Search from various 영어 teachers...
Chris
Which tense to use in connection with the verb bewitched
Another awkward question from me, please pardon me.
If somebody got bewitched it might have consequences which may last longer.
This made me think, if the sentence using simple past:
"He bewitched the children" could even be correct?
Or is it better to say:
"He has / had bewitched the children" because we can expect that the process of bewitching has some long-lasting consequences?
2018년 6월 21일 오후 4:43
답변 · 4
2
Both are fine. The choice depends on what you actually mean.
Both of them imply that "bewitching" is an event that happened at a time in the past. He bewitched the children at some specific time. Perhaps he cast the spell on February 29th, 2018 at midnight. The act itself is over. The effect of the act may or may not have continued.
If you say "he bewitched the children," we do not know from the statement whether "bewitching" has a lasting effect or not. That is a matter of our real-world understanding of bewitching.
If you say "he has bewitched the children," that implies that the children are still bewitched. It implies that it had a long-lasting or permanent effect.
If you say "he cleaned the bathtub," maybe he cleaned it this morning and it is still clean, or maybe he cleaned it a week ago and it has become dirty. If you say "he has cleaned the bathtub," that implies it is still clean.
2018년 6월 21일
1
For me, it would sound better to say:
The children were bewitched by...
2018년 6월 21일
아직도 답을 찾지 못하셨나요?
질문을 남겨보세요. 원어민이 도움을 줄 수 있을 거예요!
Chris
언어 구사 능력
덴마크어, 영어, 프랑스어, 게일어(스코틀랜드어), 독일어
학습 언어
영어, 게일어(스코틀랜드어)
좋아할 수도 있는 읽을거리

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
12 좋아요 · 11 댓글

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

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
11 좋아요 · 6 댓글
다른 읽을거리