Contents
- 1. Unit 1. Present Continuous (I am doing) νμ¬ μ§νν
- 2. Unit 2. Simple Present (I do) (λ¨μ νμ¬-- λκ° ννν λ§μ΄ λ μ€λ₯΄μ§ μλ€μ.)
- 3. Unit 3. Present Continuous and Simple Present (1) (I am doing and I do) (1,2μ₯ μ 리&νμ₯)
- 4. Unit 4. Present Continuous and Simple Present (2) (I am doing and I do) (1,2μ₯ μ 리&νμ₯)
- 5. Unit 5. Simple Past (I did) (λ¨μ κ³Όκ±°)
- 6. Unit 6. Past Continuous (I was doing) (κ³Όκ±° μ§νν)
1. Unit 1. Present Continuous (I am doing) νμ¬ μ§νν ¶
~cpp A. Am/is/are + ~ing : Present Continuous ex) Ann is in her car. She is on her way to work. she is driving to work. This means) She is driving now, at the time of speaking. The action is not finished. * μ°λ¦¬λ§λ‘ νμλ©΄ νμ¬ μ§νν. λ§νλ μμ μμ κ·Έ μΌμ΄ μ§νλκ³ μμ. μμ§ λλμ§ μμ
~cpp B. I am doing something = I'm in the middle of doing something; I've started doing it and I haven't finished yet. Often the action is happening at the time of speaking. ex) Let's go out now. It isn't raining anymore. But the action is not necessarily happening at the time of speaking. ex) I'm reading an interesting book at the moment. I'll lend it to you when I've finished it. This means) Tom is not reading the book at the time of speaking. He means that he has started it but has not finished it yet. He is in the middle of reading it. * κΌ λ§νλ μμ μμ κ·Έ μΌμ΄ μ§νλκ³ μμ§ μλλΌλ μμ¦ νκ³ μλ μΌ κ°μκ±° λ§ν λ μ°λκ² κ°μ.
~cpp C. We use the present continuous when we talk about things happening in a period around now. (today / this week / tonight, etc..) ex) "Is Sarah working this week?" We use the present contunuous when we talk about changes happening now or around now. ex) The population of the world is rising very fast. * κΌ κ·Έλκ° μλλλΌλ κ·Έ λ κ·Όμ²λ©΄ μ§νν μ. λλ κ·Έ λ κ·Όμ²μ λκ° λ³ν λλ μ§νν μ
2. Unit 2. Simple Present (I do) (λ¨μ νμ¬-- λκ° ννν λ§μ΄ λ μ€λ₯΄μ§ μλ€μ.) ¶
~cpp A. ex) Alex is a bus driver, but now he is in bed asleep. This Means) He is not driving a bus. but He drives a bus.
~cpp B. We use the simple present to talk about things in general. We use it to say that something happens all the time or repeateldy or that something is true in general. It is not important whether the action is happening at the time of speaking (μΌλ°μ μ΄κ³ λ°λ³΅μ μΌλ‘ μΌμ΄λλ μΌμ ννν λ λ¨μ κ³Όκ±°λ₯Ό μ΄λ€. λ§νλ μμ μμ μΌμ΄λλμ§ μμΌμ΄λλμ§λ μ€μνμ§ μμ)
~cpp C. We use do/does to make questions and negative sentences.( μλ¬Έλ¬Έμ΄λ λΆμ λ¬Έ λ§λ€λ do/doesλ₯Ό μ΄λ€ ) ex) What does thie word mean? In the following examples do is also the main verb( doκ° λ©μΈ λμ¬λ‘ μ°μΌλλ μλ€. ) ex) What do you do?
~cpp D. We use the simple present when we say how often we do things ( λΉλλ₯Ό λνλ΄λ λ¬Έμ₯μ λ§λ€λλ λ¨μ νμ¬λ₯Ό μ΄λ€. ) ex) In the summer Hohn usually plays tennis once or twice a week. Note the position of always/never/usually, etc... (before the main verb, after be verb) ( μμΉ μ£Όμ ) ex) I never drink coffee at night. For word order, see Unit 107
3. Unit 3. Present Continuous and Simple Present (1) (I am doing and I do) (1,2μ₯ μ 리&νμ₯) ¶
~cpp A. Present Continuous( I am doing ) We use the present continuous for something that is happening at or around the time of speaking. The action is not finished. sometimes, Use the Present continuous for temporary situations. ex) When temporary situations : I'm living with some friends until I find an apartment. I am doing past now future Simple Present( I do ) We use the simple present for things in general or things that happen repeatedly. Sometimes, Use the simple present for permanent situations. ex) When Permanent situations : My parents live in Boston. They have lived there all their lives. <--------------- I do ------------------> past now future
~cpp B. I always do and I'm always doing I always do simething = I do it every time. I'm always doing something = It does not mean that I do things every time. It means that I do things too often, or more often than normal. (κ²°κ΅ νμκ° μκ°νκΈ°μ 보ν΅λ³΄λ€ μ’ μμ£Ό μΌμ΄λλ©΄ be always doing μ μ΄λ€λ λ§μ΄λ€.)
