Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Ahsanul Irfan
1.I will get kicked.
2.Do you want to have some kicks.
3.Do you want to have kicked.
are they three sentences correct?
in Third sentence "Have kicked" mean kick by him to someone or he'll be kicked by someone?
12 févr. 2018 05:49
Réponses · 6
1
The first is good. In English there are two ways you can phrase a verb. One is active where the subject is doing the action like “I kicked” . The other is passive where the subject receives the action; “I was kicked” You use the form of “to be” and the ed form of the verb for the passive.
So in the second one, you can either say “do you want to kick(active)” or “do you want to be kicked(passive)” . In the second example you are the thing being kicked. In the third one, you just have to switch out “to have” with “to be” to be the receiver of the kicks. The reason you don’t conjugate “to be” is becuase you already have the verb “want”.
Also, in English kick is most often used as a transitive verb. You have to say what you kicked, if you used the active voice, or people will be confused. So say “Do you want to kick (the object)” instead If you are the one kicking .
12 février 2018
Apparently, all the three sentences are grammatically correct. In the third one, you are asking someone whether he wants to be kicked by you. Unlike the latter two sentences, the first one denotes that, you are the one who is going to be kicked by someone. For instance, "In one of the bars in New York, if you say the word 'literally' (which is oft-misused word) you must leave the bar immediately after your drink. Otherwise, you will get kicked out of the bar".
12 février 2018
Only the first sentence seems to be grammatically correct.
1. I will get kicked. eg. If I play football "I will get kicked" (because football is a contact sport and someone might kick me)
2. While playing football, "I kicked" someone. (You kicked one of the other players by accident)
3. Sentence 3 is unfortunately totally incorrect.
Hope this helps
12 février 2018
Hey Ahsanul!
The sentence "Have Kicked" is "noun and verb(past tense)" so you are stating that you kicked someone. If you do not understand please ask me again :)
12 février 2018
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Ahsanul Irfan
Compétences linguistiques
Bengali, Anglais
Langue étudiée
Anglais
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