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Teach English in Qishi Zhen - Jieyang Shi

Do you want to be TEFL or TESOL-certified and teach in Qishi Zhen? Are you interested in teaching English in Jieyang Shi? Check out ITTT’s online and in-class courses, Become certified to Teach English as a Foreign Language and start teaching English ONLINE or abroad! ITTT offers a wide variety of Online TEFL Courses and a great number of opportunities for English Teachers and for Teachers of English as a Second Language.

Modal Auxillary Verbs are: can, could, may, might, sha;;, should, will, would, must, have to, have got to, need to, needn't and ought to. They are used before other verbsto add meaning to the main verb. Modals are used to express a number of different ideas, such as: ibligations, possibility/probability, permissions/prohibition, ability and advice. Modal verbs are used to express differeing degrees of formality such as using may or can in sentence. These verbs are followed by a verb in its base form as this applies to both present and future meanings. There are two voices used in English passive and active. With the passive voice, the object of an active verb becomes the subject of the passive verb. In the active voice, the focus is on the agent while in the passive voice the focus is on the subject. Only transitve verbs are used in the passive. Passive verbs are formed by using auxillary verb 'be' plus a past participle. Relative clause is a dependent clause that modifies noun. It decribes,identifies, or gives further information about a noun. It can also be referred to as an adjective clause. This type of clause is introduced by a relative pronoun: who, which, that etc. There are two types of relative clauses defining and non-defining- Defining relative clause referes to information given in a sentence that is essential to the meaning of the sentence. On the other hand, the information given in a non-defining relative clause is not essential to the meaning of the sentence. Phrasal verbs or multi-word verbs, consist of a verb plus one or two particles. A particle may be a preposition or an adverb, or an adverb plus a preposition.There are three types of phrasal verbs: Intransitive- This verb cannot be followed by a direct object. Transitive Separable-Here an object pronoun can only come between the verb and the particle. Transitive separable- with this type of phrasal verb, the object phrase or object pronoun both come after the particle.
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