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Silak12 Posted 8 years ago
Grammar

What is wrong with you lately?

Hi, everyone.

I was watching a tv series, named Lucifer, and I heard a character telling another the following: "What is wrong with you lately?"

Shouldn't it be "What has been wrong with you lately?"?

What's the difference in meaning between the two?

Thanks!

  

Top answer

" certainly sounds better. The grammatical difference is that one is in simple tense and the other is in perfect tense.

  • " certainly sounds better.
  • The grammatical difference is that one is in simple tense and the other is in perfect tense.
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2 Answers
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"What has been wrong with you lately." certainly sounds better. The grammatical difference is that one is in simple tense and the other is in perfect tense.

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"What is wrong with you lately?" This is slightly awkward grammar, but is easy to understand and clearly refers to a condition that still exists.

"What has been wrong with you lately?" This does not necessarily make it clear that the speaker thinks the problem still exists at the present time..

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