Is there a summary of the texts in Unit 3 of New Concept English Book 4?

Updated on educate 2024-03-30
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-07

    New Concept English Volume 2, Practice and Progress, is part of the New Concept English series. At the same time, it is also the blueprint for the 4th and 5th level of the "New Concept English Youth Edition".

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-06

    There are many means to indicate the future, such as be going to do (subjective intention in the future or subjective judgment of the future), be about to to to (subjectively think that the future is about to appear or is about to appear), be on the point of doing, be + the present participle of the tendency verb (subjectively think that the future is developing), simple present tense (the future that is scheduled or immutable), will do or will be doing (objectively possible in the future).

    Among them, will do and will be doing both indicate a simple future without the main law, but there are certain differences in connotation.

    will do simply indicates the possibility of existence at some point in the future, such as:

    you will regret this.You may regret it.

    he will be forty on his next birthday.By the moment of his next birthday, he would be forty years old.

    will be doing indicates the likelihood that it will continue for a period of time in the future, such as:

    you will be regretting this.You may regret it for a while.

    i will be waiting for you at the park.I'll be waiting for you there in the park.

    he will be earning only half as much as he used to.At most, he would have earned half of what he used to be.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-05

    This is a question of tense, both expressions are grammatically fine, and the future continuous tense "he will be earning" describes a state in the future, which is more accurate and apt than the usual future tense.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-04

    Ing and ed here do not refer to carrying out and finishing. refers to a person or thing, as an adjective component.

    For example, a frustrating thing. a frustruted person.A depressed person.

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-03

    missing here is not a present participle but an adjective that means "lost", "gone", which is equivalent to "lost, gone, absent.""Wait.

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