Present Simple
- Form: Subject + base form of verb (+ s/es for 3rd person singular)
- Usage: 
  - Habits and routines: I walk to work every day.
  - Permanent situations: She lives in London.
  - General truths: Water boils at 100°C.
- Time markers: always, usually, often, sometimes, rarely, never, every day/week/month
Present Continuous
- Form: Subject + am/is/are + verb-ing
- Usage: 
  - Actions happening now: I am writing an email.
  - Temporary situations: She is staying with her parents until she finds an apartment.
  - Future arrangements: We are meeting Tom tomorrow.
- Time markers: now, at the moment, currently, these days
Present Perfect
- Form: Subject + have/has + past participle
- Usage: 
  - Experiences: I have visited Paris twice.
  - Unfinished actions (with 'since/for'): She has lived here for ten years.
  - Recent actions with present relevance: I have lost my keys.
- Time markers: just, already, yet, ever, never, since, for
Present Perfect Continuous
- Form: Subject + have/has been + verb-ing
- Usage: 
  - Actions that started in the past and continue to the present: I have been learning English for five years.
  - Recent continuous activities: She has been working all day.
- Time markers: for, since, lately, recently
Past Simple
- Form: Subject + past form of verb
- Usage: 
  - Completed actions in the past: I visited Rome last summer.
  - Series of completed actions: She came home, had dinner and went to bed.
- Time markers: yesterday, last week/month/year, ago, in 2010
Past Continuous
- Form: Subject + was/were + verb-ing
- Usage: 
  - Actions in progress at a specific time in the past: At 8 pm, I was watching TV.
  - Background actions: While I was cooking, the phone rang.
- Time markers: at that time, at this time yesterday, while, when
Past Perfect
- Form: Subject + had + past participle
- Usage: 
  - Actions completed before another past action: When I arrived, the train had already left.
- Time markers: before, after, by the time, already, just
Past Perfect Continuous
- Form: Subject + had been + verb-ing
- Usage: 
  - Actions that continued up to a specific moment in the past: She had been working for three hours when I called.
- Time markers: for, since, before
Future Simple (will)
- Form: Subject + will + base form of verb
- Usage: 
  - Predictions: I think it will rain tomorrow.
  - Spontaneous decisions: I'll help you with that.
  - Promises: I will call you later.
- Time markers: tomorrow, next week/month/year, in the future
Going to
- Form: Subject + am/is/are going to + base form of verb
- Usage: 
  - Plans and intentions: I'm going to study medicine.
  - Predictions based on evidence: Look at those clouds. It's going to rain.
- Time markers: tomorrow, next week, soon
Future Continuous
- Form: Subject + will be + verb-ing
- Usage: 
  - Actions in progress at a specific time in the future: This time tomorrow, I'll be flying to Paris.
- Time markers: at this time tomorrow, this time next week
Future Perfect
- Form: Subject + will have + past participle
- Usage: 
  - Actions that will be completed before a specific time in the future: By next year, I will have graduated.
- Time markers: by, by the time, before
Can/Could
- Ability: I can swim. / I could swim when I was younger.
- Permission: Can I use your phone?
- Possibility: It could rain later.
May/Might
- Permission (formal): May I come in?
- Possibility: She might be at home.
Must/Have to
- Obligation: You must finish this today. / I have to go now.
- Prohibition: You must not touch that.
- Logical deduction: He must be tired after that long journey.
Should/Ought to
- Advice: You should exercise regularly.
- Expectation: They should arrive by 6 pm.
Form: Subject + be (in appropriate tense) + past participle
Examples:
- Present Simple: The house is cleaned every week.
- Past Simple: The window was broken yesterday.
- Present Perfect: The report has been finished.
- Future: The project will be completed next month.
When to use:
- When the action is more important than who did it
- When we don't know who did the action
- When it's obvious who did the action
Zero Conditional
- Form: If + present simple, present simple
- Usage: General truths
- Example: If you heat water to 100°C, it boils.
First Conditional
- Form: If + present simple, will + base form
- Usage: Possible future situations
- Example: If it rains tomorrow, we will stay at home.
Second Conditional
- Form: If + past simple, would + base form
- Usage: Hypothetical present/future situations
- Example: If I had more money, I would buy a new car.
Third Conditional
- Form: If + past perfect, would have + past participle
- Usage: Hypothetical past situations
- Example: If I had studied harder, I would have passed the exam.
Direct Speech: "I am happy," she said.
Reported Speech: She said (that) she was happy.
Main changes:
- Tenses shift back (present → past, past → past perfect)
- Pronouns change according to context
- Time expressions change (today → that day, tomorrow → the next day)
Indefinite Article (a/an)
- Used with singular countable nouns mentioned for the first time
- Used to talk about one of many: I need a pen.
- Used with professions: She is a doctor.
Definite Article (the)
- Used when talking about something specific: The car outside is mine.
- Used with unique things: The sun, the moon
- Used with superlatives: The best, the most
Zero Article (no article)
- Used with plural or uncountable nouns when talking generally: I like music.
- Used with countries, cities, streets: France, London, Oxford Street
- Used with meals, sports, languages: breakfast, football, English
Time Prepositions
- at: specific times (at 3 o'clock, at noon)
- in: months, years, seasons, parts of the day (in June, in 2023, in summer, in the morning)
- on: days, dates (on Monday, on July 4th)
Place Prepositions
- at: specific places/events (at home, at the station, at a concert)
- in: enclosed spaces, cities, countries (in a box, in London, in France)
- on: surfaces, public transport (on the table, on the bus)
Coordinating Conjunctions (FANBOYS)
- For, And, Nor, But, Or, Yet, So
Subordinating Conjunctions
- Time: when, while, before, after, until, since
- Cause/Effect: because, since, as, so that
- Condition: if, unless, provided that
- Contrast: although, though, even though, whereas
Defining Relative Clauses (essential information)
- who/that: for people
- which/that: for things
- whose: for possession
- where: for places
- when: for times
Example: The woman who called yesterday is my teacher.
Non-defining Relative Clauses (additional information, with commas)
- who: for people
- which: for things
- whose: for possession
Example: My brother, who lives in Spain, is visiting next week.
Gerunds (verb + -ing)
- Used as subjects: Swimming is good exercise.
- After certain verbs: enjoy, avoid, consider, finish, practice
- After prepositions: I'm interested in learning English.
Infinitives (to + base form)
- Used to express purpose: I went to the store to buy milk.
- After certain verbs: want, hope, decide, plan, agree
- After adjectives: It's difficult to learn a language.
Verbs followed by either gerund or infinitive (sometimes with a change in meaning)
- remember, forget, stop, try, regret
Phrasal verbs consist of a verb + particle(s) and often have meanings that cannot be guessed from their individual parts.
Examples:
- look up: search for information
- give up: stop trying
- get along with: have a good relationship with
- run out of: have no more of something
- put off: postpone
Folosește Homiwork ca o aplicație obișnuită. E convenabil!
Adaugă la Ecranul PrincipalFolosește Homiwork ca o aplicație obișnuită. E convenabil!. Deschide meniul Safari și apasă 'Adaugă la Ecranul Principal'.
    
                Această funcție este doar pentru utilizatorii Prime
Soluții AI de înaltă calitate, cu explicații detaliate și vizualizări, sunt disponibile exclusiv pentru utilizatorii Prime.
    Începând să utilizezi serviciul, accepți: Termeni și condiții, Politica de confidențialitate, Politica de returnare