Dolphins are interactive graded readers specially designed to make developing language skills fun for younger learners. Full-colour illustrations and cross-curricular content stimulate students' interest and maintain their attention, while carefully graded English introduces them to new language points in an entertaining context.
By explaining grammatical rules that make up the English language, this book helps the reader in understanding the correct use of various parts of a sentence to avoid errors and in increasing his/her vocabulary and comprehension skills.
This book grasps the details of English grammar and explains why each rule is significant, teaches the correct usage of the same and also cites examples by using the rule in sentences. The book covers the topics of Nouns, Pronouns, Adjectives, Verbs, Adverbs, Tenses, Vowels, Synonyms, Antonyms, Idioms & Phrases and more. At the end of each topic it tests the readers with little exercises.
Adverbs in English Adverbs in English. Theory, tasks, key. Do the tasks and check your answers. The file contains 32 sentences in which one must choose between adverb and adjective.
Przysłówek w języku angielskim. Teoria, ćwiczenia, klucz. Plik zawiera 32 zdania w których należy wybrać między przysłówkiem a przymiotnikiem.
Children love stories. Bring the magic of good storytelling into your classroom with Classic Tales, and they’ll love their English lessons too. This new edition of the award-winning series uses traditional tales to bring English to life through more than 30 beautifully illustrated stories – now with accompanying:
Millions of people around the world communicate better thanks to Mignon Fogarty, aka Grammar Girl, whose top-rated weekly grammar podcast has been downloaded more than 40 million times. Now she's turning her attention to solving your worst problems—one troublesome word at a time. Are you feeling "all right" or "alright"? Does "biweekly" mean twice a week or every two weeks? Do you run a gauntlet or a gantlet? Is a pair of twins four people or two? The English language is always changing, and that means we are left with words and phrases that are only sort of wrong (or worse, have different definitions depending on where you look them up.