Inventar una historia corta con secuencia (VERBOS EN PASADO SIMPLE SUBRAYADOS)
con mínimo 10 verbos irregulares de la tabla que adjunte
AYUDENME PORFA LES DOY CORONITAA
NUNCA ME AYUDAN PORFAAA LES DOY CORONITAA PERO AYUDENME YA LO PREGUNTE COMO 5 VECES
Adjuntos:
angieromero84:
When my hands were frozen, I decided it was time to go back home. Fox didn't want to, but I pulled hard and I managed to take him back. When we arrived at the front door, I realized I didn't have my keys with me, so we stayed out in the cold for more than an hour! Fox was happy, but I was late for work!
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Last May, I listened to a truly fascinating podcast. The theme of the episode was the origin and future of irregular past tense verbs. There was so much to learn that I listened to the episode three times to try to absorb it all. You can listen to the entire episode here.
In the podcast, Michael Rosen and Dr. Laura Wright discuss that in the Indo-European language, past tense verbs were formed with a vowel change (such as modern “swim -> swam”). Most of our present day irregulars continue that pattern of vowel change. There are some common irregulars, however, that are made up of multiple verbs. For example, the past tense of “go” came from the archaic verb “wend”. And the verbs within “to be” are made up of multiple original verbs: “am, is, be, was”.
In more recent history, the ancient Germanic language began to create new verbs from nouns and adjectives (for example the adjective “full” became the verb “to fill”). The Germanic languages added a rule that these new verbs would become past tense by adding a “did” after the verb. So “fill” become “fill did”, which transformed over time to “filled”.
In the podcast, Michael Rosen and Dr. Laura Wright discuss that in the Indo-European language, past tense verbs were formed with a vowel change (such as modern “swim -> swam”). Most of our present day irregulars continue that pattern of vowel change. There are some common irregulars, however, that are made up of multiple verbs. For example, the past tense of “go” came from the archaic verb “wend”. And the verbs within “to be” are made up of multiple original verbs: “am, is, be, was”.
In more recent history, the ancient Germanic language began to create new verbs from nouns and adjectives (for example the adjective “full” became the verb “to fill”). The Germanic languages added a rule that these new verbs would become past tense by adding a “did” after the verb. So “fill” become “fill did”, which transformed over time to “filled”.
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