尋找適合你的 英語 教師……
Meem
What's the difference between *present and gift*? and when we use them???
2011年10月5日 20:58
解答 · 6
4
As nouns, they are synonyms and can generally be used in any situation. Perhaps the only situation that "gift" is used not "present" is that a charitable donation is always called a gift. As verbs, to gift and to present mean completely different things. To gift means to give something to someone as a gift or present, meaning for free. To present means to give or offer something and it has multiple uses. I present you with the bill. I presented my report.
2011年10月5日
3
A gift is more formal and usually applies to something that is worth more. However, you could use one for the other and it would be correct grammatically. He gave is daughter a doll as a present for her birthday. The staff got together and bought Donna a present. The Johnsons made a gift of their rare books to the library. Note that in the first two, you could have said "gift". You could say "present" in the third, but it would sound just a little out of place - but not much. Also, if someone has a talent, we say they have a gift.
2011年10月6日
Yesterday is history. Tomorrow is a mystery. And today? Today is a gift. That's why we call it the present.
2011年10月5日
They're the same word.
2011年10月5日
Thanks for the explanations :)
2011年10月5日
還沒找到你要的答案嗎?
寫下你的問題,讓母語者來幫助你!

Don’t miss out on the opportunity to learn a language from the comfort of your own home. Browse our selection of experienced language tutors and enroll in your first lesson now!