Mistakes Every English Learner Makes Basic English Grammar

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I said a bad word on camera.

Hi, everybody.

Welcome back to Ask Alisha, the weekly series
where you ask me questions and I answer them,

maybe.

First question this week comes from Fan.

Hi, Fan.

Fan says, “Are ‘no’ and ‘none’ the
same meaning and do they have the same usage?”

No, they don’t have the same usage.

We can’t use them the same way but they have
sort of similar meanings.

We can use “no” as a simple negative response
to something and we can also use it before

a noun to mean we have zero of that thing.

“I have no time.”

“He has no money.”

“You have no friends.”

This means “no,” zero of that thing.

“I have no time.”

“I have no money.”

“I have no friends,” for example.

I have a sad life.

“None,” however, means not one or not
any.

“None of my time is used wisely.”

“None of his money went to charity.”

“None of my friends want to hang out today.”

So, we’re using “none” to mean not any
of or not one of some other noun phrase.

So, we can’t use them quite the same, no.

So, I hope that that helps you out a little
bit.

Thanks for the question.

Next question comes from Hanna from Vietnam.

Hi, Hanna.

“What is the difference between ‘sounds’
and ‘seems’ and how to use them correctly?

Can I use ‘sound’ for a person?

For example, “You sounds not good.”

“She sounds tired.”?

Ha.

Nice question.

So, we tend to use “sound” for things
that we hear with our ears.

Like, information we get with our ears.

“Something sounds good.”

So, physically, we hear a sound with our ears.

Someone suggests an activity?

We say, “It sounds good,” because we heard
that information with our ears.

Or, if someone suggests a bad idea, like,
“Oh, that doesn’t sound good.”

Or, if you hear a friend like coughing or
something you can say, “Whoa.

You don’t sound good.”

So, those are all examples of information
we get with ears.

But, “seem,” on the other hand, “seem”
is used for information we gain but we cannot

confirm quickly.

So, it’s used for an initial impression of
something.

So, if we can confirm our kind of idea of
that thing, then it’s kind of strange to use

“seem.”

Let me give you some examples of this.

“She seems nice.”

“Your friend seems angry.”

“That place seems dangerous.”

In each of these examples, we can’t really
quickly confirm whether our initial impression

is true or not.

Like, if I touched something, like a nice
pillow and I said, “Oh, it seems soft.”

That would be weird because I can confirm
the pillow is soft.

I don’t know where my arm is a pillow but
like I can confirm that right now.

So, it sounds weird, it “sounds” weird
to use “seems” there.

So, if you can confirm something quickly or
if you can understand that quickly, it’s sort

of strange to use “seems.”

“Sounds” is used for information we get
with our ears.

I hope that that helps you.

Sounds good?

Sounds good to me.

That question also sounds good to me.

Next question comes from Imon.

Hi, again, Imon.

“Which one is correct?

‘She has gained admission to the club,’
or, ‘She has gained admission in the club.’”

In terms of the preposition you’re using,
“to” is correct.

“She has gained admission to the club.”

If, however, this is an example sentence about
going to a music venue, we don’t use “gained

admission.”

“Gained admission” sounds very, very formal.

If you’re talking about a formal club or a
formal society.

Like, “She has gained admission to the club,”
fine.

That’s fine.

If, however, you’re just talking about like
going out to a party.

We’ll use, “She got into the club,” or,
“She has gotten into the club.”

So, we say, “got into” or “get into”
a club.

It sounds like it was difficult to get in,
this is how I go into clubs.

It sounds like it was difficult to get in
but she was able to gain admission, so, “gain

admission” sounds too formal, so we use
“got into” instead.

So, I don’t know if that’s the situation here
but just in case there’s an expression you

can use as well.

To get into something.

Next question.

Next question comes from Mohamed Alhel.

Hi, Mohamed.

“What is the difference between ‘up’
and ‘above,’ ‘down’ and ‘below.’”

Okay, depending on the sentence, the words
can have different grammatical functions but

I assume this is a question about positioning
words.

So, base difference, I suppose would be that
“up” and “down,” refer to movement.

