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Teach English in Taibao Zhen - Qingyuan Shi

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Unit 18 taught Modal Auxiliary Verbs, Phrasal Verbs, and Passive Voice. Modals are used before other verbs to add meaning to the main verb; such as can, could, will, would, must, etc. These words are used to express meanings such as obligation, ability, permission, advice, etc. They can also bemused to express different levels of formality. \"May\" vs. \"can,\" for example. To use the Passive Voice instead of the Active Voice means the object of the active verb becomes the subject of the passive verb. Something is being \"done to\" the object instead of the subject doing the action. Only transitive verbs are used in the passive voice. The passive voice is used most frequently when we can't say or don't want to say who exactly did it, or if that piece of information isn't important. A Relative Cause is a phrase that contains a subject and a verb. There are three types of relative causes. 1) the Independent Clause which is a complete sentence; 2) the Dependent Clause which is an incomplete sentence and needs to be joined with a complete sentence; and 3) the Relative Clause which is a dependent clause that modifies a noun. If a sentence includes a Defining Relative Clause the information contained in that clause is essential to the meaning of the sentence and does not have commas separating it from the rest of the sentence. If it has a Non-defining Clause, the information is not critical to the sentence and could even be left out. There are no commas used with the non-defining clauses. Phrasals Verbs have one or two particles and the particles may be a preposition, adverb, or adverb plus preposition. There are three types: Intransitive, Transitive Separable, and Transitive Inseparable.
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