Selasa, 24 Januari 2012

Appointment

Appointmen tell about agree ment for meeting it is good to make an appointmen before you  met or people

     Making an appointmen :
  • Can I come and see you?
  • I'll be there
  • I want to make an apponitment to see
     Accepting an appointment :
  • Be there on time
  • It's a deal
  • I'll wait for you
     Canceling an appointment :
  • I'm sorry...... I'm very busy
  • I'm terrible sorry...... I have to put off my appointmen
Changing an appointmen :
  • Do you have another time this morning
  • Well, I must be off now...... I'll talk to later
  • What about...... (Tuesday at 03.00 p.m)

PREPOSITIONAL PHRASES

Prepositional phrases are groups of words that have a preposition and an object of the preposition. The whole phrase will always act as either an adjective or an adverb.

A preposition will always start the phrase, and an object of the preposition will always end it. An object of the preposition is a noun or pronoun that follows the preposition.


preposition + noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause
preposition + modifier(s) + noun, pronoun, gerund, or clause

- Here are some examples:

At home
At=preposition; home=noun

In time
In = preposition; time = noun.

             From Richie   
 From = preposition; Richie = noun.

- Most prepositional phrases are longer, like these:


From my grandmother
From = preposition; my = modifier; grandmother = noun.

Under the warm blanket
Under = preposition; the, warm = modifiers; blanket = noun.

A prepositional phrase will function as an adjective or adverb. As an adjective, the prepositional phrase will answer the question Which one?

Read these examples:

The book on the bathroom floor is swollen from shower steam.
Which book? The one on the bathroom floor!

The sweet potatoes in the vegetable bin are green with mold.
Which sweet potatoes? The ones forgotten in the vegetable bin!


As an adverb, a prepositional phrase will answer questions such as How? When? or Where?

Freddy is stiff from yesterday's long football practice.
How did Freddy get stiff? From yesterday's long football practice!

Before class, Josh begged his friends for a pencil.
When did Josh do his begging? Before class!




Preposition List

A

aboard, about, above, across, after, against, ahead of, along, amid, 

amidst, among, around, as, as far as, as of, aside from, at, athwart, atop

B

barring, because of, before, behind, below, beneath, beside, besides, 

between, beyond, but, by, by means of

C

circa, concerning

D

despite, down, during

E

except, except for, excluding

F

far from, following, for, from

I

in, in accordance with, in addition to, in case of, in front of, in lieu of, 

in place of, in spite of, including, inside, instead of, into

L

like

M

minus

N

near, next to

O

of, off, on, on account of, on behalf of, on top of, onto, opposite, out, 

out of, outside, over

P

past, plus, prior to

R

regarding, regardless of

S

save, since

T

than, through, till, to, toward, towards

U

under, underneath, unlike, until, up, upon

V

versus, via

W

with, with regard to, within, without

PERFECT TENSE

Present Perfect Tense is used for describing a past action’s effect on the present: He has arrived. Now he is here. This holds true for events that have just been secluded as well as for events that have not yet occurred.
Rumusnya Present Perfect Tense:
(+) Subject + have/has + V3
(-) Subject + have/sas Not + V3
(?) Have/has + subject + V3

Example:
(+) She has gone (Dia baru saja pergi)
(-) She has not gone
(?) Has She gone?

Past Perfect Tense is a kind of tense that is used to describe an action or an event that started in a certain time in the past and completed or finished till certain time in the past too; or past perfect tense is used to express an action or an event that had happened before the other event or action happened.
Rumusnya Past Perfect Tense:
(+) Subject + had+verb III+cmplement
(-) Subject + had not+ver III+complement
(?) Had + subject +verb III+complement


Example :
(+) We had eaten before they came
(-) They had not eaten before we came
(?) Had they eaten before we came?

INVITATION

Invitation tell about how to invite or ask someone to come a long or to program or activity

    There are two types of invitation

~ Formal Invitation
     Formal Invitation is usually oroginate from institutes, companies and kind of it. Normally forman invitation is written Invitation

~ Informal Invitation
     Informal Invitation is a personal invitation given to a friend, Family, etc. Informal invitation can be written Invitation and verbal Invitation

    How to invite :
•    Shall we ... ?
•    I would like you to ...
    How to accept :
•    All right !
•    I will come
    How to refuse
•    I can't for now because ...
•    I'm kraid ... I can't
    EXAMPLE :

Andy : " Hi, Putri ... can I study with you today?"
Putri  : " Hi, Andy ... I'm really sorry ... I can't I have a problem to finishing to day"
Andy : " Oh I see ... it's okay ... Maybe some times"
Putri  : " But, I'm really sorry. Thanks your kindness to me ..."
Andy : " your welcome"