(My sentences)
a. Tom is grateful that he is (now) admitted to the school.
b. Tom is grateful that he has been admitted to the school.
c. Tom is grateful that he was admitted to the school.
d. Tom is grateful to be admitted to the school.
(The context: Tom has just got an e-mail with permission from the school.)
Which ones do you think are correct and natural? I am not sure about (a).
Last edited by kadioguy; 25-Oct-2020 at 18:50. Reason: Improved the contents
I am not a teacher. If there is anything ungrammatical in my post, please correct it. I am grateful for your help.
I'm not a teacher. I speak American English. I've tutored writing at the University of Southern Maine and have done a good deal of copy editing and writing, occasionally for publication.
Hi, members
If you don't mind, could you please join this discussion?![]()
I am not a teacher. If there is anything ungrammatical in my post, please correct it. I am grateful for your help.
They're all grammatical and natural but they obviously have different uses, since they use different tenses.
Which one is best depends on exactly what you want to focus on—present, past, or future.
I am not a teacher. If there is anything ungrammatical in my post, please correct it. I am grateful for your help.
"admitted" isn't an adjective (if you think it is), kadioguy.
In this context which one(s) will you use? If you don't mind, could please you tell me?
(The context: Tom has just got an e-mail with a notice from the school.)
a. Tom is grateful that he is (now) admitted to the school.
b. Tom is grateful that he has been admitted to the school.
c. Tom is grateful that he was admitted to the school.
d. Tom is grateful to be admitted to the school.
(Cross-posted with tzfujimino)
Last edited by kadioguy; 28-Oct-2020 at 14:37.
I am not a teacher. If there is anything ungrammatical in my post, please correct it. I am grateful for your help.