Business English Grammar B2 Guide
Business English Grammar B2 Guide
This book is designed to revise and consolidate grammar points at the level of
Council of Europe Framework (CEFR) B2, reflecting contemporary international
business for people already working and for students who have not yet worked
in business. It assumes that the basic points have been covered.
The practise material includes a wide range of business topics to reflect both
everyday language use and work language use. Many learners are likely to use
English to learn other subjects during their education and the vocabulary and
topics try to reflect this fact. Some texts contain information which learners
should find interesting or challenging. The intention in general is that language
should have a familiar context and that learners should use it for business
purposes.
The final section at the back of the book offers some extra information for those
students who feel that they need more support. It can be used as a means of
improving their study at home.
                                       2
Contents
Unit 1
                                                                       3
PRESENT SIMPLE
• Use present simple for things that are always true or happen regularly.
• Put the adverbs of frequency before the main verb and after be: We
In the 3rd person singular (he, she, it) we add an -s at the end of the verb, e.g.
                                         4
   •   Interrogative: Do/Does + subject + infinitive verb
SPELLING RULES
Normally, in present simple tense we add -s at the end of the verb in the 3rd
person singular (he, she, it), but there are some special cases:
• If the verb ends in -ss, -x, -ch, -sh or the letter o, we add -es, e.g.
o Kiss → kisses
o Watch → watches
o Crash → crashes
o Go → goes
• If the verb ends in a consonant + -y, we remove the “y” and add -ies, e.g.
o Carry → carries
o Study → studies
EXERCISES
   1- Complete the sentences with the present simple form of the verbs in
      brackets.
                                          5
   c) They _______________ usually _______________ (not have) a big meal in
the evening.
2- Correct the mistakes in the highlighted phrases. Tick ✓ the correct sentences.
   c) Do you recognize the man in that photo? It’s our old maths teacher.
      _________________________________________________
   f) I’m not sure if we’re going skiing this weekend. It’s depending on the
      weather.
      _________________________________________________
                                       6
ATTENTION!
Verb “to be”:
                                   7
PRESENT CONTINUOUS
• Use the present continuous for actions in progress at the time of speaking
EXERCISES
   1- Complete the sentences with the present continuous form of the verbs in
      brackets.
a) Emma _______________ (play) the guitar at this moment, try to call her
later, please.
                                        8
   b) I _______________ (think) about going out tonight. What do you think?
d) They sometimes fly/are flying to Sweden, but usually they are going/go
by boat.
Sometimes, the choice between simple and continuous is part of the attitude of
Some verbs have meaning which refer to states or conditions, and others have
meaning which refer to actions. State verbs are either only used in simple form
                                        9
STATE VERBS NORMALLY IN PRESENT SIMPLE
• Belong, consist of, contain, cost1, depend on, deserve, matter, own,
possess, resemble.
• Seem.
                                   STATE                             ACTION
    Do                  What do you do?                   What are you doing?
    Be, have            This house is over 5 years        He is being very silly.
                        old.
    Imagine,            I imagine you feel the same.      You’re imagining things!
    Suppose, think,
    expect
    Hope, wonder        I hope you haven’t been           We’re hoping to continue the
                        waiting long.                     talks next week.
    Enjoy, like, love   I love going out for long         I’m loving every minute of my
                        walks.                            new job!
    Appear              Your visa appears to be out       Sarah is appearing in Hamlet
                        of date.                          at the Grand Theatre.
    Look                Jim looks ill.                    Helen is looking well.
    See, hear           I see you’ve had your hair        Jane is seeing Harry.
                        cut.
    Feel, see, smell,   The room smells awful!            I’m smelling the flowers!
    taste
    Ache, feel, hurt    My foot hurts.                    My foot is hurting.
    Weight,             This bag weights more than        I’m weighing the parcel
    measure             20 kilos.                         before I post it.
1
 Cost is sometimes used in continuous to describe a process that is still going on.
2
 **Realize, regret and understand are normally used with state meaning in present simple, but
can be used in continuous to show a changing situation, usually with an adverbial which shows
that change is happening.
