Ann
‘We were playing in completely different conditions!’ Wood shouted, his eyes bulging slightly. ‘Diggory’s put a very strong side together! He’s an excellent Seeker! I was afraid you’d take it like this! We mustn’t relax! We must keep our focus! Slytherin are trying to wrong-foot us! We must win!’ This is a paragraph from Harry Potter. My question is: Why did Wood say "I was afraid you'd take it like this" instead of "I'm afraid you'd take it like this"? Thanks for your reply.
Nov 20, 2023 3:40 AM
Answers · 1
1
Because the 'fear' is in the past. What they are saying is I 'thought' or 'expected' you'd take it like this. So they're describing a past prediction. The thing has happened now, so the prediction has to be in the past. It is the same for also such verbs: I feared/knew/expected/thought/predicted you'd take it like this. We would use 'am afraid' for predictions about the future. I'm afraid he's going to take it badly.
November 20, 2023
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