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    hanle
    wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:39 last edited by hanle
    #7

    People cannot care for pets
    The cost of the living crisis is worsening, leading some UK pet owners to give up their animals to save money.

    UK’s famous Battersea charity is currently caring for hundreds of dogs and cats, and similar centers around the country say they’re receiving record inquiries for dog and cat returns.

    Many owners say the additional cost of food and veterinary care isn’t manageable. One owner came to the charity to return a pregnant cat because he was no longer able to afford to care for the cat and her unborn kittens.

    The trend follows a surge in demand for pets during the COVID-19 pandemic. UK households are dealing with a huge crisis in their energy bills, and experts warn a recession will come. Some charities warn it can put millions of people into poverty, and they hope that someone will be able to give the animals permanent homes.

    ****Vocabulary:
    +Veterinary (adj): UK/ˈvet.ər.ɪ.nər.i/ and US /ˈvet.ər.ə.ner.i/: connected with taking care of the health of animals: thú y
    +Pandemic (adj): UK /pænˈdem.ɪk/ and US /pænˈdem.ɪk/: an epidemic of an infectious disease that has spread across a large region đại dịch
    +Recession (n): UK /rɪˈseʃ.ən/ and /US/rɪˈseʃ.ən/: a period when the economy of a country is not successful and conditions for business are bad: say thoái Kinh tế

    • Poverty (n): UK /ˈpɒv.ə.ti/ and US /ˈpɑː.vɚ.t̬i/: the condition of being extremely: cảnh nghèo nàn
    • Permanent (adj): UK /ˈpɜː.mə.nənt/ and US /ˈpɝː.mə.nənt/: lasting for a long time or forever: lâu dài
    1. Many Vietnamese people keep lots of pets in their homes such as dogs, cats, rabbits, monkeys etc.
    2. There is a few veterinary care facilities in cities and countrysides.
    3. When animals get illness it's difficult to treat them.
    4. We have a shortage in care facilities, care equipments and skilled veterinary staff in Vietnam.
    5. Many people cannot get a veterinary service for their pets.
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      admin
      wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:39 last edited by
      #8

      [The cost] is [leading] some UK pet owners to give up their animals to save money
      The cost [does what now?] leading
      https://context.reverso.net/translation/english-german/leading
      It's Present Continuous Tense, it describes the current, ongoing movement or activity.
      "to give up" is a phrasal verb, all verbs in the infinitive form require "to"

      be (no longer) able to
      able to do something (used as a modal verb)
      longer is a comparative adjective

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        admin
        wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:40 last edited by
        #9

        Please, post your writing in the form like I posted above, numerate your sentences. Usually we ask students to correct their sentences. Answer the questions I asked you in this thread. Also I think you need to take grammar lessons and start your writing from simple sentences.

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          hanle
          wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:41 last edited by
          #10
          1. A bus is the most common mode of transportation for Vietnamese.
          2. Most buses in Vietnam are only three colour buses - blue, green, and yellow.
          3. A bus colour indicates whether it's public or private.
          4. Every day students and workers take buses to go to school or work.
          5. People who do not take a bus ride their bikes.
          6. A big population and a big number of motorcyclists had leaded to crowds and traffic jams.
          7. The government imposed a ban on motorcycles on public roads.
          8. However, it didn't reduce a traffic jam in Vietnam.
          9. Therefore, the government extended highways and improved widening of roads.
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            admin
            wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:42 last edited by
            #11

            I think you speak/write using memorized patterns mostly (they are wrong often). That's why I recommended you to agree on grammar lessons

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              admin
              wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:43 last edited by
              #12

              I'll post grammar lessons here. I needed your confirmation to start them. Also correct your old posts with wrong sentences (press the pen shaped button to Edit). Studying English here implies an active student participation. Others can read you and learn through your diary too.