                                            10
PRESENT PERFECT SIMPLE
• Use the present perfect simple when there is a connection between the
                                           11
PRESENT PERFECT CONTINUOUS
• Use the present perfect continuous with for and since with action verbs.
• Use the present perfect continuous for actions which have been doing
• Showing that something started in the past and has continued up until
Tuesday”, etc. They have been talking for the last hour.
• Showing actions which have just stopped (though the whole action can
be unfinished) and have a result, which we can often see, hear, or feel,
in the present (focus on action). I've been running, so I'm really hot.
                                         12
ATTENTION!
Difference between present perfect and past simple:
• Use the present perfect simple when there is a connection between the
• Use the past simple to ask or talk about finished actions in the past,
EXERCISE
all week.
                                          13
g) For three years, Charles __________________________ (suffer) from
allergies.
                              14
PAST SIMPLE
• Use the past simple for finished past actions: They worked in a bank.
• For past habits and routines, usually with a time expression: Few people
+ Infinitive to help you with word order in questions: Where did you live?
                                         15
   1) Regular verbs are those ones only need to add -ed after the verb to form
the past simple and the past participle form: He listened to music
yesterday.
2) Irregular verbs are those one that has a different form, totally different
for past simple and past participle. We must study them. He went to the
doctor.
ATTENTION!!
Verb “to be”:
EXERCISES
   1- Complete the sentences with the past simple form of the verbs in
      brackets.
                                      16
Present perfect simple or past simple?
• Use present perfect simple for unfinished time and past simple for
finished time.
over a period of time and for describes how long the period is.
EXERCISE
B: I _______________ with them for the first two years but then I
/ be)
                                         17
PAST CONTINUOUS
• Two actions in the past at the same time: They were looking at the
                                        18
OTHER USES OF PAST CONTINUOUS
the past.
EXERCISES
   1- Complete the sentences with the past continuous form of the verbs in
      brackets.
f) Mary _______________ (not go) to the school when the rain started.
                                         19
PAST PERFECT SIMPLE
• Use the past perfect simple when you are talking about the past and
you want to talk about an earlier past action: When they turned on the
EXERCISE
                                         20
        b) It _______________ always _______________ (snow) here before 1978.
c) Dan _______________ (to be) sick for 3 days before he got better.
d) James and Lia _______________ (try) four times before they gave up.
e) My father’s old car _______________ (run) very well before he sold it.
that nervous.
completed at some point in the past: I had been working in the garden
all morning.
                                       21
TIME EXPRESSIONS WITH:
week/night/year, etc.
                                       22
FUTURE SIMPLE: WILL
• For predictions not based on the facts or opinions about the future: I
                                         23
Contractions are used, so: I’ll, you’ll, he’ll, etc.
• Use going to for personal plans and intentions: I’m going to stay in bed
all night.
• When the cause of a possible event is present: Look at the colour of the
• For decisions about the future: I’ve decided I’m going to phone the
police.
meaning.
                                           24
EXERCISE
1- Complete the sentences with the future simple form will or going to.
2050. (reach)
2- Fill the spaces with the correct form of the verb in parentheses in
Saturday.
                                        25
g) John and Kanye, _______________ you _______________ (read) to
                             26
FUTURE CONTINUOUS
STRUCTURE: subject + will be + verb -ing
• Use the future continuous to focus on the process during a future action.
• Events that have already been arranged for a future date: The Rolling
EXERCISE
1- Write the correct form of the future continuous tense using will.
                                        27
         b) Well, I guess we _______________ (to ride) the bus to work next week.
Monday.
this summer.
• It is most often used with a time expression: She will have been in Toledo
                                         28
EXERCISE
1- Fill in the spaces with the correct form of the verb in parentheses in future
perfect simple.
the sale.
b) By the time the treasure hunt begins, Susan _______________ (hide) all
the clues.
arrive.
d) You can touch the walls tomorrow. The paint _______________ (dry) by
then.
London in July.
• Use the future perf. continuous to describe actions that will continue up
until a point in the future: At two o’clock, she’ll have been waiting for five
hours.
                                          29
                 AFFIRMATIVE         NEGATIVE              INTERROGATIVE
 We              Will have        Won’t have been    Will we have been
                 been working     working            working…?
