Chino Alpha
How do you understand them? 1. She hasn't been in good health since she worked at that company. 2. I haven't been in good health since I smoked. Besides, are these two sentences natural? Thank you in advance.
25 janv. 2017 20:11
Réponses · 11
1
Grammatically, there is nothing wrong with them. However, the sentence "I haven't been in good health since I smoked" strikes me as strange. This sentence means you used to be in good health, back when you used to smoke, but you're not in good health now that you've quit smoking. A more logical sentence would be "I haven't been in good health since I started smoking".
25 janvier 2017
Both sentences are fine and easily understood. Whether this is your intent, we cannot tell since there is not enough context.
25 janvier 2017
They're both rather awkwardly expressed. It's not clear what you're trying to say. Do you mean the following? 1. She hasn't been in good health since she stopped working at that company. 2. I haven't been in good health since I started smoking.
25 janvier 2017
Here "since" is used in temporal sense.
25 janvier 2017
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