Week 20th – 22nd May
Hello, boys! What’s the matter with you?
You let us down last week! Hadn’t been for Chus, I’d
have been on my own the two classes!
I guess Eduardo will be snowed under (loaded) with work, studying for his
exams. Good luck!
I haven’t heard from Gabi, but I expect us to see him this
afternoon. Anyway, I hope his knee is better!
What did we do last week?
We corrected ‘Use of English’, test 2. I included
the ‘key’ in the stack of copies I’m keeping for you!
But if you’d rather check the answers by yourselves, you
can do it on this link
The sections of this test paper were headed as ‘Sound Advice for Language Learners’, ‘Pre-History’,
21st Century Workplace’, and, of course the sections of ‘Gapped
Sentences’ and ‘Key Word Transformations’
We revised the uses of the unreal past.
Sometimes the verb tense we use does not coincide with
the time. Bear in mind that
“tense” isn’t the same as “time”.
Time: present, past or
future.
I wish I had Sue’s telephone number. So, I could tell her
about the lecture.
“Had” is past simple tense
but the time it refers to is present. It refers to a present situation.
·
When Bill and I got married, his attitude to money amused me.
·
If Bill got promoted, our standard of living would go
up.
·
I wish we were better off.
·
I was so jealous when I heard about Carol’s weekend in New
York.
·
I think it’s time we moved to a bigger house.
·
I’d rather my daughters married a man with money.
·
I wish I’d married my first boyfriend!
·
If I’d married Sean, I would have a better standard of
living.
Tenses In bold red really correspond to past time.
Tenses in bold green, use the past but refer to
present or future situations.
Summing
up
·
Use wish + past simple to refer to things we would
like to be different in the present or the future (but which are impossible or
unlikely)
If only I knew the answer!
I wish I knew the answer.
·
Wish
+ past perfect, to talk about things which happened and we now regret.
(Instead of ‘wish’
you can use ‘if only’ in exactly the same way. Nevertheless, ‘if only’ is more
emphatic).
If only you hadn’t forgotten the map,
we’d be there by now!
I wish you hadn’t forgotten the map.
·
We use would rather + subject + past tense to express
preference.
I’d rather you left your dog outside. I’m allergic.
We
can use would
rather+ infinitive without ‘to’ when there is no change of subject.
I’d rather not talk
about it.
·
We use the past simple after it’s time + subject
to say that something has to be done now or in the near future.
It’s time (high time) the government did something about unemployment.
We
can use it’s
time +to+infinitive when we don’t want to specify the subject.
It’s time to finish this.
And we finished the classes reading and
speaking about the topic ‘I wish I had married for money, not for love!’
See you this evening!