GRAMMAR IN USE
The Present
Present simple
To talk about:
Things that is always true
Things in general
Permanent situations or habits
I / You / We / They Verb
He / She / It Verb -s/-es
I live in Dubai
one plus one is tow
She plays tennis once a week
Present continuous
To talk about:
Activities that are in progress at the moment
Unfinished actions
Temporary situations or habits
I Am
He / She / It Is Verb-ing
You / We / They Are
I am working now
I m living in Dubai from 2 years
He is eating a lot these days
Present perfect simple
To talk about:
Completed action that still have an effect on the present moment
New information or recent events
Life experience
I / You / We / They Have PP verb
He / She / It Has PP verb
I’ve lost me keys
The queen has given a speech
I’ve been to Tokyo
Present perfect continuous
To talk about:
Finished or unfinished activities that still have an effect on the present moment
I / You / We / They Have Been Verb -ing
He / She / It Has Been Verb -ing
I’ve been working all day, that is why I feel tired
I’ve been living in Dubai for 3 years
GRAMMAR IN USE
The Past
Past simple
To talk about:
Past action that happened at a specific time in the past
Actions in stories
I / You / We / They Verb -ed
He / She / It Verb -ed
I went to the movies yesterday
He sat down and ordered a coffee
Leonardo painted the Mona Lisa
Past continuous
To talk about:
Activities that were in progress at a specific time in the past
Story background
Past habits
I / You / We / They Was Verb -ing
He / She / It were Verb -ing
I was walking to the station when I met john
The birds were singing and the sun was shining, Amy sat down in the garden
She was constantly singing
Past perfect
To talk about an action that happened further back in the past before another action happened in the past.
I / You / We / They Had PP verb
He / She / It Had PP verb
Past perfect continuous
To talk about an activity that happened further back in the past before another action happened in the past.
I / You / We / They Had Been Verb -ing
He / She / It Had Been Verb -ing
”have” is the same meaning as “have got”, we can use either.
I have a cold, I’ve got a cold
“used to” is used to talk about something I did often in the past, but not anymore.
I used to do this but not anymore, or this used to be a cinema
The Future
Present tenses for the future
GRAMMAR IN USE
To talk about things that is already decided and arranged.
“I am doing”: I’ve already decided and arrange to do it
“I do”: usually to talk about timetables & scheduled programs
*always used with any future term (tomorrow, next week, this evening, tonight, ……)
Am going to
To talk about things that is already decided, time may or may not fixed and arranged.
I Am
He / She / It Is Going to
You / We / They Are
Was going to
To talk about thangs that was going to happen, but it didn’t.
I / You / We / They Was Going to
He / She / It were Going to
Will
To talk about things that have just decided, it’s like an announcing the decision.
To talk about what we think, believe, or know
I / You / We / They Will
He / She / It Will
Will is often used with:
I think, probably, I’m sure, I wonder
Future continuous
To talk about an activity that will be in progress at a specific time in the future.
I / You / We / They Will be Verb -ing
He / She / It Will be Verb -ing
More about the future
We normally use the present tense to talk about the future after these words:
If, When, after, until, till, as soon as
I’ll call you when I arrive
Modal Verbs
1- Can
To say something is possible, allowed, or the ability to do something.
GRAMMAR IN USE
Can Verb
“be able to” or “managed to” can be used when someone succeeded to do something in a specific situation.
I (was able to / managed to) escape the fire
For the past we use “Could”
2- Could
Although “Could” is the past of “Can”, we can use could by itself.
To talk about actions that is not realistic
I could sleep for a week
To talk about possible things but not sure about it
Maybe, I could stay with my friend when travel
Could Verb
For the past we use “could have”
3- Must
To say that we believe that something is certain
You’ve been travelling all day. You must be tired
Verb
Must be + verb -ing
be + adjective
For the past we use “must have”
PP Verb
Must have been + verb -ing
been + adjective
Must have irregular negative form, for negative forms we use “Can’t” & “Can’t have”
You’ve just ate lunch. You can’t be hungry
4- May, Might
To say that something is one of the possibilities, it is used instead of “perhaps”
Verb
GRAMMAR IN USE
May / Might be + verb -ing
be + adjective
* may & might are the same meaning, we can use either except when we are talking about something that is not real.
If they paid me better, I might work harder
For the past we use “may have, might have”
PP Verb
May have / Might have been + verb -ing
been + adjective
5- Have to
To say that something is necessary
Has to / Have to Verb
We can use “will, am going to, may, might” before “have to”
“Must” can be used instead of “have to”
For the past we use had to
6- Should
To say that it is the right thing to do.
Verb
Should be + verb -ing
be + adjective
Usually we use should with “ I think, I believe, in my opinion ….”
Should is not strong as “must & have to”
We can use should after “insist
For the past we use “should have”
PP Verb
Should have been + verb -ing
been + adjective
7- Would
To talk about something that is not real, when we imagine an action or situation.
Verb
GRAMMAR IN USE
Would be + verb -ing
be + adjective
For the past we use would have
PP Verb
Would have been + verb -ing
been + adjective
We often use “would” with “if”
8- Requests, permissions, offers, and invitations
Asking people to do things we use “Can, Could”
Can you do me a favour?
Asking for a thing we use “Can, Could”
Can I have the menu, please?
Asking to do things “Can, Could, May, do you mind, is it alright”
Can/May I ask you a question?
Offering to do something “Can, May”
Can I help you?
To offer or to invite “Would you like”
Would you like some tea?
