Yeah I often say strange or silly things. Sorry.metal56 wrote:It is obvious that there are two schedules.


Moderators: Dimitris, maneki neko2, Lorikeet, Enrico Palazzo, superpeach, cecil2, Mr. Kalgukshi2
Sometimes a slightly odd sound to a ("correct") sentence can serve users by calling particular attention to the idea expressed, as if intended to suggest a kind of emphasis. Native speakers, with some regularity, can intentionally mark their language so as to point to particular aspects of their communication that they want interlocutors to especially notice.Hmm, correct, but it doesn't sound just a bit odd to you? It seems too marked to me, creates a clash (as does any VP beginning with a "past" element) in this context (in which future events are being discussed).
*Larry actually wrote:Sometimes a slightly odd sound to a ("correct") sentence can serve users by calling particular attention to the idea expressed, as if intended to suggest a kind of emphasis. Native speakers, with some regularity, can intentionally mark their language so as to point to particular aspects of their communication that they want interlocutors to especially notice.
I could not agree with you more, Fluffy.I'm not trying to irritate anyone here, and certainly won't be rushing off myself to see and then prove if my intuitions are correct. I am just expressing an opinion, and trying to intimate that simply taking people's theories or word for something (even with "evidence") is how we "ended up" with a load of shaky grammar rules and explanations in the first place. Granted, theories provide us with a starting point, but it's finally down to the individual to come to their own understanding of how things fit together and work, and because grammar is never amenable to totally explicit inspection, those understandings will remain provisional even (and perhaps especially for!) native speakers (I made a similar point about NSs on another thread a short while ago).
If you weren't so busy setting up strawmen this would have been obvious.Are you saying that tense is used to mark time, and also non-time?
That's exactly what I was thinking (and more or less said: 'Do you guys remember the long 'On the effects of oversimplified rules' thread, that turned into a reported speech slogfest? Well, I was just thinking...'), but I p*ssyfooted around and didn't in the end explicitly add a reporting verb to metal's original example (I just made the simple a progressive aspect). I wish I had made the reporting verb explicit, however, because without it the past progressive would still sound odd to my ear:Stephen Jones wrote:If you want to see a much less contrived example of the Past Simple used with a future time adverbial just take examples from reported speech.
He said his holiday started next Friday.
Umm, 'Yes'.Incidentally the difference between that phrase and
He said his holiday starts next Friday
is purely the one of the emotional remoteness felt by the person reporting the speech.
I was just looking at "one" of the examples I myself offered:Stephen Jones wrote:He said his holiday started next Friday.
Incidentally the difference between that phrase and
He said his holiday starts next Friday
is purely the one of the emotional remoteness felt by the person reporting the speech.
I don't get as much sleep as I should when there are people to spank on Dave's, that's for sure...but seriously, is there something strange with using 'shortly' that way? I had a vague misgiving as I typed it, but shortly I mean soon decided it looked fine.metal56 wrote:Do you ever go to bed longly?fluffyhamster wrote:I just had a brainwave (probably my last before I go to bed shortly).
Or are there some mysterious forces at work in reported speech that mess up but don't totally contradict what you've been saying? I'm presuming not, because we can say 'He said his holiday starts next week' just as easily as 'He says his holiday starts next week' (but not ?'He says/said his holiday started next week').metal said - beginning first with a snippet of what SJ wrote:<purely the one of the emotional remoteness felt by the person reporting the speech. >
Always?
He said his holiday started next Friday.
So he had to cancel, postpone or change it then?
Fluff ...fluffyhamster wrote: I'm presuming not, because we can say 'He said his holiday starts next week' just as easily as 'He says his holiday starts next week' (but not ?'He says/said his holiday started next week').