多彩な 英語 講師陣から検索…
А S
Are the sentences "What if she had spoken so that everyone had heard?" and "A year ago, the teacher would have respected her because she new English well" correct?
2025年12月10日 05:43
回答 · 4
1
Using the past perfect ("had heard") after "so that" is unnatural here. "So that" introduces a purpose or result. When the main clause is in the past perfect ("had spoken"), the "so that" clause typically needs a past modal (like could or would) to show the intended or potential result. The Correction depends on your intended meaning: If you mean her goal was to make them able to hear: "What if she had spoken so that everyone could hear?" (This implies she didn't speak loudly/clearly enough in the past.) If you mean her goal was to make them actually hear (a factual result): "What if she had spoken so that everyone heard?" (simple past) OR, more naturally, for a hypothetical past: "What if she had spoken so that everyone would have heard?" For a past hypothetical scenario, the clearest option is: "What if she had spoken so that everyone could have heard?" In the second sentence, ignoring the error of using "new" instead of "knew", the sentence is fine and understandable.
2025年12月10日
1
It's "knew English" not "new English". "Knew" and "new" are 'homophones'. They are both English words and are pronounced the same. A good lesson in the trickier parts of English! There is a pattern here: Present tense Past tense "know" "knew" "blow" "blew" "throw" "threw" but these " ---ow" words don't follow it: "mow" "follow" "sow" [which has two different meanings, one of which is pronounced like "how" or "bow" (which also has two different meanings!!) ]. Wow! Why can't we all just learn Loglan?
2025年12月10日
まだあなたの答えが見つかりませんか?
質問を書き留めて、ネイティブスピーカーに手伝ってもらいましょう!

ご自宅で快適に語学を学べるチャンスをお見逃しなく。経験豊富な語学講師陣の中からお選びいただき、今すぐ最初のレッスンにお申し込みください!