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Teach English in PinggAng Nongchang - Yangjiang Shi

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This unit encapsulates modals, passive voice and phrasal verbs. The modal auxiliary verbs are: can, could, may, might, shall, should, will, would, must, have to, have got to, need to, needn't, ought to. These words are used before the other verbs to add meaning to the main verb. Modals express a number of ideas, including the concepts of obligation, possibility, permission, ability and advice. Modals can also be used to express degrees of formality. The passive voice is one of two voices in English, the other being the active voice. The active voice focuses on the agent of action in the sentence (\"I painted the floor last week\"), while in the passive voice, the object of an active verb becomes the subject of the passive verb (\"The floor was painted last week\"). Phrasal verbs are made up of a verb and one or more particles, and operate as one verb altogether. There are three basic types of phrasal verbs. The first type, an intransitive phrasal verb, cannot be followed by a direct object in a sentence (\"He did not turn up\"). With the second type, a transitive separable phrasal verb, an object pronoun can only come only between the verb and the particle (\"She took her on\"), but an object noun can come either between the verb and the particle or after the particle (\"She took Anna on\" or \"She took on Anna\"). With the third type of phrasal verb, a transitive inseparable phrasal verb, the object phrase or pronoun both come after the particle (\"She got over her operation\").
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