8 of 60 – Meaning, Form, Pronunciation

Day 8: Meaning, Form, Pronunciation — The Holy Trinity | 60-Day ELT Masterclass
Week 2 · Day 8 of 60 · Language Systems

Meaning, Form, Pronunciation
— The Holy Trinity

“Every language item has three layers. Miss one and your students will use it wrong forever.”

Week 2 Language Systems 14 min deep read 5 interactive analysers Error diagnosis game 3 full practice tasks

Why the Trinity Cannot Be Separated

Foundations

When we present a new language item, we are doing three distinct things simultaneously — and students need all three to function in real communication. Present only meaning and they will mispronounce. Present only form and they will produce sentences they cannot understand. Present only pronunciation and they have a sound with no referent.

A student who knows what a structure means, how it is built, and how it sounds — and only then — can use it.

The MFP framework is derived from the CELTA lesson planning tradition and codified across every major ELT methodology — Harmer’s The Practice of English Language Teaching, Thornbury’s How to Teach Grammar, and the CELTA Lesson Frameworks guidance document used across Cambridge centres worldwide. It is not a trend. It is the architecture of language teaching.

M Meaning

What does it mean?

Denotation, connotation, concept, pragmatic force, context of use, what it implies vs what it states. Checked through CCQs, timelines, visuals, and contrast with similar structures.

F Form

How is it built?

Grammatical structure, word class, affixation, collocation restrictions, transformations, passivisation, question formation, negation, common learner errors in formation.

P Pronunciation

How does it sound?

Phonemic transcription, word stress, sentence stress, weak forms, connected speech phenomena (elision, assimilation, linking), drilling sequence, minimal pairs, back-chaining.

Cambridge English · ELT Glossary · MFP Framework
In language teaching, Meaning, Form and Pronunciation (MFP) refers to the three aspects of a language item that need to be addressed when teaching new language. Meaning concerns what the word or structure refers to, conveys, or implies. Form concerns how the item is constructed grammatically or lexically. Pronunciation concerns how the item sounds in context. The CELTA course uses MFP as a foundational framework for all language-focused lesson planning.
Thornbury, Scott · How to Teach Grammar (Pearson Longman) · Chapter 3
“The teacher’s job in a grammar lesson is not simply to present a rule — it is to help students understand what the item means in context, how it is formed with precision, and how it sounds when produced naturally. These three dimensions are interdependent: presenting one without the others produces only partial competence.”
Harmer, Jeremy · The Practice of English Language Teaching, 5th ed. (Pearson) · p.62
“When we introduce new language, we need to be sure that students understand what it means, know how it is formed, and are able to say it. Failure in any one of these areas will limit a student’s ability to use the item productively. A student may know a word’s definition but be unable to use it in a sentence; another may know its form but misunderstand its pragmatic force.”

Meaning — The First and Most Neglected Layer

Layer One

Most teachers go directly to form. It is faster. It feels more teachable — rules can be written on a board, exercises can be set. But form without meaning produces students who can conjugate a verb they cannot use, because they do not know what situation calls for it.

Meaning in ELT is not simply dictionary definition. It encompasses at least four dimensions:

Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary · Preface: Understanding Word Meaning
A word’s meaning in context involves: (1) Denotative meaning — the literal, referential content; (2) Connotative meaning — the associations, evaluations and emotional resonances attached; (3) Pragmatic meaning — what the speaker intends by using this form in this context; (4) Collocational meaning — what the word typically combines with, which shapes how it is understood. Teaching definition alone addresses only (1).

Tools for Teaching Meaning

The following techniques for conveying meaning are ranked by how directly they engage concept rather than L1 translation. Concept first. Translation last, if at all.

