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gggse123
question
early this afternoon
earlier this afternoon
Are they the natural expressions?
and what is the difference between them?
2019年3月16日 03:16
回答 · 2
1
Natural, yes.
.
I will go to the supermarket, early this afternoon. <-- states time that something future will happen
early simply means not late, or maybe even before "on time"
He got there early. He was first to arrive.
"earlier" is comparative. It contrasts the times of two things.
I will go to the supermarket, earlier this afternoon (than yesterday). <-- states time that something future will happen compared with some other
.
Earlier this afternoon, I went to the supermarket. <-- implies earlier than now.
I went earlier. <-- implies earlier than now.
I went earlier than you (went).
You arrived at 3pm? It is best to get there earier.
It is best to get there earier, rather than later.
.
The superlative would be "earliest".
He was earliest of all of them arriving first.
The earliest known sighting of ... was in the year 1783. The first of many sightings.
2019年3月16日
Both are right, but mean two different things. One says that it was early when something happened. The other one says that whatever happened happened earlier than now.
2019年3月16日
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gggse123
語学スキル
中国語 (普通話), 英語, 韓国語
言語学習
中国語 (普通話), 英語
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