Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Tony
Hi,guys! Can you tell me what's the difference between "drip" and "drop"?
10 juil. 2021 12:23
Réponses · 13
1
As a verb, “to drop” means to fall, or more frequently, to allow or cause something to fall. This may sometimes be used as a noun, meaning a fall. However, I imagine that you are not asking about that “drop”, as it is not related to “dripping”.
As a noun, “a drop” usually refers to a small bit of water that falls (Chinese 滴). As a verb, 滴 is translated as “to drip”.
Oh, there’s actually something more important — questions in subordinate clauses (embedded or indirect questions) do *not* use inversion, so your question should be (corrections in ALL-CAPS): “Can you tell me WHAT the difference between "drip" and "drop" IS?
11 juillet 2021
Are you referring to water?
Or in general?
10 juillet 2021
The drip-a noun
To drip - the verb
The drop - a noun
To drop - a verb
This is a complicated one. So many options to explain.
1. The drip from the tap was driving me crazy.
2. The tap was dripping.
1. A drop of oil fell on my shirt and now I must wash it.
2. I dropped a glass on the kitchen floor and it shattered.
11 juillet 2021
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Tony
Compétences linguistiques
Chinois (mandarin), Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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