Isaac Sechslingloff
Professionelle Lehrkraft
Native speakers mixing up tenses? So I am a native English speaker and at the moment I am taking a TEFL course. I wasn't in the impression I had incorrect English but after studying the 12 tense system in detail I believe I mix these tenses up myself (moreover students have asked me before questions dealing with differentiating between these tenses and I gave them at the time what felt like it sounded correct 🙄). The particular examples that I noticed were the past tenses (past simple, past continuous, past perfect, past perfect continuous), I would mix the "standard" uses up with each other. "I ate already" "I'd eaten already" Naturally these seem replacable with each other. But apparently the first would be incorrect if I finished eating or didn't give a definite time in which it happened. I know I can't be the only one making such mistakes (also wow we have 12 different tenses😳🤯). Does anyone else make such 'mistakes' (mistakes being your understood and applied use of these tenses is different than the standardized definition for these tenses)?
5. Dez. 2019 22:24
Antworten · 6
(I'm a native US speaker). I've heard "boughten." I can't remember who or where. I might have used it myself, I'm not sure. An example of use would be "I don't want to take the time to bake a pie for Thanksgiving dinner, I think this year we'll just have a boughten pie." If it's regional, I don't know what region it would be. It has the feeling of something that might be an antiquated usage that has survived. Ahdictionary.org says "chiefly northern US." My wife, whose from the midwest, says she hadn't heard it until I asked her about it just now. She says she would say "a store-bought pie."
6. Dezember 2019
That's the fun thing about language: it's always changing! Even though one of those sentences are considered correct, there's going to be a difference between grammatically correct and what actually sounds right to native speakers. I'm also from southern California and I've never heard or said "boughten" before :)
6. Dezember 2019
Yes, I'm guilty as well. It was a quick lesson for me that conversational English doesn't follow the rules when I was doing my TEFLA course. We were *punished* quite severely for mistakes like this and those that couldn't adapt weren't passed in the pracs and failed. I had to consciously change a lot of speaking patterns when in the class (and teaching). My instructors at the time were British (it was a UK program) and that made it even more difficult as one of them really didn't like some Australian mannerisms that I had.
6. Dezember 2019
Also, does anyone else use past participle "boughten", wiktionary says it is "rare or dialectal" but my dialect isn't usually recognized for being dialectal (Southern Californian, the "Proto General American" dialect)
5. Dezember 2019
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