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Hi! My name is Ana.

I teach English as a foreign language for prek-12 kids in South America.

I also teach English to my sweetest student, my niece Catalina.

She is 3 years old and she lOvEs English.

I am also the author and designer of the books and games I sell here.

Scroll down the page to find different resources. I hope you can find something that fit your needs.

    www.ingles360.net

 

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Punctuation

Full Stop (Period)

Use a full stop (also called »period«) to end affirmative sentences. Example: I go shopping every morning.

Use a full stop to end orders. Example: Leave me alone.

Exclamation Mark

Use an exclamation mark at the end of a surprised exclamation (usually starting with »how« or »what«).Example: How awful! What a shame!

Use an exclamation mark at the end of a wish.Example: Good luck!

Question Mark

Use a questions mark at the end of a question.Example: What's your name?

Use a questions mark after question tags.Example: You are Connor, aren't you?

Use a questions mark at the end of a request.Example: Could you give me the book, please?

   

 

Pronouns

There are four types of pronouns: Subject Pronouns, Object Pronouns, Possessive Pronouns and Demonstrative Pronouns. Here is a list and explanation showing the different types of pronouns:

Subject Pronouns

 I, you, he, she, it, we, you, they function as the subject of a sentence:

I live in New York.

She is my sister.

We like school.

Possessive Adjectives

Before a noun, you often use words that help you indicate possession (they help you say who that object or thing belongs to)

It is my birthday party! I am five today

I / My

You / Your

He / His

She / Her

It / Its

We / Our

They / Their

You can also express the same idea  for example by adding  's to the names of people or things

Articles

Articles are the words we use to define the nouns .

a = indefinite article (not a specific object, one of a number of the same objects) with consonants
She has a dog.
I work in a factory.

an = indefinite article (not a specific object, one of a number of the same objects) with vowels (a,e,i,o,u)
Can I have an apple?
She is an English teacher.

the = definite article (a specific object that both the person speaking and the listener know)
The car over there is fast.
The teacher is very good, isn't he?

 

More ideas? Visit my blog

Arts & Crafts

Authors' study

April

August

Book' stretchers

Blends

Behaviour

Celebrations

Consonants

Clusters

Cooking

Circle time

Calendar

Colours

Drama

Dolch Words

December

Digraphs

Diphthongs

Environmental print

Fry words

Flannel board sets

File Folders

February

Fairy tales

Fables

Grammar

Holidays

Homework

IPA symbols

January

June

July

Phonetic symbols

Letters

Listening

Lots of Links

Literature genres

Music

Movies' stretchers

Management

March

May

Numbers

Nursery rhymes

Names

November

October

Poetry

Puppets

Phonetic symbols

Pocket charts

Portable centers

Props

Reading

Religious

Rhymes

Shapes

September

Sight words

Songs

Spanish

Speaking

Substitutes

Sunday school

Thematic units

Tutorials

Unit of study

Vocabulary

Vowels

Writing

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