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Julia
Can we use Present Perfect for dead people?
I mean, I’d surely say “He has never been a president”, if I speak about an alive person, because his period of life is not finished and he can change the situation.
But if I speak about a dead person — can I use Present Perfect? “Franklin has never been a president of the US” or “Franklin wasn’t ever a president”?
I’m interested in answer accordingly to grammar rules.
#English #British
2023년 4월 17일 오후 12:53
답변 · 8
3
You can only use the present perfect for present time periods. If the person is dead, their time period is no longer present, so you can't use present perfect.
Stephen King has written lots of books.
Charles Dickens wrote lots of books.
You can, however, use past simple to show that apparently present time periods have ended.
I drank 3 cups of coffee yesterday. [3 can't increase because the time period has ended]
I have drunk 2 cups of coffee today. [2 can increase because the time period hasn't finished]
I drank 2 cups of coffee today. [I know I won't drink any more coffee so I have ended the time period for drinking coffee, even though the day hasn't ended]
2023년 4월 17일
3
I can't speak specifically to written rules of grammar, but I can tell you we would never speak of a dead person in the present perfect. We would not say, "he has never been (a) president". Of a dead person, we would say, "[he] was never president". The problem is in using the verb "have" conjugated in the present tense with someone dead who really cannot "have" anything anymore, so it sounds weird to say it that way.
2023년 4월 17일
2
You can only use the present perfect if you are talking about the present because the verb "to have" is used in present tense. So, you have to say "Tom went to France" if Tom is dead.
However, you can say "the great poets have written a lot about love" even though the great poets are mostly dead. Why is this legal? I believe it is because "the great poets" names a category that is eternal. It will never die even if its individual members do.
Also, if you do it carefully, you can use it for historical figures like Ben Franklin. For example, you could say "Franklin has given us so much" because it is a statement about the present, not the past. From our selfish point of view, we are receiving the gift right now. We were not around when he discovered electricity. Of course, you could also use past tense.
2023년 4월 17일
2
As Tim and Adam have noted, the short answer is no. But there is some potential nuance. A skilled writer or storyteller will sometimes move fluidly between tenses and use them in an unusual manner when creatively recounting a narrative, but it's definitely an advanced technique.
2023년 4월 17일
커뮤니티 가이드라인을 위반한 콘텐츠입니다.
2023년 4월 18일
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Julia
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