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#1 |
20th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: November 16, 2001
Location: Estonia
Age: 36
Posts: 2,775
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I'll try to be brief since I'll have to go back to school in 10 minutes.
In our English lessons, we have word tests. This is probably done everywhere, but our English word tests with this teacher actually contain sentences and longer expressions. I got my word test results just today. The grade was 3=(two minuses) in the Estonian scale of 1-5. 2 is the smallest grade you can get for a test that you have done, and thus, 2 is the equivalent of F, so 3= means that I was very close to getting one! What I wanted to talk about were the flaws in it. First, how correct is it to write 'To watch in amazement to march them into the mist?' I wrote 'To watch them march into the mist in amazement,' which she said was very wrong. Expression nr. 29, I wrote 'To work on a memorial.' The correct one was 'To start work on the memorial.' I asked about that one, assuming both 'a' and 'the' should apply. She said "You see, if you start working on a memorial, you *know* what memorial you are working on." OK, then I asked about Nr. 25. I wrote 'To disappear into a wayside inn.' The correct way to write it was 'To disappear into the wayside inn.' She said "Well, usually there isn't more than one inn in a countryside." "But there CAN be more than one," I replied. "Don't start arguing." Grr! Then I asked about Nr. 20. The sentence was 'To carve a giant sculpture into a mountain' and I wrote it correctly. I asked why that one was correct. She said "It's an exception." I asked how, to which she said "Understand, I took these expressions from the English book. Go ask an Englishman, if you really want to know!" So here I am. This is crazy! I always get 3's on my English word tests, but 5's(A's) on my English Unit Tests. I'd really like to know which one of us is the idiot. She has been an English teacher for more than 10 years, but what she thinks seems so.. incorrect. My stupidity or her senility? ![]() It's about the British English which very few people use. i don't know close to anything about that, since I mostly learnt the English language by watching American TV shows, so she *could* be right. So, who is right? Thanks. |
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#2 |
Thoth - Egyptian God of Wisdom
![]() Join Date: May 10, 2002
Location: Dunedin, New Zealand.
Age: 43
Posts: 2,860
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Your answers were NOT wrong, they were just more vague in their identification of the sentence's object. You use the indefinite article 'a' instead of the definite 'the'. But your answers still make sense by basic English language conventions, so you shouldn't have been marked down.
However, if the excercise was to write the sentences using the definite article then you would have been wrong. Was that in fact the case? ps: in New Zealand we officially recognise 'British' English conventions over 'American'. [ 04-19-2004, 06:02 AM: Message edited by: The Hierophant ]
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[img]\"hosted/Hierophant.jpg\" alt=\" - \" /><br />Strewth! |
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#3 | ||||
Zhentarim Guard
![]() Join Date: October 28, 2003
Location: Aberdeen
Age: 36
Posts: 300
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Hi, ill try to go through them point by point.
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'To watch in amazement to march them into the mist?' - this one just isn’t good English 'To watch them march into the mist in amazement,' – this one is right, but the way you have formed the sentence imples that the people walking into the mist are amazed, not the person looking at them. If you get what I mean. Perhaps better would be: ‘To watch in amazement as they march into the mist’. Quote:
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To say what you said implies that you do not know the name of the inn and that is correct, because if you did know its name you would state it. She is wrong because, as you say, there could be more than one. And without extensive knowledge of the area surrounding you, you would not know if there was an inn near or not. If you did have this knowledge, as I have said before, then you would probably name the inn by its proper name. Quote:
I would need to know the situation here to find a right answer but: To say: 'To carve a giant sculpture into a mountain' probably would apply to you if you were no-where near mountains and were taking a vow to go to a mountainous area and carve something, or just to pick a mountain at random; like you have no prefence which one. Like what you are doing is more important than the mountain you pick. To say: 'To carve a giant sculpture into the mountain' implies that there is a specific mountain that you want to carve into, almost as if the mountain is more important thatn what you are doing to it, in this case sculpting. Overall, and I think many other will agree, this test is not a very well formed one, and if they are just giving you sentences picked from a book without telling you the situation it is in, there can be many answers, and I feel you have a right to feel angry. Drew
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Plan to be spantaneous tommorow... |
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#4 |
Drizzt Do'Urden
![]() Join Date: April 13, 2004
Location: USA
Age: 42
Posts: 676
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heh, drew is pretty much on the ball with his assessment. English is a shoddy language to have to learn if you havent grown up using it.
