Using the present to talk about the past: BBC English Masterclass

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  • Опубликовано: 7 сен 2024
  • Improve your English grammar with the BBC. Of course you all know that we use the present tenses to talk about the present, but did you know that we also use the present tenses to talk about the past?! Watch this free online English lesson to find out how.
    For more, visit our website: www.bbc.co.uk/l...
    More in this series:
    Using 'what' to give emphasis
    bit.ly/bbc_usi...
    5 ways to talk about the future:
    bit.ly/bbc_mas...
    Using 'which' to add information:
    bit.ly/bbc_mas...
    Linking words of contrast:
    bit.ly/bbc_mas...
    How to mix conditionals:
    bit.ly/bbc_mas...
    #learnenglish #bbcmasterclass #tenses
    TRANSCRIPT
    Hi Sian here for BBC Learning English. I have a great joke for you. So, a pony walks into a bar and whispers "Can I have a beer?" The barman replies, "Of course you can, but why are you whispering?" And the pony says "Because I'm a little hoarse." Get it? A pony is 'a little horse'! Ok, it's not the best joke, but did you notice what tense I used to tell the joke? I used the present not the past. We often use the present to talk about the past, so I'm going to share with you a few ways that we do this.
    Number one: When telling an exciting story. Last year I was swimming off the coast of New Zealand, when suddenly I see a shark coming up behind me. Everyone starts screaming. I swim as fast as I can… It was very scary!
    Did you notice? I started the story in the past, and then when I got to the exciting part of the story, I switched to the present. We do this to make the exciting part of the story more dramatic for the listener.
    Number two: In newspaper headlines. I actually made it into the newspapers after that scary experience. Here is the headline: "Terrified swimmer is chased out of sea." So, newspaper journalists often use the present simple 'is chased' rather than the past 'was chased'. They do this to make the story more fresh and immediate and dramatic.
    Number three: With hear, tell, gather, say. I hear you're getting married! Did you notice, I used the present form of 'hear' rather than the past? We do this because we want to put more emphasis on what I heard, rather than the fact that I heard it. We also do it with verbs like, say, tell and gather. For example, She says she's leaving the country!
    Number four: When telling jokes. I've got a joke. A pony walks into a bar and... Don't worry, I'm not going to tell the joke again! But we use the present simple when telling jokes to make the joke more exciting and more immediate for the listener. For more information about using the present to talk about the past and to practise this, go to our website: bbclearningenglish.com. And I'm not joking!

Комментарии • 69

  • @bbclearningenglish
    @bbclearningenglish  4 года назад

    Let's talk about the past... Archaeologists working in the buried Roman city of Pompeii say they have uncovered a "sorcerer's treasure trove" of objects.
    Learn words from the news: ruclips.net/video/c5YzN5myhg4/видео.html

  • @Alzain191
    @Alzain191 4 года назад +2

    Sian is my best teacher ever. Thank you for all you done for us.

  • @muradsflv5616
    @muradsflv5616 8 лет назад +18

    I like Sian. She's beautiful and her videos are very interesting.

  • @mappangaraberbagi
    @mappangaraberbagi 2 года назад +2

    Thanks. I am a historian. My problems are how to describing events in the past using English, especially using good sentences.

  • @sebyskaria3341
    @sebyskaria3341 2 года назад +1

    This is the video i was looking for

  • @mad3269
    @mad3269 4 года назад +1

    Sian you are the Best!... We need more of your lrssons

  • @bijayarashmijena3552
    @bijayarashmijena3552 4 года назад +1

    We also use present tense in our language....❤️❤️❤️ thanks a lot to tell us that we able use present in past ...

  • @massimoguarneri6575
    @massimoguarneri6575 5 лет назад +1

    Sian you are the top. Funny and clear

  • @behnamlotfi6845
    @behnamlotfi6845 2 года назад

    Sian is great. I love her performances. Well done.

