The Grammar Practice Worksheets for Life have been specially selected from Practical Grammar, a series of grammar books for students of English. Each level of Practical Grammar has 100 units. Each unit examines a particular area of grammar. The grammar is set in short, everyday conversations or texts, showing the language in natural situations. You can read about the form, meaning and use of the language on the first page, before practising it in a variety of activity types on the second page. We have selected units that cover the grammar taught in Life to provide extra self-study materials and practice activities to support your learning.
The Grammar Practice Worksheets for Life have been specially selected from Practical Grammar, a series of grammar books for students of English. Each level of Practical Grammar has 100 units. Each unit examines a particular area of grammar. The grammar is set in short, everyday conversations or texts, showing the language in natural situations. You can read about the form, meaning and use of the language on the first page, before practising it in a variety of activity types on the second page. We have selected units that cover the grammar taught in Life to provide extra self-study materials and practice activities to support your learning.
Activities for the Language Classroom contains over 100 activities to help your students become better English users. We have organised these activities into two main sections: Skills-focused Activities, which looks at ways to improve students' reading, listening, writing and speaking. There are sub-sections with activities you can do before and after these tasks.
This book is an attempt to bring together traditional philological records and knowledge of the ways and means of schwa loss and reexamine them in relation to the entire language system.
The book takes a new look at the typological change of English from a synthetic towards an analytic language, focusing on the lexical domain. It presents empirical data that document a considerable decline in the use of synthetic structures in the history of English noun formation and relates them to other typological changes in English morphology, showing the global structural reorganization of the language.