ابحث بين معلمي الإنجليزية المتعددين...
Elizabeth
'He saw him 'wrote'' is wrong. He saw a crowd of people 'gathered' is correct. Why?
٣١ أغسطس ٢٠١٠ ١٤:٢٧
الإجابات · 2
1
Because gathered is an adjective in this example
٣١ أغسطس ٢٠١٠
He saw a crowd of people 'gathered' == He saw a crowd of people 'who had gathered'.
In the 1st sentence on left hand side, "gathered" is an adjective because it is in the past-participle form, qualifying the noun 'people' (who had gathered). It is NOT a verb.
In the 2nd sentence on the right hand side, "who had gathered" is an adjective clause, that serves the same purpose by qualifying the noun 'people'.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
"He saw him 'wrote' ".... is wrong because 'wrote' (the past tense of 'write') is a VERB and hence can't qualify the pronoun 'him' as an adjective.
The correct expression should be : "He saw him 'writing'"..... here 'writing' is in the present-participle form, working as a qualifier...
Again if I say, "He saw him 'was writing'.... it is WRONG. Because here 'writing' is a VERB with a definite (past continuous/progressive) tense....so, it can't be a qualifier....hence, NOT an adjective.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Hope you get the difference.
For further clarification, pls study "Participle and Gerund" chapter in your English Grammar book.
٣١ أغسطس ٢٠١٠
لم تجد إجاباتك بعد؟
اكتب اسألتك ودع الناطقين الأصليين باللغات يساعدونك!
Elizabeth
المهارات اللغوية
الصينية (المندرية), الإنجليزية, الإسبانية
لغة التعلّم
الإنجليزية, الإسبانية
مقالات قد تعجبك أيضًا

How to Ask for a Raise or Promotion in English
9 تأييدات · 8 التعليقات

The Key to Learning a Language Faster
31 تأييدات · 8 التعليقات

Why "General English" is Failing Your Career (An Engineer’s Perspective)
30 تأييدات · 12 التعليقات
مقالات أكثر
