Pesquise entre vários professores de Inglês...
Kailin
The difference between "eternal", "permanent" and "perpectual"
My understanding would be:
1) eternal--related to religion or abstract things.
eternal life;eternal truth;eternal question;eternal love
2) permanent--more concrete things
permanent residence/damage/solution/employee
exceptions are: permanent tension, threat
3) However, eternal or perpectual can be replacements of each other, to describe an annoying action that never stops.
the perpetual/eternal [noise of traffic; argument;complaint] --Is it right?
They can both be used for positive implications, too. Like perpectual/eternal search for truth?
Please tell me whether I understand them right or if I leave out anything or how you will use them.
Thank you very much!
1 de ago de 2014 15:51
Respostas · 6
1
1 & 2: Yes, you are quite right about the distinction.
3: The word you are thinking of is 'perpetual' (no letter 'c' in it). But no, you wouldn't use 'eternal' to describe noise, and I wouldn't say that perpetual and eternal are interchangeable in most cases. 'Constant' would be the best word to use here.
1 de agosto de 2014
You are completely correct. "Eternal" is a bit religious or poetic in use. There is an "eternal flame" at the tomb of John F. Kennedy.
1 de agosto de 2014
Thank you, Richard! It is very helpful! One thing I am still confused about: I didn't include sth.--I left sth. out versus I have left sth. out. The grammar tells me that using the present perfect tense means the past action has an impact on the present. Is it why I need to use "have left out" here? Sometimes, it is hard for me to draw the line. Thank you!
2 de agosto de 2014
Good question Kailin. I just want to offer a couple of suggestions regarding your sentence ``Please tell me whether I understand them right or if I leave out anything or how you will use them.`
After the verb ``understand`` you can ask the question ``how``, so that means that the word describing how must be an adverb. ``right`` is an adjective and there is no adverb ``rightly`` so it would be better to use the adverb ``correctly``.
If you did not include everything, then you ``have left something out``.
``will use them is correct, however, it would be better to say ``how you would use them``, because ``would`` is used to express something that is in the future but may or may not be ``used``.
Please tell me whether I understand them CORRECTLY or if I HAVE LEFT ANYTHING OUT or how you WOULD use them.
1 de agosto de 2014
Ainda não encontrou suas respostas?
Escreva suas perguntas e deixe os falantes nativos ajudá-lo!
Kailin
Habilidades linguísticas
Chinês (Mandarim), Inglês, Francês, Coreano, Espanhol
Idioma de aprendizado
Inglês, Francês, Coreano, Espanhol
Artigos que Você Pode Gostar Também

Same Word, Different Meaning: American, British, and South African English
22 votados positivos · 17 Comentários

How to Sound Confident in English (Even When You’re Nervous)
17 votados positivos · 12 Comentários

Marketing Vocabulary and Phrases for Business English Learners
14 votados positivos · 6 Comentários
Mais artigos
