Wählen Sie aus verschiedenen Englisch Lehrkräften für ...
pirecles
what's the difference between : I got a cold/ I got cold?
28. Jan. 2012 18:06
Antworten · 3
4
GET (A) COLD = CATCH A COLD = become ill (infected) with a cold an acute viral infection of the upper respiratory passages characterized by discharge of watery mucus from the nose, sneezing, etc e.g. Let's dry our hair so we don't get a cold. Most of them caught colds and began to cough; one man of the draft was taken to hospital with pleurisy. GET COLD 1) a condition of low temperature: e. g. your dinner's getting cold; the nights are getting colder. 2) feeling no warmth; uncomfortably chilled e.g. I get cold a lot so I always carry a jacket with me. They were cold, but there wasn't anything warm to put on. see also this link: http://forum.wordreference.com/showthread.php?t=724722
28. Januar 2012
2
Craig from Newcastle got the meanings of "cold" right but a cold is when you are sick and "I got cold" is the simple past of an experience of low temperature. If you got a cold then you got sick. If you got cold it means you experienced uncomfortable or painfully low temperatures.
28. Januar 2012
I wouldn't say "I got cold". I would guess that, "I got cold" is just poor English. "Cold" can mean temperature or a disease. (the medical term is influenza, but when you become too cold or wet, you catch influenza, so English people say "I got a cold" and actually to be very thorough, influenza (flu) is a worse disease than a normal little cold.) I want to put my coat on because I am (I have become - I was - etc) COLD I have caught A cold because I didn't wear my coat. I hope that helps.
28. Januar 2012
Haben Sie noch keine Antworten gefunden?
Geben Sie Ihre Fragen ein und lassen Sie sich von Muttersprachlern helfen!

Verpassen Sie nicht die Gelegenheit, bequem von zu Hause aus eine Sprache zu lernen. Stöbern Sie in unserer Auswahl an erfahrenen Sprachlehrern und melden Sie sich jetzt zu Ihrer ersten Unterrichtsstunde an!