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  • Hi, my name's Rebecca. For the next few minutes, let's pretend you are the English teacher

  • and you're correcting your student's homework. Let's look at some of these sentences and

  • see if you can find some of the errors in these English sentences.

  • Okay, the first sentence: "My mother she works in a bank."

  • Is that okay?

  • Well, let me tell you right now that actually none of these sentences are okay; there is

  • a mistake in every sentence. So see if you can find the mistake. Okay?

  • "My mother she works in a bank." What's the mistake? Okay... Here, "she", all

  • right? I'm just going to grab a different marker. So what happened here is we said:

  • "My mother she works in a bank." So we cannot repeat the subject. The mistake here is that

  • we had a double subject; the subject was mentioned twice. In English, you can't do that. You

  • just mention the subject once. So this sentence, in order to be correct, would need to be:

  • "My mother works in a bank." Or: "She works in a bank." If you know who "she" is. Right?

  • But you can't say both. So no double subjects.

  • Number two: "John is an engineer"

  • What's wrong with that? Look carefully. Well, what's wrong is that it's missing the punctuation.

  • All right? Part of a correct sentence is correct punctuation. So here, there was no period

  • at the end of the sentence, that's what was wrong.

  • Next sentence: "The manager of my department"

  • What's wrong with that? Well, what's wrong is that it's not a sentence because it doesn't

  • have any verb, there's no verb there. Okay? And, of course, you need to continue this

  • sentence, and then eventually you'd need to have some punctuation as well. But basically,

  • there is no... This is a sentence fragment. This is called only a part of a sentence.

  • It is not a complete English sentence or a correct English sentence. There is no verb.

  • Missing verb.

  • Next one: "we enjoy watching old movies."

  • Okay? Again, look carefully. What's wrong there? Well, it has a subject, it has a verb,

  • but this is the problem. The first letter in the first word of an English sentence has

  • to be capitalized and that's what was missing here. You see, we didn't have that problem

  • before. Okay.

  • Next one: "I like very much Chinese food."

  • Okay? Maybe that sounds okay to you, but doesn't sound okay to me. It's close, but not quite.

  • What's wrong? Well, what's wrong here is this, the word order. Not only do you need to have

  • certain elements, you need to have the words in the right order. So in English, the correct

  • order for this sentence would be: "I like Chinese food very much." Okay? Not: "very

  • much Chinese food." "I like Chinese food very much." Okay?

  • Next: "Maria need help with her hw."

  • "Maria need help with her homework." What's wrong there? Okay? So the mistake is here,

  • the mistake is in subject-verb agreement. The verb has to agree with the subject. Right?

  • And if we say: "Maria", it's like: "she", and we would have to say: "She needs". "Maria

  • needs help with her hw." So the error here was in subject-verb agreement.

  • Next one: "delivered the package yesterday"

  • Okay? "delivered the package yesterday" What's wrong here? Well, it's similar to this one,

  • except here, we had a sentence fragment and we had the subject. Here, we have a sentence

  • fragment, and we have a verb, but we don't have a subject. We have a missing subject.

  • So this is also a sentence fragment. "Fragment" means only part. It is not a complete sentence.

  • Next one: "We recieved your letter."

  • "We recieved your letter." Sounds fine, but if you're an English teacher, you're going

  • to look really carefully at each of the words. And what's wrong is here, the mistake is here.

  • It's a spelling mistake. Okay? The word "received" is one of those tricky words with the "e"

  • and the "i", and the "i" and the "e" that you have to learn very well.

  • So spelling mistakes will also bring down your marks. If you're doing the IELTS, if

  • you're bring... Doing the TOEFL, any errors of this kind will bring your marks down. Okay?

  • So even though they seem very basic, I know from experience that students make all of

  • these mistakes. Be very careful not to make them.

  • Let's look at what principles apply to correct English sentences. Okay? So, an English sentence

  • must express a complete thought and it must express it with certain elements. Now, just

  • because a sentence must express a complete thought, it doesn't have to have a lot of

  • words; it doesn't have to be a very long sentence.

  • Let me give you an example of a perfect English sentence which is not long. And here we are,

  • this is an example: "Babies cry."

  • Let me explain to you why this is a perfectly correct English sentence. So, an English sentence

  • has to have a subject. The subject in this sentence is: "Babies". An English sentence

  • has to mention the subject once. Here, it's only mentioned once. We don't say: "Babies

  • they cry." We just say: "Babies cry." And a sentence has to have a verb. What's the

  • verb in this sentence? "Cry". A sentence has to have subject-verb agreement. So, in this

  • case, we said: "Babies cry." It's correct. We didn't say: "Babies cries", or anything

  • like that. There is subject-verb agreement. A correct sentence should have a capital letter.

  • Okay? At the start of the sentence. And we do, so that's fine. A correct English sentence

  • should have punctuation at the end, which we have, we have a period. It should be correct

  • word order, which we have. We didn't say: "Cry babies", which means something else.

  • We said: "Babies cry." That was fine. And spelling. Okay? The word "babies" is spelled

  • correctly, the word "cry" is spelled correctly.

  • So these points are all the points that you need to keep in mind when you're constructing

  • an English sentence. Make sure you do that and you don't lose marks unnecessarily on

  • your exams by making one of these basic errors. All right? If you'd like to do some more practice

  • on this, please go to our website: www.engvid.com. Thanks very much for watching, and

  • good luck with your English.

Hi, my name's Rebecca. For the next few minutes, let's pretend you are the English teacher

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A2 初級

8つの英文。間違いを見つける (8 English Sentences: Find the Mistakes)

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    Gabriel Kuo に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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