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                admin
                wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:43 last edited by admin
                #13

                There are two language schools.
                1.Those who are against grammar. They claim people speak using patterns, you cannot think of grammar rules when you speak quickly. They are right. However, you cannot memorize patterns for everything, you cannot build long sentences, your lexicon is very poor.
                For example, there is the online language school Rosetta Stone. They force students to type 20 times I go to a market, She goes to a market, He goes to a market, They go to a market... Then you have to replace a market with a store and type another 20 sentences. It's boring. Also you may not only go to a market but run to a market or even fly by taking a flying car. In 95% you still go to a market.
                2.Those who are for grammar. They say you have to learn grammar all the time because it's a skeleton of any language, you can build long sentences when you know grammar. However, grammar in English is very big, mastering grammar may take a whole life and you may forget to concentrate on other language aspects such as vocabulary, speech, practice. If you dive deeper into grammar you can see it's playing with times mostly (someone comes or leaves at n o'clock), it's useless because you don't use many sentences with specific time in real life, you can divide a long sentence on parts and don't care of grammar much and you will be understandable.

                So, where is the truth? The truth is in the middle. Memorize patterns and study a little grammar.
                Use patterns for quick speech when your goal is to tell someone your ideas, for doctor consultations, for emergency calls, for an informal speech.
                Use well worded sentences with good grammar for interviews, for lectures, for speeches in front of a big auditorium. You can structure and write down everything when you have long speeches.

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                  admin
                  wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:43 last edited by
                  #14

                  Let me know what do you think of these language schools, what method is preferable for you?

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                    admin
                    wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 10:47 last edited by admin 4 Jan 2025, 11:31
                    #15

                    You should try the next tests.


                    BE, HAVE, DO, DID, WAS...
                    Tenses


                    Difficulties of the Passive Form
                    Active → Passive voice
                    Many tests on Active, Passive voice and mix


                    Present Simple
                    Present Continuous
                    Present Continuous or Present Simple
                    Many tests on Present Simple, Present Continuous


                    Past Simple
                    Present Perfect
                    Present Perfect or Past Simple
                    Present Perfect Continuous
                    Present Perfect or Present Perfect Continuous
                    Present Perfect Continuous or Past Perfect Continuous or Future Perfect Continuous
                    Past Simple or Past Continuous
                    Past Perfect
                    The pasts
                    Many tests on Present Perfect, Present Perfect Continuous, Past Simple
                    Many tests on Past Simple, Past Continuous, Present Perfect


                    Future Simple
                    Future in Present Continuous (Be going to)
                    Present Continuous (Be going to) or Future Simple
                    Future Perfect
                    Future Continuous or Future Perfect
                    Future Progressive or Future Perfect
                    Future Tenses
                    Will and Would: a little further
                    Future in the past
                    Many tests on Future Continuous, Future Simple, Future Perfect


                    Gerund
                    Gerunds or Infinitives
                    Infinitive clause
                    Infinitive in sentences
                    Infinitive phrase
                    Many tests on Gerunds, Infinitives 1
                    Many tests on Gerunds, Infinitives 2


                    For and its use in English
                    For, During, While
                    In/into - On/onto
                    About/At/For/To
                    At - In - On
                    Prepositions of time
                    Prepositions of location
                    Prepositions: Finding one's way
                    Prepositions (for / in / of /on / to)
                    To or For
                    To - For
                    at/of/on/to
                    Verbs and prepositions 1
                    Verbs and prepositions 2
                    Verbs and prepositions 3
                    Verbs and prepositions 4
                    Verbs and prepositions 5
                    Verbs and prepositions 6
                    Verbs and prepositions 7
                    Phrasal verbs: GET
                    Phrasal verbs: GO
                    Phrasal verbs: PUT
                    Phrasal verbs: TAKE
                    Phrasal verbs: TAKE, LOOK, GET
                    Many tests on Prepositions, Adjectives, Phrasal Verbs
                    Many tests on Particles, Phrasal Verbs


                    Adjectives -ing and -ed
                    Many tests on Adjectives


                    Adverbial Clauses
                    Adjectives and adverbs
                    Many tests on Adverbs


                    Can/Could/May... Must/Have to...
                    May, Might, Should
                    Can, Could and Be able to
                    Modals in Present tense
                    Modals in Past tense
                    Modals in Future tense
                    Must have or Had to
                    Many tests on Modal Verbs


                    Participle Clauses
                    Many tests on Participle Clauses


                    COUNTABLE AND UNCOUNTABLE NOUNS
                    A (An) or The
                    Countable nouns with A/An and Some
                    The or nothing
                    Using The or nothing with nouns
                    Many tests on Articles


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                      admin
                      wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:11 last edited by
                      #16

                      Please, take at least 3-5 grammar tests every day and post links, your marks. It's the task for 2 weeks.

