NAMA : ERNITA
KELAS : 4EA23
NPM : 12212545
TUGAS : BAHASA INGGRIS
BISNIS II
1.
Modal Auxiliary Verb
Modal Auxiliary verb adalah
kata yang ditempatkan sebelum main verb (kata kerja utama) untuk
memodifikasi makna dari kata kerja utama tersebut.
Fungsinya untuk mengekspresikan willingness (kemauan) atau ability
(kemampuan), necessity (kebutuhan), dan possibility
(kemungkinan).
What is Modal Auxiliary Verb?
verbs include can, Could, may, Might, will, Would,
Marshall (typically in British English), Shall, Should, must, and ought to
so-called 'capital of the auxiliary verb' (auxiliary verb of capital). They are
used before the infinitive or any other verb, and adding a specific meaning.
Need, dare, and Had better sometimes also be used as auxiliary verb capital.
I
you (singular)
he
we
you (plural)
=> they can write well.
There is also a separate section on the Modal
Auxiliaries, which divides these verbs into their various meanings of
necessity, advice, ability, expectation, permission, possibility, etc., and
provides sample sentences in various tenses. See the section on Conditional
Verb Forms for help with the modal auxiliary would. The shades of meaning among
modal auxiliaries are multifarious and complex. Most
English-as-a-Second-Language textbooks will contain at least one chapter on
their usage. For more advanced students, A University Grammar of English, by
Randolph Quirk and Sidney Greenbaum, contains an excellent, extensive analysis
of modal auxiliaries.
The analysis of Modal Auxiliaries is based on a
similar analysis in The Scott, Foresman Handbook for Writers by Maxine Hairston
and John J. Ruszkiewicz. 4th ed. HarperCollins: New York. 1996. The description
of helping verbs on this page is based on The Little, Brown Handbook by H.
Ramsay Fowler and Jane E. Aaron, & Kay Limburg. 6th ed. HarperCollins: New
York. 1995. By permission of Addison-Wesley Educational Publishers Inc.
Examples in all cases are our own.
Uses of Can and Could
PATTERN OF CAPITAL Auxiliaries:
* (?) CAPITAL + S + V1
Can she do the test?
Will we go to the supermarket?
* (+) S + CAPITAL + V1
She can do the test.
We will from go to the supermarket
* (-) S + CAPITAL NOT + V1
She can not do the test.
We will from not go to the supermarket.
* (?) CAPITAL + S + V1
Can she do the test?
Will we go to the supermarket?
The modal auxiliary can is used :
a. Expressing an ATP (Reveals Capabilities)
Ex: I can do the test.
b. Expressing a Possibility (Reveal Possible)
Ex: He cans be in the class now.
c. Expressing a Permission (Reveal permission)
Ex: You can leave me no.
American automobile makers can make better cars if
they think there's a profit in it.
d. To express ability (in the sense of being able to
do something or knowing how to do something):
Ex : He can speak Spanish but he can't write it very
well.
e. To expression permission (in the sense of being
allowed or permitted to do something):
Ex : Can I talk to my friends in the library waiting
room? (Note that can is less formal than may. Also, some writers will object to
the use of can in this context.)
The modal auxiliary could is used
• to express an ability in the past:
I could always beat you at tennis when we were kids.
• to express past or future permission:
Could I bury my cat in your back yard?
• to express present possibility:
We could always spend the afternoon just
sitting around talking.
• to express possibility or ability in contingent
circumstances:
If he studied harder, he could pass this
course.
• In expressing ability,
Can and could frequently also imply
willingness:
Can you help me with my homework?
Can versus May
Whether the auxiliary verb can can be used to express
permission or not — "Can I leave the room now?" ["I don't know
if you can, but you may."] — depends on the level of formality of your
text or situation. As Theodore Bernstein puts it in The Careful Writer, "a
writer who is attentive to the proprieties will preserve the traditional
distinction: can for ability or power to do something, may for permission to do
it.
The question is at what level can you safely ignore
the "proprieties." Merriam-Webster's Dictionary, tenth edition, says
the battle is over and can can be used in virtually any situation to express or
ask for permission. Most authorities, however, recommend a stricter adherence
to the distinction, at least in formal situations.
Authority: The Careful Writer by Theodore Bernstein.
The Free Press: New York. 1998. p. 87.
Must
a. Expressing a necessity (Reveal mandatory)
Ex: You must do everything I say.
b. Expressing a Prohibition (ban Reveal)
Ex: You must not break the school
rules.
c. Expressing a certainty (certainty Mengukapkan)
Ex: John must be upset. He failed
in the final test.
Uses of May and Might
Two of the more troublesome modal auxiliaries are may
and might. When used in the context of granting or seeking permission, might is
the past tense of may. Might is considerably more tentative than may.
• May I leave class early?
• If I've finished all my work and I'm really quiet,
might I leave early?
And the context of expressing possibility, may and
might are interchangeable present and future forms and might + have + past
participle is the past form:
• She might be my advisor next semester.
• She may be my advisor next semester.
• She might have advised me not to take biology.
Avoid confusing the sense of possibility in may with
the implication of might, that a hypothetical situation has not in fact
occurred. For instance, let's say there's been a helicopter crash at the
airport. In his initial report, before all the facts are gathered, a newscaster
could say that the pilot "may have been injured." After we discover
that the pilot is in fact all right, the newscaster can now say that the pilot
"might have been injured" because it is a hypothetical situation that
has not occurred. Another example: a body had been identified after much work
by a detective. It was reported that "without this painstaking work, the
body may have remained unidentified." Since the body was, in fact,
identified, might is clearly called for.
Should
a. Expressing the advisability (Reveal advice)
b. Example: We Should do something now.
c. b. Expressing a certainty Future (Mengukapkan
certainty in the future)
d. Example: They Should Be there tomorrow.
