Sorry, but my teacher gave me an exercise:
Immediately after his arrival things went wrong
Rewrite it, start with "Hardly"
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we don't do your homework for you!
try using past perfect:
Hardly had he.....
good luck![]()
Ah, nah, that's not the homework. I knew what he had corrected but just want to know what your ideas are. Because there's something I not understand in his correction, but that's day the time's run out. So that's why I have to ask you guy. B/c this Friday here comes my test!
Last edited by Belly T; 23-Nov-2006 at 02:58.
Akay, if you guys don't believe me. I'll show you the correction:
Hardly had he arrived when things went wrong
I don't know why whe here to use " when"
Thanks JSmiley, it's mistype :D
Last edited by Belly T; 23-Nov-2006 at 03:26.
oh... okay then:
'hardly had he arrived when things went wrong."
hardly had he arrived ....
... is past perfect, meaning it talks about a specific point in the past. We use the word 'when' to reference that specific time and connect it to things going wrong.
Q:When did things go wrong?
A:Hardly a moment after he arrived!
hope that helps.
here's a sentence with a parrallel form:
Big, sweet grapes are what I like.
EDIT/WONDERING: would I be correct in calling this a 'rhetorical' form?
Okay, and how about this:
He got down to writting the letter as soon as he returned from his walk
Here is my job:
->No sooner did he return from his walk than he got down to writing
Ah, I though it was wrong b/c "No sooner" often goes with Past perfect, doesn't it?
Well, I personally would probably say:
No sooner had he got home than he started writing the letter.
Which means I would probably use the past perfect, but both are okay, I think. Hehehehe, thats a pretty tricky bit that I never thought about, even though I use it sometimes. AFAIK, "no sooner" is not tied to any tense, except that, being a comparison, you must use 'than' with it.