English

Thanks you guys, you really helpful :slight_smile:

I want to be so good at English, till I can write articles.
I sure got a long way to walk till then.

Can anybody list the tenses that the English grammar includes?
You know, all those present simple, past progressive and etc…

It’s not easy with me eh? :blush:

This should help you out: English Tenses

I doubt most English speakers know all of those (and even then, that any fraction of them actually know what they’re called… I sure don’t =p).

The misuse of tenses is one of my grammar peeves. British journalism has lately become riddled with basic errors that misuse tenses, particularly when paraphrasing sources.

I never knew we had so many tenses. Phew.

Learning English is easy. I’ve been speaking it for 46 years and I’m thick. My little boy is five and has picked it up with ease (although his use of “foots” instead of “feet” highlights the difficulties).

My advice to anyone who want’s to communicate in a foreign tongue is just go for it. No one cares if you make mistakes but they care if you don’t try

you can learn English its not so difficult. you can buy some CD of verbal grammar from market or u can download also some stuff from internet. it will help you.

you can learn English its not so difficult. you can buy some CD of verbal grammar from market or u can download also some stuff from internet. it will help you.

I would demand a refund if I were you. :wink:

While jimmy11’s post isn’t a shining example of grammatical perfection, he does raise an interesting idea. Try listening to books-on-tape/audiobooks. Listening to a book read aloud may help you acquire a good ear for the language. If you get the unabridged audiobook (which means nothing from the book has been cut out or changed), you could also get the book itself and follow along.

I would recommend stories by Louis L’Amour. Most are American Westerns, but they’re dynamic, often have different voice actors, and include music and sound effects, so it wouldn’t be dry or boring. I usually listen to these stories on long car trips.

That’s a great idea. I know watching and listening to Japanese stuff has really helped me start picking up on some of the lesser things (such as phrases which means something other than their literal translation).

I agree with you… after watching I don’t know how many anime series I can say “idiot” in Japanese with a perfect accent :lol:

Same here! - Conditional Progressive, Future Progressive?! They even sound intimidating!

Baka!

:lol:

PS:I hope that you didn’t mean to call me that :shifty: :stuck_out_tongue:

Of course not! Sumimasen!

Pete Seeger once wrote:
[I][INDENT]English is the most widely spoken language in the history of the planet.
One out of every seven human beings can speak or read it.
Half the world’s books, 3/4 of the international mail are in English.
It has the largest vocabulary, perhaps two million words,
And a noble body of literature. But face it:
English is cuh-ray-zee!

Just a few examples: There’s no egg in eggplant, no pine or apple in pineapple.
Quicksand works slowly; boxing rings are square.
A writer writes, but do fingers fing?
Hammers don’t ham, grocers don’t groce. Haberdashers don’t haberdash.
English is cuh-ray-zee!

If the plural of tooth is teeth, shouldn’t the plural of booth be beeth?
It’s one goose, two geese. Why not one moose, two meese?
If it’s one index, two indices; why not one Kleenex,two Kleenices?
English is cuh-ray-zee!

You can comb through the annals of history, but not just one annal.
You can make amends, but not just one amend.
If you have a bunch of odds and ends and get rid of all but one, is it an odd or an end?
If the teacher taught, why isn’t it true that a preacher praught?
If you wrote a letter, did you also bote your tongue?
And if a vegetarian eats vegetables, what does a humanitarian eat?
English is cuh-ray-zee!

Why is it that night falls but never breaks and day breaks but never falls?
In what other language do people drive on the parkway and park on the driveway?
Ship by truck but send cargo by ship? Recite at a play but play at a recital?
Have noses that run and feet that smell?
English is cuh-ray-zee!

How can a slim chance and a fat chance be the same
When a wise man and a wise guy are very different?
To overlook something and to oversee something are very different,
But quite a lot and quite a few are the same.
How can the weather be hot as hell one day and cold as hell the next?
English is cuh-ray-zee!

You have to marvel at the lunacy of a language in which your house can burn down
While it is burning up. You fill out a form by filling it in.
In which your alarm clock goes off by going on.
If pro is the opposite of con, what is the opposite of progress?

Well, English was invented by people, not computers
And reflects the creativity of the human race.
So that’s why when the stars are out, they’re visible,
But when the lights are out, they’re invisible.
When I wind up my watch I start it, but when I wind up this rap,
I end it. English is cuh-ray-zee![/INDENT][/I]

And another shorter quote regarding the language:

[INDENT]English is a language cooperatively invented by the Saxons, Jutes, and Picts with words brought in or borrowed from the Romans, Normans, Welsh, Irish, Celts, French, Spanish and many others, all of whom only have one thing in common – severe drinking problems.[/INDENT]

If you want to get a list of the tenses and to be so good at English, you can brows following sites.

www.englisch-hilfen.de/en/
www.myenglishpages.com/site_php_files/grammar.php

Thanks

[FONT=Verdana]As this discussion is well over a year old, I don’t think there’s any merit in resurrecting it.

Thread closed.[/FONT]