TechniqueHow it worksBest forLimitation
Timeline diagramVisual representation of time reference — past, present, future, duration, completionTense and aspect (esp. present perfect, past perfect, continuous)Not useful for lexis or functions
Concept Checking QuestionsShort yes/no or short-answer questions that probe whether students have grasped the concept (see Day 6)All language items — essential, not optionalMust be carefully designed — see Day 6 rules
Visuals / imagesPicture, drawing, or realia that demonstrates meaning non-verballyConcrete nouns, adjectives describing appearance or conditionAbstract concepts, functions, tense/aspect
Context sentenceA sentence in which meaning is inferrable from context aloneAll items — always required as the first stepMust be constructed carefully — ambiguous contexts mislead
Contrast / minimal contextPlacing the item next to a similar structure to show the differenceConfusable pairs: used to / be used to; will / going to; since / forCan introduce confusion if contrast is shown too early
Mime / gesturePhysical demonstration of action or emotionAction verbs, manner adverbs, emotional adjectivesCulture-dependent; not scalable to complex structures
TranslationDirect L1 equivalent offered as last resortFalse cognates; highly abstract items where inference failsDoes not develop independent comprehension strategies

Denotation vs Connotation — the Difference That Changes Register

This distinction is one the most missed in vocabulary teaching. Two words may have identical denotative meaning but carry entirely different connotations — meaning students who substitute one for the other will sound wrong to a native speaker, even though they are technically correct.

Word AWord BSame denotation?Connotative difference
slimskinnyYes — thinslim = positive, deliberate; skinny = negative, possibly unhealthy
thriftystingyYes — careful with moneythrifty = admirable; stingy = selfish, disapproving
confidentarrogantYes — belief in selfconfident = neutral to positive; arrogant = negative, excess
uniquepeculiarYes — one of a kind / unusualunique = positive rarity; peculiar = strange, slightly negative
economicalcheapYes — low costeconomical = efficient, neutral; cheap = poor quality, dismissive
Cambridge Advanced Learner’s Dictionary · Usage Notes on Connotation
Many learners of English at B1–C1 level have sufficient vocabulary breadth to express an idea but lack the connotative precision to choose the appropriate word for the social context. This is a key differentiator between B2 and C1 level performance on Cambridge exams.
Cambridge: Adjectives with similar meanings but different connotations ↗

Form — The Architecture of the Item

Layer Two

Form analysis is what makes the difference between a student who can use a structure and one who can only recognise it. Form covers morphology (the shape of words), syntax (the order of elements), and the restrictions and transformations the item permits or prohibits.

Cambridge Dictionary of Linguistics · Form in Language Teaching
In applied linguistics, form refers to the surface realisation of a linguistic item — its morphological structure, syntactic position, inflectional possibilities, and the formal rules governing its combination with other elements. For language teaching purposes, form analysis includes: (1) the structure of the item itself; (2) what can be changed (negation, question formation, tense change, passivisation); and (3) what cannot be changed (fixed expressions, non-passivisable verbs, collocation restrictions).

What Form Analysis Must Cover

Form Checklist — CELTA Lesson Frameworks, Cambridge ESOL
For grammar items: Subject + auxiliary + verb form; negation pattern; question formation; any irregular forms; third person -s; passive possibility; degree of formality.

For lexical items: Part of speech; countable/uncountable; regular/irregular plural; transitive/intransitive; collocations (common verb/adj/noun partners); register (formal/informal/neutral).

For phrasal verbs: Separable/inseparable; whether it takes an object; passivisation possibility; common fixed phrases built around it.

Common Form Errors — and Why Teachers Miss Them

Teachers who do not do thorough form analysis before a lesson cannot anticipate student errors. These are the ten most commonly missed form points in ELT teaching:

StructureCommonly missed form pointStudent error that results
Present Perfect SimpleCannot use with finished time adverbials (yesterday, last week)“I have seen him yesterday.”
Used toNo present form — “use to” ≠ “used to” in affirmative“I use to go there.”
Make + object + infinitiveNo to in active; to required in passive“She made me to cry.” / “I was made cry.”
SuggestCannot be followed by infinitive: suggest + -ing / that-clause“She suggested me to go.”
WorthAlways followed by -ing, not infinitive; no object before -ing“It’s worth to try.” / “It’s worth you trying” ✗ in some uses
Wish + past perfectOnly for past regret; cannot use present perfect in the clause“I wish I haven’t done it.”
Despite / in spite ofMust be followed by noun phrase or -ing, not a that-clause“Despite that it was raining, we went.”
Comparative adjectivesNo double comparison: more taller; irregular forms“She is more better than him.”
Second conditionalWere for all persons in formal/written; would NOT in the if-clause“If I would have time…”
Reporting verbsEach verb takes a specific pattern (accuse of -ing, suggest -ing, advise to-inf)“She told to go.” / “He suggested to leave.”

