How could you do/have done it?

Marika33

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I'm trying to figure out which, the simple or the perfect infinitive, you should use after "could" in these two cases.

1. [Somebody did/has done something extraordinary.] You ask that person:
  • How could you do it?
  • How could you have done it?
2. [There was a fight between two men. One lost.] The one that lost asks himself:
  • How could I lose?
  • How could I have lost?
 

emsr2d2

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In the first, "How could you do that?" is more natural than "it".
In the second, of the two, I'd probably use "lose" but " have lost" isn't wrong. I'd actually say "How [the hell] did I lose?"
 

Marika33

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1. [Somebody did/has done something extraordinary.] You ask that person:
How were you able to do that?
How did you manage to do that?
That's exactly what I thought! But (unfortunately, I don't have the source) I've heard this line said by a native English speaker.
  • [Somebody's just done something cool]
    His friend: How could you do that!?
2. [There was a fight between two men. One lost.] The one that lost asks himself:
As for this situation, I've heard a native speaker say, "How could I have ...", and I assumed that he wanted to say, "How could I have lost?", but stopped for some reason.

To say I'm confused is to say nothing. :(
 

jutfrank

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That's exactly what I thought! But (unfortunately, I don't have the source) I've heard this line said by a native English speaker.

You needn't take everything every native speaker says as a perfect model of good English.

  • [Somebody's just done something cool]
    His friend: How could you do that!?

As for this situation, I've heard a native speaker say, "How could I have ...", and I assumed that he wanted to say, "How could I have lost?", but stopped for some reason.

Yes, that's probably right.

To say I'm confused is to say nothing. :(

Where's the confusion? We're suggesting to you what we think is the best way of expressing yourself.
 
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