of it we'll all decide the most suitable title for it. So, join the project and happy writing!






“It was a bright cold day in April, and the clocks were striking thirteen.” — George Orwell, 1984

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

Zero, 1st, 2nd and 3rd CONDITIONALS

The English Conditional

There are a number of structures in English that are called the conditionals which are used to talk about possible or imaginary situations. A "Condition" is a "situation or circumstance".
For example: If a certain condition is true, then a particular result happens.
There are four basic conditionals that we use in English.
There are some more conditionals formed by mixing some of these four. To learn more about these, see our glossary entry: English Conditionals.

Structure of Conditional Sentences

The structure of the conditionals is straightforward. There are two basic possibilities in terms of order in the sentence:
IFConditionResult
Ifit rains,we will get wet
or like this:
ResultIFCondition
We will get wetifit rains.
Notice that we only use a comma in the first example.

Conditionals: Time and Probability Table


ProbabilityConditionalExampleTime
Certainzero conditionalIf you heat water to 100 degrees celsius, it boilsany time
Likelyfirst conditionalIf it rains, I will stay in.future
Unlikelysecond conditionalIf I won the lottery, I would retire.future
Impossiblesecond conditionalIf I had the money, I would lend it to youpresent
Impossiblethird conditionalIf I had seen him, I would have given him the message.past

Read more at http://www.usingenglish.com/articles/english-conditionals-an-introduction.html#CA13WH3LRUlAxu5H.99