Uses of Will and Would
In certain contexts, will and would are virtually
interchangeable, but there are differences. Notice that the contracted form 'll
is very frequently used for will.
e. Expressing a certainty (certainty Reveal)
Example: We will of come to her party. I
promise.
I'll wash the dishes if you dry.
f. Expressing a Willingness (Expresses Desire)
Example: There's a knock on the
door. I will from open it.
g. Expressing a request (Reveal request)
Example: Will you help me?
We're going to the movies. Will you
join us?
h. It can also express intention (especially in the
first person):
I'll do my exercises later on.
i. and prediction:
specific: The meeting will be over soon.
timeless: Humidity will ruin my hairdo.
habitual: The river will overflow its
banks every spring.
j. Would can also be used to express willingness:
Would you please take off your hat?
k. It can also express insistence (rather rare, and
with a strong stress on the word "would"):
Now you've ruined everything. You
would act that way.
l. and characteristic activity:
customary: After work, he would walk to
his home in West Hartford.
typical (casual): She would cause the
whole family to be late, every time.
m. In a main clause, would can express a hypothetical
meaning:
My cocker spaniel would weigh
a ton if I let her eat what she wants.
n. Finally, would can express a sense of probability:
I hear a whistle. That would be the
five o'clock train.
Uses of Used to
The auxiliary verb construction used to is used to
express an action that took place in the past, perhaps customarily, but now
that action no longer customarily takes place:
• We used to take long vacation trips with the whole
family.
The spelling of this verb is a problem for some people
because the "-ed" ending quite naturally disappears in speaking:
"We yoostoo take long trips." But it ought not to disappear in
writing. There are exceptions, though. When the auxiliary is combined with
another auxiliary, did, the past tense is carried by the new auxiliary and the
"-ed" ending is dropped.
This will often happen in the interrogative:
• Didn't you use to go jogging every morning before
breakfast?
• It didn't use to be that way.
Used to can also be used to convey the sense of being
accustomed to or familiar with something:
• The tire factory down the road really stinks, but
we're used to it by now.
• I like these old sneakers; I'm used to them.
Used to is best reserved for colloquial usage; it has
no place in formal or academic text.
2. Relative clause
Relative clause
merupakan klausa dependen yang berfungsi menerangkan kata benda sehingga
didapat informasi yang jelas mengenai benda tersebut. Untuk menghubungkan antar
klausa digunakan kata penghubung seperti, that, which, who, whom, dan whose.
Berikut adalah contoh
kalimat relative clause.
The woman who wears the red dress is my aunt
This is the bicycle that my father bought me yesterday
The man whom we met is my father's friend
The family whose house is in front of the our house
is our relatives
These are the cookies which my mothe gives us.
Penggunaan Relative Clause
(That, Which, Who, Whom, dan Whose)
Who
Digunakan untuk orang yang berfungsi sebagai subjek.
1.The man
who is running is my brother
Orang yang
sedang berlari adalah saudara saya
2.My brothes who lives in Bandung is a police man
Saudara
saya yang tinggal di Bandung adalah seorang polisi
3.The man who teaches the lesson patienly is a
teacher
Orang
yang mengajarkan pelajaran sabar adalah guru
4. Do you
know the people who live next door?
Kamu tahu
orang yang tinggal di sebelah?
Whom
Digunakan untuk orang yang berfungsi sebagai objek
Whom
Digunakan untuk orang yang berfungsi sebagai objek
1.The
students whom I met yesterday are coming to my house
Murid yang saya temui kemarin akan dating ke rumah saya
Murid yang saya temui kemarin akan dating ke rumah saya
2.I
never thought before that I would marry a woman whom I didn’t love
Saya tidak pernah menyangka saya akan menikah dengan perempuan yang tidak saya cinta
Saya tidak pernah menyangka saya akan menikah dengan perempuan yang tidak saya cinta
3.The boy whom we gave money
yesterday is Amir
Anak
laki-laki yang kami berikan uang kemarin adalah Amir
Which
Digunakan untuk benda
1.This is
the book which I always read
Ini buku yang selalu saya baca
Ini buku yang selalu saya baca
2.There
is a program on TV tonignt which you might like
Nanti malam ada acara di TV yang mungkin kamu suka
Nanti malam ada acara di TV yang mungkin kamu suka
3.Bali which has a lot of historical
temples is Paradise Island
Bali
yang memiliki banyak candi sejarah adalah Paradise Island
That
Digunakan untuk orang dan benda
1. The policeman that I talked to will retire next year
Polisi yang bebicara dengan saya akan pensiun tahun depan
2. This is the house that I will live in when I am old
Inilah rumah yang akan saya tinggali kalau saya sudah tua nanti
That
Digunakan untuk orang dan benda
1. The policeman that I talked to will retire next year
Polisi yang bebicara dengan saya akan pensiun tahun depan
2. This is the house that I will live in when I am old
Inilah rumah yang akan saya tinggali kalau saya sudah tua nanti
3.Borobudur that was bombed years ago
is an historical temple
Borobudur yang dibom tahun lalu adalah sebuah kuil bersejarah
Borobudur yang dibom tahun lalu adalah sebuah kuil bersejarah
Whose
Digunakan untuk menunjukkan kepunyaan
1. The manager whose secretary is beautiful is married
Manajer yang sekertarisnya cantik sudah menikah
2. I saw a girl whose hair came down to her waist
Saya melihat seorang gadis yang rambutnya panjang sampai pinggang
3. The man whose doughter we visited
two days ago is Mr. Rudi
Putri
pria yang kami mengunjungi dua hari yang lalu adalah Mr Rudi
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