 You             Will have        Won’t have been    Will you have been
                 been working     working            working…?
 They            Will have        Won’t have been    Will they have been
                 been working     working            working…?
ATTENTION!!
There are some other ways to talk about the future without using future verb
tenses.
• Present simple: we can also use the present simple to talk about future
expected.
soon.
arrangements.
month.
                                         30
EXERCISE
1- Fill in the spaces with the correct form of the verb in parentheses in future
perfect continuous.
a) This spring, the twins _______________ (attend) culinary school for two
years.
b) By 2021, our city _______________ (recover) from the hurricane for ten
years.
stopping!
we get up.
                                      31
ADVERBS
adverbs. Adverbs answer: how, when, where, why, or to what extent – how often
or how much.
• Many adverbs end in -ly, but many do not. Generally, if a word can have -
• Not all words ending in -ly are adverbs: friendly, ugly, apply, supply, and
so on.
TYPES OF ADVERBS
                                       32
   •   Adverbs of time ➜ now, today…
EXERCISE
1- Find the adjective in the first sentence and fill the gap with the adverb.
a) Mary is very quiet. She often sneaks out of the house ___quietly___.
each space.
ADJECTIVES
Adjectives are words that describe people, places, and things. They give us extra
seem...
• When we have more than one adjective, the usual order is:
                                       33
EXERCISE
  • Yet, still and already are adverbs we use to add time references to our
     sentences.
  • Still means that something did not happen before now, and for situations
     that continue to the present time (affirmative and negative sentences): I
EXERCISE
                                      34
      e) I’ve _______________ read that book.
FOR
  • We use for to talk about the duration – how long something has been
      happening. For is always used in the present perfect simple or the
present perfect continuous: I have been living in London for two years.
  • We use for with a period of time, such as: seconds, minutes, hours, weeks,
      years, and so on.
  • We also use for with expressions of time, such as: ages, a long time, too
      long, and so on.
SINCE
• We use since to talk about the starting point or the beginning. Since is
• We always use since with a specific point in time, such as: yesterday, last
SUMMARY:
EXERCISE
c) Our boss hasn’t come to the office _______________ three days now.
                                      35
d) My brother has been stronger than me _______________ 3 years.
                             36
CONNECTORS
  TYPE OF                               CONNECTOR
CONNECTOR
                                   37
  TYPE OF                                     CONNECTOR
CONNECTOR
EXERCISE
healthy.
d) We were disappointed because the art gallery was closed and the
e) She was quite nervous, so / despite / however she didn’t do very well.
                                         38
f) He got the job despite / however / because not having much
experience.
                          39
COMPARATIVES & SUPERLATIVES
We change adjectives and adverbs to say that a person, a thing or an action has
more or less of a quality than another. We put more or less before long
                                       40
SUPERLATIVES
We can use adjectives and adverbs to say that people or things and actions
have the most or least of a quality. We put the most or the least before long
forms and add -est to short forms.
ATTENTION!!
    • There are some irregular comparative adjectives / adverbs:
                                        41
            o Anna is my best friend.
o Big→ Bigger
o Hot→ Hotter
o Easy→ Easier
o Happy → Happier
EQUATIVES
Equatives are marked by as…as or not as…as. We use adjectives and adverbs
in equatives to say that a person, thing, or action is similar (or not) to another
in some way.
EXERCISES
c) He got a very good mark on his exam. The exam was _______________
                                        42
   g) I don’t understand this lesson. It is _______________ (difficult) than the
restaurant in town.
