Grammar
have got
Affirmative
I/You/We/They’ve got (have got) two sisters.
He/She/It’s got (has got) a brother.
Negative
I/You/We/They haven’t got (have not got) black hair.
He/She/It hasn’t got (has not got) green eyes.
Questions and short answers
Have I/you/we/they got any cousins?
Yes, I/you/we/they have.
No, I/you/we/they haven’t.
Has he/she/it got brown eyes?
Yes, he/she/it has.
No, he/she/it hasn’t.
Possessive ’s
Use ’s to show possession.
This is Julia’s bag.
That is my father’s phone.
Write the apostrophe after a plural noun ending in -s.
This is my brothers’ room. (more than one brother)
Write ’s before a plural noun not ending in -s.
This is the children’s mother. (more than one child)
Vocabulary
Family
Atidaryti garso įrašo transkripciją
aunt, brother, child/children, cousin, daughter, father, granddaughter, grandfather, grandmother, grandson, mother, nephew, niece, parents, sister, son, uncle
Describing people
Atidaryti garso įrašo transkripciją
fair/dark, old/young, tall/short
Parts of the body and face
Atidaryti garso įrašo transkripciją
arm, beard, ear, eye, foot/feet, hair, hand, head, leg, moustache, mouth, nose, teeth
Describing hair
Atidaryti garso įrašo transkripciją
long/short, curly/straight