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Rosemary’s.’
preparatory
subject
Instead of using a clause
as the subject of a sentence, it is often
more natural to begin the
sentence with it and put the clause later: ‘It’s amazing that nobody was injured.’ ‘It will be
good to see you all again.’ When used in this way, it is called a preparatory subject.
preposition
a
word like at, from, for, during, into, in spite
of which is used before a noun, pronoun, etc:
‘We went to the airport in a taxi.
present perfect
the verb form that is made with have and the past participle: ‘My watch has stopped.’ ‘Have
you seen Alex this morning?’ See also PROGRESSIVE
present
progressive
See
PROGRESSIVE
present simple
the verb form which has no endings apart from -s/-es with subjects such as ‘he’, ‘she’, ‘it’, ‘Mrs
Robinson’ etc: ‘I play a lot of tennis.’ ‘The sun rises in the east and sets in the west.’ See also
PROGRESSIVE
progressive
(also ‘continuous’) a verb form made with be + -ing: ‘It was raining this morning.’ (past
progressive); ‘Are you coming tonight?’ (present progressive); ‘I’ve been waiting here for over
an hour.’ (present perfect progressive); ‘Before
coming to London,
she had been working in
Paris.’ (past perfect progressive). See also SIMPLE
pronoun
a
word like he, her, mine, themselves, some, who, which is used
in place of a noun or noun
phrase: ‘Ann was very upset when she heard the news.’ (‘she’ is the pronoun for ‘Ann’); ‘If Alex
needs a red pen, there’s one in the drawer.’ (‘one’ is the pronoun for ‘a red pen’)
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