News19 mins ago
Give or Pass
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I teach young children English as a second language and would like your opinions on this: which do you think is more modern (so, up-to-date) for them to learn;
Can you pass me that book, please? OR
Can you give me that book, please?
In my time, pass was the correct form but is it too over the top these days? Give always seems like an order!
Hope you can help.
Can you pass me that book, please? OR
Can you give me that book, please?
In my time, pass was the correct form but is it too over the top these days? Give always seems like an order!
Hope you can help.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.First of all I'd be wary of using the word 'can' - you might have some smart alecs in the class like one of my sons when he was younger. If he was in a 'funny' mood and you asked him 'can you give me the....' His answer was 'yes' and then I'd be waiting. He'd then go on 'yes, physically I am able to give you the...' Oh, do you want it?' So I used to rephrase my question to 'would you give me the ...'.
Sorry I digress from your question. What about 'would you hand me that book please?'
Sorry I digress from your question. What about 'would you hand me that book please?'
�Can' has been used colloquially to imply a request for permission for over a century and a half, so it is long past time for pedants to stop saying only �may' should be thus employed.
"Can I see the manager?" is perfectly acceptable in day-to-day spoken usage. Only in situations where extreme politeness and formality are called for is there any need to insist on �may'. "Sir, may I have your daughter's hand in marriage?" is nowadays the only sort of situation in which �may' might reasonably be said to be necessary.
So, Foxlee, you should really have told your son that he was 'way out of date in his pedantry!
'Give' would certainly be more modern, Butterflies, but 'pass', in the circumstances would - even now - probably be the more appropriate.
"Can I see the manager?" is perfectly acceptable in day-to-day spoken usage. Only in situations where extreme politeness and formality are called for is there any need to insist on �may'. "Sir, may I have your daughter's hand in marriage?" is nowadays the only sort of situation in which �may' might reasonably be said to be necessary.
So, Foxlee, you should really have told your son that he was 'way out of date in his pedantry!
'Give' would certainly be more modern, Butterflies, but 'pass', in the circumstances would - even now - probably be the more appropriate.