Editor's Blog2 mins ago
Mr Nelson Mandela Is Dead
11 Answers
Hallo,
Sorry to bother you if this is the wrong place to put my question.
Can you explain to me what is the difference between the two following expressions?
Thanks.
(1) Mr Nelson Mandela is dead
(2) Mr Nelson Mandela has died.
Sorry to bother you if this is the wrong place to put my question.
Can you explain to me what is the difference between the two following expressions?
Thanks.
(1) Mr Nelson Mandela is dead
(2) Mr Nelson Mandela has died.
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by devayaani. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.Verbs under one analysis can be durative ( the action is on going ) or punctiliar ( there is an instant in which the event occurs)
I ) is ongoing - like my father is dead - he died in 1972 in fact
2) reports the event - or even NM died at 7 o'clock.
This idea runs through all indo-european languages.
(well you did ask)
We have a French colleague and he is tortured by the different senses in ... I talked to X and I have been talking to X...poor guy
I ) is ongoing - like my father is dead - he died in 1972 in fact
2) reports the event - or even NM died at 7 o'clock.
This idea runs through all indo-european languages.
(well you did ask)
We have a French colleague and he is tortured by the different senses in ... I talked to X and I have been talking to X...poor guy
No, Corby, but we know it when we see it. The Cambridge English Grammar is a large volume running to thousands of pages. It is so technical that, reading it, you'll wonder how anybody speaks English.
He has died means the man has died in the recent past. It is a historic event of recent occurrence . "He has died happy" is similar. "He had died happy" means that he died, but not in the recent past.
"He is dead" is a continuing present ("is"), using an adjective, just as "He is happy" is; is dead is describing something which still exists The confusion in devayaani' s question is that 'dead' is an adjective. 'Died' is not; it is a form of a verb, 'to die' : He dies, he died, he has died, he had died. We cannot use 'died' as an adjective, a word to describe something: we can't say "He is died"
He has died means the man has died in the recent past. It is a historic event of recent occurrence . "He has died happy" is similar. "He had died happy" means that he died, but not in the recent past.
"He is dead" is a continuing present ("is"), using an adjective, just as "He is happy" is; is dead is describing something which still exists The confusion in devayaani' s question is that 'dead' is an adjective. 'Died' is not; it is a form of a verb, 'to die' : He dies, he died, he has died, he had died. We cannot use 'died' as an adjective, a word to describe something: we can't say "He is died"
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