Can anyone help with the following..
Is this sentence expressing desire in present simple...'I would like a tea'.
IE it means you would like tea now even though the now is not stated.
Thanks.
Present Simple
Moderator: Joe
Re: Present Simple
I agree. And a native speaker would say: I'd like some tea. Or I would like some tea.
Re: Present Simple
Not necessarily. Consider the following:jayjay wrote:Is this sentence expressing desire in present simple...'I would like a tea'.
IE it means you would like tea now even though the now is not stated.
- What would you like for breakfast tomorrow?
- I would like a full English breakfast.
Your sentence ("'I would like a tea") may well be referring to the present but only by the context would we know it.
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Re: Present Simple
Pardon me, but it's not the Present Simple anyway.
"I like tea" is the Present Simple.
"I would like a tea" or varients thereof (I might like a tea, I should like a tea) is a construction with a modal verb and the bare infinitive.
But yes, you have the meaning sussed. It's most likely to be a request form, a synonym of:
"I will have a tea", "Can I have a tea?" and so on.
Unless, of course, there's some sentence stress on "would", like this:
"I WOULD like a tea"
which sort of suggests that none is available or that circumstances don't allow it..
Hope that helps..
"I like tea" is the Present Simple.
"I would like a tea" or varients thereof (I might like a tea, I should like a tea) is a construction with a modal verb and the bare infinitive.
But yes, you have the meaning sussed. It's most likely to be a request form, a synonym of:
"I will have a tea", "Can I have a tea?" and so on.
Unless, of course, there's some sentence stress on "would", like this:
"I WOULD like a tea"
which sort of suggests that none is available or that circumstances don't allow it..
Hope that helps..