9- If
To talk about something that will not happen, or expected to not happen we use If + past
If we went by bus, it would be cheaper
Verb -ed
If + past Would
Could/Might
For the past we use If + Past participle
PP Verb
If + had + PP verb Would have
GRAMMAR IN USE
Could have/Might have
10- Wish & Hope
To wish somebody something “luck / all the best / success”
I wish you all the best
To regret something, we use wish + past
I wish I knew how to solve the problem
To regret about something that happened before, we use wish + had + PP verb
I wish I had said it
We use “hope” to wish something happens
I hope you feel better soon
Passive
Present simple
Am / is / are PP Verb
GRAMMAR IN USE
I am invited to the party
Past simple
Was / Were PP Verb
I was invited to the party
Present continuous
Am / is / are being PP verb
The room is being cleaned at the moment
Past continuous
Was / were being PP verb
The room was being cleaned when we arrived
Present perfect
Has / Have Been PP verb
The room looks nice, it has been cleaned
Past perfect
Had Been PP verb
The room looked nice; it had been cleaned
Future
Will / going to Be PP verb
This room will be cleaned
Modals
Modal Be PP verb
This room must be cleaned
Reported speech
In general, for reported speech, all tenses are going one step back except:
Past simple changes to past perfect or it can remain the same
Present stays the same for ongoing situations and things that is always true.
Reporting verbs to be used:
Said that, told, admitted, explained, added, ordered, asked, encouraged…..”
Reporting verb That (optional) Verb
Questions
Questions starts with a question verb
Verb questions like (Be, Do, auxiliary verbs)
GRAMMAR IN USE
Question verb Subject Rest of sentence
Are you Canadian?
Was I wrong?
Could you tell me about it?
Did you know?
Questions start with question words
There are nine questions words in English (What, Why, where, when, How, Who, Which, Whom, Whose)
Question word Question verb Subject Rest of sentence
What is your name?
Where are you from?
Why did you go?
Who should I call?
Negative questions to show surprise
Why don’t we go out tonight?
Didn’t you hear the doorbell?
Reported questions
Reporting questions like (he asked me…, do you know…, please tell me…, I don’t know why…)
Reporting questions Question word Subject verb Rest of sentence
Do you know what time it is?
Can you tell me where I can find it?
He asked me where he has gone?
Questions tags
In general, we use negative questions tags after positive statements and positive question tags after negative statements
Ashley plays the violin, doesn’t she?
You didn’t lock the door, did you?
Verbs
In general, some verbs can only be followed with Verb-ing while other verbs can only be followed by to-verb after it, and
some verbs can be followed with either.
Verbs that followed with “Verb-ing”
GRAMMAR IN USE
Enjoy Mind Suggest Recommend Consider
Admit Stop Finish Avoid Imagine
Deny Risk Fancy Give up Put off
Go on Carry on Keep Keep on
Verbs that followed with “To-verb”
Offer Manage Plan Deserve Agree
Arrange Fail Afford Refuse Hope
Promise Learn Decide Forget Threaten
Tend Dare Seem Pretend Claim
Appear Show Tell Ask Advise
Verbs that followed with “To - subject – verb”
Want Tell Ask Advise Expect
Help Like Prefer Remind Warn
Invite Encourage Persuade Get Force
Teach Allow Enable
Special phrases that followed with verb -ing
There’s no point in What’s the point of It’s no use
It’s no good It’s worth It’s not worth
Have trouble Have difficulty Have a/no problem
Spent time Waste time Go “sports and activities”
prepositions
In general, prepositions is followed by objects or verbs
(to, by, in, at, of, for, about, with, without, before, after, in spite of, instead of, despite)
Preposition + verb -ing
When prepositions are followed with a verb, we use the verb -ing
Preposition Verb -ing
GRAMMAR IN USE
I said this without thinking
I can improve my English by reading more
*We can add somebody after the preposition and still use verb -ing
*We can use either “verb -ing or to verb” with “after & before”
Preposition “To”
Verb -ing & Verb
To + verb
It is used after specific verbs or to talk about the purpose of something
I decided to travel
I called the restaurant to reserve a table
To + Verb -ing
When “to” is used as a preposition, we use “to + verb -ing”
I am looking forward to hearing from you
I prefer driving to travelling
“Am used to doing” & “Used to do”
am used to doing
It is used to talk about something that is not new or strange for me and comfortable with.
I am used to living alone
used to do
It is used to talk about something I did often in the past, but not anymore.
I used to do this but not anymore, or this used to be a cinema
Adjective + to
We can use adjective + to in different structures
Adjective + to + verb
He is hard to understand
Adjective + noun + to + verb
This is a difficult question to answer
Adjective + of + subject + to + verb
It was nice of you to pick me
The next, the last, the first, the second ……
We can use “ to verb” after ranking words
I was the first to arrive
The train is the last to departure
Afraid to & Afraid of
Afraid to do something
I am afraid to walk alone in the night
GRAMMAR IN USE
Afraid of something happening to me
I am afraid of failing
Interested to & interested in
Interested to in general
I am interested to hear that Ashley is going to Canada
Interesting in doing something
I am interested in joining the club
Sorry to & sorry for
Sorry to is to regret something happen
I am sorry to hear that
Sorry for is to apologize
I am sorry for shouting at you
To + verb & for + noun
To + verb to do something
We stopped to get petrol
For + noun for something needed
We stopped for petrol
To & So / So that
We use so or so that with modals
She is learning English so that she can go to Canada
She is learning English so she can go to Canada
Nouns
Countable Vs. Uncountable
Countable nouns Uncountable nouns
“a, an, the” must be used with singulars Can’t use any determiners with singulars
Numbers can be used Numbers can’t be used
Some & any can be used Some and any can be used
Many & few is used Much & little is used
GRAMMAR IN USE
Determiners
Pronouns
Relative clauses
Adjectives
Comparatives
Superlative