  • @samerabd8775
    @samerabd8775 6 лет назад

    i love your way of teaching , it is shorter and easier and have a lot of inf ... so thanks for that from my heart

  • @Kevin509wisdom
    @Kevin509wisdom 4 года назад

    Wow, you solved my puzzle! I had been always not sure which tense I should choose when it comes to like 'I heard xx' or 'I hear xx'. THANKS, BBC & Sian

  • @MegaBear85
    @MegaBear85 8 лет назад +2

    Sian is simply the best teacher at BBC Learning English. I like all of her lessons. Her accent is amazing :)

  • @heimlichvonbladderburst8348
    @heimlichvonbladderburst8348 7 месяцев назад

    Judgement is necessary, especially where sensationalising a story by using the present tense can sound goulish. There is an example of this on today's BBC News website where a report on a disturbing matter that happened a few years back is written in the present tense which makes it sound all up-beat and breathless as you read it. However, the story in question is a deeply sad matter that resulted in a woman going to prison and other people being falsely accused of crimes. As the matter was now closed, past tense should have been used.

  • @denisebranquinho2377
    @denisebranquinho2377 8 лет назад +4

    we also use the present to talk about the past in Portuguese!

    • @bounty1402
      @bounty1402 3 года назад

      it's the same in Italian

  • @randeepsingh9606
    @randeepsingh9606 3 года назад

    💕💕💕she teaches really impressive idea 💡 to switch my mind

  • @najatarabia741
    @najatarabia741 6 лет назад +1

    THANK you

  • @przemekx4182
    @przemekx4182 8 лет назад

    very very nice presenter and lovely intonation

  • @calebcc5304
    @calebcc5304 8 лет назад +1

    Does anyone get the joke at the first time?
    I didn't because I didn't know the word "hoarse". Now I do and I'll never forget it thanks to this joke :)

  • @cheeehus
    @cheeehus 5 лет назад

    THANK YOU...I've been waiting this for so long

  • @vahidjavadi273
    @vahidjavadi273 5 лет назад

    great,but it's easy for you to use that as a piece of cake for me it's hard but I should give it a try,you are fantastic

  • @liwang4022
    @liwang4022 4 года назад

    very useful, thanks so much

  • @soniamandnice287
    @soniamandnice287 6 лет назад +1

    love you sian

  • @2minutesenglish594
    @2minutesenglish594 2 года назад

    Love u n miss u

  • @raed2178
    @raed2178 8 лет назад

    Thank you 😊

  • @ndres839
    @ndres839 6 лет назад

    Thanks, I love the video

  • @franklinquinchoconcha
    @franklinquinchoconcha 8 лет назад

    I love the British accent, but I'm studying the American English. By the way thanks a lot for these material :D

  • @hothiphuongthao4998
    @hothiphuongthao4998 8 лет назад +1

    Thanks for video!! I am a beginer. I cann't understand all of the video, but i will try. ( if i write wrong, help me please!! ^^

  • @tgchan
    @tgchan 8 лет назад

    thank you.

  • @ahmedosama2217
    @ahmedosama2217 3 месяца назад

    Good ❤️❤️❤️

  • @sajidahmed2403
    @sajidahmed2403 5 лет назад

    Really nice knowledge

  • @balsonnaoshekpam6240
    @balsonnaoshekpam6240 10 месяцев назад

    Nice

  • @huonghoang-hv3ll
    @huonghoang-hv3ll 8 лет назад

    it was a great video, i have never heard about using the present to talk about the past before. thank you bbclearning english for this extremely new thing. but can you explain to me for the first joke which Sain said at the beginning of the video, i dont understand why it was joking? thank you so much

  • @ChiNguyen-tk6no
    @ChiNguyen-tk6no 7 лет назад +1

    i love Sian

  • @chribjslaha
    @chribjslaha 10 месяцев назад

    I have a question. Can you write in present tense something of the past that is still true today? For example, "30 years ago today, John Doe's book 'Welcome Home' is released in bookstores.

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  10 месяцев назад

      In this example it would be more common to say 'was released'.

    • @chribjslaha
      @chribjslaha 10 месяцев назад

      @@bbclearningenglish Thanks for the response! That's what I thought, too.