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                        hanle
                        wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:11 last edited by
                        #17

                        I always had to do a lot of grammar exercises. It was incredibly boring. It was easy for me to forget how to make correct sentences after a few months if I didn't review grammar.
                        Therefore, I'd like to learn using Method 1 this time, then I can apply my knowledge in my daily communication. When I speak with my colleagues or my boss, I often spend much time considering what I should say. In addition, I also want to focus on grammar to improve my writing skills because I often have to send emails to suppliers in English or send orders to foreign companies. I'll start with 2-3 grammar tests every day.
                        Thank you for your advice^^.

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                          hanle
                          wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:15 last edited by admin
                          #18

                          Lesson 1: Active->passive
                          My mark: 100.

                          Lesson 2: Apostrophe (with video).
                          Apostrophe
                          My mark: 87.5.
                          Wrong sentence: He's bought stamps --> He is bought stamps.
                          Correct: He has bought stamps.

                          Lesson 3: Be in the simple past tense.
                          Be in the simple past tense
                          My mark: 91.
                          Wrong sentence: Was Mike good at school? No, he wasn't hopeless.
                          Correct: No, he was hopeless.

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                            admin
                            wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:36 last edited by admin
                            #19

                            Try to figure and analyze why your choose was wrong. I marked the posts with wrong sentences by downvoting. Please, correct them, you have to do it by yourself. I'll remove downvotes when you make right sentences. If you don't work hard, a miracle will not happen and you will not improve. Stay motivated.

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                              hanle
                              wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:36 last edited by admin
                              #20

                              Lesson 4
                              Contractions and auxiliaries
                              My mark: 81.5
                              **Wrong sentence:
                              2. Your cousin’s optimistic. He’s told you that he’d pass all his exams in June; he’d better study seriously, but he’d rather have fun with his friends.
                              Correct: would
                              Explanation: "He'd rather" = He would rather" expresses a wish, something which isn't realised at that moment, which is still unreal.
                              5. He’d hit me before I’d found the opportunity to punch him too
                              Correct: had hit me
                              Explanation: Here is a difficulty that you have to overcome. "Hit" may be either "the infinitive without to", or the preterite, or even the past participle. If we look at the end of the sentence closely, we'll find out that "hit" can here only be a past participle and a part of a past perfect. => "He had hit"
                              before I’d found = had found the opportunity to punch him too.
                              "Before I'd found" = "before I had found" => the contraction of "had", a part of the past perfect.

                              Lesson 5:
                              Do - don't - does - doesn't
                              My mark: 90
                              **Wrong sentence:
                              7. It is a really cheap restaurant, it don't cost much to eat there.
                              Correct: Doesn't
                              Explanation: verb form He/She/It +does

                              Lesson 6:
                              Do/does/did: affirmative, interrogative and negative forms
                              my mark: 77
                              **Wrong sentence:
                              1.Lucy likes chocolate and making chocolate cakes. She wants to make one with her mum.' don't I take six eggs out of the fridge?”
                              No Lucy, we don't wanna six eggs, but only four.”
                              Correct: do I take
                              Explanation:
                              Lucy wants to make a chocolate cake with her mum and offers to take eggs from the fridge: interrogative form of an "ordinary" (irregular) verb=> "Do I take...?"

                              5.“Well, Lucy, if you didn't ate the chocolate I bought yesterday, we would have enough…'
                              Correct: didn't eat
                              Explanation: "Yesterday I bought" implies the use of the negative auxiliary "didn't eat".

