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原帖由 hog.wash 於 10-11-20 00:17 發表
Answers:
1.a. fall
1.b. reading
1.c. either form will do
Primary school teachers normally tell the students the bare infinitive and the –ing form are interchangeable. In fact they seldom are. ...
Some follow up explanation on Q2
The following is copied from BBC Learning English website:
"English speakers often use the present continuous tense (subject + 'be' = verb-ing) to talk about future arrangements.
I'm spending Christmas and New Year with my Mum and Dad.
We're meeting Susan at 3 o'clock tomorrow afternoon."
For readers who are interested to know more, they can go to http://www.bbc.co.uk/worldservice/learningenglish/flatmates/episode73/languagepoint.shtml
To use simple future tense in the sentence like "when will we watch it?" would have been acceptable if the context of the sentence is not that the tickets have been bought but that they are still discussing whether or not to see the film and no arrangement has been made yet.
Follow up on Q3
That is how I taught my daughters. The error in Question 3 was picked up from their writing. After I told them what went wrong, I asked them a few days later to translate for me sentences like 我想明天不會下雨. This way they would remember. Repetition is the key. Same for mathematics. Before exams I only asked them to redo those questions they made a mistake originally. If they still got it wrong, I would then make up some similar questions with different numbers plugged in. After a while, they could do it themselves in senior forms. That is also how they prepared for the HKCEE. Keep a record of mistakes when they first attempted the past paper questions, then only redo those wrong ones several times. But this approach is more suitable for science students, particularly for multiple choice papers.
[ 本帖最後由 hog.wash 於 10-11-21 18:57 編輯 ] |
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