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You and I, you and me - Afterwards, after all - who, whom, whose - AIRC72

You and I, you and me - Afterwards, after all - who, whom, whose - AIRC72

FromAprende ingles con inglespodcast de La Mansión del Inglés-Learn English Free


You and I, you and me - Afterwards, after all - who, whom, whose - AIRC72

FromAprende ingles con inglespodcast de La Mansión del Inglés-Learn English Free

ratings:
Length:
31 minutes
Released:
Oct 11, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Description

If you are a new listener to this podcast, welcome to the award-winning podcast that improves your English. With over 40 years of teaching between us, we'll help you improve your English and take it to the next level.
In this episode: You and I, you and me - afterwards, after all - who, whom, whose
Listener Feedback:
Javi T.
I wanted to ask you a couple of questions.Diference between, '' After all '' and '' afterwards'' // Exemp: we are not a good chefs, but after all, the food wasn't that bad.we had to study last night, but afterwards we went out for a few beers.
'Afterwards' is a time expression. It refers to time.
'After all' is more than a time expression:
"I thought I was lost, but I was going the right way after all."
"Let me help you. After all, you always help me." (por lo menos)
"After all is said and done." - al fin y al cabo, a fin de cuentas
"After all the trouble she's causes me, I still love Berta." (despues de todo)
"We had lunch. Afterwards, John went home."
¡OJO! It's not correct to say, X"We had lunch. Afterwards, John went home."X you should say, "We had lunch. After that, John went home."
"After" is a preposition and needs to go with another word.
Whom, who or whose?
"To Whom It May Concern" - Use this expression in formal emails when you do not know the name of the person you are writing to.
whose = de quién
Whom is mainly used in formal English (especially in written English).
Whom can only be for objects, it cannot be for subjects.
"Are you the gentleman WHOM I met earlier?" ('Whom' is the object, 'I' is the subject). This is not common spoken English. It's more common to use 'who', not 'whom' in modern spoken English.
When it's an indirect object, with a preposition, use 'whom'.
"For Whom the Bells Toll" by Ernest Hemingway
"With Whom are you going out tonight?"
Use WHOM (with an 'M') if the answer is HIM. - "Whom do you love?" - "I love him." (No se dice, X"I love he."X)
 
"Is it posible to use the verbs 'fancy , feel like' as past verbs tense?
Yes, it is! - "I fancied a pizza so we went out for dinner."
"I felt like having a pizza."
A question from Armando
Hello, Reza and Craig. I want to thank you for creating this podcasts every week. I am from Colombia and recently I became a patron to support your great labor (work).
I really hope that many people can join us because together we can achieve the aim of having written transcriptions for every episode.
Would you mind help me with this question? I have been studying how to create questions with the following words:
how, what, which, where, when, among others, but I can't understand or identify the structure for these sentences and when I need to use these auxiliary verbs: do / does / did / have / has / etc
I know the auxiliary 'do' is for I / you / we / they in the present simple, and 'does' for he / she / it. But it is not clear for me when I need to put the auxiliary in the question and when not to. For example:
What time do you usually have breakfast?How many people live in this house? (this question does not have any auxiliary)How much is this bunch of white roses?How often do you visit your parents?
When the question word is an object, use an auxiliary verb:
+ I eat rice. (positive form)- I don't eat rice. (negative form)? Do I eat rice. (question form)
"How many people live in this house? ("How many" is the subject, not the object)
"Who did you help?" - "I helped John." - "Who (object) did you (subject) help?" - "I helped John (object)."
"Who helped you?" - "Who (subject) helped you (object)?"
"How many eggs did you buy?" (auxiliary verb)
"How many cars arrived?" (no auxiliary verb)
"Whose car is this?" - The verb TO BE never uses an auxiliary verb.
"How long ago did my mother arrive?" My mother is the subject - you need an auxiliary verb.
"Where do you work?" - 'You' is the subject of the question, so you need an auxiliary verb
I do not understand why these sentences use the verb 'likes' with 's' instead of 'like' without s:
"Craig likes chocol
Released:
Oct 11, 2015
Format:
Podcast episode

Titles in the series (100)

For Spanish speakers learning English. Level B1 and above. | Mejorar tu ingles con nuestros podcasts. Desde el nivel B1.