View Single Post
  #2 (permalink)  
Old 14-Dec-2003, 19:37
RonBee's Avatar
RonBee RonBee is offline
Moderator
 
Join Date: Feb 2003
Country: USA
Posts: 12,913
Current Location: North Carolina
First Language: English
Thanks: 51
Thanked 621 Times in 565 Posts
RonBee is a name known to allRonBee is a name known to allRonBee is a name known to allRonBee is a name known to allRonBee is a name known to allRonBee is a name known to all
Default Re: "start + to + verb" and " start + present

Quote:
Originally Posted by zeppy
From below dialogue ,What's the difference between "start + to + verb" and " start + present participle" here? and what's the red highlights ? thanks for your always help!

Man :All of a sudden, the phone starts to ring. Now I don't know what to do, everybody starts looking at me.
A phone either rings or it doesn't. It can't start to ring. When we "start to" do something we begin to do it but we don't actually do it. On the other hand, when we "start doing" something we are actually doing it. We may continue doing it or we may be interrupted, but we are actually doing it.


Quote:
Originally Posted by zeppy
Man :Finally, I figure I'd better answer it, and it turns out it's my mother, which is very-very weird, because- she never calls me!
"I figure I'd better answer it" means the person decides to answer the phone. The phrase "it turns out that it's my mother" means that he realizes that it's his mother on the phone.

:)
Reply With Quote