搜尋自 英語 {1} 教師……
Andrea
Does "I'm never invited to parties." equal "I've never been invited to parties."?
As you can see in the Topic.
Are they the same? If not, then what's the difference?
Thanks!
2012年1月23日 09:12
解答 · 4
4
"I'm never invited to parties." = people don't invite me to parties
"I've never been invited to parties." = at this point in time you haven't been invited to a party yet.
2012年1月23日
1
The statements are not the same. "I am never.." indicates present tense, continuing action, but does not entirely preclude the possibility the speaker has been invited on some occasion in the past. "I have never been.." is a definite statement that it has not happened in the past up to the present.
2012年1月23日
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Andrea
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阿拉伯語 (現代標準), 中文, 中文 (上海話), 英語, 法語, 日語, 葡萄牙語
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