搜索 英語 老師
Kailin
The difference between "eternal", "permanent" and "perpectual"
My understanding would be:
1) eternal--related to religion or abstract things.
eternal life;eternal truth;eternal question;eternal love
2) permanent--more concrete things
permanent residence/damage/solution/employee
exceptions are: permanent tension, threat
3) However, eternal or perpectual can be replacements of each other, to describe an annoying action that never stops.
the perpetual/eternal [noise of traffic; argument;complaint] --Is it right?
They can both be used for positive implications, too. Like perpectual/eternal search for truth?
Please tell me whether I understand them right or if I leave out anything or how you will use them.
Thank you very much!
2014年8月1日 15:51
解答 · 6
1
1 & 2: Yes, you are quite right about the distinction.
3: The word you are thinking of is 'perpetual' (no letter 'c' in it). But no, you wouldn't use 'eternal' to describe noise, and I wouldn't say that perpetual and eternal are interchangeable in most cases. 'Constant' would be the best word to use here.
2014年8月1日
You are completely correct. "Eternal" is a bit religious or poetic in use. There is an "eternal flame" at the tomb of John F. Kennedy.
2014年8月1日
Thank you, Richard! It is very helpful! One thing I am still confused about: I didn't include sth.--I left sth. out versus I have left sth. out. The grammar tells me that using the present perfect tense means the past action has an impact on the present. Is it why I need to use "have left out" here? Sometimes, it is hard for me to draw the line. Thank you!
2014年8月2日
Good question Kailin. I just want to offer a couple of suggestions regarding your sentence ``Please tell me whether I understand them right or if I leave out anything or how you will use them.`
After the verb ``understand`` you can ask the question ``how``, so that means that the word describing how must be an adverb. ``right`` is an adjective and there is no adverb ``rightly`` so it would be better to use the adverb ``correctly``.
If you did not include everything, then you ``have left something out``.
``will use them is correct, however, it would be better to say ``how you would use them``, because ``would`` is used to express something that is in the future but may or may not be ``used``.
Please tell me whether I understand them CORRECTLY or if I HAVE LEFT ANYTHING OUT or how you WOULD use them.
2014年8月1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!
Kailin
語言能力
中文, 英語, 法語, 韓語, 西班牙語
學習語言
英語, 法語, 韓語, 西班牙語
你也許會喜歡的文章

The Power of Storytelling in Business Communication
44 讚 · 9 留言

Back-to-School English: 15 Must-Know Phrases for the Classroom
31 讚 · 6 留言

Ten Tourist towns in Portugal that nobody remembers
59 讚 · 23 留言
更多文章