ChatterBank7 mins ago
Is the use of the word 'yet' gramatically correct in the current Jaguar XF ad on TV?
20 Answers
Is the use of the word 'yet' gramatically correct in the current Jaguar XF ad on TV?
Is goes something like: .....and why didn't we win in 2007? Because the XF wasn't in production yet.
I would have thought it should be ........wasn't in production then.
Your thoughts would be appreciated.
Is goes something like: .....and why didn't we win in 2007? Because the XF wasn't in production yet.
I would have thought it should be ........wasn't in production then.
Your thoughts would be appreciated.
Answers
There is nothing wrong with the use of yet in the advert. As Chambers Dictionary, for example, explains, the word does not always mean up to NOW, but may also be used to mean hitherto... ie up to THAT time. As the relevant year - 2007 - had already been mentioned, the word is perfectly acceptable.
05:57 Tue 03rd Aug 2010
Not quite, JJ. Karen is correct.
"Because the XF wasn't in production" could mean that the car was temporarily not being made at that time, but had been before and since e.g. from 1990-2006 and from 2008-2010...
Saying that it wasn't in production yet means, totally unambiguously, that in 2007 the XF had never been manufactured.
"Because the XF wasn't in production" could mean that the car was temporarily not being made at that time, but had been before and since e.g. from 1990-2006 and from 2008-2010...
Saying that it wasn't in production yet means, totally unambiguously, that in 2007 the XF had never been manufactured.
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