MEDIA MENGAJAR
FOR SMP/MTs GRADE VII
BRIGHT AN ENGLISH
They’ve Hot Thick Eyebrows
BAB 7
A. Have/Has
Have is an irregular verb in English.
Have + You Have you got any brothers or sisters?
I + have I have got two sisters, Nina and Lola.
They + have They have both got blonde hair, like me.
He/She/It + has Lola has got green eyes.
Remember! x and y + have
Nina and Lola (they) have got blonde hair.
Not Nina and Lola has got blonde hair.
Have you got a big family?
No. I’m the only child in my family.
Practice the dialogue
source: piqsels.com/Piqsels
B. Parts of Body
hair
eye
nose
shoulder
elbow
arm
finger
leg
foot
forehead
ear
tooth
lip
chest
stomach
hand
knee
ankle
source: freepik.com/Rawpixels.com
shoulder
eyebrow
eyelid
eyelash(es)
cheek
neck
back
elbow
wrist
source: dokumen penerbit
source: dokumen penerbit
3. Other adverbs of frequency are every day/week/month/year/Sunday, once a week, three times a month. They are usually put at the end of sentences.
4. When talking about daily activities, we usually include information about time.
To ask about time, you can say:
C. Features of Pets
ear
tail
fur
leg
paw
claw
tail
beak
feather
Features of cats:
Features of birds:
source: pixnio.com/PPD
source: pixabay.com/Avalon_Art
Summary
‘have’ / ‘have got’
When we are talking about possession, relationships, illnesses and characteristics of people or things, we can use either have or have got. The ‘have got’ forms are more common in n informal style.
Have got has the same meaning as have and both are used as present tenses.
In informal speeches we often switch from one form to the other.
A description text is a text which describes a particular person, place or thing. Descriptions usually use the simple present tense.
The structure of a description text.