                                    43
PREPOSITIONS
Prepositions are words that usually stand in front of a noun, noun phrase or
are single words such as at, from, in, of and on or phrases such as in front of,
next to and out of. We can use prepositions with noun phrases when we
                                       44
               •   PREPOSITIONS OF TIME
                                                       45
              •    PREPOSITIONS OF PLACE (position and direction)
                                                      46
English                                   Usage                              Example
Below     ▪   Lower than something else but above ground                 ▪   The fish is
                                                                             below the
                                                                             surface
Over      ▪   Covered by something else                                  ▪   Put a jacket
          ▪   Meaning more than                                              over your shirt
                                                                         ▪   Over 16 years
          ▪   Getting to the other side (also across)
                                                                             of age
          ▪   Overcoming an obstacle
                                                                         ▪   Walk over the
                                                                             bridge
                                                                         ▪   Climb over the
                                                                             wall
Above     ▪   Higher than something else, but not directly over it       ▪   A path above
                                                                             the lake
Across    ▪   Getting to the other side (also over)                      ▪   Walk across
          ▪   Getting to the other side                                      the bridge
                                                                         ▪   Swim across
                                                                             the lake
Through ▪     Something with limits on top, bottom and the sides         ▪   Drive through
                                                                             the tunnel
To        ▪   Movement to person or building                             ▪   Go to the
          ▪   Movement to a place or country                                 cinema
                                                                         ▪   Go to
          ▪   For bed
                                                                             London /
                                                                             Ireland
                                                                         ▪   Go to bed
Into      ▪   Enter a room / a building                                  ▪   Go into the
                                                                             kitchen / the
                                                                             house
Towards ▪     Movement in the direction of something (but not directly   ▪   Go 5 steps
              to it)                                                         towards the
                                                                             house
Onto      ▪   Movement to the top of something                           ▪   Jump onto the
                                                                             table
From      ▪   In the sense of where from                                 ▪   A flower from
                                                                             the garden
                                                  47
              •    OTHER IMPORTANT PREPOSITIONS
EXERCISES
c) There has been a sharp increase ____ house prices in recent months.
f) I’m sorry, but I’m not ____ liberty to tell you anymore.
                                                    48
2- Complete the following sentences using at, about or against.
a) I don’t know his exact age; I can only guess _________ how old he really
is.
c) After the war, several people were tried for crimes _________ humanity.
complain _________.
g) Raise the gun to your shoulder, aim _________ the target, and try not
to kill anyone.
a) Do you take pride _________ your appearance, or are you just vain?
c) All forms of travel are expensive nowadays, but, _________ balance, air
your control.
f) I’ve been _________ your essay, and I wore out three red pens making
corrections.
comfortable.
                                   49
ANSWERS:
Exercise 1
a) For
b) By/at
c) In
d) In
e) For
f) At
g) For
Exercise 2
a) At
b) At
c) Against
d) Against
e) About
f) About
g) At
Exercise 3
a) In
b) In
c) On
d) Over
e) In
f) Over
g) Into
                50
PHRASAL VERBS
A phrasal verb it’s a phrase that’s made up of a verb and another word, usually
verb, based on the preposition that follows them, and they are very important
in everyday conversation.
This is a list of some phrasal verbs and the translation into Spanish, but there
triste.
                                       51
•   Bring on: ser la causa de algo, normalmente negativo.
                                      52
•   Get back to: responder más tarde.
                                       53
•   Take away: llevar una cosa de un punto a otro.
                                    54
CONDITIONALS
ZERO CONDITIONAL
• Use zero conditional when you want to express general truths / facts:
ATTENTION!!
  •   If and when have the same meaning in the zero conditional:
FIRST CONDITIONAL
                                       55
  •   To talk about things that are possible, but not certain. The main clause
      says what we think the result will be in this situation.
ATTENTION!!
  •   Unless = if...not
  •   We can use might instead of will in the main clause to mean “will
      perhaps”.
SECOND CONDITIONAL
         o If I had her number, I would call him. (But it is not possible because
           I don’t have her number).
ATTENTION!!
                                      56
   •    We can use could instead of would in the main clause to talk about ability
        or possibility.
   •    We can use might instead of would in the main clause to mean “would
        perhaps”.
THIRD CONDITIONAL
ATTENTION!!
   •    We can also use could, should, might and may in the main clause to mean
        “would perhaps”.
SUMMARY:
  CONDITIONAL                                    FORM
 Zero Conditional                If + present simple, … present simple
                                        57
 Third Conditional    If + had + past participle, … would/wouldn’t + have +
                                           past participle
EXERCISES
f) If she ___________ (come) home very late, her parents ___________ (get)
very angry.
e) If I ___________ (miss) the bus, I ___________ (to be) late for work.
f) If you ___________ (not move), the bee ___________ (not sting) you.
weight.