There’s actual movement happening.

“Up,” meaning things go this direction,
“down” meaning things go this direction.

So, there’s movement “up” or movement
“down” when you use the word “up”

or “down.”

“Let’s walk up the street.”

“She scrolled down on the page.”

“She put her hand up.”

“He put his hand down.”

So, all of these refer to movement, there’s
some movement happening “up” or “down.”

“Above” and “below,” however, refer
to fixed positions, there’s no movement.

And, we need to use a direct object when we
use “above” and “below.”

So, when I say, “A is above B,” there’s
an A and a B in that situation.

I can’t use “above” if I don’t have an
A and a B. There’s like a relative positioning

there that’s happening and there’s no movement
happening either.

So, examples.

“I put a shelf above the TV.”

“Hide these keys below the sink.”

“My name is above your name.”

“Our sales were below the target amount
this month.”

So, in each of these example sentences, there’s
no movement happening, it’s a simple position.

In some cases, like in the first three examples,
the position is like a physical object.

In the last example sentence, however, about
sales, it’s a concept.

So, “Sales were below the target amount
this month,” but the position is still fixed.

So, there was a target amount and sales.

Sales were below that target amount.

So, you can use this for concepts or for physical
objects.

So, keep that in mind.

“Up” and “down,” movement.

“Above” and “below,” no movement,
fixed positions.

Hope that helps.

Thanks for the great question.

Next question.

Next question comes from Eugen.

Eugen?

You don’t have an “E” in the end, Eugen.

I don’t know.

Hi, sorry.

“Hi, Alisha.

What is the difference between ‘need,’
‘have’ and ‘should.’

For example, ‘what do I need to,’ ‘what
do I have to,’ ‘what should I do?’

Which sentence is correct?”

Thanks.

Actually, all of these sentences are correct.

It just depends on what you want to say.

Grammatically, all of these are fine.

But, the nuance and the meaning changes.

Let’s look at a simple example.

“I have to go to the bank.”

“I need to go to the bank.”

“I should go to the bank.”

Alright, first one.

“I have to go to the bank,” it sounds
like you have a responsibility to do that

task and there’s maybe some reason you don’t
want to do that task.

So, you I’m kind of like, “Aw.

I don’t want to do this thing.

This is boring.”

Or, “This is something I don’t want to do
with my time but I have a responsibility to

do that thing.

I have to go to the bank.”

The second example sentence, “I need to
go to the bank,” sounds like, yes, you have

a responsibility to do that task.

That task is still your responsibility but
that feeling of, “I don’t want to do this,”

is not anywhere near as strong.

If you say, “I have to go to the bank,”
it’s like a stronger feeling of something

you don’t want to do.

Maybe, if you say, “I need to go to the
bank,” you still don’t want to do that but

you’re not really communicating such a strong
feeling of “I don’t want to do this.”

That feeling is much, much more diminished,
it’s not as strong here.

So, I need to go to the bank, it’s pretty
neutral, just a responsibility phrase.

The last one, “I should go to the bank,”
means I don’t have a responsibility to do

this task right now but it’s probably a good
idea if I do it.

“I should go to the bank.”

This one’s good for things you’re maybe thinking
about, you’re not responsible for but maybe

there are good ideas.

So, like, “I should clean my house,” or,
“I should do the dishes,” or “I should

do my homework,” for example.

“I should,” it’s for things that are good
ideas but maybe you don’t have a responsibility,

necessarily.

“Have to,” sounds more like, “I don’t
want to do this,” “need” is pretty neutral

for a responsibility.

In my case, that’s how I use these words.

I hope that that helps you.

They’re all correct.

Next question is from Alexandre.

Hi, Alexandre.

“Hi, Alisha.

What does “sick grind” mean?”

What does “sick grind” mean?

This is a skateboarding term, actually, but
I’m not a skateboarder.

But a grind is when a skateboarder is doing
a trick and the skate boards, imagine this

is the skateboard, they jump on to some obstacle
and the side of the skateboard does this motion,

which we call grinding.

So, it grinds against some obstacle.

