Comment parler de ce qui est en train de se dérouler?
Transcription
Comment parler de ce qui est en train de se dérouler?
Comment parler de ce qui est en train de se dérouler? This document is a picture, more exactly a drawing. It represents an airport because we can see the words “flight” and “gates” on the notice board. There are fourteen people. In the foreground, a man and woman are sitting at a table and they are drinking a cup of coffee while they are chatting. In the bottom right hand corner, there is a family, they are sitting on a sofa/ settee, they are waiting for their flight number AF2715 ( Twenty-seven fifteen ) to Philadelphia. The boy is reading a comic strip or a magazine. At middle distance, on the left, the woman in a raincoat is reading a newspaper. Near her, on the right, a man is asking for information to a woman. In the background, a woman is pushing a luggage trolley while she is phoning. In the background, on the right, a man is buying a perfume at the duty-free shop. Pour parler de ce qui est en train de se passer, on utilise le présent be + ing. Son auxiliaire est be. Il apparaît à TOUTES LES FORMES. Il est suivi de la base verbale à laquelle on ajoute ING. FORME AFFIRMATIVE Rappel: S + AUX BE conjugué au présent + BVING+ CT ex: a man is buying a present people are going out I am You are He/she/it is We are You are They are FORME NEGATIVE S + AUX BE conjugué au présent + NOT + BVING+ CT ex: a man is NOT buying a present. people are NOT going out. A l'oral, on peut utiliser des formes contractées : ISN'T - AREN'T A l'écrit, il vaut mieux utiliser des formes pleines : IS NOT - ARE NOT FORME INTERROGATIVE (Wh-) + Aux BE + S + Bving + CT ? Ex : Is the man buying a present ? Yes, he is No, he isn't Where are the people going ? They are going out. Pour les verbes monosyllabiques se terminant par consonne voyelle consonne, il faut doubler la consonne finale avant d'ajouter la terminaison ING afin de conserver la prononciation originale. Sit => They are sitting at a table Dig => I am digging my grave Get => I am getting nervous Cut => I am cutting paper Swim => He is swimming like a hammer. Chat => They are chatting. Exercices d'application