Thank you very much for the lesson. Prepostions are always difficult, and I have been confused by these prepostions, such on, for, in ,up. This lesson clarifies the use of for. There are four situations we use for: benefit, money, purpose, and time. THis is a great lesson as usual. All the best.
Thank you very much my dear teacher i appreciate you because of that method. With love from Afghanistan i staday all your video that was benefit for me.
After 14 years, you are still teaching English here, which moves me a lot. I visited your here for the first time and saw your photos 14 years ago. Compared with now, you are much more mature now, Very much appreciate your work on this, I'll come and visit you as many as I can , go for it sir,
Great video, thank you. I speak English as a second language (I’m Brazilian) and I can say I’m reasonably fluent. But I still get confused with the preposition for when it’s used with adjectives such as necessary , essential, important, etc. For example, should I say This job is important for me or to me Water is essential for life or to life? Thank you
"for" is used when you are seeing the matter in question through the lens of a general cause-effect relation. And, we use "to" when we think of the same from a personal perspective. For example : Reading is important for me. (It implies that reading will enhance the speaker because it opens eyes etc ; that is, he's seeing the act of reading from the general perspective on the fact, what Bacon says, that readings makes a man full.) Reading is important to me. (It's the speaker's private concern in that perhaps he thinks in his life he has read less; now that he's lagging, he needs to make up. Or, maybe he's much fond of reading. Such private thought calculation is the essence of this "important to" sentence.)
I have recorded huge content in Urdu/Hindi. Taking some ideas from your videos on ‘how to teach that content in English medium of instruction’.. Thank you for the video!
thanks for the work you have done, it's been so helpful. Well, I've a little question. Let's take for example a sentence like 'I've been teaching English for 22 years." Now is it ungrammatical if that "for" is replaced by "on" used as a postposition (I mean, 'I've been teaching English for 22 years."='I've been teaching English 22 years on.")? I don't have any logical answer to my question for long. hope you would help.
@@Learnamericanenglishonline then, we should suppose 'on'-postposition='for'-preposition in this particular case (i.e. "for 22 years=22 years on") goes wrong? what does your experience say?
Great video as always. Thanks Paul. Q: I didnt't have enough money. I didn't buy a car. (If) A: If I had had enough money, I would have bought a car. Or: If I had enough money, I would buy a car. Which is it correct? and why?
Get back up" means when you have a downfall, you get to literally get back up. And also means people who will come and help you. Your sentence " most of the time we don't get back up alone " means get people to come and help us. I hope I could help
Hi Teacher, I have a request. I want to practise English by speaking English. Do you consider providing speaking club that everyone can participate in and talk on Teams or zoom etc. ?
Tnx a lot for useful lessons ,I really enjoy watching them, but don't think it is correct to write letter (f) in capital position of line in the middle of a word.
Thank you very much for the lesson. Prepostions are always difficult, and I have been confused by these prepostions, such on, for, in ,up. This lesson clarifies the use of for. There are four situations we use for: benefit, money, purpose, and time. THis is a great lesson as usual. All the best.
There are some other reasons for using “for.” Subtle nuances in English are expressed with this preposition as with other prepositions.
@@Learnamericanenglishonline I need to pay attention to the subtle nuances of prepositions. Thank you.
Thank you very much my dear teacher i appreciate you because of that method. With love from Afghanistan i staday all your video that was benefit for me.
After 14 years, you are still teaching English here, which moves me a lot. I visited your here for the first time and saw your photos 14 years ago. Compared with now, you are much more mature now, Very much appreciate your work on this, I'll come and visit you as many as I can , go for it sir,
YOU ARE MY BEST TEACHER. YOU HAVE HLEPED ME TO KNOW THE USAGE OF FOR
Thank you so much for this lesson. Really helpful! You're a great teacher.
Love these classes . Short and accurate.
Good sey teacher i wish You all the best teacher
Thank you teacher
I'm learning a lot from your teachings 🙏🏻
Thank you for your obvious and complete explanation
Hello Mary, how are you doing today, hope you’re fine and safe from the Virus??
Thank you teacher, you work so hard for us.
Wonderful!
Your teaching is excellent thanks
Dear sir, I watched almost all of your videos, and you are really a great teacher that I have ever watched whose videos.
It’s always easy with you! Thank you!
Thanks for all your efforts Sir!!!
