Simple Present (Unit 7)

I’m happy because of your reply.
Could you take a look at my last comment in ‘Simple Present Questions (Unit 8)’ topic, please?

Have a nice day.

to come:
I come
You come
He comes
She comes
It comes
We come
You come
They come

to go:
I go
You go
He goes
She goes
It goes
We go
You go
They go

to drink:
I drink
You drink
He drinks
She drinks
It drinks
We drink
You drink
They drink

to get:
I get
You get
He gets
She gets
It gets
We get
You get
They gets

to drive:
I drive
You drive
He drives
She drives
It drives
We drive
You drive
They drive

to know:
I know
You know
He knows
She knows
It knows
We know
You know
They know

to say:
I say
You say
He says
She says
It says
We say
You say
They say

to run:
I run
You run
He runs
She runs
It runs
We run
You run
They run

Is It correct?

Almost.
The 3rd person plural of ‘to get’ should be ‘they get’.

Why not try using these verbs in simple sentences to give them more meaning:
He comes to the party.
We get a letter.
They know the answer.

My mother works as a biology teacher.
Every TV have a remote control.
I rarely drink a whiskey.
He doesn’t ride a motorcycle.
Does She have a pet? Yes, she does.
Bears like honey.
They visit their grandparents every weekend.
I drink a glass of water in every two hours. (So I drink at 12, 14, 16, 18 o’clock.)
There is a few vegetation in a desert.
British like to drink beer after job.
I ocassionaly use a red pencil.
There are two dogs in a car.
There are a lot of logs in a tree container. ( Is it a word? What is the properly word? log container, tree container, wood container etc.?Where do we store log?)
I see the Moon every night.

Which do we use: shall or will?

These needed slight adjustments, but the rest were fine:
Every TV has a remote control.
I rarely drink whiskey.
Does she have a pet?
I drink a glass of water every two hours.
There is little vegetation in a desert.
Many British like to drink beer after doing a job.
I occasionally use a red pencil.
There are a lot of logs in the wood shed.
I see the moon every night.

I like the way you try to use a variety of sentences and make them interesting and different.

wood shed or woodshed?
I have never seen it before.

Both are used. You may also see ‘wood-shed’.

Why do we use hyphen between the two words? I really don’t know. I have seen it before.

Because the two words make up one distinct phrase.

Thanks for the reply.

I rarely eat junk food.
You don’t want to live in abroad.
She likes playing the piano.
He never pick up his cell phone.
We like to travel to the sea.
Do you need a car?
They often drink alcohol in the afternoon.

P.S.: I have a question. Does it useful to learn hundreds of basic English sentences? What do you think about this thought? I mean: ‘Can I help you? How can I help you? Do you have a minute? Please, wait. Would you like something to eat?’ etc.

You don’t want to live abroad. / You don’t want to live in another country.

He never picks up his cell phone.

I have edited my last reply.

My reading skill is better than my writing and speaking skill. As a matter of fact my comphrehension is better.
If you want to speak in English properly you have to do something. Anything.

Is it useful to learn basic English questions?

Only up to a point (which you are probably past).
Do get started with the language then it has t be worthwhile having a repertoire of basic questions, however it quickly becomes far more sensible to master the language patterns and tackle the irregular verbs and tenses. Only then do you begin to use and apply your knowledge to other phrases and begin to get a ‘feel’ for the language.

Reading (understanding) is usually in advance of speaking and writing (creating) so I wouldn’t worry too much about that if I were you.

Thank you for your thoughts.

I watch a lot of American TV series. Sometimes I pick up some new words, phrases.
I’m really tired. It was a hard day. I think I will have a shower.

Have a nice night.

10 minutes later:

I think the nice isn’t so good. My tip is: Have a good night. :slight_smile:

I don’t really know vs I really don’t know. Are these fine? They mean the same, do they? Cheers

They are not the same.

I don’t really know = I think I might have a bit of an idea but I’m not certain (I could not be sure without confirmation from someone else).
I really don’t know = I have no idea at all.

Hi everyone,

They are in a garden.
Somebody is walking the dog in the park.
She never swims in the sea.
We stand in a line at the cinema every Sunday.
He doesn’t live in China.
Jack goes home after work.
Kathy stay at home.
Their parents drive to work every day.
She goes out with her friends twice a week.
How many times a week do you play tennis?
How often does she watch TV?
Charles reads the news at night every day.
Doesn’t Kate take a shower in the morning?
When does the train goes to London?
You never eat meat. You’re vegetarian.
Jacob and Thomas meet in the summer.
I was born in April.
I can see a repairman in the picture.
There is a picture above a bed.
She always carries a make-up mirror with herself.

That’s all. Have a nice day.

Hi,

I assume you’re focusing on prepositions. Except for the last sentence you got them all right :slight_smile:

Kathy stays at home. (she stays)

Charles reads the news every night. (although what you wrote was okay for the prepositions, it would not be written/said like that).

She always carries a make-up mirror. (‘with herself’ is a redundancy and sounds very strange. You could say ‘She always carries a make-up mirror herself’ if you wish to convey the meaning that she doesn’t need to borrow one from someone else.)

I don’t understand the difference between ‘She always carries a make-up mirror.’ and ‘She always carries a make-up mirror herself.’.
I just wanted to say that she goes wherever she wants, she has a make-up mirror in her reticule. I reckon every woman has one in a reticule. That’s it.
These two sentences mean the same to me.