Word Order

Lesson 1 ISAD


Word Order (might be handy)

1 / 24
next
Slide 1: Slide
EngelsMBOStudiejaar 1

This lesson contains 24 slides, with interactive quizzes and text slides.

time-iconLesson duration is: 60 min

Items in this lesson

Lesson 1 ISAD


Word Order (might be handy)

Slide 1 - Slide

Goals
You will know how to make a correct sentence in English

Slide 2 - Slide

Slide 3 - Slide

Word order

Slide 4 - Slide

1. The sentence


The word order in sentences is: Subject – Verb  – Object.
Subject     Verb     Object
I     play     football.
Max     reads     books.
We     can speak     English.
Sue     is singing     a nice song.

Slide 5 - Slide

subject = noun or pronoun
The person, place, or thing that the sentence is about

verb = action or state of being
one verb or a verb phrase

object = the noun or nouns that receives the action of the verb or is affected by the action of the verb

Slide 6 - Slide

Slide 7 - Slide

Adverbs of frequency

Tell how often something happens.

Never, Rarely, Sometimes, Often, Usually, Always


Slide 8 - Slide

Adjectives often come before the noun that they describe. 

Examples:
 
The smart teacher taught the quiet students.
 
The happy students listened to the serious teacher.

Slide 9 - Slide

Adjectives can also be placed at the end of a sentences by using a stative verbs. (Stative verbs express a state rather than an action: seem, love, be, is, know.)
Examples:
 
The teacher is smart. The students are quiet.
The students seem happy, but the teacher looks serious.

Slide 10 - Slide

Adverbs
In English, we never put an adverb between a verb and the object.

Correct: She always cooks pizza.

Incorrect: She cooks always pizza.

Slide 11 - Slide

 At the front of the sentence, before the subject


    Yesterday, the teacher taught the students.

    Suddenly, I ran to the door.

    At the corner, she turned right.

Slide 12 - Slide

 At the end of a sentence, after the object
The students will take the test tomorrow.

John invited his friends too.

She will arrive home in an hour.

Slide 13 - Slide

3. In the middle of a sentence (before or after the verb) or in the middle of a group of verbs

She often studies before class.

The student works quietly at her desk

Lisa has nearly finished the race.

Slide 14 - Slide

Slide 15 - Slide

Sleepvraag
A sentence can have 5 grammatical parts, put these in the correct order:
Who
Does
What
Where
When

Slide 16 - Drag question

Slide 17 - Slide

Choose the sentence with the correct word order.
A
Who swims every day in the canal?
B
Who swims in the canal every day?

Slide 18 - Quiz

Choose the sentence with the correct word order.
A
My sister got married last year.
B
Last year my sister got married.
C
Both are correct, no difference in meaning.
D
Both are correct, there is a difference in meaning.

Slide 19 - Quiz

Choose the sentence with the correct word order.
A
They often go out in the weekends.
B
They go often out in the weekends.

Slide 20 - Quiz

Choose the sentence with the correct word order.
A
Did he completely tell the truth yesterday?
B
Did he tell completely the truth yesterday?
C
Did he tell the truth completely yesterday?
D
Did he tell the truth yesterday completely?

Slide 21 - Quiz

Correct word order:
Billy / to his friend / five minutes ago / next door / went
A
Billy went to his friend five minutes ago next door.
B
Billy went next door to his friend five minutes ago.
C
Billy went five minutes ago next door to his friend.
D
Billy went to his friend next door five minutes ago.

Slide 22 - Quiz

Correct word order:
her / in town / yesterday / I / met
A
I met her in town yesterday.
B
I met her yesterday in town.
C
I yesterday met her in town.
D
I met yesterday her in town.

Slide 23 - Quiz

Sleepvraag
Een zin kan uit 5 onderdelen bestaan. Zet deze in de juiste volgorde
Wie
Doet
Wat
Waar 
Wanneer

Slide 24 - Drag question