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Cabbage Green beans Turnips Kiwi fruit Fig Apple Orange Peas Carrot Pineapple Strawberries Cherries Mango Lemon 2. Choose the right words to fill each space. a) How .. (much/ many/ a lot of/ few) children do Mr and Mrs Smith have? b) We dont have (much/ many/ no/ some)fruit. c) Do we need.( a lot/ many of/ any/ a little) mushrooms? d) (much/ any/ many/ no) people dont like meat; they are vegetarians.
3. Fill in columns A and B with countable uncountable nouns from the box. Egg sausage sugar Pizza rice flour jam toast oil cheese bread apple Milk cake
a. Countable .....
b. Uncountable ..
How many? Voc pode traduzir "How many" em Portugus como "Quantos" ou "Quantas". Esta expresso sempre usada quando queremos perguntar uma quantidade que pode ser representada com um nmero (1, 2, 3, etc...).
How much? Por sua vez, "How much", deve ser traduzido em Portugus como "Quanto" ou "Quanta". Esta questo sempre utilizada quando a quantidade no pode ser medida exactamente ou representada por um nmero. Voc pode responder por exemplo com: "no muito" ou "trs colheres de ch".
Preencha com MUCH ou MANY: ..Children Women Information ..Bread ..Policemen .Cheese .Pieces of Bread Slices of chesse ..Money Dollars
Countable Nouns
Countable nouns are easy to recognize. They are things that we can count. For example: "pen". We can count pens. We can have one, two, three or more pens. Here are some more countable nouns:
coin, note, dollar cup, plate, fork table, chair, suitcase, bag
Uncountable Nouns
Uncountable nouns are substances, concepts etc that we cannot divide into separate elements. We cannot "count" them. For example, we cannot count "milk". We can count "bottles of milk" or "litres of milk", but we cannot count "milk" itself. Here are some more uncountable nouns:
music, art, love, happiness advice, information, news furniture, luggage rice, sugar, butter, water electricity, gas, power money, currency
We usually treat uncountable nouns as singular. We use a singular verb. For example:
IF CLAUSES TIPE I
Form
Example: If I __ (to go) to the cinema, I ________ (to watch) an interesting film.
(to pass) the exams. (to walk) to the town. (to see) the doctor. (to be) very happy. (to fly) to New York. (to visit) the museums.
(to have) a temperature, he (to come), I (to earn) a lot of money, she (to travel) to London, we
1 2 3
If If
hard,
you he you
the
exam. ill.
(STUDY STOP
/ / /
smoking, you if
(NOT
them.
(HELP
an apple every day, you in the fridge, you TV tonight if they my advice, you me some money, I the train, you no, I
some cold drinks. (LOOK / FIND) out. (WATCH / NOT GO) in big trouble. (NOT TAKE / BE) you back tomorrow. (GIVE / PAY) to wait an hour for the next. (MISS / HAVE)
if + Simple Past, main clause with Conditional I (= would + Infinitive) Example: If I found her address, I would send her an invitation. The main clause can also be at the beginning of the sentence. In this case, don't use a comma. Example: I would send her an invitation if I found her address. Example: If I had a lot of money, I wouldnt stay here