Hi there,
The course I'm applying to has given me an enormous pre-interview task to do and whilst I can confidently approach most of the questions, I've found a few (admittedly basic) parts of the task to be quite perplexing. Please see below and comment if you can:
1) Sentence parts - in the below sentence, what is the word "down"? Is it a preposition? Or perhaps it is part of the adverb "quickly" as in "quickly down"? I am really stuck with this one.
'He ran quickly down the stairs'
2) Sentence parts again - What is the word "from" in the below sentence
'She disappeared from my sight'
Responses would be much appreciated :D
pre-course task, haalp!
Moderator: Joe
Re: pre-course task, haalp!
down = preposition in this sentence
Note the potential confusion for a learner with the phrasal verb to run down as in "The president ran down the country" or "The president ran the country down."
from = preposition in all sentences
Note the potential confusion for a learner with the phrasal verb to run down as in "The president ran down the country" or "The president ran the country down."
from = preposition in all sentences
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Re: pre-course task, haalp!
Thanks TN, that's what I thought.
Weirdly enough, I'm supposed to take the sentence apart and put each word under their grammatical categories in a table, yet there is no 'preposition' column. That's what threw me off!
I'm actually a bit concerned about the quality of the course now, especially as in the beginning of the document there is a sentence that goes: "You may refer to a dictionary and a grammar."
Sigh..
Weirdly enough, I'm supposed to take the sentence apart and put each word under their grammatical categories in a table, yet there is no 'preposition' column. That's what threw me off!
I'm actually a bit concerned about the quality of the course now, especially as in the beginning of the document there is a sentence that goes: "You may refer to a dictionary and a grammar."
Sigh..
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- Member
- Posts: 5
- Joined: 25 May 2008, 17:33
Re: pre-course task, haalp!
I just thought, is the phrase "disappeared from" not a phrasal verb?
Re: pre-course task, haalp!
No, there is no phrasal verb to disappear from.
Just as a very general guide, phrasal verbs tend to be Germanic in origin (short, mono-syllabic, not to say guttural).
Disappear is French in origin (disparaître). See this for a brief history:
http://www.englishclub.com/english-language-history.htm
Just as a very general guide, phrasal verbs tend to be Germanic in origin (short, mono-syllabic, not to say guttural).
Disappear is French in origin (disparaître). See this for a brief history:
http://www.englishclub.com/english-language-history.htm
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- Member
- Posts: 5
- Joined: 25 May 2008, 17:33
Re: pre-course task, haalp!
Brilliant. Thanks for that TNJust as a very general guide, phrasal verbs tend to be Germanic in origin (short, mono-syllabic, not to say guttural).
Disappear is French in origin (disparaître)