Personal profile
Introduce, My name is Fahmi Edi Wiranta, I was born in Jakarta on 07 October 1988. I am a moslem. I was living with parents in Depok. I am currently enrolled at the University Gunadarma economics faculty management.
Preferred subjects
Actually a lot of courses that I liked, the courses related to Marketing. Why do I choose topic related to Marketing? Obviously, first, because I am a student majoring in economic management. Second, because the material is not boring, so comfortable to learn.
Hobby
I love the variety of sports such as; chess, badminton, Indoor soccer/Futsal, and others.
Jumat, 26 Maret 2010
Kamis, 25 Maret 2010
Modal Auxiliaries
The Modal Auxiliaries in English are: can, could, had better, may, might, must, ought to, shall, should, will, would.
Modal Auxiliaries generally express a speaker’s attitudes, or ‘’moods”. For example, modals can in addition, they can convevy the strength of these attitudes.
Each modal has more than one meaning or use.
Command and Request
Command is the command while the request is a request.
Command and request an order or request or appeal directly to the pronoun to two.
Command and request our language is usually ordered or ordered to do something called a command line / request (Command and Request).
"The words" messenger plus ituh with "lah" and ends with an exclamation point (!) Is like "Sit!" Or "Go!".
In English, the word "God" did not exist. So if we want to get someone to do something, only the verb are placed in front of the sentence itself is getting the meaning of "is" in the sentence.
For example:
Come here!
Try to speak English!
Study diligently!
If the sentence is not a verb(verb), then use "be" in front of the sentence because it is the verb to be. But this has nothing to be mean / translation.
For example:
Be good to her!
Be diligent!
Be careful!
example command and request :
1.use this shirt at college !
2.use a seat belt when driving a car !
3.if you want to dance with me ?
4.don’t touch me !
Command and request an order or request or appeal directly to the pronoun to two.
Command and request our language is usually ordered or ordered to do something called a command line / request (Command and Request).
"The words" messenger plus ituh with "lah" and ends with an exclamation point (!) Is like "Sit!" Or "Go!".
In English, the word "God" did not exist. So if we want to get someone to do something, only the verb are placed in front of the sentence itself is getting the meaning of "is" in the sentence.
For example:
Come here!
Try to speak English!
Study diligently!
If the sentence is not a verb(verb), then use "be" in front of the sentence because it is the verb to be. But this has nothing to be mean / translation.
For example:
Be good to her!
Be diligent!
Be careful!
example command and request :
1.use this shirt at college !
2.use a seat belt when driving a car !
3.if you want to dance with me ?
4.don’t touch me !
ADJECTIVE CLAUSES
Clause : A clause is a group of words containing a subject and a verb.
Adjective clause: An adjective clause is a dependent clause that modifies a noun. It describes, identifies, or gives further information about a noun. (An adjective clause is also called a relative clause.)
Who: untuk orang dalam posisi subjek (human as subject).
Whom: untuk orang dalam posisi objek (human as object).
Which: untuk benda, baik dalam posisi subjek atau objek (non-human as subject/object).
That: digunakan sebagai subtitusi who, whom, atau which.
Whose: digunakan untuk kepemilikan.
When: digunakan untuk waktu (year, day, time, etc.)
Why: digunakan untuk sebab.
Using subject Pronouns: Who, Which, That
1.I thanked the woman.
She helped me.
a.I thanked the woman who helped me.
b.I thanked the woman that helped me.
2.The book is mine.
It is on the table.
c. The book which is on the table is mine.
d. The book that is on the table is mine.
Note:
In (a): I thanked the woman = an independent clause
Who helped me = an adjective clause
The adjective clause modifies the noun woman.
In (a): who is the subject of the adjective clause.
In (b): that is the subject of the adjective clause.
Who = used for people
Which = used for things
That = used for both people and things
Using object pronouns: Who(m), Which, That
1.The man was Mr. Jones.
I saw him.
(a)The man who(m) I saw was Mr. Jones
(b)The man that I saw was Mr. jones.
2.The movie wasn’t very good.
We saw it last night.
(c)The movie which we saw last night wasn’t very good.
(d)The movie that we saw last night wasn’t very good.
Adjective clause: An adjective clause is a dependent clause that modifies a noun. It describes, identifies, or gives further information about a noun. (An adjective clause is also called a relative clause.)
Who: untuk orang dalam posisi subjek (human as subject).
Whom: untuk orang dalam posisi objek (human as object).
Which: untuk benda, baik dalam posisi subjek atau objek (non-human as subject/object).
That: digunakan sebagai subtitusi who, whom, atau which.
Whose: digunakan untuk kepemilikan.
When: digunakan untuk waktu (year, day, time, etc.)
Why: digunakan untuk sebab.
Using subject Pronouns: Who, Which, That
1.I thanked the woman.
She helped me.
a.I thanked the woman who helped me.
b.I thanked the woman that helped me.
2.The book is mine.
It is on the table.
c. The book which is on the table is mine.
d. The book that is on the table is mine.
Note:
In (a): I thanked the woman = an independent clause
Who helped me = an adjective clause
The adjective clause modifies the noun woman.
In (a): who is the subject of the adjective clause.
In (b): that is the subject of the adjective clause.
Who = used for people
Which = used for things
That = used for both people and things
Using object pronouns: Who(m), Which, That
1.The man was Mr. Jones.
I saw him.
(a)The man who(m) I saw was Mr. Jones
(b)The man that I saw was Mr. jones.
2.The movie wasn’t very good.
We saw it last night.
(c)The movie which we saw last night wasn’t very good.
(d)The movie that we saw last night wasn’t very good.
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