Pronunciation — The Layer Teachers Fear Most

Layer Three

Pronunciation is the layer most frequently reduced to “listen and repeat.” But effective pronunciation teaching requires understanding the International Phonetic Alphabet, word stress, sentence stress, the phenomena of connected speech, and how to design a drilling sequence that produces durable pronunciation improvement, not just immediate imitation.

British Council · TeachingEnglish · Pronunciation Teaching
Research consistently shows that learners who receive explicit pronunciation instruction — particularly on word stress and connected speech — achieve significantly higher intelligibility than those who receive only incidental exposure. The key insight is that pronunciation is not about sounding native; it is about being understood. Stress is more important than individual phonemes for this goal.
TeachingEnglish: Pronunciation Teaching article ↗

The Four Dimensions of Pronunciation in MFP Analysis

DimensionWhat it involvesExampleTeaching tool
Phonemic accuracyProducing individual sounds correctly — particularly those that don’t exist in the student’s L1/θ/ in think; /ɪ/ vs /iː/ in ship/sheepIPA chart, minimal pairs, tongue position description
Word stressPlacing the primary stress on the correct syllable — the biggest single determinant of intelligibilitypho·TO·graph vs pho·TOG·ra·phyStress marks on board, clapping, tapping, bOOMing the stress
Sentence stressWhich words in an utterance receive prominence — content words (nouns, main verbs, adjectives, adverbs) are stressed; function words (articles, prepositions, auxiliaries) are typically unstressed and weakenedShe WAS working at the OFFICEUnderlining in transcript, listen-and-mark exercises
Connected speechHow sounds change when words are spoken naturally together: elision, assimilation, linking, intrusion, and weak formsnext day → /nek deɪ/ (elision of /t/); good boy → /gʊb bɔɪ/ (assimilation)Phonemic transcription of natural speech, listen and notice

The Drilling Sequence — Choral to Individual

A drilling sequence is not just “listen and repeat.” It follows a precise pedagogical progression designed to build confidence before exposing individual students to judgment from peers. The sequence below is from the CELTA micro-stage framework:

CELTA Lesson Frameworks · Pronunciation: Drilling Sequence
1. Model: Teacher produces the item clearly, naturally — not exaggerated.
2. Choral drill: Whole class repeats together — removes individual exposure anxiety, builds rhythm and confidence.
3. Group drill: Half class / rows / sides — creates accountable groups.
4. Pair drill: Pairs practice — teacher monitors.
5. Individual nomination: Teacher selects specific students — lowest anxiety when preceded by above stages.

Back-chaining (for multi-syllable or multi-word items): Build from the end. “mind” → “my mind” → “up my mind” → “make up my mind.” End of the phrase is always clearest — students build from the point of stability.
British Council · Interactive IPA Phonemic Chart
The British Council’s interactive phonemic chart allows teachers and students to hear every IPA symbol with native speaker audio. Essential for pronunciation preparation — click any symbol to hear it, see the position, and find example words.
TeachingEnglish: Interactive Phonemic Chart ↗

Live MFP Analyser — Five Language Items

Interactive

Select a language item. Click through the M, F, and P tabs. For each CCQ, click to reveal the expected answer and the reason it proves understanding. These analyses are built to CELTA and Cambridge standard — study the structure before writing your own.

MFP Analyser · Click a language item
I’ve just finished reading it.” Present Perfect Simple with adverb · B1–B2
Concept Timeline
finishedrecent past
NOW
Future
Key concept: Action completed in the very recent past. “Just” emphasises recency. The result (knowing the content of what was read) is relevant NOW. This is present perfect — not simple past, which would carry no present relevance.
Denotation

An action completed in the recent past — the speaker finished reading a very short time before this utterance. “Just” collapses the gap between past action and present moment.

