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Muhammed Qasim
"I'd rather you explained to her why we can't go", I'd is I had?
In the below sentence "I'd" is a contraction of "I had", not "I would"?
- I'd rather you explained to her why we can't go
6 sep. 2018 16:17
Antwoorden · 7
1
Hey Muhammed, how are you? I hope you are doing just fine!
* May I provide you with information on the usage of the idiom ''would rather''?
Firstly, you should know that the ''I'd rather'', used in the context concerned, is a contraction of ''I would rather''. On average, when we speak about a specific preference (our preference now), ''would rather'' and ''would prefer'' have the same meaning and are interchangeable.
--> Would rather can be abbreviated to 'd rather .
--> Would prefer can be abbreviated to 'd prefer :
E.g.: ''We went to the theatre yesterday; today I would rather go to the cinema''.
E.g.: ''We went to the theatre yesterday; today I would prefer to go to the cinema''.
** NOTE: We say:
1) would rather . . . than...
2) would prefer . . . rather than or would prefer . . . instead of...
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd rather sit in the garden than watch TV''.
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd prefer to sit in the garden rather than watch TV''.
E.g.: ''It's such nice weather – I 'd prefer to sit in the garden instead of watching TV''.
*** We use a past tense after ''would rather'' when we speak about the actions of other people, even
though that action may be in the present or future:
E.g.: ''I'd rather you took a taxi (instead of walking) – it's not safe on the streets at night''.
E.g.: ''The film is quite violent. I'd rather our children didn't watch it''.
Hope that helps!!! :)
7 september 2018
1
The "I'd rather" here is a contraction of I would rather.
It has two different constructions:
1) A sentence with the same subjects, "would rather" is followed by the base form of verb.
2) A sentence with different subjects, "would rather" is followed by the simple past clause.
E.g.:
1) (+) I'd rather work at home than go out tonight.
(-) I'd rather not go out tonight.
2) (+) I'd rather you worked at home tonight.
(-) I'd rather you didn't go out tonight.
Hope they help,
Tere
6 september 2018
1
Hi Muhammed,
"I'd" rather" in this sentence is a contraction of "I would" rather.
Regards,
Sinead
6 september 2018
Heb je je antwoorden nog steeds niet gevonden?
Schrijf je vragen op en laat de moedertaalsprekers je helpen!
Muhammed Qasim
Taalvaardigheden
Engels, Punjabi, Urdu
Taal die wordt geleerd
Engels
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