• Re: had been delivering

    From HenHanna@21:1/5 to Aidan Kehoe on Sun May 26 14:59:11 2024
    XPost: alt.usage.english

    cúigiú -------- looks a bit like Chee-gyuu w w w

    On 5/26/2024 11:09 AM, Aidan Kehoe wrote:

    Ar an cúigiú lá is fiche de mí Bealtaine, scríobh navi:

    > 1) Tom had been delivering pizzas before he started working as a
    > security guard.


    The canonical use of [had been] is

    Tom had been delivering pizzas for 3 years [,]
    when he got his 2nd job as a part-time security guard.

    i think you 'd be better off studying the
    variations of:

    I'd waited in the station for 10 minutes
    when the train arrived.

    I was waiting ...
    I had been waiting....


    >
    > I can see three possibilities:
    >
    > a) He started working as a security guard right after he stopped
    > delivering pizzas.
    >
    > b) There was a time lapse between the time he stopped delivering pizzas
    > and the time he started working as a security guard.
    >
    > c) He kept on delivering pizzas after he started working as a security
    > guard.
    >
    > Which of the cases 1-3 can correspond to (a)?

    Do you mean ‘which of the cases a-c can correspond to (1)?’

    For me a-c are all consistent with 1), but a) is most likely. It’s the sort of
    phrasing that will probably be from a journalist, and that has the difficulty these days that journalists are routinely idiots and their editors seem less likely to pick up their mistakes than they were.


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