So, that trick is called a grind.

“Sick,” however, is slang for cool, great,
awesome, nice, good.

So, “sick grind” means that was a nice
grind, that was a cool trick, well done.

So, it’s a compliment.

Very casual used probably among skateboarders
and other people who do similar tricks.

By the way, you can replace “grind” with
anything you want to make a very casual compliment.

Like, “Sick dinner, man.”

I don’t know.

Something that sounds kind of young and casual
and cool, we can use the word, “sick,”

to describe.

“That was sick.”

I don’t use sick because I’m not cool but
if you want to, you can use the word, “sick.”

“Sick burn,” or like, “Sick ride.”

I don’t even know.

Though, “sick” sounds kind of cool, young,
whatever.

But, “sick grind” is a skateboarding term.

Skateboarding and maybe other similar sports.

So, hope that helps you.

I’m not a cool person, I can’t give you cool
examples but there you go.

Next question, hopefully not a skateboarding
question, comes from Mohamed Al Dale.

Hi, Mohamed.

“Hi, Alisha.

What’s the difference in pronunciation between
‘very’ and ‘vary?’”

Aha.

“Very” and “vary” have no difference
in pronunciation.

Very exciting, isn’t it?

That’s it.

Alright.

That’s it for questions that I want to look
at this week.

Thank you so much for sending so many great
questions.

There are so many now, I cannot possibly answer
them all in one week.

But, keep sending, I love reading them and
make sure if you haven’t sent one yet, that

you send one to me at EnglishClass101.com/ask-alisha.

Of course, if you liked this video, please
make sure to give it a thumbs up, subscribe

to the channel and come check us out at EnglishClass101.com
for other good English study tools.

Thanks very much for watching this episode
of Ask Alisha and I will see you again next week.

Bye-bye.

Sick video.

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我在镜头前说了一句坏话。

大家好你们好。

欢迎回到 Ask Alisha,这是每周一次的系列
,你问我问题,我

可能会回答。

本周第一个问题来自范。

嗨,范。

范说:“no”和“none”是
同一个意思吗,用法一样吗?

不,它们的用法不同。

我们不能以相同的方式使用它们,但它们具有
相似的含义。

我们可以使用“不”作为
对某事的简单否定反应,也可以在名词前使用它

来表示我们对那件事的看法为零。

“我没时间。”

“他没钱。”

“你没有朋友。”

这意味着“不”,那件事的零。

“我没时间。”

“我没钱。”

例如,“我没有朋友”。

我有一个悲伤的生活。

然而,“无”意味着不是一个或没有
任何一个。

“我的时间都没有被明智地利用。”

“他的钱都没有捐给慈善机构。”

“我的朋友今天都不想出去玩。”

因此,我们使用“none”来表示不是
任何其他名词短语或不是其他名词短语之一。

所以,我们不能完全一样地使用它们,不。

所以,我希望这对你有所帮助

谢谢你的问题。

下一个问题来自越南的 Hanna。

嗨,汉娜。

“‘声音’
和‘似乎’有什么区别,如何正确使用?

我可以对一个人使用“声音”吗?

例如,“你听起来不太好。”

“她听起来很累。”?

哈。

好问题。

因此,我们倾向于将“声音”用于
我们用耳朵听到的东西。

比如,我们用耳朵得到的信息。

“听起来不错。”

因此,在身体上,我们用耳朵听到声音。

有人建议活动?

我们说,“听起来不错”,因为
我们用耳朵听到了这些信息。

或者,如果有人提出一个坏主意,比如,
“哦,这听起来不太好。”

或者,如果您听到朋友喜欢咳嗽之类的
话,您可以说:“哇哦。

你听起来不太好。”

所以,这些都是
我们用耳朵获得的信息的例子。

但是,“似乎”另一方面,“似乎
”用于我们获得但我们无法

快速确认的信息。

因此,它用于对某事的初步印象

所以,如果我们能确认我们对
那件事的看法,那么使用

“似乎”就有点奇怪了。

让我给你一些例子。

“她看起来不错。”