How could one thank you for your help and support ❤ 🙏 💕
I have almost watched your videos and learned many things, I really appreciate you for making such a useful lesson. 💌 🌹 💕🙏 🤗
Thank you sir...pretty useful and simple as always..
Thank you so much for your time blessings
Thanks for this wonderful lesson!
Thank you for doing this wonderful video
Yes, i appreciated you as you provided clear explanation.
Thanks sir for teaching us.
Thank you very much Paul
Nice teacher thank you.
Your your family is formidable...
Great video, thank you.
I speak English as a second language (I’m Brazilian) and I can say I’m reasonably fluent. But I still get confused with the preposition for when it’s used with adjectives such as necessary , essential, important, etc. For example, should I say
This job is important for me or to me
Water is essential for life or to life?
Thank you
"for" is used when you are seeing the matter in question through the lens of a general cause-effect relation. And, we use "to" when we think of the same from a personal perspective.
For example :
Reading is important for me.
(It implies that reading will enhance the speaker because it opens eyes etc ; that is, he's seeing the act of reading from the general perspective on the fact, what Bacon says, that readings makes a man full.)
Reading is important to me.
(It's the speaker's private concern in that perhaps he thinks in his life he has read less; now that he's lagging, he needs to make up. Or, maybe he's much fond of reading. Such private thought calculation is the essence of this "important to" sentence.)
Thanks 👍 professor
A good video.Thanks a lot.
Thanks a lot sir Paul
I have recorded huge content in Urdu/Hindi. Taking some ideas from your videos on ‘how to teach that content in English medium of instruction’..
Thank you for the video!
thank you, teacher, i hope in the next video, could you show us some of common abbreviations used in daily life ?
Thanks.. thanks very much Sir!
Thank you for a very useful lesson. Could you please make a lesson on 'using "to" as a preposition' ? Thank you in advance.
Great suggestion!
When I don't know the use of something I always ask the question "What is it good for?".
Thank you sir or teacher.
Thanks teacher paul
Thank you Teacher
Thank you so much 😊
Tha nk you from Thailand.
thanks for the work you have done, it's been so helpful.
Well, I've a little question. Let's take for example a sentence like 'I've been teaching English for 22 years." Now is it ungrammatical if that "for" is replaced by "on" used as a postposition (I mean, 'I've been teaching English for 22 years."='I've been teaching English 22 years on.")?
I don't have any logical answer to my question for long.
hope you would help.
What some people say is "going on" which is somewhat colloquial. I've been teaching English going on 22 years. That's in spoken English.
@@Learnamericanenglishonline then, we should suppose 'on'-postposition='for'-preposition in this particular case (i.e. "for 22 years=22 years on") goes wrong? what does your experience say?
@@Learnamericanenglishonline thanks for your observation and response
Great video as always. Thanks Paul.
Q: I didnt't have enough money. I didn't buy a car. (If)
A: If I had had enough money, I would have bought a car.
Or: If I had enough money, I would buy a car.
Which is it correct? and why?
First one is correct 💯☺️
Both are good.
I have been a teacher for over 3 years. = ഞാൻ 3 വർഷമായി ടീച്ചർ ആയിട്ട്.
Awesomeness
Teacher can you aid me with the last idiomatic sentence? I don't understand.
"What is this going for?" Means you want to know its price. In Portuguese would be "Por quanto sai?". Did you get it?
Ótimo
Hi . what is the difference between / for work and for working ?
Good health i wish You
Thank you to teach me
Hello Paul!
For who (whom) are you working?
Is it grammatically correct to put "for" at the end of the sentence? Who are you working for?
That's important is that we get back up and the truth is.
Most of the time we don't get back up alone.
What does this mean please (back up)
Get back up" means when you have a downfall, you get to literally get back up.
And also means people who will come and help you.
Your sentence " most of the time we don't get back up alone " means get people to come and help us.
I hope I could help
You are good
yes benar ..
Thank ferry much
Hi Teacher,
I have a request.
I want to practise English by speaking English. Do you consider providing speaking club that everyone can participate in and talk on Teams or zoom etc. ?
@@@ ... great ... !!!
Tnx a lot for useful lessons ,I really enjoy watching them, but don't think it is correct to write letter (f) in capital position of line in the middle of a word.
Yes, you are right - The way I print, the "f" sometimes looks like a capital letter, so excuse my poor handwriting skills.
I've been a drive for over two years
I've been driving for over two years.
Much better i thk :)
I bought 1 kg banana for 10 Riyals
Pls correct if it's wrong
Teacher