                                      58
c) If I ___________________ (study) harder, I ___________________ (pass) the
exam.
more money.
upset.
too.
(recommend) it to me.
                                   59
MIXED CONDITIONALS
structures, we talk about mixed conditionals. We use them when the two parts
of a conditional sentence refer to different times and they show only unreal
situations. There are a lot of combinations, but we are going to focus on the
the past with the present result (past + present): If he had taken the medicine,
he wouldn’t be ill.
                                      60
- SECOND / THIRD CONDITIONAL → To describe ongoing circumstances in
                                      61
MODAL VERBS
• Modal verbs are those verbs that goes with another verb and they
• Modal verbs are auxiliary verbs, so we do not need any auxiliary verb in
negatives or questions.
VERB
• Offer please?
weekend?
                                       62
                                       ➢ It can get very cold in Alaska
• Polite please?
weekend?
Alaska
suggestion
• Possibility today
necessary
light
                                  63
Should            •   Advice                ➢ You should drive carefully
demand, order
                      assumption
                                            ➢ I will stop smoking
                  •   Promise
                  •   Spontaneous
                                            ➢ I will drive you to the station
                      decision
talking
me some flowers
to”
EXERCISES
                                       64
2- Correct the mistakes in the highlighted phrases. Tick ✓ the correct
sentences.
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
h) People mustn’t answer their mobiles when they are talking to someone.
_________________________________________________________________
______________________
                                    65
ANSWERS
Exercise 1:
a) Must
b) Can’t
c) Might / may
d) Can’t
e) Must
f) Might / may
Exercise 2:
   d) ✓
   e) I had to stay in bed
   g) ✓
   h) People shouldn’t answer
                                    66
REPORTED SPEECH
• In direct speech we can report what someone says by using the same
• Commas disappear:
                                    67
     •    Pronouns, demonstrative adjectives and adverbs of place change:
This That
These Those
Here There
Now Then
Last week / month The week / year before the previous week /
year
REPORTING VERBS
o “I like motorbikes”.
                                        68
      •    Verbs such as: ask, beg, invite, offer, order, remind and tell go with
REPORTED STATEMENTS
Can Could
May Might
ATTENTION!!
o Past perfect
o Might
                                        69
      o Could
o Should
o Mustn’t
REPORTED QUESTIONS
order is:
o SUBJECT + VERB
• As with reported statements, the verb changes into a more past tense
of mine.
o “Who are you going out with?” → My mother asked me who I was
suggestions.
o “Don’t judge him too quickly.” → She asked me not to judge him
too quickly.
• Suggestions are expressed with the verb: suggest and one of these
structures:
                                        70
        o “Why don’t we all go out together?”
EXERCISES
__________________.
__________________.
a) Jane said that she will / would come shopping with us.
c) I asked Cindy where she buys / does she buy her clothes.
f) I asked the manager whether / that the shoes were in the sale.
                                     71
   h) They asked me where I worked / did work.
ANSWERS
Exercise 1
a) was full
e) he might be late
h) if I wanted to dance
Exercise 2
a) would
b) told me
c) she buys
d) it was
                                       72
e) hadn’t bought
f) whether
g) had to go
h) worked
j) if I could
                       73
RELATIVE CLAUSES
Relative clauses are sentences starting in a relative pronoun: who, whose, whom,
things…) and they join two sentences. There are two types of relative clauses:
things
things
                                       74
DEFINING RELATIVE CLAUSES
information about a person, thing, etc. It comes immediately after the thing it
of the sentence, and it cannot be removed without changing the meaning: She
information which is not relevant for the understanding of the sentence. They
are set off by commas and do not begin with the pronoun that: London, which
EXERCISES
______________________
______________________
Madrid. → ______________________
f) Mont Blanc, which is between France and Italy, is the highest mountain in
                                        75
g) Sarah’s father, who is 64, goes swimming every day. →
______________________
______________________
______________________
                                      76
PASSIVES
                        Object + to be + past participle (+ subject)
Sentences can be in active or passive. We use active verb to say what the subject
is the object, that’s why the object goes in the first place followed by the verb
We use passive:
• To focus the attention on the object of an action and establish the topic
of a sentence.
