met every Saturday night during term to discuss

Status
Not open for further replies.

GoodTaste

Key Member
Joined
Feb 19, 2016
Member Type
Student or Learner
Native Language
Chinese
Home Country
China
Current Location
China
I wonder why not "during term" be removed from met every Saturday night during term to discuss"? "Met every Saturday night to discuss" still makes perfect sense to me.


--------------------
[h=2]Friendship with Tennyson[edit][/h]Hallam and Tennyson became friends in April 1829. They both entered the Chancellor's Prize Poem Competition (which Tennyson won). Both joined the Cambridge Apostles, a secret debating society which met every Saturday night during term to discuss, over coffee and anchovy sandwiches, serious questions of religion, literature and society. (Hallam read a paper on 'whether the poems of Shelley have an immoral tendency'; Tennyson was to speak on 'Ghosts', but was, according to his son's Memoir, 'too shy to deliver it' - only the Preface to the essay survives).[SUP][5][/SUP] Meetings of the Apostles were not always so intimidating: Desmond MacCarthy gave an account of Hallam and Tennyson at one meeting lying on the ground in order to laugh less painfully, when James Spedding imitated the sun going behind a cloud and coming out again.[SUP][6]

Source[/SUP]
 
"Met every Saturday night to discuss" still makes perfect sense to me.

It makes perfect sense, but it does change the meaning. You could change Saturday to Tuesday and it would still make perfect sense, but it wouldn't mean the same.
 
The relevant phrase is:

a secret debating society which met every Saturday night to discuss, over coffee and anchovy sandwiches, serious questions of religion, literature, and society
 
Status
Not open for further replies.

Ask a Teacher

If you have a question about the English language and would like to ask one of our many English teachers and language experts, please click the button below to let us know:

(Requires Registration)
Back
Top