Iakov
Hi everyone, I'm a bit confused. What's the difference between "I don't like it when he's playing the guitar" and "I don’t like it when he plays the guitar"? In the first sentence, it is also not happening right now. Right? What's the difference then?
2024년 3월 8일 오후 10:44
답변 · 7
2
The phrases are basically the same. In spoken English, we use both of these. A professor might have an opinion about which phrase is "more correct", but we would understand both. Good luck
2024년 3월 9일
1
This is the most common question on iTalki. Let's discuss the difference between the two sentences 1. He is playing the guitar. 2. He plays the guitar. The first uses a present participle ("p.p."), "playing", as an adjective to describe the subject of the sentence, "he". The verb is "is". As a p.p., "playing" can have an object ("guitar") but it cannot have a subject. To prove that "playing" is an adjective and not a verb, consider these sentences: (a) Playing the guitar, Jack saw a cat. (b) Jack, playing the guitar, saw a cat. (c) Jack saw a cat playing the guitar. In each sentence, the subject is "Jack" and the verb is "saw". Notice in the third sentence it is the cat, not Jack, who plays the guitar. As an adjective, "playing" clings to and describes the nearest noun. That is how ADJECTIVES behave. In the third sentence, "cat" is the closest noun, so the brilliant cat is the one described as "playing the guitar". Sentence #2 uses an active verb "plays" whose subject is "he". Active verbs MUST have subjects, whereas participles never have one. You can think of #1 as a photograph or a painting of a person playing a guitar. That's what p.p. adjectives do. They create images. That is the only thing you need to know about them. You can forget everything you have read in grammar books about them. Without context, they give no information about time frame. Since a p.p. adjective acts like a photograph, it describes something that continues external to any time frame unless context provides one. #2, on the other hand, is an ACTION. It happens. It accomplishes. It is factual. That is the difference. Use participles as adjectives when you want your listener to imagine something happening. Use active verbs when you want to state facts.
2024년 3월 9일
1
In both of your examples there could be differences in meaning. When he’s playing the guitar, it’s too loud in here. I don’t like it when he plays the guitar because he makes too many mistakes. He should stick to piano. You have to tell her tonight but don’t interrupt her when she’s reading. (I know that tonight’s reading is important and that there will be a better time to tell her) Don’t interrupt her when she reads. She gets very angry. (General rule)
2024년 3월 9일
I don't like when he plays the guitar. Это его общая способность, а не процесс.
2024년 3월 11일
Thank you everyone! :)
2024년 3월 9일
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