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 RUclips on grammar that don’t make grammar boring
It is amazing lecture !!! could you teach us about causative verbs? Thank you
The lesson is explained in detail, but the loud music prevents me from concentrating on the explanation.
I usually get lost regarding non finite and finite verbs I want to understand more about the difference between them
One of the best teacher ever
at 0:11 shouldn't the past participle of eat be "eaten"?
It should be...
I love your teaching so much..
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!
Where is the girl you put a picture of a beautiful girl to make us watch the video
I love it when you said you can only use one verb in a sentence.. great....
thank you so much!
Thank you soooo much 🤩🤩🤩
'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 😭
Eated? 😅
I love working as a CEO. Working as a CEO is a noun, right? But you say it is an adjective.
Very nice
Thanks helped me a lot
no problem!!
I don’t get it my brain is too slow
Thi video
helps a lot ty
Ure a good teacher
he obviously isn't based on your spelling and grammer🙃💀
Damn I am confused. I think I need to start reviewing from the basic first.
😁😁😁😁confuseing
Awesome!
thank you for your compliment!
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!😿