VERBS
and TENSES: function
- Understanding the tenses matrix:
a) simple versus continuous (progressive) aspects - FOCUS
b) referenced versus perfect aspects - PERSPECTIVE - Profile overview of perfect tenses usage
- TWO-PAGE MAP SHOWING THE SYSTEMIC RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN THE TENSES (including modality) This is an ESSENTIAL TOOL
- Visual side-by-side ready reference comparisons of statement versus questions forms, active versus passive etc. (ESSENTIAL TOOL)
- Tenses discrimination model (ESSENTIAL TOOL)
- Practice exercises using the tenses discrimination model (with key)
- Overview of modal usage: core concepts underlying the three notional groups:
1) will, would;
2) can, may, could, might;
3) must, shall, should, ought to, needn’t . (ESSENTIAL TOOL)
- BE ABLE (to) and HAVE (to) – underpinning modality
- Will as a lexical verb
- Guide to modal discrimination
- Practice exercises using the guide to modals discrimination (with key)
- Summary overview of functions associated with modals
- Direct closed questions; practice exercises (including key)
- Direct open questions (subject and object); practice exercises (including key)
- Focus question words
- Indirect (and reported) speech, including statements and questions; practice exercises (including key)
- Comparison between Germanic and Latinate expressions of modality in English
- Ways of expressing the future (OVERVIEW using the TWO-PAGE MAP)
- Time links in relation to the future
- ‘Defective’ usage – USED to and BE GOING to
- Reflexive usage in English
- ‘DISTANCING’ – the ‘backward’ and ‘downward’ shift, using the TWO-PAGE MAP to express ‘FACT’ and ‘NOT-FACT’ (hypothesis, wishes and conditionals) - and ‘social distancing’
- Using the TWO-PAGE MAP as a paint palette to communicate more subtle and nuanced perspective (including ‘past perfect’ usage)
- Using the system to understand GERUND and INFINITIVE distinction
- PASSIVE-INFINITIVE reporting
- SUBJUNCTIVE usage
- DIPLOMATIC English - drawing on the ‘backward’ and ‘downward’ shift, modality and indirectness, and ‘cushions’ (lexical softeners)
- The multifunctional uses of present and past participles
- Elliptical usage
- Clarification of ‘USE’, USED to, and BE USED to
- Single-page overview of the multifunctional uses of the different parts of the verb