Simone
Verb "expect" Hello everyone! Are these sentences correct? -- I expect that you finish by 5pm I expect you finish by 5 pm. I expect you to finish by 5pm. -----> is the preposition "to" fundamental? I expected you finished by 5pm. I expect that you'll finish the work by 5 pm. we expect that our employer pay us a reasonable salary. we expect our employer to pay us a reasonable salary. -----> is the preposition "to" fundamental? we expect our employer pay us. we expect to receive money from/by our employer. I expect it to rain ------→ I don’t understand the contruction of this sentence I expect that it will rain I expect raining tonight. I expect to work until 9pm. I expect working until 9pm. I expect to eat pasta tonight. I expect eating pasta tonight. I expect a positive answer from/by her ---- Thanks Simone
13 Thg 12 2017 16:00
Câu trả lời · 2
1
INCORRECT: I expect that you WILL finish by 5pm INCORRECT: I expect you finish by 5 pm. CORRECT: I expect you to finish by 5pm. Yes, you need "to" here. INCORRECT: I expected you TO BE finished by 5pm. CORRECT: I expect that you'll finish the work by 5 pm. INCORRECT: we expect that our employer WILL pay us a reasonable salary. CORRECT: we expect our employer to pay us a reasonable salary. Yes, you also need "to" here INCORRECT: we expect our employer TO pay us. CORRECT: we expect to receive money from our employer. INCORRECT: we expect to receive money by our employer. I expect it to rain ------→ I don’t understand the construction of this sentence "It" is a little strange in this phrasing, but that is how you always say it. "to rain" is a verb and in English you need to say what is doing the raining. You aren't raining, you are expecting. Since what rains (the sky/clouds/weather) is vague, we just say "it" to make the grammar work. CORRECT: I expect that it will rain INCORRECT: I expect raining tonight. You could say "I expect it to rain tonight." or "I expect rain tonight." In "I expect rain tonight," rain is a noun, so it is something you can expect. If you want to say "to rain," something needs to rain, so you need "it." CORRECT: I expect to work until 9pm. INCORRECT: I expect working until 9pm. CORRECT: I expect to eat pasta tonight. (But I've never heard anyone say this, seems a bit strange. Usually you "plan to eat" or are "going to eat" pasta. Even if you are not cooking.) INCORRECT: I expect eating pasta tonight. INCORRECT: I expect a positive answer by her. CORRECT: I expect a positive answer from her.
13 tháng 12 năm 2017
I expect that you finish by 5pm - correct, but not common usage. I expect you finish by 5 pm. - incorrect. See the next sentence. I expect you to finish by 5pm. -----> is the preposition "to" fundamental? "To" is required, and this is perfect. In this case, 5 PM has not happened yet. Also, this sentence is more of a command, rather than an expectation. I expected you finished by 5pm. 5 PM has passed, but you need to add "to" and use the present tense of "finished." So: "I expected you to finish by 5 PM. I expect that you'll finish the work by 5 pm. Also good. In this sentence, the writer is confident that the work will be finished. we expect that our employer pay us a reasonable salary. Again, using "that" is not common usage. we expect our employer to pay us a reasonable salary. -----> is the preposition "to" fundamental? And yes, "to" is necessary. we expect our employer pay us. Add "to" before "pay" to make it correct. we expect to receive money from/by our employer. "From" should be used here. I expect it to rain ------→ I don’t understand the construction of this sentence. You can say, "I (subject) expect (verb) rain (noun/object). For your sentence: "I (subject) expect (verb) it (object: think of the sky - while not exactly true, it's a good way to visualize "it") to rain (infinitive verb). I expect that it will rain. correct I expect raining tonight. incorrect I expect to work until 9pm. correct I expect working until 9pm. incorrect I expect to eat pasta tonight. correct I expect eating pasta tonight. incorrect. I expect a positive answer from/by her. "From" is correct. A general note: Newspapers sometimes drop words like "to" so that a title will fit on the page. Also, it might be easier for you to read answers in the NOTEBOOK section. It allows teachers to highlight words, etc. Hope this helps. :-)
13 tháng 12 năm 2017
Bạn vẫn không tìm thấy được các câu trả lời cho mình?
Hãy viết xuống các câu hỏi của bạn và để cho người bản xứ giúp bạn!