Emory
[ Grammar ] past tense I get / catch you vs I got / caught you While playing tag... A: I got you. B: Okay. Now I’m it. ------ C: I don’t know what you are talking about. D: Stop kidding around. I got you. ----- Q1: Can person A & D say “ I get / catch you ” ? Q2: In those situations, what is the difference of the usage between past tense and present tense ? ie. I get / catch you vs I got / caught you ----- Thanks a lot : )
15 июня 2020 г., 14:33
Ответы · 7
1
Speaking like this is slang, and used in colloquial English. Examples of "get/got" depend on present or past tense. "I get it." / "I get you" is present tense. "I got it." / "I got you" is past tense, but people often say it while referring to present tense. We don't exactly use "catch" you. But instead we could say something like: "I catch your drift." - present tense. It means "I understand what you're saying" "I caught what was going on" - past tense. It means "I understand what happened"
15 июня 2020 г.
Dear Chris, Could you explain why present tense doesn't work in those dialogues ? ---- Dear Marlana, You meant both " I get you " and " I got you " are correct in those dialogues ? Thank you all ^_^
15 июня 2020 г.
Chris, "I get you" is present tense and can work for this example of slang.
15 июня 2020 г.
No. Present tense doesn't work.
15 июня 2020 г.
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