Clase 9: Taller GOING TO y WILL
Queridos estudiantes, a continuación se les enuncia una serie de oraciones para que usted llene los espacios vacíos con GOING TO o con WILL, según sea el caso:
1. I to play basketball tomorrow.
2. I take a taxi.
3. She clean.
4. They be at the library all day.
5. I call tomorrow.
6. I be there.
7. I go tomorrow. (promesa)
8. I be famous. (predicción)
9. He´s be here next week.
10. You see.
11. She leave soon.
12. We go on vacation.
13. They be happy to see you.
14. I buy a car next week.
15. My sister travel to Bogotá.
16. What do this monday?
17. I´m bored, I think I go to the mall.
18. What you do now?
19. Tomorrow I skip classes.
20. I feel sick, I think I skip classes.
21. They play.
22. I make a cake tomorrow.
23. You see the difference.
24. He be here next week.
25. We have children soon.
26. I make a cake tomorrow.
27. You see in a minute.
28. She be home soon.
29. It be great.
30. We have children one day.
31. In 50 years, we have flying cars.
32. My candidate win the next elections.
33. Life be easy after I retire. (individuo próximo a pensionarse)
34. You fall. (caminante a punto de pisar cáscara de banano)
35. I go later.
36, I help you. (acción voluntaria).
A continuación se presenta un texto en inglés para que usted lo traduzca al español:
Elemento gramatical: presente simple.
Título
Ahora, emprenderemos el elemento gramatical, presente simple, cuya estructura gramatical es:
SUJETO + VERBO EN PRESENTE + COMPLEMENTO
Observemos el siguiente video:
Título
A continuación encontrarán un texto en inglés relacionado con la BIOS. Se les solicita traducirlo al español siguiendo las instrucciones siguientes: procure no utilizar, inicialmente, el diccionario, en cada párrafo extracte la idea principal, y, no utilice traductores de la red.
BIOS (basic input/output system)
Part of the Operating systems glossary:
BIOS (basic input/output system) is the program a personal computer's microprocessor uses to get the computer system started after you turn it on. It also manages data flow between the computer's operating system and attached devices such as the hard disk, video adapter, keyboard, mouse and printer.
BIOS is an integral part of your computer and comes with it when you bring it home. (In contrast, the operating system can either be pre-installed by the manufacturer or vendor or installed by the user.) BIOS is a program that is made accessible to the microprocessor on an erasable programmable read-only memory (EPROM) chip. When you turn on your computer, the microprocessor passes control to the BIOS program, which is always located at the same place on EPROM.
When BIOS boots up (starts up) your computer, it first determines whether all of the attachments are in place and operational and then it loads the operating system (or key parts of it) into your computer's random access memory (RAM) from your hard disk or diskette drive.
With BIOS, your operating system and its applications are freed from having to understand exact details (such as hardware addresses) about the attached input/output devices. When device details change, only the BIOS program needs to be changed. Sometimes this change can be made during your system setup. In any case, neither your operating system or any applications you use need to be changed.
Although BIOS is theoretically always the intermediary between the microprocessor and I/O device control information and data flow, in some cases, BIOS can arrange for data to flow directly to memory from devices (such as video cards) that require faster data flow to be effective.