See, it just depends, are you talking past tense or past participle? We had this discussion about words like funner. Grammatically it ought to be more fun, but funner is {grammar term that escapes me}.
I knit a a scarf for my dog. My grandma knitted a scarf for me to match. She brought it to me and petted my dog. I told her he likes that, I pet him yesterday and he drooled.
My example doesn't really tell you why though. Hmm, think I'm going to have to ask my prof abou tthis one.
That about sums it up perfectly. I answered 'knitted' and 'pet', because those are the ones I use most often in the course of daily life, but they all work in some context or other. This is the sort of thing where if you think about it too much none of it makes any sense. :P
I'm just glad I didn't have to learn this messed up language fron scratch in school, I never would have passed. >.
Of course to me, to pet isn't a verb that I recognise in my native language. I'm only familiar with it through exposure to US media. But it doesn't figure in my own vocabulary. So take that into account I guess.
I voted for knit with knit being the thing one does with yarn. I tend to use 'knitted' when referencing someone's brow. Although now that I think about it, that isn't a phrase I manage to work into conversation much.
does it feel more comfortable to anyone else to say "i was petting"? i fully realize this is technically another tense...but everytime i tried to see what sounded better, pet or petted, "was petting" is what came out.
Hey, you should add a choice for both. Or is that the shrug? Well in any case I shrugged for the first one cause both sounded valid to me(native speaker).
See, it just depends, are you talking past tense or past participle? We had this discussion about words like funner. Grammatically it ought to be more fun, but funner is {grammar term that escapes me}.
I knit a a scarf for my dog. My grandma knitted a scarf for me to match. She brought it to me and petted my dog. I told her he likes that, I pet him yesterday and he drooled.
My example doesn't really tell you why though. Hmm, think I'm going to have to ask my prof abou tthis one.
That about sums it up perfectly. I answered 'knitted' and 'pet', because those are the ones I use most often in the course of daily life, but they all work in some context or other. This is the sort of thing where if you think about it too much none of it makes any sense. :P
I'm just glad I didn't have to learn this messed up language fron scratch in school, I never would have passed. >.
Of course to me, to pet isn't a verb that I recognise in my native language. I'm only familiar with it through exposure to US media. But it doesn't figure in my own vocabulary. So take that into account I guess.
I voted for knit with knit being the thing one does with yarn. I tend to use 'knitted' when referencing someone's brow. Although now that I think about it, that isn't a phrase I manage to work into conversation much.
does it feel more comfortable to anyone else to say "i was petting"? i fully realize this is technically another tense...but everytime i tried to see what sounded better, pet or petted, "was petting" is what came out.
Hey, you should add a choice for both. Or is that the shrug? Well in any case I shrugged for the first one cause both sounded valid to me(native speaker).
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I don't know.
Um.
I set the book down every day (present)
I set the book down yesterday (past)
I feed the cat, I fed the cat.
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My example doesn't really tell you why though. Hmm, think I'm going to have to ask my prof abou tthis one.
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I'm just glad I didn't have to learn this messed up language fron scratch in school, I never would have passed. >.
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I don't know.
Um.
I set the book down every day (present)
I set the book down yesterday (past)
I feed the cat, I fed the cat.
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My example doesn't really tell you why though. Hmm, think I'm going to have to ask my prof abou tthis one.
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I'm just glad I didn't have to learn this messed up language fron scratch in school, I never would have passed. >.
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