The “Identity Bridge”
Think of the verb To Be as a bridge. On one side is the Person, and on the other side is the Fact.
- I → am (The only one for me!)
- He / She / It → is (The “S” is for a Single person)
- You / We / They → are (For groups or “You”)
HOW ARE YOU?
In English, when someone asks “How are you?”, we respond with: “I am + [Feeling].”
Useful Feelings (Vocabulary)
Here are some common words for adults. Which one fits you today?
Fine / Good (Normal)
Happy (Positive)
Tired (Need sleep)
Busy (Much work)
Hungry (Need food)
Great (Very positive)
The “How are they?” Exercise
Look at the person and write a positive sentence using am, is, or are.
I (Feeling: Good) I am good.
He (Feeling: Tired) He ______ tired.
She (Feeling: Busy) She ______ busy.
We (Feeling: Happy) We ______ happy.
They (Feeling: Hungry) They ______ hungry.
It (The dog) (Feeling: Fine) It ______ fine.
The “True or False” Icebreaker
I will tell you three things about myself. Two are true, and one is a lie. Can you guess which one is the lie?
- I am a teacher.
- I am from Kyiv.
- I am very happy to meet you.
(Hint: Look at the form of “to be” in each sentence!)
Your Turn!
Fill this out for yourself. If you don’t know a word in English, you can ask me: “How do you say [Word] in English?”
- I am __________.
- I am __________.
- I am __________.
Complete these sentences using am, is, or are. These are all facts about a normal day.
- I ______ a person.
- You ______ in a lesson.
- The water ______ cold.
- We ______ in the room.
- He ______ a good worker.
- The door ______ open.
- They ______ my colleagues.
- It ______ 9:00 AM.
Vocabulary Bonus: “A” vs “An”
- Use a before a consonant: a doctor, a teacher, a manager.
- Use an before a vowel (a, e, i, o, u): an engineer, an actor, an office worker.
Grammar Challenge: Negative & Questions
To make it interesting, we need to ask questions!
- The Negative: Just add not.
- I am not a student. I am a teacher.
- The Question: Flip the Subject and the Verb.
- Statement: You are from France.
- Question: Are you from France?
Try to rewrite these simple sentences as questions:
- Example: It is cold. → Is it cold?
- You are tired. → __________ tired?
- He is busy. → __________ busy?
- They are from Italy. → __________ from Italy?
- She is happy. → __________ happy?
Fill in the conversation between two people meeting for the first time.
A: Hello! I ______ (am/is) Marco. B: Nice to meet you. I ______ (am/is) Elena. A: ______ (Am/Are) you from Spain?B: No, I ______ (am/is) from Italy. A: Oh! ______ (Is/Are) you a designer? B: Yes, I ______ (am/is).
To say “No,” just add not.
- I am not a student.
- He is not at work.
- They are not hungry.
Your turn! Finish these sentences about yourself:
- I am not from __________ (Country).
- I am not a __________ (Job you don’t do).
- Today, I am not __________ (Feeling, e.g., sad/tired).