Trova Inglese Insegnanti
prudent260
I watched a cartoon made by Disney called Mickey Mouse Clubhouse with my son. There is a sentence as below: 'We used a ball to shoot baskets.' They had played basketball earlier in the video and Mickey was saying what they had done today. In that scene, there was only one basketball stand, so only one basket, too. If I wanted to talk about this, would I always use 'baskets' in the plural even though there was only one? Are there other phrases coming to your mind that is often used this way? Thank you. :)
28 apr 2022 23:50
Risposte · 8
2
If you throw the ball and it goes into the basket, you have "made a basket." If you throw it second time and it goes into the same basket, you have "made two baskets." In other words, "basket" can mean "a successful shot." It is like the word "goal" in football (called "soccer" in the US). A "goal" can mean a metal frame with a net. There are only two "goals," one at each end of the field. However, a "goal" can also mean "the act of scoring, by putting a ball into the goal," and during a soccer game the teams may score more than two "goals."
29 aprile 2022
2
Shooting a basketball into a basket is called making a basket when you throw a ball threw the hole . When you take more than one throw/shot it is called making baskets or shooting baskets or taking baskets or playing baskets.
29 aprile 2022
1
‘Shooting baskets’ is an activity. It means playing at a basketball hoop without playing an organized game. Hey, Mom, I’m going to go shoot some baskets at the park. (I’m going to bring my ball to the basketball court at the park and play around) To be honest, the phrase ‘we used a ball to’ sounds unnatural. Maybe it’s said because it’s a show for children and they are trying to introduce simple sentences. I can’t imagine a native saying that naturally.
29 aprile 2022
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