0
Points
Questions
0
Answers
3
-
Asked on March 27, 2021 in Word choice.
Is it true that if Asians’s eating pasta means’ ”I just eat pasta”, then this sounds like Asian language basic mix up, as they will use English to say ”I just ate pasta” but this is not correct.
The tenses are very important in English and can have an effect on the implication of the other words in the sentence, such as in this case. They are very important, considering the tenses and of which there is the most emphasis, when it comes to the sentence a single word or several, when it comes to the verb.
Meaning is important to know.
Why does nobody eating pasta?
Where did You See Then, You Earned the Antwort? “Have you
eaten already?” I’m
enoying it the same
as I ate pasta, despite
the
fact that I think many people only do this and I will be more familiar with it later on in the case of a) ”I only ate pasta” and b)”I am not a vegetarian.”
If you asked someone to eat something you don’t offer, they would possibly reply c) ”I
just ate pasta,’ and it would mean something completely different It (C) would mean ”I
am full because I ate (pasta) recently” Whereas in example a) the
same sentence meant ”I didn’t eat much”
- 780892 views
- 5 answers
- 287780 votes
-
Asked on March 27, 2021 in Word choice.
Is it true that if Asians’s eating pasta means’ ”I just eat pasta”, then this sounds like Asian language basic mix up, as they will use English to say ”I just ate pasta” but this is not correct.
The tenses are very important in English and can have an effect on the implication of the other words in the sentence, such as in this case. They are very important, considering the tenses and of which there is the most emphasis, when it comes to the sentence a single word or several, when it comes to the verb.
Meaning is important to know.
Why does nobody eating pasta?
Where did You See Then, You Earned the Antwort? “Have you
eaten already?” I’m
enoying it the same
as I ate pasta, despite
the
fact that I think many people only do this and I will be more familiar with it later on in the case of a) ”I only ate pasta” and b)”I am not a vegetarian.”
If you asked someone to eat something you don’t offer, they would possibly reply c) ”I
just ate pasta,’ and it would mean something completely different It (C) would mean ”I
am full because I ate (pasta) recently” Whereas in example a) the
same sentence meant ”I didn’t eat much”
- 780892 views
- 5 answers
- 287780 votes
-
Asked on March 15, 2021 in Grammar.
For me, it implies the feeling of being asleep and the importance of what is first… like immediate and essential and in a state of half sleep – not merely the first thing that you do.
For “first saw him” it also implies the value of meeting.
- 899900 views
- 1 answers
- 333571 votes