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The Verb "To Be" The verb "to be" is one of the most important verbs in English. It has three present forms: - **Am**: used with the subject "I." - **Is**: used with singular subjects (he, she, it). - **Are**: used with plural subjects (we, you, they) and with the pronoun "you." Using "Am": - **I am** happy. - **I am** a teacher. Using "Is": - **He is** my brother. - **She is** a doctor. - **It is** a sunny day. Using "Are": - **We are** friends. - **You are** my best friend. - **They are** students. Summary: I am He/She/It is We/You/They are I'm  He's/ She's/It's  We're/ You're/They're  Exercises  **Instructions:** Fill in the blanks with the correct form of the verb "to be" (am, is, are). 1. I ___ excited about the trip. 2. She ___ a great singer. 3. They ___ my neighbors. 4. He ___ very tall. 5. We ___ going to the park. 6. It ___ cold outside. 7. You ___ my inspiration. 8. Th...

Simple present tense

The simple present tense is used to express habitual actions, general truths, and facts. Use the base form of the verb for most subjects, adding 's' or 'es' for third-person singular (he, she, it). For example, "I eat lunch at noon" or "She works in an office." Remember to use 'do' or 'does' in negative and question forms. Here are some example sentences in the simple present tense: 1. I walk to school every day. 2. She speaks Spanish fluently. 3. They play tennis on weekends. 4. The sun rises in the east. 5. We love to watch movies together. 6. He always arrives on time. 7. The cat sleeps in the sun. 8. Water boils at 100 degrees Celsius. 9. It rains a lot in that region. 10. Do you like chocolate? Positive, negative, and interrogative forms using the simple present tense: Positive: 1. I play tennis every weekend. 2. They watch movies on Fridays. 3. The sun rises in the east. Negative: 1. She doesn't like coffee. 2. We don't ...