استاذ انور
17-05-2010, 03:06 AM
Present poem
The present simple is simply I go,
It’s a very useful thing to know,
But the continuous is I am going,
Which is really worth knowing.
I go, sometimes, often, always,
But I am going now, today, these days.
Although they are both present in name,
These two tenses are really not the same.
A Two-part poem contrasting Active and Passive
.
Car thief, Part 1
A robber stole my car,
His name was Jonny Parr.
I got it back today,
So I said ‘Hurray’!
Johnny Parr stole my car,
But he didn’t get very far!
Car thief, Part 2
My car was stolen.
Was it a man or a woman?
Was it an alien or human?
I don’t know, I don’t care,
Because I wasn’t there!
I’ll never know who did it,
The mysterious person who’s got it.
That’s why I say,
In this special way,
My car was stolen,
By someone unknown
.
3. Which is which?
Relative clause: Defining.
The man who is walking towards me is angry
It’s clear who I mean,
Because there are other men to be seen,
But none of them are coming towards me.
Relative clause: Non-defining.
That old man, who lives near here, plays the guitar by ear!
I used that to point him out,
I’m not comparing him with anyone else about.
I added a fact, just for something to say,
With a comma between, to show I meant it this way.
The present simple is simply I go,
It’s a very useful thing to know,
But the continuous is I am going,
Which is really worth knowing.
I go, sometimes, often, always,
But I am going now, today, these days.
Although they are both present in name,
These two tenses are really not the same.
A Two-part poem contrasting Active and Passive
.
Car thief, Part 1
A robber stole my car,
His name was Jonny Parr.
I got it back today,
So I said ‘Hurray’!
Johnny Parr stole my car,
But he didn’t get very far!
Car thief, Part 2
My car was stolen.
Was it a man or a woman?
Was it an alien or human?
I don’t know, I don’t care,
Because I wasn’t there!
I’ll never know who did it,
The mysterious person who’s got it.
That’s why I say,
In this special way,
My car was stolen,
By someone unknown
.
3. Which is which?
Relative clause: Defining.
The man who is walking towards me is angry
It’s clear who I mean,
Because there are other men to be seen,
But none of them are coming towards me.
Relative clause: Non-defining.
That old man, who lives near here, plays the guitar by ear!
I used that to point him out,
I’m not comparing him with anyone else about.
I added a fact, just for something to say,
With a comma between, to show I meant it this way.