miércoles, 17 de diciembre de 2014

Transportation Sentences



  • He was driving to work when he saw his colleague at the bus stop
  • He drove to the bus stop and gave his colleage a lift. 
  • When he was twenty he had never driven a car.
  • He set off at 7.50 am so, by the time he got to work he had been driving for over an hour

Transportation


transportation makes general reference to the means of moving people or goods from one place to another
Types of transportation:Water, like: Boat, Underwater Yacht boat, humanTerrestrial, such as: Automobile, Bicycle, Motorcycle, train, tank, feet, etc.Air, like: Airplane, helicopter, hot air balloon, warplanes, etc. Animal Traction: carriages, sleighs, carts, etc. and with the help of technology.

Past Simple

1) I  Worked (work)  in a bank for ten years.


2) Where did you live (you/live) when you were young?

3) She didn't study (not/study) French at university.

4) He travelled (travel) through the middle east last year.

5) Did they visit (they/visit) the Louvre in Paris?

6) She didn't watch (not/watch) TV yesterday.
7) We bought (buy) a new car last weekend.

8) Where did you teach (you/teach) before you came here?

9) He didn't think (not/think) that he was right.
10) I cooked (cook) steak last night.

Simple Past Verbs (Irregular) and Simple Past Verbs (Regular)


Simple Past Verbs (irregular):

  • You had
  • He had
  • She had
  • It had
  • We had
  • You had
  • They had


Simple Past Verbs (Regular):

  • I worked.
  • You worked.
  • He worked.
  • She worked.
  • It worked.
  • We worked.
  • You worked.
  • They worked.

Describing In Past Form


describing cabo san lucas history:

*Archaeological excavations have shown evidence of continual human habitation in the area for at least ten thousand years.[4] When the first Europeans arrived, they encountered the Pericú people, who survived on a subsistence diet based on hunting and the gathering of seeds, roots, shellfish, and other marine resources. They called the location Yenecamú.

According to the narrative of Hatsutaro, a Japanese castaway, in the book Kaigai Ibun (written by Maekawa, Junzo and Bunzo Sakai and narrated by Hatsutaro), when he arrived at Cabo San Lucas in May 1842 there were only two houses and about twenty inhabitants. However, American authors such as Henry Edwards and John Ross Browne claim that Cabo San Lucas's founder was an Englishman named Thomas "Old Tom" Ritchie. John Ross Browne says Ritchie arrived there about 1828, while Edwards says that he died in October 1874.[5]

A fishing village began growing in the area when in 1917, an American company built a floating platform to catch tuna and ten years later founded Compañía de Productos Marinos S.A., the plant lasted several years in operation