Referring to Multiple Events in the Past
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- DanielBJacobsen
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- Joined: May 13th, 2025, 9:26 am
Referring to Multiple Events in the Past
I'm having trouble with when to use the past perfect in a sequence of events. I understand that it is used for an event that happened before another past event, but I'm not sure how to apply it when there are multiple events. For example, in the sentence, "I had thought that I had shot a goose, but it turned out to be a duck," I feel like the past perfect sounds awkward. I think a more natural expression would be, "I thought I had shot a goose, but it turned out to be a duck." Is this a dialect issue?
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- Josef Essberger
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Re: Referring to Multiple Events in the Past
"I thought I had shot a goose, but it turned out to be a duck" is perfectly natural and correct.DanielBJacobsen wrote: ↑May 13th, 2025, 9:28 am I'm having trouble with when to use the past perfect in a sequence of events. I understand that it is used for an event that happened before another past event, but I'm not sure how to apply it when there are multiple events. For example, in the sentence, "I had thought that I had shot a goose, but it turned out to be a duck," I feel like the past perfect sounds awkward. I think a more natural expression would be, "I thought I had shot a goose, but it turned out to be a duck." Is this a dialect issue?
English Prepositions List by Josef Essberger
Extremely useful ebook full of examples and visual aids to learn prepositions
Inés Barbero
Extremely useful ebook full of examples and visual aids to learn prepositions