Pragmatic force

The speaker is signalling availability, relevance, or a desire to discuss the content. Often implies: “I can talk about it now because I’ve just done it.”

Contrast: simple past

“I finished reading it” = neutral past event. No present relevance implied. The reading is simply over. Present perfect adds the “and it matters now” layer.

Time adverbs that trigger this

“just / already / yet / ever / never / recently / so far / this week / today” — all signal present relevance of a past action.

CCQs — click to reveal answers

Did I finish reading a long time ago, or very recently?
VERY RECENTLY
Have I finished reading, or am I still reading?
FINISHED
Does the reading matter now — do I know the content?
YES — present relevance
Would I say “I finished it yesterday”?
NO — “just” = moments ago
Subject + have/has + just + past participle
✓ I have just finished / She has just finished / They have just finished ✗ “I just finished” = American English acceptable; British English prefers present perfect with “just” ✗ “I’ve just finish” → missing past participle Negation: I haven’t finished yet (note: “just” not used in negative — use “yet”) Question: Have you just finished? / Has she just finished? Cannot use with finished time: ✗ “I’ve just finished it yesterday”
Error typeStudent producesCorrect form
Missing auxiliary“I just finished it.”“I’ve just finished it.”
Wrong participle“I’ve just finish it.”“I’ve just finished it.”
Finished time adverb“I’ve just finished yesterday.”“I finished it yesterday.”
Third person error“She have just finished.”“She has just finished.”
Phonemic transcription (natural, connected speech) /aɪv dʒʌst ˈfɪnɪʃt/
Weak form: “have”

In connected speech, “have” reduces to /əv/ or even /v/. “I have just” → /aɪv dʒʌst/. Students often overpronounce the auxiliary.

Word stress

Primary stress on FIN-ished. “Just” receives secondary stress. Auxiliary “have” receives no stress in normal speech.

Elision: -ed ending

“Finished” /ˈfɪnɪʃt/ — the -ed sounds /t/ after the voiceless /ʃ/. Not /ˈfɪnɪʃɪd/. Common error is adding an extra syllable.

Drilling sequence

finished → just finished → I’ve just finished → I’ve just finished reading → I’ve just finished reading it

Back-chain drill — click each step

finished
just finished
I’ve just finished
I’ve just finished reading it
“It’s worth trying.” Gerund after “worth” · B1
Core meaning

The effort or trouble involved in trying is justified by the potential benefit. Speaker recommends attempting something because the potential reward exceeds the cost of effort.

Pragmatic force

Mild encouragement or recommendation. Less strong than “you must try” — more like “the odds are reasonable enough to bother.”

Common contexts

Suggesting a restaurant, a film, a method, an application: “That new Thai place is worth visiting.” “This book is worth reading.” “Is it worth applying?”

Contrast: not worth

“It’s not worth trying” = the effort exceeds the potential benefit. The same structure reversed: “Don’t bother — the outcome is unlikely to justify the cost.”

Do I think trying will probably have a good result?
YES — benefit likely
Am I saying they must try, or just that they should consider it?
SUGGESTING — not obliging
Has the person tried yet?
NO — they haven’t tried yet
worth + verb-ing (gerund — always)
✓ It’s worth trying / worth visiting / worth doing ✗ “It’s worth to try” → infinitive NEVER follows “worth” ✗ “It’s worth try” → base form not used after “worth” Negation: “It’s not worth trying” / “It’s hardly worth it” Question: “Is it worth trying?” (subject “it” — never the person) ✗ “Is it worth you trying?” — marginal; avoid in teaching until B2+
Phonemic transcription /ɪts wɜːθ ˈtraɪɪŋ/
Key pronunciation note

The /θ/ in “worth” is a common difficulty for speakers of many L1s (French, Spanish, Italian, Japanese, Arabic). It requires the tongue between the teeth. Back-chain: -rth → worth → worth trying. The /ɪŋ/ ending of the gerund must not be reduced to /ɪn/ in careful speech, though it is in natural speech.

trying
worth trying
It’s worth trying
I’d rather not say.” Would rather + bare infinitive (preference, polite refusal) · B1–B2
Core meaning

A preference not to do something — expressed politely. The speaker is declining without a direct refusal. “I’d rather not” = I prefer not to, with implication that they will not do it.

