yanxu
When "...than I thought/expected" is followed by a sentence, when is not? 1.The data was harder to interpret than I thought it would be. 2. Arranging all these paintings is a much bigger job than I expected. Why “I thought” is followed by "it would be", while "I expected" is followed by nothing. Thank you very much!
Apr 18, 2011 3:03 PM
Answers · 5
Great question. Actually, in this type of sentence "thought" and "expected" mean the same thing. And both can be followed by a phrase. You can say:"It was harder than I thought it would be." or "It was harder than I expected it to be." 都是一样。 As Eliot mentioned "it would be" or "it to be" can be left off. Hence, you can also say: "It was harder than I thought" or "It was harder than I expected" And all 4 sentences mean the same thing. Don't ask me why "thought" must be followed by "would" and "expected" must be followed by "to". Haha ... I am a bit puzzled by this myself. 有时候我觉得中文比英语容易一点。
April 22, 2011
than I thought = abbreviation for "than I thought [it would be]" You can say the long phrase or you can say the shorter one at any time, without any change in meaning. BTW, the long phrase has variations: ...than I though he would do ...than I thought he would have. ...than I thought she would be. I think you get the gist.
April 19, 2011
The tenses have to match
April 19, 2011
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