搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Pelin
Are the all answers OK?
Person A Don't you want to marry me?
Person B
Where did you get the idea that I would marry you?
Where did you get the idea that I was going to marry you?
Where did you get the idea thqt I'm going to marry you?
2025年11月14日 19:52
解答 · 2
1
All three sentences are understandable and grammatically fine — they just differ slightly in meaning and tone because of the verb tense and implication of timing. Here’s the breakdown
1. “Where did you get the idea that I would marry you?”
→ Most natural and commonly used in this context.
It sounds hypothetical or sarcastic — perfect if Person B never planned to marry Person A.
Meaning: “What made you think I’d ever agree to marry you?”
2. “Where did you get the idea that I was going to marry you?”
→ Also correct. It implies there was some past situation where Person A might have thought marriage was possible.
Meaning: “What made you think, back then, that I was planning to marry you?”
3. “Where did you get the idea that I’m going to marry you?”
→ Grammatically fine, but sounds a bit odd stylistically because it mixes past (‘did get’) and present (‘I’m going to’).
Still, people sometimes use it in conversation for emphasis or sarcasm.
Meaning: “What makes you think I’m planning to marry you (now or soon)?”
Best choice:
👉 “Where did you get the idea that I would marry you?”
— smooth, idiomatic, and emotionally fits the dialogue best.
2025年11月15日 11:07
1
Yes, all grammatically correct, although a bit strong in many English-speaking cultures.
2025年11月15日 04:31
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