Ola Swensson
Member
- Joined
- Oct 15, 2024
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Russian
- Home Country
- Russian Federation
- Current Location
- Russian Federation
Dear all,
I have a sentence in my Workbook:
Mount Jiree has been thought to be thousands of years old, but no one is sure.
I have to find the mistake in it (if there are any) related to the passive form of the verb.
The correct answer is "Mount Jiree is thought to be thousands of years old, but no one is sure".
I don't undestand why. As I see it, the present perfect here refers to the action of thinking that has continually happened up to now. That is to say, people was thinking this way and they are still thinking that Mount Jiree is thounsands of years old.
Could you be so kind as to explain me why "has been thought" would not be the correct answer here?
Thank you very much in advance!
I have a sentence in my Workbook:
Mount Jiree has been thought to be thousands of years old, but no one is sure.
I have to find the mistake in it (if there are any) related to the passive form of the verb.
The correct answer is "Mount Jiree is thought to be thousands of years old, but no one is sure".
I don't undestand why. As I see it, the present perfect here refers to the action of thinking that has continually happened up to now. That is to say, people was thinking this way and they are still thinking that Mount Jiree is thounsands of years old.
Could you be so kind as to explain me why "has been thought" would not be the correct answer here?
Thank you very much in advance!
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