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#5 |
Vampire
![]() Join Date: January 29, 2003
Location: Sweden
Age: 44
Posts: 3,888
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English- Easy to learn, impossible to master.
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Nothing is impossible, it's just a matter of probability. |
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#6 |
Jack Burton
![]() Join Date: March 21, 2001
Location: Philippines, but now Harbor City Sydney
Age: 42
Posts: 5,556
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amen stratos
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#7 |
20th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: November 16, 2001
Location: Estonia
Age: 36
Posts: 2,775
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Thanks a lot for the replies, folks!
Hierophant, does the Definite Article mean that there is a specific object and thus, the 'the' article is used? Then why was 'To carve a giant sculpture into a mountain' correct? Hmm, drew_jarvie, are you sure that 'To watch in amazement to march them into the mist' isn't correct English at all? It does seem very incorrect to me, but she speaks as if she's 100% sure that it is correct. Curious. Heh yeah, I admit that 'To watch them march into the mist in amazement' is slightly flawed. This is really annoying as it has been since this teacher started teaching us. Others don't seem to have any problems with it, since they study for English word tests, but the thought of studying English isn't appealing, as I already come to IWF, play English games, watch English TV shows, etc. Even though I always get the more important(Unit) Tests A's, and I have mostly got the first rank in every year in-school contests for advanced English speakers, I still have trouble with the word tests. It's all because there are so many different ways to express the same meaning, and my teacher doesn't seem to understand that. I might send my whole test and my flaws here soon, if I become bored. ![]() You're damn right, Stratos! My sister went to the Tallinn English College, and you wouldn't believe the rules proper English has, including the fact that 'Don't let's go to the cinema' is correct. ![]() |
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#8 | ||||||
40th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: October 29, 2001
Location: Western Wilds of Michigan
Posts: 11,752
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Uss,
I have to qualify by saying I speak American, not English... First thing I'll note is that these seem to be mostly sentence fragments, and not full sentences. The full sentence can often give you more information about what's being discussed. That being said, it appears that the distinction you're being tested on is whether to use "a" or "the" as a qualifier. Is that correct? Assuming it is.... Quote:
"To watch them march into the mist in amazement" says that those doing the marching are the ones in amazement. "To watch them in amazement as they march into the mist" says that the watcher is in amazement. I'd probably write "In amazement, I watch them march into the mist". Any one can be correct, depending on the context of the sentence, which isn't given here. Quote:
I think either one is pretty much correct, though. "The" memorial also implies that there are no other memorials, which may or may not be correct. It's all about context, and I can pretty much guarantee you that no one you talk to on the street will quibble about this one. Quote:
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But across the board, there are no right or wrong answers, based on what you've indicated here. There are only shades of meaning and interpretation. If there's additional material that clarifies the question, you may have to toss out everything I've written. I don't know your teacher well enough to make any comments. There may be more information that could qualify all this. Good luck in pleading your case.
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#9 |
Jack Burton
![]() Join Date: March 1, 2001
Location: Airstrip One
Age: 41
Posts: 5,571
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Perhaps the inn was called "The Wayside Inn"
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#10 | |
40th Level Warrior
![]() Join Date: July 11, 2002
Location: Chicago, IL
Posts: 11,916
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Quote:
Regarding the "carve a face in a mountain" -- your teacher is correct that it is written correctly, unless you have a particular mountain in mind, that is. However, your teacher cites an "exception" to the rule. This is made up. It's BS. There aren't really "exceptions" to the rule, there are only differing applications of the rule to a particular situation. This is what those of us who have been teachers call "backpedalling" or "making stuff up" -- we do that when a bright student corners us. ![]() |
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