Anything and everything goes in here... within reason.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:03 am
Umm... yeah.
So I can write things, and i'm not a bad writer when it comes to stories, or personal type essays... but i'm a bit out of my league.
I need to write a history paper.
And it has to be written in past tense.
Present, past and first person type tenses... have always been a boggle in my mind. I'm not exactly sure what i'm using when i'm using them.
And i'm wondering if the ever smart people here on PPT *worships* can please explain to me what on earth past tense is?
Please... I need help...
Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:07 am
Past tense : He ate the apple.
Present tense : He is eating the apple.
First person : I am eating the apple./I ate the apple.
I'm not sure if that helps. If you want an actual indepth description, I can do that as well.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:18 am
To find out what you're using is simple. For instance, you were writing in the Present Tense.
Past Tense is is an absolute tense that refers to a time before the moment of utterance/pauses/long breaks. You use it when you explain things which have already occured.
For example, you don't say,
Past in Present: "Mom! Look what I am did!"
Present: "Mom! Look what I am doing!"
Another example related to your history would be,
Past: "Benjamin Franklin was a very intelligent man,"
The verbs highlighted are in Past Tense.
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I can't really help you more with this because I don't know exactly where you are confused.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 12:25 am
Allright. I think i've got it. (present tense)
Mmm hmm. Thankyou. I should know that. But it's just... one of those things that seems to be applied with liberal oil to my brain... it just slides off.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 2:14 am
Just as a note, they fall into two seperate categories:
Past/Present/Future Tense
Past - Things that have happened
Present - Things currently happening
Future - Things that are going to happen
and First/Second/Third Person.
First: Uses 'I'
Second: Uses 'you', (barely ever comes up so don't worry about it)
Third: Uses 'he, she, it, etc.'
You can mix and match the two as you wish.
Past 1st:
I ate dinner.
Present 2nd:
You are eating dinner.
Future 3rd:
She will eat dinner.
Hope that helped and didn't confuse you more - I have a tendency to do that.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 9:11 am
Basically what the others said. Though I do like Starchaser's explanation, as it includes the first, second, and third person as well. (I did a writing assignment in the second person, my teacher was amazed I was able to pull it off).
Be thankful you don't need to know the French tenses. I have to know two different past tenses, and two future tenses. I still don't know which is which.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 9:16 am
Pfft, what's so hard about writing an assignment in the 2nd person?
(No, really).
Thu Oct 28, 2004 9:24 am
Apparently it's hard to pull off.
Or something. I don't listen to my English teacher, she sucks.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 9:27 am
Hard for you Alex.
Not hard for normal people.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 2:04 pm
Tenses will come naturally to you if you read a lot.
For a history assignment:
In 19XX, Hitler invaded France and attacked blah blah (my history sucks

)...... He commited suicide in an underground bunker after his troops lost.
I don't see what is so difficult about it... it's just like recounting something that has already happened.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 2:09 pm
Qanda wrote:Tenses will come naturally to you if you read a lot.
For a history assignment:
In 19XX, Hitler invaded France and attacked blah blah (my history sucks

)...... He commited suicide in an underground bunker after his troops lost.
I don't see what is so difficult about it... it's just like recounting something that has already happened.
Alledgedly. Ahem.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 2:11 pm
Tenses will come naturally to you if you read a lot.
I'm an incredibly fast reader. Not... that I look at a page, and I read it all at once, but we'll put it this way. I got through the fifth harry potter in three hours the first go round. And that was taking it slow.
I've got it now. I just needed a memory boost.
I sold my english writing books... and when I asked my room mate about it she kinda stared blankly at me (which I should expect, knowing her).
I don't see what is so difficult about it... it's just like recounting something that has already happened.
I'm going to use this as an excuse, because it's true. I'm a fine arts student, the expectations of how we write are fairly low. Except when we take a class outside of our course. Such as Classics. And i'm more then just a little intimidated by writing history papers. I've written demi history papers before back in High School... and I never did well on them (C+ B- sorta thing). And I really really really really wanna do well in this course. So... I thought it'd be best to find out now, rather then on Novemeber 9th start freaking out because the papers due the next day and I dont' know what Past tense is.
*nods*
But thankyou for your help everyone.
Thu Oct 28, 2004 5:37 pm
I always remember my tenses by the words. Like...
PAST: Yesterday, I
made a set
PRESENT: I am
making a set
FUTURE: I will have to
make a set for PPTTG.
Made goes into making by adding the "K" because the future nears in the present. I just made that up.
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