4. Unit 4. Present Continuous and Simple Present (2) (I am doing and I do) (1,2μ₯ μ 리&νμ₯) ¶
~cpp A. We can use continuous tenses only for actions and happenings. Some verbs are not action verbs. You cannot say "I am knowing" or "They are liking" you can only say I know, I like. (λͺ¨λ λμ¬μ μ§ννμ μΈμ μλ건 μλλ€ λΌλ λ§ κ°λ€) * μ§νν μΈμ μλ λμ¬λ€ like love hate want need prefer know realize sppose mean understand believe remember belong contain consist depend seem ex) Do you understand what I mean? When think means "believe" do not use the continuous (thinkκ° believeμ μλ―Έλ‘ μ°μΌλλ μ§νν λΆκ°) ex) What do you think ( = believe ) will happen? (not What are you thinking?) I'm thinking ( = considering) of quitting my job. When have means "possess" do not use the continuous (haveκ° κ°μ§λ€μ μλ―Έλ‘ μ°μΌλ μμ μ§νν λΆκ°) ex) We have a nice room in the hotel. We're having a great time.
~cpp B. See hear smell taste We normally use the simple present(not continuous) with these verbs.(μ°λ¦¬λ§λ‘ μ§κ°λμ¬μλ λ¨μνμ¬) ex) This room smells, Let's open a window. can + see/hear/smell/taste ex) Can you hear something? You can say I'm seeing when the meaning is "having a meeting with" (Especially in the future) ex) I'm seeing the manager tomorrow morning. (λκ΅°κ°μ λ§λ¨μ κ°μ§λ€λΌλ ννμ μΈλλ I'm seeing)
~cpp C. He is selfish and He is being selfish He's being = He's behaving / He's acting ex) I can't understand why he's being so selfish. He isn't usually like that. ex) He never thinks about other people. He is very selfish. We use am/is/are being to say how somebody is behaving. It is not usually possible in other sentences.
~cpp D. Look and Feel (μ§νν, νμ¬ν λ€ κ°λ₯) μμΈ) I usually feel tired in the morning.(not I'm usually feeling)
5. Unit 5. Simple Past (I did) (λ¨μ κ³Όκ±°) ¶
~cpp A. He ''started'' composing at the age of five and ''wrote'' more than 600 pieces of music. started, wrote are simple past.
~cpp B. Very often the simple past ends in -ed (κ½€ μμ£Ό -edλ‘ λλλ¨ λ§μ λλ€.) ex) She ''passed'' her exam because she ''studied'' very hard. But many verbs are irregular.(μ κ·Έλ°κ²λ λ§λ¨ λ§μ λλ€.)
~cpp C. In questions and negatives we use did/didn't + base form(μλ¬Έλ¬Έμ΄λ λΆμ λ¬Έ λ§λ€λλ did/didn't + μνμ΄λ©λλ€.) ex) A : ''Did'' you ''go'' out last night? B : Yes, I ''went'' to the movies, but I ''didn't enjoy '' the film much. Be careful when do is the main verb in the sentence.(doκ° μ£Όλμ¬μΌλ μ£Όμνλμ) ex) I didn't do anything.
~cpp D. The past of be is was/were.(beλμ¬μ κ³Όκ±°λ was/wereλλλ€.) am,is -> was, are -> were Note that we do not use did in negatives and questions with was/were.(λΆμ λ¬Έμ΄λ μλ¬Έλ¬Έμμ didλ₯Ό beλμ¬μ κ°μ΄ μμ΄λ΅λλ€.) μ΄κ±΄ λ¬΄μ¨ λ§μΈμ§ μ λͺ¨λ₯΄κ² λΉ .. μ©;
6. Unit 6. Past Continuous (I was doing) (κ³Όκ±° μ§νν) ¶
~cpp A. Yesterdat Karen and Jim played tennis. They began at 10:00 and finished at 11:30. So at 10:30 they were playing tennis. They were playing = they were in the middle of playing. They had not finished playing. was/were + ing : past continuous.
~cpp B. We use the past continuous to say that somebody was in the middle of doing something at a certain time. The action or situation had already started before this time but had not finished.
~cpp C. Compare the past continuous and simple past Past Continuous(in the middle of an action) ex) I was walking home when I met Dave. ( = in the middle of walking home) Simple past(complete action) ex) I walked home after the party last night. ( = all the way, completely)
~cpp D. We often use the simple past and the past continuous together to say that something happened in the middle of something else. (λμ΄ κ°μ΄ μΈλλ μλ€λ€μ. μ μ΄λ¬λ€ μ λ¬λ€μ§;; λ―ΈμΉ μμ΄) ex) Matt burned his hand while he was cooking dinner. But we use the simple past to say that one thing happened after another.(λκ°κ° μΌμ΄λ λ€μλ λ¨μκ³Όκ±°λ§ μ°λμ.) ex) I was walking downtown when I saw Dave. So I stopped and we talked for a while. Compare : ex) When Beth arrived, we were having dinner.(= We had already started dinner.) ex) When Beth arrived, we had dinner.( = Beth arrived and then we had dinner.)