Cerca tra vari insegnanti di Inglese...
Baron Zhao
what's the difference among "engage in","attend ","participate in"and"take part in"
you can answer in general or give some typical examples,thanks[emoji]
12 nov 2016 13:08
Risposte · 2
2
There is no difference between "participate," and "take part in."
For example, "I participate in sport," and "I take part in sport," are exactly the same in meaning.
In this context, "to engage in," also has the same meaning.
"To attend," has a different meaning. It means to go to something.
"I attend football matches," has a very different meaning to "I participate in football matches." In the first case, you are watching the match, in the second you are playing in the match.
Sometimes, if we are talking about a meeting, then the word 'attend," can have a similar meaning to the other terms:
"I attend a meeting once a week."
"I participate in a meeting once a week."
"I take part in a meeting once a week."
In these sentences the meanings are all similar. But the terms participate, take part in and engage in are more active terms than "to attend." Saying that you 'participate in a meeting,' implies that you had something to say and you were really involved in the meeting. If you merely attended it then you might have sat there in silence, or even fallen asleep during the meeting.
12 novembre 2016
Non hai ancora trovato le tue risposte?
Scrivi le tue domande e lascia che i madrelingua ti aiutino!
Baron Zhao
Competenze linguistiche
Cinese (mandarino), Inglese
Lingua di apprendimento
Inglese
Altri articoli che potrebbero piacerti

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
12 consensi · 11 Commenti

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
13 consensi · 11 Commenti

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
11 consensi · 6 Commenti
Altri articoli