Waiter,please___ away the tea and ___ me a cup of coffee.

Waiter,please___ away the tea and ___ me a cup of coffee.


take
bring



If it --- too much trouble, I'd love a cup of tea?


if it-isn't -too much trouble,i'd love a cup of tea.
Conditional adverbial clause, the subject will follow the present, so the clause uses the general present tense
I'd love is the abbreviation of I would love
Would is not a past tense, but a euphemistic tone



The same sentence of the waiter son brouth him a cup of tea


He soon got a cup of tea from the waiter.



Interrogative sentences in passive voice
1.Must we hand in examination papers now?
2.How did you make the model plane?
3.You can keep the book for two weeks.
Who do you think I should choose


1.Must we hand in examination papers now?
-----Must the exam papers be handed in now
2.How did you make the model plane?
------How was the model plane made by you?
3.You can keep the book for two weeks-----The book can be kept for two weeks
---------How long can the book be kept (by me)



How do general questions change into passive voice
Did say anything interesting?


First of all, I'm sorry to tell you that there is no subject in the sentence
Did he say anything interesting~
→ Have something interesting been said by him~
When changing time, we should pay attention to whether the passive subject is a person or a thing, singular or plural, countable or uncountable~
Decide the verb form according to the situation, and pay attention to the word order of questions~



What does the subject predicate object attribute adverbial complement noun pronoun adverb adjective verb article exclamation even preposition have?


Subject: 1. Definition: Subject: subject is the object of statement in a sentence, indicating who or what it is. 2. Characteristics: A. It is often acted by nouns, pronouns and nominal phrases. B. It generally means "who" or "what" in the predicate. 3. Symbol: double line
Predicate: 1, definition: used to describe the subject of statement. 2, characteristics: A, often by verbs, adjectives as. B, generally means the subject "how" or "what". 3, symbol: single line
Object: 1. Definition: the language unit of the object involved in the predicate verb. 2. Characteristics: A. It is often served by nouns, pronouns and nominal phrases. B. It generally means "how" or "what" of the predicate. 3. Symbol: wavy line. 4. All verbs that can be expected, such as "hope, think, can, say" are generally treated as objects
Attributive: 1. Definition; language unit used in front of subject and object to modify and restrict. 2. Features: A. It is often acted by noun, adjective, verb and pronoun. B. there is a "de" connection between general attributive and head word. 3. Symbol: bracket ()
Adverbial: 1. Definition: the unit of language used before the predicate of verb and adjective to modify and restrict. 2. Features: A. It is often acted by adverbs, adjectives, verbs, nouns and position words expressing place and time. B. there is a "Di" connection between the general adverbial and the central word. 3. Symbol: bracket [
Complement: 1. Definition: the additional elements behind the predicate, which play a supplementary role in the predicate, and answer questions such as "how", "how long", "how much" (time, place, result). 2. Characteristics: A. It is often acted as a verb or adjective adverb. B. there is a "de" connection between the general complement and the head word. 3. Symbol: single book title
Pithy formula: basic component subject predicate object, joint component definite complement
For example:
In this sentence, "Xiao Zhang" is the object of statement, so it is the subject; "kick" is the predicate verb; "ball" is the object
Attributive is an element that modifies a restrictive noun
Xiao Zhang of No.1 middle school plays a big ball. The words "No.1 Middle School" and "dada" are used to modify "Xiao Zhang" and "ball"
If it becomes: Xiao Zhang kicks the ball hard, "hard" is used to modify and restrict the action of kicking, so it is an adverbial
The complement is, after the verb, plays the supplementary function, for example, Xiao Zhang kicks the ball to break, in "broke" is the complement
Notional words: nouns, verbs, adjectives, numerals, quantifiers, pronouns
Function words: adverbs, prepositions, conjunctions, auxiliary words, interjections, onomatopoeia
The simplest components of a sentence -- subject, predicate (auxiliary verb), object
There are ten kinds of words in English: noun, verb, adjective, pronoun, numeral, article, adverb, preposition, conjunction and exclamation
Part of speech English name (abbreviation) meaning example words
Noun nouns (n.) is the name of a person, thing, time, place or abstract concept
room
Verbs verbs (v.) VT and VI denote action, state or quality stand
be
Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj. Adj
interesting
Pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns pronouns
everything
The numerals (num.) denote number or order nine
first
The article articles (art.) is used before nouns to help explain the meaning of nouns
the
Adverbs (adv.) modify verbs, adjectives, other adverbs or whole sentences to express behavior characteristics or character characteristics almost
bravely
Preposition (prep.) is used before a noun or pronoun to indicate the relationship between a noun, pronoun and other words
from
The conjunction conjunction (conj.) connects words, phrases, clauses or sentences and
but
The interjection (interj.) is used to express the mood or feeling of speaking hello
oh
In the above ten parts of speech, nouns, pronouns, adjectives, adverbs, numerals, verbs, etc. have clear meanings and can act as sentence components independently in sentences, which are called notional words. Prepositions, conjunctions and articles can only play the role of connection or assistance, and they do not act as any components in sentences, which are called function words. Exclamations generally do not form a part of sentences, but usually act as independent components
Hope it helps!



What are words, verbs, nouns, adjectives, articles, exclamations, adverbs, conjunctions, pronouns, numerals, prepositions? Are noun possessive words


Words are words made up of a series of letters. Verbs, nouns, adjectives, articles, exclamations, adverbs, conjunctions, pronouns, numerals, prepositions can be words or phrases
Possessive can be the category of words



Do articles, nouns, adjectives, adverbs, verbs, exclamations, conjunctions, pronouns and prepositions all belong to words


Yes, they are all words that can be found in dictionaries, but grammarians classify them



What English words modify what words, such as adjectives modify nouns, please list them one by one


Adjectives can modify nouns, such as: interesting news good died
Adverbs can modify adjectives and verbs, such as badly hurt / so good, very bad
A noun modifies a noun, such as: shop factory
Adverbs can also modify a sentence, such as lucky, he passed the exam
Hope it works



What suffixes do English nouns usually add to change verbs / adjectives


Suffix Verb Suffixes the common suffixes and their specific meanings are as follows: 1. - ify means to turn into, to make or come To become (to make or become ;to make in...