Hi,In the following sentence, [never] / [ever] ended in and give me a feeling that they have a use for judgment where "I heard it" as the real or logic subject in which a judgment about the possibility of hearing it is made.[When I did well, I heard it never; when I did ill, I heard it ever.] I need your teaching and opinions.Thank you for your assistance.
Top answer
'I heard it' is not the subject. The subject is 'I'. The verb is 'heard'.
— Mister Micawber
'I heard it' is not the subject.
The subject is 'I'.
The verb is 'heard'.
Etc.
'When I did well' is merely an adverb describing the situation in the main clause.
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'I heard it' is not the subject. The subject is 'I'. The verb is 'heard'. Etc. 'When I did well' is merely an adverb describing the situation in the main clause.
Thanks a lot Mister Micawber.I accept your teaching.Would you be kind enough let me to show you the cause of the overdone?It is misplaced in a pattern: He is good at cooking.I need to ask you for a futher questioning. In [He is good at cooking], at shows the activity of cooking in which a judgment about his ability is made.Why not to have the [never / ever] as a use of judgment as in that patte