Foreign student : Excuse ME. You have GIVEn me the WRONG form.
Library assistant : Sorry, I gave you what you ASKed for. [irritated, appeals to others in the queue for support]
Foreign student : NO. IT IS the WRONG form.
Library assistant : OK. There's no need to be rude.
(capitalisation means the stress on it).
Since foreign student employed long stress, library assistant get angry.
If the stress falls on WRONG form, doesn't it just emphasise WRONG form? (Does it imply speaker's irritation if a speaker is native speaker?)
Then what about wrong FORM?
Top answer
I am confused. What is all this? In a normal conversation, WRONG form would mean essentially the same as wrong FORM .
— Mister Micawber
I am confused.
What is all this?
In a normal conversation, WRONG form would mean essentially the same as wrong FORM .
It means that a different form is required – though the 2nd would be the first spoken and the 1st would be used in the 2nd attempt to communicate, I think.
The speaker would be upset in either case.
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I am confused. What is all this? In a normal conversation, WRONG form would mean essentially the same as wrong FORM. It means that a different form is required – though the 2nd would be the first spoken and the 1st would be used in the 2nd attempt to communicate, I think. The speaker would be upset in either case.