Register / pragmatic force

Soft refusal. More polite than “I don’t want to say” or “I won’t tell you.” Frequently used in professional contexts, conversations about sensitive topics. Implies respect for the interlocutor.

Contrast: would prefer not to

“I’d prefer not to say” = near synonym, slightly more formal. Same preference meaning but without the “rather” structure. Both acceptable at B2+.

Contrast: I’d rather not + action

“I’d rather not go” / “I’d rather not comment” / “I’d rather not discuss it” — the structure is versatile; any bare infinitive can follow.

Will I tell them?
NO — polite decline
Am I being rude or polite?
POLITE — softened refusal
Do I have a preference, or am I saying it’s impossible?
PREFERENCE — could say, choose not to
Subject + would rather + not + bare infinitive
✓ I’d rather not say / She’d rather not go / We’d rather not discuss it ✗ “I’d rather not to say” → NO “to” with would rather ✗ “I would rather don’t say” → NOT negated with do-support Would rather + past simple = preference about another person: “I’d rather you didn’t tell him.” (B2+ — teach separately) Contraction: always use “I’d rather” in speech; “I would rather” is formal/emphatic only
Natural speech phonemic transcription /aɪd ˈrɑːðə nɒt seɪ/
Connected speech notes

“I’d rather” contracts and runs together: /aɪd ˈrɑːðə/. The /ð/ in “rather” is between a voiced /ð/ (same as “the”) — not /θ/. “Not” receives stress as the negation marker. Final “say” often de-stressed when the sentence is clearly understood from context.

say
not say
rather not say
I’d rather not say
“She can’t have known about it.” Modal of deduction — past impossibility · B2
Core meaning

The speaker deduces — from available evidence — that it was impossible for her to have known. Strong certainty that knowledge did not exist in the past. Deduction, not fact.

Deduction certainty scale

must have known (95%+ certain it happened) → should have known → may have known → might have known → can’t have known (95%+ certain it did NOT happen)

Contrast: didn’t know

“She didn’t know” = stated fact. “She can’t have known” = logical deduction from evidence. The speaker was not present — they are reasoning from what they know.

Evidence basis

Always implies reasoning from evidence: “She can’t have known — she was in Australia at the time.” The evidence is either stated or strongly implied.

Does the speaker know for certain that she didn’t know?
NO — deducing, not stating fact
Is the speaker about 95% sure she didn’t know?
YES — strong certainty
Does this refer to the past or the present?
PAST — “have known”
Is the speaker making a logical conclusion based on evidence?
YES — deduction from evidence
Subject + can’t have + past participle
✓ She can’t have known / They can’t have arrived / He can’t have been there ✗ “She couldn’t have knew” → wrong participle; “knew” is simple past, not past participle of “know” (= known) ✗ “She can’t have know” → base form not acceptable here Note: “couldn’t have known” = also acceptable, emphasises impossibility. Slightly more emphatic than “can’t have” No passive common — subject is always the one doing the knowing/acting
Natural speech transcription /ʃi kɑːnt həv ˈnəʊn əˈbaʊt ɪt/
Key notes

“Can’t” = /kɑːnt/ in British English, /kænt/ in American English — a significant difference relevant to listening. “Have” reduces to /həv/ or /əv/. Stress falls on “can’t” (the negation) and “known” (the main content). “About it” de-stresses completely in natural speech.

“This product is environmentally friendly.” Compound adjective · B2
Core meaning

Not harmful to the environment; produced, used, or disposed of in ways that minimise ecological damage. Connotation: positive, responsible, modern. Used in marketing, policy, daily conversation.

Synonyms & register

eco-friendly (informal/marketing), green (informal), sustainable (broader concept), low-carbon (technical). “Environmentally friendly” is neutral formal — safe in all registers.