  • @trangdangzhd
    @trangdangzhd 8 лет назад

    thanks from Vietnam

  • @erdemzuhal
    @erdemzuhal 8 лет назад +1

    what if I want to talk about present in newspaper and readers get it as if it happened in the past??? it's complicated situation.

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад +1

      Hi Erdem. That’s a very good question. It’s normally clear from the context of the story and the words in the headline. Remember we are referring to newspaper headlines here, not news stories. Most of the time, you can assume that headlines are using the present form to talk about a past event, because most newspaper stories are about events which have happened in the past.

    • @erdemzuhal
      @erdemzuhal 8 лет назад +1

      so, you are saying if we just look at headlines, without looking at stories, we don't know story happened which time and we predict that it's probably happened in the past.

  • @gelox32
    @gelox32 8 лет назад

    a pretty bad joke indeed but very illustrative .... and yeah Sian is beutifull but her voice is even more beatiful :)

  • @ricardoribeiro606
    @ricardoribeiro606 7 лет назад

    ha ha ha I get it ! nice one

  • @guli5831
    @guli5831 8 лет назад

    It's very Useful. 😍👌

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад

      We're glad you find it useful. Good luck with your English studies.

    • @j.c.1104
      @j.c.1104 8 лет назад

      +bbclearningenglish
      You write: "we're glad you find it useful"(find is the present tense), but I find out that some native English speakers would say: "I'm glad you found it useful"(found is the past tense), I wonder if you could explain this problem to me?

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад

      It’s not a problem. You can use both forms.

  • @cyclistRM2024
    @cyclistRM2024 6 лет назад

    👌

  • @svitlanalozova1103
    @svitlanalozova1103 2 года назад +1

    You are so beautiful! )

  • @omaima.abouhassab
    @omaima.abouhassab 8 лет назад +1

    i think it is suitalble to the advanced, they only can study it easily , i'm intermediate so i can't understand it kind of videos easily.

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад

      Hi Omaima Abohassab, this video is part of our 'Towards Advanced' series of videos. We also have lots of videos for intermediate learners. You can also visit our website (www.bbclearningenglish.com) where you will find lots of materials for different levels.

    • @omaima.abouhassab
      @omaima.abouhassab 8 лет назад

      thanks a lot for your interest , and i have a question, Do you have a native speakers who help other through conversation?

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад +1

      Native speakers at BBC Learning English can help you improve your English through videos.
      It’s good to listen carefully and imagine how you would take part in a conversation about the subject. You might also improve your pronunciation with our guides: www.bbc.co.uk/learningenglish/english/features/pronunciation

    • @syrymrakhimov
      @syrymrakhimov 7 лет назад

      you are best teacher.

  • @kaaskaa201
    @kaaskaa201 8 лет назад +1

    1:45 what did you say? ''fresh,a.....???''

    • @AlexandrH
      @AlexandrH 8 лет назад

      more fresh and immediate..

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад +5

      We have added a transcript to help you.

    • @raed2178
      @raed2178 8 лет назад

      +bbclearningenglish
      👍

  • @MrVol10
    @MrVol10 8 лет назад

    It's a pun))

  • @geoffreystephen6840
    @geoffreystephen6840 2 года назад

    using the present tense is really irritating, especially when mixed with the past tense. I suspect it's an American idea!

  • @manuchehrmukhidinov7111
    @manuchehrmukhidinov7111 8 лет назад

    I didn't get the joke((

    • @bbclearningenglish
      @bbclearningenglish  8 лет назад +20

      Hi, 'horse' and 'hoarse' are pronounced in the same way. 'Horse' is the animal - and a 'pony' is a baby horse. 'Hoarse' is when you can't speak properly because you have a sore throat! Can you work it out now?

    • @manuchehrmukhidinov7111
      @manuchehrmukhidinov7111 8 лет назад +1

      +bbclearningenglish Yes, I got it. Thanks.

  • @subjectfrank
    @subjectfrank 3 года назад

    Damnnn, that was a source of cringe.. in 0:26😁

  • @uvs1265
    @uvs1265 7 лет назад

    English is very confusing Language. :(