problema señora lopez

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  • 7/29/2019 problema seora lopez

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    Mrs. Lopez has studied food and is currently attending a refresher course in international cuisine in

    the city of New Orleans. Although it has a domain of English at intermediate generally have

    difficulty understanding and expressing ideas related to failure or Demacia culinary ingredient.

    Resolve cognitive conflict, In English grammatical structures are used that do not follow the logic of

    Spanish.What are these

    Learn the basic grammatical differences between the two languages avoided, largely to make mistakeswhen using English. The following summary will be a number of differences between the two

    languages:

    1.-The adjective and the definite article (el, la, los, las) in English are unchanged from the point of view

    of grammatical gender (masculine or feminine) and number (singular or plural).

    The tall boy the tall guyThe tall girl the tall girl

    The tall boys tall guysThe tall girls tall girls

    (As you can see, unlike the English, Spanish, changing the gender and number according to the articleand adjective accompanying the noun.)

    The = the, the, the, the

    tall = high, high, high, high

    3.-The English adjective usually precedes the noun it is describing in Spanish while going behind the

    name.

    My white cat My cat white

    4.-always subject pronouns in English are mandatory, while in Spanish not

    I am tall I am tall / a

    5.-English object pronouns always go after the verb in Spanish while always go before the verb.

    I told him I Told

    6.-You is used in English to refer you to both you and to you.

    You are from England England You are or you are from England

    7.-English verbs. Unlike Spanish, in which all people are conjugated verb, the verb has a single

    conjugation. To form the infinitive is used the particle 'to' that precedes the verb:

    To play / play

    The present tense is formed with the infinitive without to. Everyone has the same way, except the third

    person singular (in which adds a '-s' to the infinitive).I play I play

    You play you play

    He / She / It plays he, she, it plays

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    We play we play

    You you you play play

    They play they play

    In the past even gets the '-s' to the third person singular

    I played I played

    you played you playedhe / she / it played he / she / it played

    we played we played

    you played you you playedThey played they played

    8.-Shift. The names of nationalities, languages, days of the week, months of the year are capitalized inEnglish, whereas in Spanish no. The station names are written in lower case when used in a general

    way.

    American American

    Ingls EnglishFriday Friday

    September September

    I, the English pronoun I is always capitalized.

    9.-Signs score. Question marks and admiration in English only placed at the end of the sentence.

    10.-The English pronunciation variable. One big difference is that you are getting the pronunciation of

    English, since the same letters and letter combinations in words can be pronounced differently from

    word to word. A little hard to believe but true. While in Spanish when you see a group of letters in a

    word can be 99% sure on how to pronounce the word - with English there are cases of difference.

    There are also English sounds that do not exist in Spanish and vice versa, for example in English has 12

    vowel sounds in Spanish while only 5 and, with respect to the consonants, certain phonemes that soundalike despite written so b identical for example, p, p, h, g, v, z, etc.

    Besides English no letter

    11.-The order of the words in the sentence. The order of words in a sentence in English can vary the

    order in Spanish. In English the word order is more important - not so much to change the order.

    For a positive declarative sentence the following scheme is very useful:Subject + (adverb frequency if any) + verb + c. Indirect + c. DC Direct + + DC mode location + DC

    time

    I solved the problem at home yesterday QuicklyS --- V ------ C.D. -------- C. C.M. - C.C.L. --- C. C.T.

    In the following link you can see some examples of the order of the various elements within the

    sentence in inglshttp :/ / www.eoilangreo.net/guia_expresion/Ingles/orden1.htm

    12.-In English the possessive adjective is put in cases in which Spanish is not put:

    John is washing his hands / John washes his hands (his hands).

    Traductor de Google para empresas:Google Translator Toolkit