Queueuey
Member
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2024
- Member Type
- Interested in Language
- Native Language
- Macedonian
- Home Country
- Macedonia
- Current Location
- Ukraine
Let's look at two dialogues.
1.
A: That's a nice photo, Bill! I can see that your wife is frying potatoes.
B: Yes, she brought them for the picnic.
2.
A: Hello, Bill! Is your wife at the picnic with you?
B: Hello, Alice. Yes, she is.
A: What is she doing?
B: Frying potatoes. She brought them along with other vegetables.
Are these equally idiomatic and grammatical in British English? How would changing the tense to Present Perfect change the style, register, tone, and the listener's perception? Does the choice of tense vary across different social groups? What are the implications behind using either tense in these examples?
1.
A: That's a nice photo, Bill! I can see that your wife is frying potatoes.
B: Yes, she brought them for the picnic.
2.
A: Hello, Bill! Is your wife at the picnic with you?
B: Hello, Alice. Yes, she is.
A: What is she doing?
B: Frying potatoes. She brought them along with other vegetables.
Are these equally idiomatic and grammatical in British English? How would changing the tense to Present Perfect change the style, register, tone, and the listener's perception? Does the choice of tense vary across different social groups? What are the implications behind using either tense in these examples?