Collocations

environmentally friendly packaging / product / car / choice / policy / practice / design / lifestyle / alternative. Also: environmentally friendly + to + noun: “friendly to the environment.”

Pragmatic use

Often used in advertising and public discourse. May carry green-washing implications in context — when a company claims eco-friendliness without evidence. Discuss this at B2/C1.

Does this product damage the environment?
NO — or minimally so
Is this a positive or negative description?
POSITIVE
Is the company concerned about nature here?
YES — or claiming to be
environmentally + friendly (compound adjective — adverb + adjective)
When used attributively (before noun): often hyphenated: an environmentally-friendly product When used predicatively (after noun/verb): no hyphen: “the product is environmentally friendly” Word family: environment (n) → environmental (adj) → environmentally (adv) → environmentalist (n) ✓ More/less environmentally friendly (gradable adjective) ✗ No comparative shortening: ✗ “more enviro-friendlier”
Full transcription — 6 syllables /ɪnˌvaɪrənˈmentəli ˈfrendli/
Stress and syllable count

Primary stress: -MENT- (4th syllable). Secondary stress: FRIEND-. A 6-syllable compound that students often mispronounce by stressing the wrong syllable (common error: en-VI-ron-men-tal-ly). Back-chaining essential here. Schwa /ə/ in “environmentally” — the -ment reduces to /mənt/.

friendly
-mentally friendly
-vironmentally friendly
environmentally friendly

Error Diagnosis — Which Layer Was Missed?

Interactive Game

Below are ten student errors. For each one, identify which layer of MFP was not taught — or not taught well enough — to prevent this error. Each error reveals a specific teaching gap.

MFP Error Diagnosis Score: 0 / 0
Student error — B1 class, teaching present perfect simple
“I have seen him yesterday.”
Student error — B1 class, teaching “worth”
“It’s worth to visit the museum.”
Student speaking — A2 class, teaching comparatives
“She is more better than her brother.”
Student error — B2, teaching modal deduction (past)
“She can’t have knew about it.”
Student speaking — B1, pronunciation of “environmentally”
Student says: “en-VI-ron-mental-ly friendly” (stresses second syllable)
Student writing — B1, teaching “suggest”
“She suggested me to go to the doctor.”
Student speaking — B2, teaching “I’d rather”
“I’d rather don’t discuss it.” (Student adds do-support to negate)
Student — B1, after lesson on present perfect continuous
Student uses “I’ve been living here for 10 years” but thinks it means the action has finished.
Student speaking — B1, lesson on “used to”
“I use to play football every weekend.” (Present tense form)
Student — B2, writing. Taught “slim” but uses it negatively
Student writes: “She was too slim” meaning she looked unhealthily thin — not knowing “slim” is usually positive.
Final result displayed when all 10 items completed.

Full Practice — CELTA-Standard MFP Analysis

Your Turn

Write a complete MFP analysis for each language item. Use the worksheet columns — Meaning (with CCQs and timeline/diagram notes), Form (structure, restrictions, errors), Pronunciation (transcription, stress, drill sequence). Then reveal the model to compare.

Item A

“I wish I hadn’t said that.”

Wish + Past Perfect — Past Regret · B2

Concept to analyse: past regret — the action happened, cannot be undone, speaker feels negative about it. Three layers to cover below.

M — Meaning + CCQs
F — Form + restrictions
P — Pronunciation + drill
Meaning

Core concept: The speaker did something in the past, regrets it now, and cannot change it. Three elements: (1) past action; (2) negative emotion now; (3) impossibility of changing it.
CCQs: Did the person say something? (YES) · Are they happy about it? (NO) · Can they unsay it? (NO) · Is this about the past or future? (PAST)

Form

wish + subject + had + past participle (past perfect)
✓ I wish I hadn’t said that / She wishes she hadn’t gone
✗ “I wish I didn’t say” → wrong tense (simple past ≠ past regret in standard grammar)
✗ “I wish I haven’t said” → present perfect not possible here
Negation in the past perfect: hadn’t = had not

Pronunciation

/aɪ wɪʃ aɪ ˈhædnt ˈsɛd ðæt/
Stress: HADN’T and SAID — negation and action receive primary stress
Drill: said → hadn’t said → I hadn’t said → I wish I hadn’t said → I wish I hadn’t said that

Item B

“Despite the rain, we went.”

