Hi, As you mentioned your 3 example for past participle " The music made the cat excited = The cat is excited by the music. But the main clause in past tense which is "made" that point the participle meaning. which I think " The music made the cat excited = The cat was excited by the music.
@@shakespearesenglish795 Also, the link to your blog doesn't work? And do you have any recommendation of a specific book to understand Grammar better, especially via the method of grammatical functions?
@@inten79 oh sorry I shut by blog down. I didn't have the time to manage it. I don't know what you mean exactly by grammatical functions, but "The Grammar Book" by Diane Larsen-Freeman and Marianne Celce-Murcia is very acclaimed. I recommend the book!
Hello professor Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance. I love your way of teaching and excellent explanation. I really appreciate your job. I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity. Your follower from Algeria.
Thank you for your wonderful videos. I have followed other linguistic videos, and this is so clear and condensed. I have a question about "I love working a as CEO" on 2:10: is "working as a CEO" really the complement, why not the object?
oops! you are absolutely right! I made an error. I meant to say that "working as a CEO" is the object, not the complement! I will write that down on the vido information. Thank you so much for your contribution!
you are absolutely right! non-finite verbs form clauses. What I wanted to achieve by using the term "Quasi-sentence" is to distinguish cluases whose subjects are hidden because they coincide with the subject of the main clause. Due to my ignorance, I don't know a suitable term, so I made up a term.
Thank you for the teaching! But I don't understand when you say 'you can only use one verb per sentence' For example, I picked and ate some apples. Help meee!😿
The only UA-cam on grammar that don’t make grammar boring
It is amazing lecture !!! could you teach us about causative verbs? Thank you
I love your teaching so much..
One of the best teacher ever
at 0:11 shouldn't the past participle of eat be "eaten"?
It should be...
I usually get lost regarding non finite and finite verbs I want to understand more about the difference between them
The lesson is explained in detail, but the loud music prevents me from concentrating on the explanation.
Eated ? My God poor teacher
Hi, As you mentioned your 3 example for past participle " The music made the cat excited = The cat is excited by the music.
But the main clause in past tense which is "made" that point the participle meaning.
which I think " The music made the cat excited = The cat was excited by the music.
You are absolutely right! I totally missed that. I should write that down on the video description! Thank you so much!
I should remake the video with all these revisions sometime!
@@shakespearesenglish795 Also, the link to your blog doesn't work?
And do you have any recommendation of a
specific book to understand Grammar better, especially via the method of grammatical functions?
@@inten79 oh sorry I shut by blog down. I didn't have the time to manage it. I don't know what you mean exactly by grammatical functions, but "The Grammar Book" by Diane Larsen-Freeman and Marianne Celce-Murcia is very acclaimed. I recommend the book!
I was confused abt the difference between gerund and present participle and this video helps me a lot😭 thank youu👍👍
Hello professor
Thank you so much for your priceless advice and interesting guidance. I love your way of teaching and excellent explanation. I really appreciate your job. I wish you peace and happiness under the sky of prosperity.
Your follower from Algeria.
Thank you so much for your compliment! I hope everything goes well with your future endeavor!
Thank you for your wonderful videos. I have followed other linguistic videos, and this is so clear and condensed.
I have a question about "I love working a as CEO" on 2:10: is "working as a CEO" really the complement, why not the object?
oops! you are absolutely right! I made an error. I meant to say that "working as a CEO" is the object, not the complement! I will write that down on the vido information. Thank you so much for your contribution!
Thank you soooo much 🤩🤩🤩
I love it when you said you can only use one verb in a sentence.. great....
thank you so much!
Very nice
Thanks helped me a lot
no problem!!
Where is the girl you put a picture of a beautiful girl to make us watch the video
Eated? 😅
'Quasi-sentence' - I thought it was called a clause?
you are absolutely right! non-finite verbs form clauses. What I wanted to achieve by using the term "Quasi-sentence" is to distinguish cluases whose subjects are hidden because they coincide with the subject of the main clause. Due to my ignorance, I don't know a suitable term, so I made up a term.
this did not help me
Fr 😭
Thi video
helps a lot ty
Awesome!
thank you for your compliment!
I love working as a CEO. Working as a CEO is a noun, right? But you say it is an adjective.
Ure a good teacher
he obviously isn't based on your spelling and grammer🙃💀
😁😁😁😁confuseing
Damn I am confused. I think I need to start reviewing from the basic first.
I don’t get it my brain is too slow
Thank you for the teaching!
But I don't understand when you say 'you can only use one verb per sentence'
For example, I picked and ate some apples.
Help meee!😿