                              +“Err … Well Mum! I think we had bought more chocolate, then…”
                              Correct: Have to buy
                              Explanation: We have to buy" is the equivalent of the modal auxiliary "must", expressing an obligation.

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                                admin
                                wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 11:48 last edited by admin
                                #21

                                1)copy an url
                                2)type the next form
                                [ A name of a grammar test ](https:// grammarwebsite)

                                The sentences you edited doesn't sound good yet. Since you get good marks, your problem is mainly in concentration. Try to devote more time to studying, don't hurry, proofread what you posted, use a capital letter for a new sentence. You can copy-paste a wrong sentence and search on it in Google, Context-Reverso or use Google Translate. This forum is not for competitions in quick writing, not for "words on the street". We fight for a perfect English here.

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                                  hanle
                                  wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 13:40 last edited by admin
                                  #22

                                  Lesson 7:
                                  Do: Insistence - Contradiction - Confirmation
                                  My mark: 80
                                  **Wrong sentence
                                  1)No, not really, but I'm sure you'll explain... = Confirmation
                                  Correct: Insistence
                                  Explanation: This is the emphatic form. When speaking, should stress the word; when writing, do it in italics.

                                  2)'Oh dear, I liked this film...' 'I understand that, I do too! It's a great film!'
                                  Correct: did
                                  Explanation: the sentence was in the preterite, the auxiliary used will be in the preterite too.

                                  8)She said she'd follow my advice and she does
                                  Correct: Did
                                  Explanation: "she would follow" has the structure of a conditional. Following the time sequence, we must turn the auxiliary in the preterite: "she did".

                                  10)Lucy never tidies up her room, but Claire does every evening.-->Insistence.
                                  Correct: Short form
                                  Explanation: This avoid the repetition of the verb "to tidy up one's room" in the 3rd person singular.

                                  Lesson 8:
                                  Gone or been
                                  My mark: 58.5

                                  **Wrong sentence
                                  3.Patrick has been to his friend’s for the night. He’ll be here tomorrow.
                                  Correct: gone
                                  Explanation: He isn't back from there, since he should spend the night with his friend.

                                  5.'She’s went out for a few minutes. She’ll be back in ten minutes.
                                  Correct: gone
                                  Explanation: indicates that she left the house, but that she's going to come back.

                                  8.'Have you already gone to an Australian restaurant?' 'I did and had kangaroo…'
                                  Correct: been
                                  Explanation: is a question about a fact. "Have you ? " or "haven't you ? " If he had been there, he would have been back.

                                  9.Those days of affluence have been! We’re in a crisis now!
                                  Correct: gone
                                  Explanation: "Going, once, going twice, gone ! " are the words uttered by an auctioneer during a sale. The object for sale has gone and won't come back.

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                                    hanle
                                    wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 13:48 last edited by
                                    #23

                                    Sorry, I don't ignore your words, I just wanted to learn grammar tests for a few days. I will be back to corrections my old posts soon. Now, I still don't know how to correct my sentences.

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                                      admin
                                      wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 13:48 last edited by
                                      #24

                                      Here is the plan:
                                      1.Use a big letter in the beginning of a new sentence and use a dot in the end of your sentence.
                                      2.Pay attention to what you type.
                                      3.Format and highlight your posts.

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                                        hanle
                                        wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 14:26 last edited by admin
                                        #25

                                        Lesson 9:
                                        Link: Have you got / Do you have
                                        My mark: 90
                                        *Wrong sentence:
                                        1.Mom, look! Tim's father have bought a brand-new car, a red one, this time.
                                        Correct: has
                                        Explanation: It's Present Perfect Tense.

                                        Lesson10:
                                        Link: He's or His
                                        My mark: 100

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                                          admin
                                          wrote on 28 Mar 2025, 14:29 last edited by
                                          #26

                                          I see you started to correct posts. That's good, they look better now.
                                          Also try to keep a symmetry and the same style everywhere.
                                          "Correct", "Explanation", "Wrong sentence", "My mark" should be typed using a capital letter in the beginning everywhere.

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