Recherche parmi différents professeurs en Anglais…
Maki
1. His wife passed away in 2000. I met him five years later.
2. I met him five years after his wife's death.
3. His wife passed away in 2000. I met him after five years.
Do these sentences sound natural? I'd like to know how to use "number" + "days/ weeks/ hours/ etc" + later/after, and if there are differences.
Thank you!
Maki
2 mars 2024 06:16
Réponses · 3
1
Let me explain why #2 is correct but #3 is wrong.
In #2, "death" is the object of the preposition "after": "after her death". That makes sense.
In #3, "death" is STILL the intended object of the preposition (because you still mean "after her death") but the sentence is written in such a way that it appears that "five years" is the object of the preposition. This confuses the listener. When you say "I met him after five years", I start to wonder "after five years of what?"
2 mars 2024
1
3 is wrong but both 1 and 3 both might overemphasize the wife by making her the sentence subject. You can say:
I met him in 2005, five years after his wife’s passing. (Keeping the focus of 2 but with the information and tone of 1 and 3)
2 mars 2024
1
1. and 2. are good. 3. is not very good.
It may not seem to make much sense, but you could say, "His wife passed away in 2000. I met him five year after." (basically the same as later.--but 1. is still probably better).
2 mars 2024
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Maki
Compétences linguistiques
Anglais, Français, Japonais, Ukrainien
Langue étudiée
Anglais, Français, Ukrainien
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