Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Tourist attractions - I'm going to travel.

I'm going to travel.

I intend to travel. I intend to travel. I'm going to travel. I intend to travel. I plan to travel. The basic structure of English sentence patterns is as follows: 1. Declarative sentence 1, affirmative sentence: the basic structure is "subject+predicate" structure and its supplementary structure (1) subject +be verb (am\is\are)+ predication She is beautiful. She is very beautiful. I am very tall. I am very tall. They are very handsome. 2) Subject+Predicate (intransitive verb) bloom. Bloom's phone rang. There was a ring at the bell When the predicate verb is an intransitive verb, it can be modified by adverbial although it cannot follow the object. This car runs very fast. The car goes very fast. The children run very fast. The children run very fast. Subject+predicate (transitive verb)+object (+adverbial) He wrote a letter last night. They are running on the playground. They are running on the playground. Subject+predicate+indirect object+direct object She handed me a ball. She passed the ball to me. I gave him an apple. I gave her an apple. 2. Negative sentences: that is, affirmative sentences contain a "no ……" (1) and put not after the be verb (am\is\are). I am a student. I am not a student. I am not a student. They are going to school. They went to school. They didn't go to school. They did not go to school. Then is not can be abbreviated as isn't and are not can be abbreviated as are 't.