Anna
"Try to sleep and try sleeping". What's the difference? There are two sentences: I stopped to smoke. I stopped smoking. There is a difference between them. In the second sent. it means I gave up smoking. Am I right? But there are two another verbs with the same pattern: remember and try. For example: I try to sleep and I try sleeping. I don't understand the difference
27 Thg 11 2012 14:06
Câu trả lời · 2
3
The two examples you have given aren't comparable. Allow me to explain. "I stopped to smoke" = "I stopped for a short time so that I could smoke." "I stopped smoking" = "I stopped smoking and don't intend to smoke agan." --- "Try to sleep" = "Have a go" / "Have an attempt" at sleeping. It means... "Do your best to sleep". It's ALMOST a command. "Try sleeping" = It's more of a suggestion or a recommendation. Mr X: "Sometimes I feel drowsy in the afternoon, maybe it's because of caffeine or something" Mr Y: "Try sleeping" / "Try sleeping more." ----- The two examples you have given aren't the same at all though. To put your "smoking" example into the second sense, you should say: "Try to smoke" = "Do your best to smoke". [Like, "try to sleep"]. Or ..."Try smoking" = "Why don't you have a go at smoking?" [Like... "Try sleeping.." ... it is a recommendation or suggestion]. ----- Likewise, "I stopped to sleep" = "I waited a moment so that I could get some sleep".[Like, "I stopped to smoke".] OR: "I stopped sleeping" = "I stopped sleeping. I don't know if I will ever sleep again". [Like, "I stopped smoking".] --- The examples you have given aren't parallel at all.... I hope this helps anyway, Take care and good luck!
27 tháng 11 năm 2012
I try to sleep and I try sleeping; no difference in the meaning, but in grammar yes, one is using the infinitive, and the other is using the gerund
27 tháng 11 năm 2012
Bạn vẫn không tìm thấy được các câu trả lời cho mình?
Hãy viết xuống các câu hỏi của bạn và để cho người bản xứ giúp bạn!