Pronouns
Infinitive and Gerunds
Conditionals
Present perfect
Have, must, can
100

We use them to talk about possession

Possessive pronouns

100

Simplest form of a verb

Base form

100

Clause used for Conditionals (1st and 2nd)

If

100

Present perfect is used to talk about

actions that started in the past and are still true now.

100

We use it to say something is optional

Don't have to

200

A possessive pronoun takes the place of the

Noun

200

Formula for infinitive

verb (base form) + infinitive/to + verb (base form)

200

Difference between first and second conditional

First: for possible future situations 

Second: for imaginary or hypothetical situations

200

True or false:

We use simple present for this sentences.

False
200

We use it to talk about rules and obligations

Have to / Must

300

Possessive pronouns are used to avoid

repeating ingormation

300

Formula to create gerunds

verb + ing

300

We can use this imperative instead of "will"

Can + base form

300

We use this to formulate questions

How long

300

Often used in official forms, notices and signs

Must

400

Pronoun used to talk about something that belongs to a group that includes me

Ours

400

We use infinitive to explain something

Why we do something

400

Verbs in first conditional have to be in

Present



400

How is "since used"

Since + the beginning of a time

400
We use it to state a rule

Can't/must not

500

Possessive pronoun we use to say the name of an animal

Its

500

True or false: We can use gerunds in positive and negative ways

True

500

Verbs in second conditional have to be in

past

500

The structure for Present perfect

Subject + have/has + Past participle

500

Difference between must not and don't have to

Must not: something is prohibited

Don't have to: something not obligatory

M
e
n
u