“你的朋友好像很生气。”

“那个地方好像很危险。”

在这些例子中的每一个中,我们都无法真正
快速地确认我们最初的印象

是否真实。

就像,如果我触摸了什么东西,比如一个漂亮的
枕头,我会说,“哦,它看起来很软。”

那会很奇怪,因为我可以
确认枕头是软的。

我不知道我的手臂在哪里是枕头,但
我现在可以确认。

所以,这听起来很奇怪,在
那里使用“似乎”“听起来”很奇怪。

因此,如果您可以快速确认某件事,
或者您可以快速理解某事,那么

使用“似乎”有点奇怪。

“声音”用于
我们通过耳朵获得的信息。

我希望这对你有帮助。

听起来不错?

听起来不错。

这个问题对我来说也很好听。

下一个问题来自 Imon。

嗨,再次,艾蒙。

“哪一个是正确的?

“她已经被俱乐部录取了,”
或者,“她已经被俱乐部录取了。

”就你使用的介词而言,
“to”是正确的。

“她已经被俱乐部录取了。”

但是,如果这是一个关于
去音乐场所的例句,我们不使用“gained

admission”。

“获得录取”听起来非常非常正式。

如果你说的是正式的俱乐部或
正式的社团。

就像,“她已经获得了俱乐部的入场券,”
很好。

没关系。

但是,如果您只是在谈论
参加聚会。

我们将使用“她进入俱乐部”或
“她已经进入俱乐部”。

所以,我们说,“进入”或“进入”
一个俱乐部。

听起来很难进入,
这就是我进入俱乐部的方式。

听起来好像很难进去,
但她能被录取,所以,“gain

admission”听起来太正式了,所以我们用
“got into”代替。

所以,我不知道这是否是这里的情况,
但以防万一你

也可以使用一个表达式。

进入某事。

下一个问题。

下一个问题来自 Mohamed Alhel。

嗨,穆罕默德。

“‘上’
和‘上’、‘下’和‘下’有什么区别。”

好吧,根据句子的不同,单词
可以有不同的语法功能,但

我认为这是一个关于定位单词的问题

所以,我想基本的区别是
“向上”和“向下”指的是运动。

有实际的运动正在发生。

“向上”表示事情朝着这个方向发展,
“向下”表示事情朝着这个方向发展。

因此,
当您使用“上”或“下”这个词时,会有“上”或“下”的运动

“我们走上街吧。”

“她在页面上向下滚动。”

“她举手了。”

“他把手放下了。”

所以,所有这些都指的是运动,有
一些运动发生在“向上”或“向下”。

但是,“上”和“下”是
指固定位置,没有移动。

而且,当我们
使用“上方”和“下方”时,我们需要使用直接对象。

因此,当我说“A 高于 B”时,
在这种情况下存在 A 和 B。

如果我没有 A 和 B,我就不能使用“above”
。就像发生了相对定位

,也没有发生移动

所以,例子。

“我在电视上方放了一个架子。”

“把这些钥匙藏在水槽下面。”

“我的名字在你的名字之上。”

“我们本月的销售额低于目标金额
。”

所以,在这些例句中,
没有发生任何运动,这是一个简单的位置。

在某些情况下,例如前三个示例,
该位置就像一个物理对象。

然而,在最后一个例句中,关于
销售,它是一个概念。

因此,“本月销售额低于目标金额
”,但位置仍然固定。

所以,有一个目标数量和销售额。

销售额低于该目标金额。

因此,您可以将其用于概念或物理
对象。

所以记住这一点。

“上”和“下”运动。

“上”和“下”,不动,
固定位置。

希望有帮助。

谢谢你的好问题。

下一个问题。

下一个问题来自 Eugen。

欧根?

Eugen,你最后没有“E”。

我不知道。

你好,对不起。

“嗨,艾丽莎。

“需要”、
“拥有”和“应该”有什么区别。

例如,“我需要
做什么”、“我必须做什么”、“我应该做什么?”

哪个句子是正确的?