• When the agent of the action is not known, generic or obvious for the
                                          77
         TENSE                    ACTIVE                       PASSIVE
Present simple I see your friend Your friend is seen (by me)
(by me)
Past simple I saw your friend Your friend was seen (by
me)
Past continuous I was seeing your friend Your friend was being seen
(by me)
Present perfect I have seen your friend Your friend has been seen
Present perfect I have been seeing your Your friend has been being
Past perfect simple I had seen your friend Your friend had been seen
(by me)
Future simple (will) I will see your friend Your friend will be seen
(by me)
Future perfect simple I will have been seen your Your friend will have been
Future (going to) I’m going to see your Your friend is going to be
ATTENTION!!
• Only transitive verbs (verbs with an object) can be made passive. Some
transitive verbs cannot be made passive: become, fit, get, have, lack, let,
                                       78
   •   Verbs with two objects: There are sentences which contain two objects,
in these cases, we can make the passive using both objects, so we are
Ask, bring, give, lend, offer, pass, pay, promise, sell, send, show, teach, tell…
EXERCISE
______________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________
___________
c) It rained all the time the film / make / on location (past continuous).
______________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________
___________
                                         79
______________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________
___________
______________________________________________________________________
___________
ANSWER
Exercise 1
a) is directed
b) will be shown
f) is going to be dubbed
g) was made
h) is based
                                       80
INTENSIFIERS: So, such, too, enough
other expressions and show emphasis. There are a lot of different intensifiers,
such as: completely, absolutely, highly, really, utterly, and so on. We are going
SO
• Meaning: very.
SUCH (a/an)
• Meaning: very.
                                       81
  •   With a “that” clause ➜ It was such a warm night that we decided to go
out.
TOO
ENOUGH
exam.
EXERCISE
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
b) How much money have we got? Can we pay for tickets? (enough)
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
                                      82
   ________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
________________________________________________________________
_______________________
2- Rewrite each sentence in such a way that it means exactly the same as
the sentence printer before it. Use: so, such, too or enough.
a) She is such a good tennis player that she wins all her matches.
Algebra isn’t…
                                    83
   The package isn’t…
It is…
e) The view from the top was so magnificent that we couldn’t move.
It was…
f) This bag is too heavy for me to carry. Can you help me?
Sammy is…
Alan isn’t…
She didn’t…
                                  84
QUESTION TAGS
Question tags are short questions at the end of statements. They are mainly
• Confirm that something is true or not ➜ Mike is from London, isn’t he?
• When the verb in the main sentence is in the present simple, we form the
EXERCISE
                                      85
b) Peter is on holiday, _______________?
                                 86
IRREGULAR VERBS
Infinitive   Simple Past   Past Participle   Spanish
arise        arose         arisen            surgir
be           was / were    been              ser
beat         beat          beaten            golpear
become       became        become            convertirse
begin        began         begun             comenzar
bet          bet/betted    bet/betted        apostar
bite         bit           bitten            morder
bleed        bled          bled              sangrar
blow         blew          blown             soplar
break        broke         broken            romper
bring        brought       brought           traer
build        built         built             construir
buy          bought        bought            comprar
catch        caught        caught            atrapar
choose       chose         chosen            elegir
come         came          come              venir
                                    87
cost      cost           cost           costar
creep     crept          crept          arrastrarse
cut       cut            cut            cortar
deal      dealt          dealt          dar,
                                        repartir
do        did            done           hacer
draw      drew           drawn          dibujar
dream     dreamt/dreamed dreamt/dreamed soñar
drink     drank          drunk          beber
drive     drove          driven         conducir
eat       ate            eaten          comer
fall      fell           fallen         caer
feed      fed            fed            alimentar
feel      felt           felt           sentir
fight     fought         fought         pelear
find      found          found          encontrar
flee      fled           fled           huir
fly       flew           flown          volar
forget    forgot         forgotten      olvidar
forgive   forgave        forgiven       perdonar
forsake   forsook        forsaken       abandonar
freeze    froze          frozen         congelar
get       got            got            tener,
                                        obtener
give      gave           given          dar
