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table tennis

 
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Marlen



Joined: 22 Oct 2005
Posts: 62

PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 10:08 pm    Post subject: table tennis Reply with quote

Hello native speaker,

Does the following sentence work?

Students might like the quick movement in company of their friends and it would be an excellent training for the personal condition.

Thanks in advance for your help.
Marlen
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timtom



Joined: 08 Mar 2006
Posts: 14
Location: Sunny San Diego

PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 11:27 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Gramattically, it is not bad. It should be something like:
Students might like the quick movements in the company of their friends and it would be excellent training for their personal condition.

The sentence still sounds kinda odd though, so here's an alternative sentence that conveys the same idea:
Students may enjoy the fast-paced action with their friends and table tennis promotes excellent personal fitness.
This sentence is still a little weird though because the subject of the first clause is 'students' and the subject of the second clause is 'table tennis,' so it may be better to go with a sentence like:
Along with the benefits of improved physical condition, students will also enjoy the fast-paced action of table tennis with their friends.
This sentence also makes the sentence more confident because
a) It uses a more powerful sentence structure.
b) it uses 'will' instead of 'may'

Oh, and your greeting in your post should probably have an 's' at the end of speaker (because you are adressing all native speakers rather than a single native speaker).
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Marlen



Joined: 22 Oct 2005
Posts: 62

PostPosted: Wed Mar 08, 2006 11:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Thanks a lot for your comprehensive and useful reply. I always find it quite difficult to correct a sentence that looks almost correct grammatically.
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clonc



Joined: 02 Oct 2005
Posts: 45
Location: UK

PostPosted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 12:02 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dear Timtom,

Are you a teacher or a student? You do not say so in your profile.

I hope you do not claim to be a teacher, because there were spelling mistakes in your advice, which is a bad thing for a teacher to display when advising a student. (Gramattically, adressing)

And what is this word kinda? I cannot find it in any dictionary. Not a good example to a student, I am sure.

Finally, how does one make a sentence more confident?
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timtom



Joined: 08 Mar 2006
Posts: 14
Location: Sunny San Diego

PostPosted: Thu Mar 09, 2006 5:33 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I am definitely just a English speaker. (I am a student, but not of lingustics/language... so it doesn't really count for this discussion).

While I agree that the use of the "slang" word kinda (It's a semi-contraction of the words 'kind' and 'of') is not the most appropriate; for your information it does exist in dictionaries. I did a quick google on 'kinda dictionary' and got an instant result from:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/kinda

Even more than I do not claim to be a teacher I do not claim to spell things correctly. I am actually quite amazed that I only managed to make 2 typing mistakes during a post. Some day I plan on installing the spell-checker extension for my browser...

I believe I explained myself on why the sentence was more confident to the best of my ability on a non face-to-face discussion, but I will attempt to elaborate.

Take for example the sentences:
1) When he grows up, Billy may become an astronaut.
2) When he grows up, Billy will become an astronaut.
The first sentence conveys that there exists the probability that Billy will become an astronaut.
The second says that there is no doubt that Billy wishes to become an astronaut.

As for the sentence structure being more confident. I don't know how to describe it. Maybe if I was a linguist I could tell you. But I can tell you that my little native-english brain says that the second suggested sentence in my previous post has a stronger, more confident, form.
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advoca



Joined: 09 Oct 2003
Posts: 422
Location: Beijing

PostPosted: Fri Mar 10, 2006 12:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Quote:
For your information it does exist in dictionaries. I did a quick google on 'kinda dictionary' and got an instant result from:
http://www.thefreedictionary.com/kinda


Forgive me, timtom, but The Free Dictionary lists this only in its Thesaurus.

But you are right. The word kinda does appear in some dictionaries.
The Cambridge Advanced Learner�s Dictionary, and the
Cambridge Dictionary of American Language both say
kinda is an adverb NOT STANDARD. They both say kinda is used in writing to represent an informal way of saying "kind of":
I was kinda sorry to see him go.


Encarta also describes kinda as: kind of ( nonstandard )
It's kinda strange.


Rhymezone states:Definitions of kinda: adverb: to some (great or small) extent

However, you will not find kinda in any of the Oxford English Dictionaries. or any Merriam Webster Dictionaries and these are dictionaries that students ought to use for guidance.

I do not want to start a debate with you, or to score points, but I must beg any student taking part in this forum to note that using kinda in writing is slovenly and certainly not standard. It is certainly how some people speak but it should only be used when quoting spoken words.

Quote:
I do not claim to be a teacher I do not claim to spell things correctly.


In which case, timtom, you should not object to having your spelling mistakes pointed out so that students will learn from these mistakes. And may I suggest that you should not give advice to students as if you were a teacher. By all means give advice as a native English speaker, albeit a slovenly one, but not as a teacher

And pleased be advised that a sentence cannot be confident. Students and some native English speakers can be, but not sentences.
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clonc



Joined: 02 Oct 2005
Posts: 45
Location: UK

PostPosted: Fri Mar 10, 2006 12:38 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

Hear hear, advoca.

Well said.
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Boy Rates



Joined: 13 Mar 2006
Posts: 36

PostPosted: Mon Mar 13, 2006 8:43 am    Post subject: Doesn't anyone care what goes on around here? Reply with quote

Doesn't anyone care what goes on around here?

Marlen posts a question starting with "Hello Native Speaker"

Some good-hearted guy gives a great answer to her question. She's happy. He's happy. End of story, right?

NOT!

First a guy (who has nothing in his OWN profile) can't resist picking on the native speaker.

Quote:
Are you a teacher or a student? You do not say so in your profile. I hope you do not claim to be a teacher, because there were spelling mistakes in your advice, which is a bad thing for a teacher to display when advising a student.


When the native speaker who DARED to answer a question addressed to a native speaker defends himself, along comes another member of the teacher police.

Quote:
timtom, you should not object to having your spelling mistakes pointed out so that students will learn from these mistakes. And may I suggest that you should not give advice to students as if you were a teacher. By all means give advice as a native English speaker, albeit a slovenly one, but not as a teacher
(OOOOOOH! Shame on you Advoca! You forgot to put a period at the end of your sentence! You'd better run and edit it quickly before someone notices!)

UHHHH did I miss something??? Did timtom ever say he was a teacher????
And where does it say that only teachers can answer questions? Is it really OK for people who call themselves teachers (if they really are), to call the people who come here to help "slovenly"?
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