Here's an honorable mention for the video: the word Alright, which doesn't exist. It's spelled All right. Remember, Alright is Alwrong. With lie and lay, just to make things even more confusing, lay is the past tense of to lie. So, I lay down on the couch and took a nap. The past participle is the highly infrequent lain. I think people overuse lay, (especially laying) when it refers to things, for example, I left a number of magazines on the table, but when I came back they were all laying on the floor. Anyway, if it helps, to lie is an intransitive verb. To lay is a transitive verb. Good, compact, informative video. Oh, for the next video you can include ain't and double negatives. Native English speakers make so many mistakes.
Miss Aga, it is an excellent teaching video. Just one point in the last section about lie & lay :Should the sample sentence be 'I lay down...' instead of 'I lied...' 😊
Thank you for this video that helped us to avoid some common mistakes. Many mistakes when they occurred repeatedly becomes fossilised in the future and that’s why this video explained these mistakes.
Hi, Aga! I have a question. Please reply. I know we should use 'been' instead of 'gone' when referring to a completed visit. But, for activities like skiing, skydiving, fishing, etc. what should we use 'gone' or 'been'? When I was searching for it, on the Cambridge dictionary site, I saw the sentences where both 'been' and 'gone' are used with 'skiing'. The sentences I saw are.. I haven't been skiing - it's never really appealed. I've never gone skiing. So, can we use both? What is the difference? Could you please reply?
In my native language, we don’t have countable and uncountable terms, and the first-person pronouns “I/me”, we only have one word, irrespective of subject or object, like “was/were”, we also just have one word, it doesn’t matter who the subject is. in addition,We also have no concept of tenses. As far as I know, English is still too strict and complicated.
Here's an honorable mention for the video: the word Alright, which doesn't exist. It's spelled All right. Remember, Alright is Alwrong. With lie and lay, just to make things even more confusing, lay is the past tense of to lie. So, I lay down on the couch and took a nap. The past participle is the highly infrequent lain. I think people overuse lay, (especially laying) when it refers to things, for example, I left a number of magazines on the table, but when I came back they were all laying on the floor. Anyway, if it helps, to lie is an intransitive verb. To lay is a transitive verb. Good, compact, informative video. Oh, for the next video you can include ain't and double negatives. Native English speakers make so many mistakes.
Thank you! Good reminders! I learned the difference between using fewer and less!
Excellent!
Hello Aga
Really You are a great English teacher. Your coolness and calmness way to go.
Today's lesson erased many of my doubts.
Many thanks.
Thank you!
That's wonderful!
Miss Aga, it is an excellent teaching video.
Just one point in the last section about lie & lay :Should the sample sentence be 'I lay down...' instead of 'I lied...' 😊
Thank you for this video that helped us to avoid some common mistakes.
Many mistakes when they occurred repeatedly becomes fossilised in the future and that’s why this video explained these mistakes.
That's true!
Thank you. They are all useful and informative.😊
Great madam. Thank you very much!
This is marvelous ❤
Thank alot for subtitles, I have poor listening skill.
Keep practising! You're going to get better and better. ⭐
Thank you so much Aga for this amazing video! It's very interesting and useful!
Thank you Mam.
Thank you Aga, nice explanation and exercises. I got full points on the last one. Wonderful!
Amazing 😊
Well done!
Hello. I got right 12. Thanks
Well done!
Hi, Aga!
I have a question. Please reply.
I know we should use 'been' instead of 'gone' when referring to a completed visit.
But, for activities like skiing, skydiving, fishing, etc. what should we use 'gone' or 'been'?
When I was searching for it, on the Cambridge dictionary site, I saw the sentences where both 'been' and 'gone' are used with 'skiing'.
The sentences I saw are..
I haven't been skiing - it's never really appealed.
I've never gone skiing.
So, can we use both? What is the difference?
Could you please reply?
Thank you very much for the video 👍🏻
You’re welcome! 😊
Five out of five. Thank you so much for your clear explanation.
You’re welcome! 😊 and well done!
Well done!
I will thank you 🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏
❤❤Thanks for your work, beautiful girl!
Ma'am, ❤🌹🙏🙏🙏🙏🙏🌹🌹🌹🌹you are one of the coolest teacher of ours
Thank you aga ❤ 🎉 I got 5/5 means five out of five!🎉
Well done!
Thanx a lot. I don’t clearly understand about completment 😢
I hope that me makes less miss-stakes into the fewture. ✌️😁
Mistakes are really sexy! 😂😂😂
❤❤❤ wndrfl
In my native language, we don’t have countable and uncountable terms, and the first-person pronouns “I/me”, we only have one word, irrespective of subject or object, like “was/were”, we also just have one word, it doesn’t matter who the subject is. in addition,We also have no concept of tenses. As far as I know, English is still too strict and complicated.
Aga czy możesz wytłumaczyć ...made of / made from / made with / made out of..
Good job