Gilbert
Junior Member
- Joined
- Dec 11, 2004
- Member Type
- English Teacher
- Native Language
- Czech
- Home Country
- Czech Republic
- Current Location
- Czech Republic
The other day, me and some teacher had a bit of a fight over the following sentence:
?I haven't been working with him for a week and I already hate him.
The meaning she says it conveys is "it has only been a week, which I consider a rather short time to start hating someone", which I just don't agree with. To my ears, the following sentences sounds much better:
I haven't even been working with him for a week and I already hate him.
I haven't been working with him for a week yet and I already hate him.
(syntactically speaking, there is something strange about the even/yet items, definitely worth looking deeper into it)
Am I right assuming the "extra" items do make a hell of a difference?
Thanks a lot!
?I haven't been working with him for a week and I already hate him.
The meaning she says it conveys is "it has only been a week, which I consider a rather short time to start hating someone", which I just don't agree with. To my ears, the following sentences sounds much better:
I haven't even been working with him for a week and I already hate him.
I haven't been working with him for a week yet and I already hate him.
(syntactically speaking, there is something strange about the even/yet items, definitely worth looking deeper into it)
Am I right assuming the "extra" items do make a hell of a difference?
Thanks a lot!
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