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Rommel Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

Should I say 'before his talk ended,' 'before he ended his talk,' or 'before the end of his talk' in the sentence?

Should I say 'before his talk ended,' 'before he ended his talk,' or 'before the end of his talk' in the sentence? My choice is the first one, but is it correct?

(Before his talk ended, before he ended his talk, before the end of his talk), the chairman of the panel suggested that the researchers avoid using colloquial terms in their works.

  

Top answer

'before his talk ended,' This doesn't tell us that he ended it. Maybe there was an earthquake. 'before he ended his talk,' This clarifies that he made the decision to end it.

  • 'before his talk ended,' This doesn't tell us that he ended it.
  • Maybe there was an earthquake.
  • 'before he ended his talk,' This clarifies that he made the decision to end it.
  • 'before the end of his talk' This doesn't tell us that he ended it.
  • Maybe there was an earthquake.
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1 Answers
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'before his talk ended,' This doesn't tell us that he ended it. Maybe there was an earthquake.

'before he ended his talk,' This clarifies that he made the decision to end it.

'before the end of his talk' This doesn't tell us that he ended it. Maybe there was an earthquake.


(Before his talk ended, before he ended his talk, before the end of his ta

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