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Teach English in Britstown - TEFL Courses

Do you want to be TEFL or TESOL-certified in Northern Cape? Are you interested in teaching English in Britstown, Northern Cape? Check out our opportunities in Britstown, Become certified to Teach English as a Foreign Language and start teaching English in your community or abroad! Teflonline.net offers a wide variety of Online TEFL Courses and a great number of opportunities for English Teachers and for Teachers of English as a Second Language.
Here Below you can check out the feedback (for one of our units) of one of the 16.000 students that last year took an online course with ITTT!

Basic sentence structure can be broken down into the following components: subject (the subject that the verb is being done by), object (the object the verb is acting on), verb (an action). There are also nouns (Name of an object/person/place etc), articles (the, a, an) and conjunctions (sentence ?glue?). More complex sentences require the addition of gerunds, pronouns, prepositions (place markers), and adverbs (verb description). Articles, verbs, prepositions, nouns, adjectives, and pronouns encompass a larger group of subcategories whereas subjects, objects, and adverbs have more basic criteria. Adjectives are used to describe nouns and compare nouns. When comparing nouns, there are two ways to do this; to use a comparative or a superlative. Comparative adjectives are used to compare two things and often utilise the addition of ??er than? to the ending of the adjective. Superlatives are used to compare one thing to a sample group often using the ending ?-est? added to the adjective. Articles are broken down into two subcategories: definite articles (the) and indefinite articles (a, an). The former being used for a specific object, the latter being used for a non-specific object that is a general object. Gerunds are verbs in the present participle form used as a subject of a sentence. ?Playing tennis is fun.? Nouns are broken down into common, proper, compound, abstract and collective. Proper nouns always have a capital letter as they are specific to only one of their kind. Common nouns are the names of everyday objects, people, places etc. Compound nouns are two nouns put together to create a new noun, abstract nouns are things we cannot touch but experience as an idea. Collective nouns are nouns used to express a specific group of noun. Countable and uncountable nouns, the former being objects you can physically count, and the latter being something you cannot count. Pronouns are split into personal (I, he, she), possessive (Mine, yours), reflexive (myself, yourself), and relative (who, which). Prepositions are place markers that help denote where something is, and a non-specific time, and general directions. Verbs are action words that must be conjugated depending on the usage in the sentence and are classified in the following four categories: base form (infinitive/dictionary form), past simple, past participle, and present participle. When conjugating, verbs are classified into two categories, regular and irregular verbs. Regular verbs are conjugated with a somewhat uniform set of rules: addition of ?ed (past simple) or ?ing (present participle) with correction of doubling up consonants or removal of ?y in specific cases. Past simple and past participle conjugation is the same. Irregular verbs, which are more commonly used in everyday speech, conjugate with a more erratic set of rules depending on the context the verb is used, and the past simple and past participle conjugations are not the same. Verbs are classified into two categories: transitive and intransitive. The former requiring an object to act on, the latter not requiring an object. Auxiliary verbs are the ?glue? that perfect the conjugation of the verb; do, have, and be.", Although I am not the biggest enthusiast for English grammar


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