Page 116 - Complete IELTS Bands 6.5-7.5_Neat
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We can add these affixes to give words a negative meaning:  We use the present perfect tenses to describe:
            affix        meaning          examples             s   past events, if we do not say exactly when they
                                                                 happened, or if the past time is not implied by the
           anti-        opposed to,      anti-social, anti-
                                                                 speaker:
                        against          virus                   Brazil has won the World Cup several times.
           de-          the opposite of,   decaffeinated,     s   a past event which has a result in the present:
                        remove, reduce   decelerate              Scientific research has led to the discovery of an
                                                                 important new antibiotic.
           dis-         added to words   disadvantage
                        to form the                           s   something which started in the past and is still
                                                                 happening now:
                        opposite
                                                                 The authorities have been working on this project for
           in-          lacking, not, the   inexact              six months (and they’re still working on it).
           il- (before l)  opposite of   illegal              We use the present perfect with time adverbs that connect
           im- (before                   impatient            the past to the present, e.g. just, already, lately, since, so far,
             b, m and p                                       up to now, yet:
           ir- (before r)                irrelevant           Figures have risen since 2005.
                                                              So far, little has been done to improve the situation.
           -less        without          meaningless, careless
                                                              There has been a lot in the news about this issue lately.
           mal-         badly, wrongly   malfunction,
                                                              The past perfect simple tense is used:
                                         malpractice
                                                              s   to indicate that we are talking about an action which
           mis-         badly, wrongly   mispronounce,           took place, or a state which existed, before another
                                         misinterpret            activity or situation in the past (which is described in the
                                                                 past simple):
           non-         not, the opposite   non-fiction, non-
                                                                 When I got to the lecture theatre, the class had already
                        of               existent
                                                                 started.
           over-        above, more      overflow,                (Compare this with When I got to the lecture theatre, the
                        than, too much   overcrowded             class started. This indicates that the class started when
                                                                 I arrived.)
           un-          not, lacking, the   untidy
                        opposite of                           s   typically with time expressions like: when, as soon as,
                                                                 after, before, it was the first time, etc.:
           under-       not enough       underestimate
                                                                 The number of students went up for ten consecutive
                                                                 years. It was the first time I’d ever flown.
          Past simple, present perfect simple and past
          perfect simple                                      s   with by + a time:
                                                                 By 2010, it had risen to over 15,000.
          We use the past simple tense to describe:           s   with these adverbs: already, just, never:
          s   something that happened at a specific time in the past:    Dimitri had already done a degree in biology when he
             Alexander Fleming discovered penicillin in 1928.    decided to study medicine.
          s   a state at a specific time in the past:
             At the time of the American Declaration of Independence,  Phrasal verbs
             the United States consisted of just 13 states.
                                                              Phrasal verbs are formed from:
          s   things which happened over a period of time in the past,   1  verb + adverb particle, e.g. read on (continue reading):
             but not now:                                        After you’ve read the introduction, you need to read on
             The number of overseas students in Canadian universities
                                                                 till you find the answer.
             rose between 2008 and 2011.
                                                              2  verb + preposition, e.g. get into (enter):
          s   actions or events which happened one after the other:    You’ll need high grades to get into university.
             They dug the foundations, then they built the walls and
             finally they put on the roof.                     3  verb + adverb particle + preposition, e.g. come up with
                                                                 (suggest or think of an idea or plan):
          When we use the past simple, the past time is usually stated
                                                                 It was Einstein who came up with the theory of relativity.
          (yesterday, while he was a student, in the 18  century, etc.)
                                             th
                                                              Phrasal verbs often have meanings which are not clear from
          or clear from the context (Did you give your tutor that essay?
          (i.e. when you saw him)).                           their component parts:
                                                              get over = recover from
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