Yes, absolutely! This spelling mistake unfortunatley escaped my attention before uploading the video and when I noticed, there was no point deleting the video and reuploading it again. You have an eye for details. Thanks for your feedback.
Dear teacher, You teach English verbs by V1,V2,V3 method. No doubt it is an easy method to understand the seemed to be cumbersome English verbs. But the danger is that V1 and V3 are non finite verbs. We can't use it in a sentence with out adding suitable auxiliary verb to it. On the other hand we can use V2 in a sentence directly as it is a finite verb. Hence it creates much confusion to a non english speaker /learner. My request is that may dispense with teaching V1,V2,V3 method and teach there are 3 non finite verbs and 12 finite verbs.At the beginning it may be difficult to under the method. But from my experience it is very easy to make under stand the method to the student with a little patience. It would make them use English verbs with out any chaos and confuion.
Dear Sir, In English there are 3 non finite verbs viz.( I) Infinitive form (2) Past Participle and (3) Present Participle. Am I right?. From these non finite verbs We make 12 Finite verbs by adding suitable auxiliary verbs. In my opinion we have to teach a student non finite verbs and finite verbs separately instead of mixing them together irrespective of the fact that whether they are irregular, regular or zero change verbs. In V1,V2,V3 method V1 and V3 are non finite verbs. V2 is finite verb. It often creates much confusion to a non native English Student.
Should you need more practice on the passive voice, please visit these links: th-cam.com/video/E_tl1jVpZzs/w-d-xo.html or th-cam.com/video/Mv5AiT5Z5pU/w-d-xo.html
Sure thing! Please follow the channel, there is a new video every week, hopefully. With your comment you can help my channel grow as well as you can actively have a say in what the videos should be about in the future. If you have ideas what you would like to see in the channel, I'm going to think about it and if other people also vote for that, sooner or later there will be a video about it. Cheers.
You are clearly wrong. The irregular verb lie/lay /lain does mean being in a position in which your body is flat on the floor, on a bed etc. In this meaning, it is an intransitive verb. The verb "lie" when it is a regular verb indeed means not telling the truth. The irregular verb lay is also a v1 (infinitive), not only the past simple (v2) form of "lie". Lay/laid/laid means putting someone or something down carefully into a flat position. In this case, lay is a transitive verb and synonymous with "place."
very useful! Thx again
Thank you!
Perfect, you're the best teacher 🌷 keep teaching us 😍🌹🥀🌷
Thank you a lot. Glad you liked it.
Simple but great video
This is more simple even 7age may understand thank teacher good work
Thank you. That was my goal, I wanted to make something easy to understand.
Thank you so much sir
I like your video very much thanks a lot 🙏
Thank you for your feedback.
Awesome, great job, thank you.🎉🎉🎉🎉
Thank you 🙏
Thanks, the pictures are very funny & the examples are interesting
Thank you!
Thanks ! Do u have all those exampels as pdf ?
Yes, I do.
Wow this video is fantastic, it was useful for me.
Happy to hear that. Thank you for the feedback, I appreciate it.
This means a lot to me.
Great, good to know that the content is useful. Thx.
Thank you
Thank you!
Great video… I love the examples, please make more like this one…Thank you!❤
There are other videos like this with the same concept. Please look for them in my channel. Thank you for your comment.
Good job my teacher
Thanks 🙏
Good exsmple teaching
Thank you very much.
I need more like this, please.
More videos like this are in the pipleline. Stay tuned.
Thank you very much
Thank you for the feedback. Appreciated!
thank you Aron!
You're welcome!
thank you so much for your great effort🙏
Thx
Thanks 😊
Thank you!
Thank you ❤❤❤
Glad you liked it ☺️
Please check the minute 5:10 Should be: "...someone has drunk HIS Guinness..." Thank you and everything is very helpfull.
Yes, absolutely! This spelling mistake unfortunatley escaped my attention before uploading the video and when I noticed, there was no point deleting the video and reuploading it again. You have an eye for details. Thanks for your feedback.
Dear teacher,
You teach English verbs by V1,V2,V3 method. No doubt it is an easy method to understand the seemed to be cumbersome English verbs. But the danger is that V1 and V3 are non finite verbs. We can't use it in a sentence with out adding suitable auxiliary verb to it. On the other hand we can use V2 in a sentence directly as it is a finite verb. Hence it creates much confusion to a non english speaker /learner. My request is that may dispense with teaching V1,V2,V3 method and teach there are 3 non finite verbs and 12 finite verbs.At the beginning it may be difficult to under the method. But from my experience it is very easy to make under stand the method to the student with a little patience. It would make them use English verbs with out any chaos and confuion.
The problem is that I simply don't understand what you suggest. Would you be so kind to explain?
Dear Sir,
In English there are 3 non finite verbs viz.( I) Infinitive form (2) Past Participle and (3) Present Participle. Am I right?. From these non finite verbs We make 12 Finite verbs by adding suitable auxiliary verbs. In my opinion we have to teach a student non finite verbs and finite verbs separately instead of mixing them together irrespective of the fact that whether they are irregular, regular or zero change verbs. In V1,V2,V3 method V1 and V3 are non finite verbs. V2 is finite verb. It often creates much confusion to a non native English Student.
Thanks a lot😊
Thank you Andrea!
Thank you!
Thank you!
Thanks 👍
Thank you for your feedback. Appreciated!
So cool 🥰
Thank you 😊
Good , thanks Coach ❕❕❕
You're welcome!
powerful video❤
Thank you
Thanks
Thank you!
Great
Thank you mate. :)
1.21 The pronunciation is not "digri" but "disagri" = disəˈɡrē.
Indeed! There was a sound problem there. The correct pronuncioation of the word "disagree" is /dɪsəˈɡriː/
Passive voice
Should you need more practice on the passive voice, please visit these links: th-cam.com/video/E_tl1jVpZzs/w-d-xo.html or th-cam.com/video/Mv5AiT5Z5pU/w-d-xo.html
Wow, that is some accent. Where are v2 and v3 of bring pronounced that way?
The pronunciation is /brɔːt/ as standard UK English as opposed to US /brɒːt/.
@@onlineangoltanar what you say doesn't follow the phonetics. check it with youglish or anything else.
Why is the salesman running? Because the dog has bitten him several times in the ass.🤣😂🤣🤣
Glad you liked the video and the example sentences. 😆
Can you teach me English please 🙏
Sure thing! Please follow the channel, there is a new video every week, hopefully. With your comment you can help my channel grow as well as you can actively have a say in what the videos should be about in the future. If you have ideas what you would like to see in the channel, I'm going to think about it and if other people also vote for that, sooner or later there will be a video about it. Cheers.
🎉🎉🎉
👍👏👏👏
thank you
❤
Thanks 🙏
❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉🎉😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊😊
Thank you 👍!
The verb Lie is wrong; is Lay, Laid, Laid; the meaning of lie is not telling the truth
You are clearly wrong. The irregular verb lie/lay /lain does mean being in a position in which your body is flat on the floor, on a bed etc. In this meaning, it is an intransitive verb.
The verb "lie" when it is a regular verb indeed means not telling the truth. The irregular verb lay is also a v1 (infinitive), not only the past simple (v2) form of "lie". Lay/laid/laid means putting someone or something down carefully into a flat position. In this case, lay is a transitive verb and synonymous with "place."
THANK YOU VERY MUCH
Thank you
Welcome
thank you so much
thx mate