Heidi
Which is ok? In English class/in the English class, we read many interesting articles and practice speaking and reading. I’m taking about the subject English at school. Thanks
2024年12月19日 02:53
回答 · 4
1
"In English class" is correct for this sentence. For reference, you might use "In the English class" when you're referring to it, having mentioned it before or just recently. For example: "We have two classes offered: an English class and a science class. In the English class, we practice speaking and reading. In the science class, we conduct experiments." Hope this helps!
2024年12月19日
Both options are grammatically correct, but their usage depends on the context: 1. "In English class, we read many interesting articles and practice speaking and reading." * This is the more natural and common choice in casual speech and writing. It refers to the general activity of being in English class. 2. "In the English class, we read many interesting articles and practice speaking and reading." * This sounds more specific, as if you're referring to a particular English class (e.g., a specific group or course). It’s less commonly used unless you're emphasizing one particular class. For your purpose of talking about the subject in school, "In English class" is better.
2024年12月20日
If I were talking about a course that I am taking, I would say "In my English class" unless the context already makes clear that I am talking about classes I am taking, in which case I would say "In English class". I would only use "the" if for some reason I wanted to differentiate that class from other classes.
2024年12月19日
Most natural by far is just: In English, we read …. Classes have names like ‘English’, ‘French’, ‘Biology’, ‘History’ etc. and those names are unambiguous in most cases. In certain contexts, ‘class’ might sound natural: There are 20 students in my English class. Yesterday’s English class was cut short by the fire drill. The History class is taught in the portable.
2024年12月19日
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