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Unit 3 Places. Lessons 3b and 3 C

This document contains information about grammar lessons 3b and 3c from a Unit 3 on Places. It includes examples of verbs in the present simple tense and how auxiliaries are used without inflecting the main verb. There are also questions about languages, including how many there are in the world, what a mother language and official language are, where Spanish is spoken, and examples of ordinal numbers.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
187 views

Unit 3 Places. Lessons 3b and 3 C

This document contains information about grammar lessons 3b and 3c from a Unit 3 on Places. It includes examples of verbs in the present simple tense and how auxiliaries are used without inflecting the main verb. There are also questions about languages, including how many there are in the world, what a mother language and official language are, where Spanish is spoken, and examples of ordinal numbers.

Uploaded by

Angel CT
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Unit 3 Places.

lessons 3b and 3 c

ANGEL CAMPOS TORRES


ENGLISH BENEMERITA UNIVERSIDAD AUTONOMA DE PUEBLA
4 3 2
6 5 1
7
studies
haved
nothing
Gets up
nothing
starthing What does study she?
finished
Where does she work
What time she get up does
Work shw does when start

Are you from


What do you study
Does work from office
Where are you doing
Do you speak

4.2 When an auxiliary verb (including modals) is


4.1 We have already seen that we use the present simple to describe things that used, the main verb is not inflected (no s or ed
we do on a regular basis. With he, she and it almost always has a simple -s at the ending), meaning that either the base form or past
end of the verb. Some verbs require -es, such as to go or to do and in others the participle is used.
way we write it changes a little bit, for example: go becomes goes, buy en buys,
study en studies
7.000 languages in the World Second language
Mother Language
Oficial language
Latín america Mother Language
Yes
dialects Spanish speaker
comunication Second language
500

In mathematics, an
ordinal is a number
that denotes the
position of an element
belonging to an
ordered sequence. For
example, in the
sequence a b c d,
element a is the first, b M
the second, c the third M
1st 2nd 4th
23rd 33th
61st 71st 81st s

Spanish
Only Spanish

English, because it is
the universal language

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