Below is the fundamental English grammar you should master:
1. Part of speech (e.g. noun, pronoun, verb, preposition, adj, adv, connector/conjunction), and how does it co-relate to each others.
2. Agreement of nouns and verbs
3. Tense and voice (active + passive)
4. *** participles: present + past ***
5. Relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, and that, including how the relative pronouns are used in both restrictive and non-restrictive clause.
5. Components of sentence: main/principal clause v. subordinate clause.
As you have completed the above grammar over 3 yr, you are strongly advised to study it by yourselves - not my responsibility.
Both the mid-term and final exam will be testing only your reading comprehension - not that grammar. If you still lacks the understanding of such grammar, please review it as much possibly as you can.
Again, this course - "English for Lawyer"- is not "Fundamental English", which all of you had already succeeded since the third year!!!
Below is the fundamental English grammar you should master:1. Part of speech (e.g. noun, pronoun, verb, preposition, adj, adv, connector/conjunction), and how does it co-relate to each others.2. Agreement of nouns and verbs3. Tense and voice (active + passive)4. *** participles: present + past ***5. Relative pronouns: who, whom, whose, which, and that, including how the relative pronouns are used in both restrictive and non-restrictive clause.5. Components of sentence: main/principal clause v. subordinate clause.As you have completed the above grammar over 3 yr, you are strongly advised to study it by yourselves - not my responsibility.Both the mid-term and final exam will be testing only your reading comprehension - not that grammar. If you still lacks the understanding of such grammar, please review it as much possibly as you can.Again, this course - "English for Lawyer"- is not "Fundamental English", which all of you had already succeeded since the third year!!!
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