谢谢。

实际上,所有这些句子都是正确的。

这取决于你想说什么。

从语法上讲,所有这些都很好。

但是,细微差别和含义发生了变化。

让我们看一个简单的例子。

“我得去银行。”

“我要去银行。”

“我应该去银行。”

好吧,第一个。

“我必须去银行”,这听起来
像是你有责任完成这项

任务,而你可能出于某种原因
不想执行这项任务。

所以,你我有点像,“哦。

我不想做这件事。

这很无聊。”

或者,“这是我不想
用我的时间做的事情,但我有责任

做那件事。

我得去银行。”

第二个例句“我需要
去银行”听起来像是,是的,你

有责任完成这项任务。

那项任务仍然是你的责任,但
那种“我不想这样做”

的感觉远没有那么强烈。

如果你说,“我必须去银行”,
这就像是一种你不想做的事情的强烈感觉

也许,如果你说,“我需要去
银行”,你仍然不想这样做,但

你并没有真正传达出如此
强烈的“我不想这样做”的感觉。

那种感觉要少得多,要少得多,
在这里没有那么强烈。

所以,我需要去银行,这很
中性,只是一个责任短语。

最后一个,“我应该去银行”,
意思是我现在没有责任做

这个任务,但如果我去做可能是个好
主意。

“我应该去银行。”

这对你可能正在考虑的事情有好处
,你不负责,但也许

有好主意。

因此,例如,“我应该打扫我的房子”或
“我应该洗碗”或“我应该

做我的家庭作业”。

“我应该”是针对那些好
主意的事情,但也许你不一定有责任

“必须”听起来更像是“我
不想这样做”,“需要”

对于责任来说是相当中性的。

就我而言,这就是我使用这些词的方式。

我希望这对你有帮助。

他们都是正确的。

下一个问题来自亚历山大。

嗨,亚历山大。

“嗨,艾丽莎。

“病态研磨”是什么意思?”

“病态研磨”是什么意思?

实际上,这是一个滑板术语,但
我不是滑板手。

但是磨削是当一个滑板手在做
一个技巧时,滑板,想象这

是滑板,他们跳到一些障碍物
上,滑板的一侧做这个动作

,我们称之为磨削。

因此,它会遇到一些障碍。

所以,这个技巧被称为磨合。

然而,“Sick”是很酷、很棒、
很棒、很好、很好的俚语。

所以,“病态研磨”意味着这是一个很好的
研磨,这是一个很酷的技巧,做得很好。

所以,这是一种赞美。

可能在滑板手
和其他做类似技巧的人中非常随意使用。

顺便说一句,你可以用
任何你想做的非常随意的恭维来代替“研磨”。

比如,“生病的晚餐,伙计。”

我不知道。

听起来有点年轻、随意
、酷的东西,我们可以用“生病”这个词

来形容。

“那是病态。”

我不使用生病,因为我不酷,但
如果你愿意,你可以使用“生病”这个词。

“病态烧伤”,或类似“病态骑行”。

我什至不知道。

不过,“生病”听起来很酷,很年轻,
无论如何。

但是,“病态研磨”是一个滑板术语。

滑板和其他类似的运动。

所以,希望对你有所帮助。

我不是一个很酷的人,我不能给你很酷的
例子,但你去吧。

下一个问题,希望不是滑板
问题,来自 Mohamed Al Dale。

嗨,穆罕默德。

“嗨,艾丽莎。

‘very’和‘vary’之间的发音有什么区别?”

啊哈。

“Very”和“vary”
在发音上没有区别。

非常令人兴奋,不是吗?

而已。

好吧。

这就是我本周想讨论的问题

非常感谢您发送这么多很棒的
问题。

现在有这么多,我不可能
在一个星期内全部回答。

但是,请继续发送,我喜欢阅读它们,
并确保如果您还没有发送,

请在 EnglishClass101.com/ask-alisha 上发送给我。

当然,如果你喜欢这个视频,
请一定要给它点个赞,

订阅频道,来EnglishClass101.com看看我们
的其他好的英语学习工具。

非常感谢您观看这一
集 Ask Alisha,我下周再见。

再见。

生病的视频。