Hi, Can you rewrite this sentence: "The second day of Lunar New Year has just passed."
---> The Lunar New Year has just passed for two days.
Is that correct? How will you rewrite the sentence?
Hi,
The Lunar New Year started two days ago, or
It has been two days since the Lunar New Year passed.
Bye.
Hi,
I wouldn't like to sound too fussy but there is something I don't fully undersatand, so I'd be really grateful if you could help me. Among your suggestions I read 'It is two days since the start of the Lunar New Year'. My question is would 'It has been two days since the start of the Lunar New Year' also be possible? and, if so, what difference does it is / has been make, if any at all?. Thanks in advance.
Regards
Since it is now two days since something happened, the present is fine.
You can add "It has been two days since the Lunar New Year started" to the other options.
Thanks.
I'm very sorry, my question is so fuzzy. What I want to say is different. I want to say that the present is the day which is two days after the end of the New Year vacation. I want to say that the Lunar New Year (by which I mean the vacation) has just passed. The vacation has just passed. It's not passed too long, and the bustling atmosphere of this occasion is still around us. People are still thinking about the vacation....
Maybe,
It is (only/barely/just) two days that the Lunar New Year has passed.
It is only two days ago that we celebrate the Lunar New Year.
Hi,
I hope it is a typo and you really meant 'celebrated' or I'll go completely crazy. Just one thing, what's the problem with 'has passed'?, is it the present perfect or is it the verb 'pass' (=end, here)?. Why suddenly most people are so reluctant to use the present perfect in this kind of sentence?. Thanks in advance.
Regards
typo!
I think that in this context, "pass" is not good English.