go        went           gone           ir
grind     ground         ground         moler
grow      grew           grown          crecer
hang      hung           hung           colgar
have      had            had            tener
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hear    heard            heard            oír
hide    hid              hidden           esconderse
hit     hit              hit              golpear
hold    held             held             tener,
                                          mantener
hurt    hurt             hurt             herir, doler
keep    kept             kept             guardar
kneel   knelt            knelt            arrodillarse
know    knew             known            saber
lead    led              led              encabezar
learn   learnt/learned   learnt/learned   aprender
leave   left             left             dejar
lend    lent             lent             prestar
let     let              let              dejar
lie     lay              lain             yacer
lose    lost             lost             perder
make    made             made             hacer
mean    meant            meant            significar
meet    met              met              conocer,
                                          encontrar
pay     paid             paid             pagar
put     put              put              poner
quit    quit/quitted     quit/quitted     abandonar
read    read             read             leer
ride    rode             ridden           montar, ir
ring    rang             rung             llamar por
                                          teléfono
rise    rose             risen            elevar
run     ran              run              correr
say     said             said             decir
see     saw              seen             ver
                                  89
sell     sold             sold             vender
send     sent             sent             enviar
set      set              set              fijar
sew      sewed            sewn/sewed       coser
shake    shook            shaken           sacudir
shine    shone            shone            brillar
shoot    shot             shot             disparar
show     showed           shown/showed     mostrar
shrink   shrank/shrunk    shrunk           encoger
shut     shut             shut             cerrar
sing     sang             sung             cantar
sink     sank             sunk             hundir
sit      sat              sat              sentarse
sleep    slept            slept            dormir
slide    slid             slid             deslizar
sow      sowed            sown/sowed       sembrar
speak    spoke            spoken           hablar
spell    spelt/spelled    spelt/spelled    deletrear
spend    spent            spent            gastar
spill    spilt/spilled    spilt/spilled    derramar
split    split            split            partir
spoil    spoilt/spoiled   spoilt/spoiled   estropear
spread   spread           spread           extenderse
stand    stood            stood            estar de
                                           pie
steal    stole            stolen           robar
sting    stung            stung            picar
stink    stank/stunk      stunk            apestar
strike   struck           struck           golpear
swear    swore            sworn            jurar
                                   90
sweep     swept         swept         barrer
swim      swam          swum          nadar
take      took          taken         tomar
teach     taught        taught        enseñar
tear      tore          torn          romper
tell      told          told          decir
think     thought       thought       pensar
throw     threw         thrown        lanzar
tread     trod          trodden       pisar
understand understood   understood    entender
wake      woke          woken         despertarse
wear      wore          worn          llevar
                                      puesto
weave     wove          woven         tejer
weep      wept          wept          llorar
win       won           won           ganar
wring     wrung         wrung         retorcer
write     wrote         written       escribir
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PRONUNCIATION
                92
93
Webpage for pronunciation: https://howjsay.com/
                               94
PRONOUNS
I ME MY MINE MYSELF
IT IT ITS ITSELF
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SPELLING RULES OF VERBS ENDING IN -ing
The general rule is to add -ing at the end of the verb, but there are some
exceptions:
• If the verb ends in an -e, we remove -e and add -ing. For example:
          - live: living
          - have: having
          - take: taking
          - stop: stopping
          - sit: sitting
          - get: getting
- happen: happening
                                      96
    - enter: entering
    - offer: offering
    - fix: fixing
    - enjoy: enjoying
    - snow: snowing
    - lie: lying
    - die: dying
    - tie: tying
    - travel: travelling
    - marvel: marvelling
•   If the verb ends in a stressed vowel + r, we double the final r and add
    -ing. For example:
    - refer: referring
    - defer: deferring
    - offer: offering
    - suffer: suffering
    - whisper: whispering
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BIBLIOGRAPHY
Powell, M., Big Tree, & Macmillan Publishers. (2014). In Company 3.0:
Intermediate: Student's Book: B1+. London, England: Macmillan Education.
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