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Week 2. Tenses

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
8 views26 pages

Week 2. Tenses

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Uyên Phương
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We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Tenses

Tenses vs. Time

Aspects

Mood
WHAT A VERB IS AND WHAT IT DOES
➤A verb is a word or a phrase which expresses the
existence of a state or the doing of an action.

“love, seem” “take, play”

➤ Auxiliary verbs are used with full verbs to give other


information about states and actions.
➤ Finite verbs and non- nite verbs?
➤ Modals?
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Verbs

Full Auxiliary

➤Action & State ➤Be

➤Transitive & Intransitive ➤Have

➤Do
➤Linking

➤Modals
TENSE AND ASPECT

TENSE

PRESENT TENSE PAST TENSE

ASPECT

LEXICAL GRAMMATICAL

•Stative •Perfect
•Dynamic •Progressive
FOOD FOR THOUGHT

➤Why is it okay to say, Today I slept late and missed my bus,


with verbs in the past tense.

➤I just bought a car. Why can’t I say, I’m having a car now?
THE SPEAKER’S NOW

The time-line perspective:

past time —> present time —> future time

The speaker’s perspective:

remote <— non-remote —> remote

(Factual) (Non-factual)
TENSE

➤The basic tense distinction in English is marked only by two


forms of verb: the PAST TENSE and the PRESENT TENSE.

➤Future verb form is expressed via a modal verb which


indicates a relative possibility of an event.

FUTURE =remote + non-factual;


THE SPEAKER’S NOW
The speaker’s perspective:

remote <— non-remote —> remote

(Factual) (Non-factual)

(1) She said, ‘I am waiting here.’

(2) She said that she was waiting there.

The di erence between direct speech and indirect speech is not a


matter of time, but of “distance” from the reporting situation.
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THE HISTORIC PRESENT

Last night Blackie comes in with this huge dead rat in her mouth and drops
it right at my feet.

The time of the event: Past

The described action: Present

—> making storytelling events more “vivid” (or less remote)


Lexical and Grammatical Aspects
ASPECT

LEXICAL GRAMMATICAL

•Stative •Perfect
•Dynamic •Progressive
Aspect refers to how the event expressed by a verb is viewed

(e.g., complete, in progress, habitual, momentary)


THE LEXICAL ASPECT OF VERBS (VERB MEANING)
Stative Dynamic
Punctual Durative

Cognition Relation Acts Activities Processes

believe be hit eat become


hate belong jump run change
know contain kick swim flow
like have stab walk grow
understand own strike work harden
want resemble throw write learn
State verbs
Some verbs has a stative meaning and a different active meaning:

(1) I am tasting the soup. (deliberate action)

(2) The soup tastes salty. (state)

(Ex: depend, feel, measure, see, taste, weigh, think)


GRAMMATICAL ASPECT
Progressive aspect Simple aspect

BE + V-ing

- in progress, developing - nished

- uncompleted states - permanent

- temporary duration - habitual

- pre-arrangement What are some common types of verbs that are rarely
used with the continuous forms?
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GRAMMATICAL ASPECT
Perfect aspect

(HAVE) + PAST PARTICIPLE

- a relationship between one state/event and a later state/event or time

- a state/event that extends up to a point in time

- an event that occurred within a time period

- an event that has the result continuing up to a point


GRAMMATICAL ASPECT
Choose the correct sentence in the pairs:

a. Global weather patterns have changed for many years.

b. Global weather patterns have been changing for many years.

The simple or continuous aspect applies across the entire tense system.
GRAMMATICAL ASPECT
He has believed in Allah all his life. (Pre-existing state)

“has believed” here does not receive a “completion interpretation”

Actual meaning in English is compositional. Each feature of lexical and


grammatical aspect adds to the overall e ect in implicated meaning.

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THE PRESENT PERFECT PROGRESSIVE

1.I have been working for Exxon for Repeated Actions

15 years. Drawing conclusions

Actions in progress throughout a period


2.Jim has been phoning Jenny every

night for the past week.

3.Your eyes are red. You have been

crying.
OTHER GRAMMAR FOCUS

1. Since I left college, I’ve lived and worked in four di erent


European countries.

2. Since I lived here, there hasn’t been a day when the water
hasn’t been cut o .

Compare: We’ve been best friends as long as we’ve known


each other.
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MOODS
A set of contrasts shown by the form of the verb

Expressing the speaker’s/writer’s attitude towards what he/she is talking


about, and whether the event is considered fact or non-fact.

(1) Indicative

(2) Imperative

(3) Subjunctive
SUBJUNCTIVE MOOD
The form of the verb used to express uncertainty, wishes, desires, etc.

Referring to non-factual/hypothetical situations

Usually belongs to formal/written English

Present subjunctive

Past subjunctive
PRESENT SUBJUNCTIVE
Formulaic: God save the Queen/ Su ce it to say/ Come what may.

Mandatory: That-clause + present subjunctive

(After nouns/verbs and adjectives expressing obligation, demand, suggestions,


advice, etc.)

The police insisted the car (should) be moved immediately.

Lest + present subjunctive

He spent whole days in his room, headphones on lest he disturb anyone.


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EXAMPLES OF VERBS
Insist

Suggest

Request

Order

Recommend

Propose

Think
EXAMPLES OF ADJECTIVES
Advisable

Essential

Desirable

Preferable

Anxious
EXAMPLES OF NOUNS
Decisions

Insistence

Demand

Requirement

Condition
PAST SUBJUNCTIVE (FORM: PAST SIMPLE/WERE)

1. He ordered me about as though I were his servant.

2. He orders me about as though I were his servant.

Structures used with Past Subjunctive:

As if/as though

It is (high/about) time…

Would rather + pronoun (you)…

Conditional sentences/ suppose (v.)/ imagine (v.)/Inversions

Wish
References
1.Explaining English Grammar/ George Yule, OUP 19
2.Longman English Grammar / L. G. Alexander
3.Grammar and Vocabulary for Cambridge Advanced and Pro ciency/
Richard Side and Guy Wellman
4.Advanced Language Practice: Grammar and Vocabulary/ Michael Vince &
Peter Sunderland

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