“Despite” + noun phrase / -ing — contrast · B1–B2

Concept to analyse: concession — two facts are stated where the first seems to predict the second would not happen, yet it did. Key form restriction: despite ≠ despite the fact that (teach separately).

M — Meaning + CCQs
F — Form + restrictions
P — Pronunciation + drill
Meaning

Concession: The rain is an obstacle — it makes going less likely. The speaker went anyway. The contrast is between an expected obstacle and an unexpected outcome.
CCQs: Was it raining? (YES) · Did they stay home? (NO — they went) · Was the rain a problem? (YES — expected obstacle) · Did the rain stop them? (NO)

Form

despite + noun phrase: “despite the rain”
despite + -ing: “despite being tired”
despite + the fact that + clause: “despite the fact that it rained” (more formal)
✗ “Despite that it rained” → NOT accepted in standard BrE
✗ “Despite of” → preposition “of” not added (contrast: in spite of = in + spite + of)
Contrastive structure: main clause still occurs / result despite condition

Pronunciation

/dɪˈspaɪt ðə ˈreɪn wi ˈwent/
Stress: -SPITE (second syllable of despite), RAIN (content noun), WENT (main verb)
Drill: went → we went → rain, we went → despite the rain, we went

Item C

“She had the car repaired.”

Causative “have” — B2

Concept to analyse: causative — she did not repair the car herself; she arranged for someone else to do it. Often confused with the past perfect “she had repaired” — the word order distinguishes them.

M — Meaning + CCQs
F — Form + restrictions
P — Pronunciation + drill
Meaning

Causative: Someone else repaired the car for her — she arranged it (paid for it, requested it). She did not do it herself. The focus is on the service arrangement, not the action.
CCQs: Did she repair the car herself? (NO) · Who repaired it? (A mechanic / someone else) · Did she arrange it? (YES) · Is the car repaired now? (YES — result)

Form

have + object + past participle
“She had the car repaired” — note word order: object (the car) between “had” and past participle (repaired)
✓ I’m having my hair cut / She’s getting her eyes tested
“get” can replace “have” in informal speech: “She got the car repaired”
Contrast with past perfect: “She had repaired the car” = SHE repaired it herself (no object between “had” and past participle)

Pronunciation

/ʃi həd ðə kɑː rɪˈpeəd/
“had” reduces to /həd/ — weak form; “the” reduces to /ðə/ before consonant; stress falls on “CAR” and “-PAIRED”
Drill: repaired → car repaired → the car repaired → had the car repaired → She had the car repaired

Reference Sources — Direct Links

Further Reading
Cambridge
Cambridge ELT Blog — MFP in Language Teaching

Cambridge English’s professional blog for ELT teachers — articles on concept checking, drilling, and language analysis.

Cambridge ELT Blog ↗
Oxford
Oxford Advanced Learner’s Dictionary — Grammar Notes

Full grammatical information for every entry — collocations, form restrictions, usage examples. Essential for form analysis.

OALD: Dictionary + Grammar ↗
Brit. Council
British Council Phonemic Chart — Interactive IPA

Click any IPA symbol to hear it with native speaker audio. Essential for pronunciation preparation for every language item.

TeachingEnglish: Phonemic Chart ↗
Cambridge
Cambridge Dictionary — Grammar Reference

Grammar explanations with usage examples in authentic context. Use for checking form rules and finding model sentences.

Cambridge: British Grammar reference ↗
Brit. Council
TeachingEnglish — Language Analysis Articles

British Council’s curated articles on teaching grammar, vocabulary, and pronunciation — indexed by skill and level.

TeachingEnglish: Knowing Your Subject ↗
Oxford
Oxford English Grammar Course (Online)

Swan and Walter’s grammar course — one of the most trusted references for form analysis of complex structures.

Oxford Grammar Reference ↗

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