Understand English Grammar and Sentence Structure Strange Sentences

Hi, I’m Marie.

Welcome to Oxford Online English!

In this lesson, you’re going to see nine
strange sentences.

Have you seen the nine sentences yet?

If not, look below the video and read them.

What do you think?

Which ones are correct?

Actually, all nine sentences are correct.

But, we’re sure at least some of these sentences
look weird to you.

In this video, we’ll analyse each of these
sentences, so that you can understand how

they work.

Look at our first three sentences: ‘Have
you ever had to have a tooth extracted?’

‘I would have had to stay longer if I hadn’t
had to go to have my car repaired.’

‘All the medicine he had had had had little
effect.’

What connects these three sentences?

All three sentences play with different ways
to use ‘have’.

‘Have’ can be a main verb which describes
a state, like ‘I have a new computer,’

or which describes an action, like ‘I’m
having lunch right now.’

‘Have’ can also be an auxiliary verb,
which is used in perfect verb forms.

There’s the verb ‘have to’, which you
use to talk about obligations and rules.

Finally, there are some fixed phrases with
‘have’, like ‘have something done’,

which you use when you pay someone else to
do something for you.

For example, you could say, ‘I had my hair
cut yesterday,’ meaning that you paid someone

else to cut your hair.

When you use many of these forms of ‘have’
in one sentence, you can get strange results,

like: ‘Have you ever had to have a tooth
extracted?’

Here, you use ‘have’ in three different
ways.

The first ‘have’ is an auxiliary verb,
because the question is present perfect.

The second ‘have’ is part of the verb
‘have to’, to talk about an obligation.

Finally, the third ‘have’ is part of the
phrase ‘have a tooth extracted’.

What does this mean?

Do you remember?

It means that you’re paying someone else
to do something for you.

Here, it means that you’re paying a dentist
to pull your tooth out; you’re not trying

to do it yourself.

So, can you explain the meaning of the full
sentence?

The question is asking about your past experience,
and whether you’ve ever needed to go to

the dentist’s to have a tooth pulled out.

Does this make sense now?

If not, remember that you can always go back
and review parts of the video which are difficult

for you.

Let’s look at our next sentence: ‘I would
have had to stay longer if I hadn’t had

to go to have my car repaired.’

Can you work out what’s going on here?

Here’s a clue: it’s similar to the last
sentence you saw, but a little more complicated.

The first ‘have’ is an auxiliary.

You use ‘have’ after ‘would’ to show
that you’re talking about the past.

In this case, you’re talking about the imaginary
past: something which didn’t really happen.

Then, you use ‘have to’ to talk about
an obligation.

The third ‘have’, after ‘if’, is another
auxiliary.

Again, you use ‘have’ here to show that
you’re talking about the past, in this case

the imaginary past.

There’s another ‘have to’, again expressing
an obligation.

The final ‘have’ is part of the phrase
‘have my car repaired’, meaning that you’re

paying someone else to repair your car for
you.

Now, you should be able to explain the overall
meaning of the sentence; can you do it?

The sentence means that you needed to take
your car to be repaired, but if you hadn’t

needed to do this, you would have needed to
stay longer at the meeting or event or whatever

you’re talking about.

What about our last sentence?

‘All the medicine he had had had had little
effect.’

This one is a little different.

Can you see what’s happening here?

Two of the ‘hads’ are auxiliary verbs,
and two are main verbs.

This sentence is talking about sometime in
the past, and it says that all of the medicine

he had taken before that time hadn’t worked.

The sentence uses two meanings of ‘have’:
‘have medicine’, meaning to take medicine,

and ‘have an effect’, which is a fixed
collocation, like ‘have a result’ or ‘have

an influence’.

This sentence looks very confusing when it’s
written down, but in speech it hopefully sounds

more logical.

Let’s try once more: ‘All the medicine he h/ə/d
had || h/ə/d had little effect.’

The two auxiliary verbs are pronounced weakly,
meaning that the ‘h’ sound either partly

or completely disappears, and the vowel sound
is reduced to a schwa: /ə/.

The main verbs have their full pronunciation,
with /h/ and a full vowel sound: /hæd/.

Also, this sentence is very grammatically
simple; there’s a subject: ‘all the medicine

he had had’, a verb, ‘had had’, and
a complement: ‘little effect’.

You can hear that there’s a short pause
between the subject and the verb.

This helps to make all of the ‘hads’ clear
to your listener.

This is an important point, especially for
your listening: ‘have’ as an auxiliary

verb needs to be reduced and pronounced weakly
in most cases, while ‘have’ in main verbs

keeps its full pronunciation.

And if you’re thinking, ‘pronounced weakly’?

What is he talking about?

Learn about weak forms; there’s at least
one video on our channel which will explain

this to you, and it’s a really useful topic
to study.

Okay, let’s move on and look at our next
group of sentences.

Let’s read the sentences together: ‘The
party was almost over at around ten thirty.’

‘The cat jumped out from behind the sofa.’

‘She gets in in the morning.’

Before we look at these, we want to ask you
a question.

What do prepositions do?

Prepositions can do many things.

They can be used to express time, like ‘It
starts at eight o’clock.’

They can be used to express where something
is; for example, ‘It’s in the cupboard,

on the bottom shelf.’

They can express motion, as in, ‘She walked
towards the lake.’

Prepositions can be used in combination with
nouns, verbs, or adjectives; they can also

be used in phrasal verbs, like ‘get up’.

Finally, prepositions can also function as
adjectives in some cases.

For example, the preposition ‘over’ can
be used to mean ‘finished’.

Like you saw with the different meanings of
‘have’, when you combine all of these

different ways to use prepositions in one
sentence, you can get some strange-looking

results.

Let’s look at our first sentence: ‘The
party was almost over at around ten thirty.’

This sentence contains three prepositions
all together.

What are they all doing?

The first, ‘over’, technically isn’t
a preposition; it’s an adjective which describes

the noun ‘party’, and it means ‘finished’.

Then, you have two prepositions describing
when the party finished: ‘at around ten

thirty’.

The second sentence is similar.

The word ‘out’ is technically an adverb;
it adds information to the verb ‘jumped’;

then, you have two prepositions in a row.

Let’s look: ‘The cat jumped out from behind
the sofa.’

Can you explain what the prepositions are
doing here?

‘Out’—which, remember, is an adverb—goes
with the verb ‘jump’.

The cat jumped out, meaning that the cat wasn’t
visible before it jumped.

Then, the two prepositions describe the movement
and position of the cat.

They tell you where the cat was before it
jumped out: it was behind the sofa.

Overall, the sentence means that the cat was
hidden behind the sofa, and then it jumped

out and you saw it.

Finally, let’s look at our last sentence,
which is possibly the most confusing!

She gets in in the morning.

Can you see what’s happening here?

Although it looks strange to have the word
‘in’ twice in a row, it’s both logical

and quite common in English.

Like the other sentences in this section,
one of the ‘ins’ isn’t actually a preposition.

The first ‘in’ is an adverb, and it’s
part of the phrasal verb ‘get in’, meaning

to arrive.

Then, the second ‘in’ is a preposition
of time: it tells you when she arrives.

So, the meaning of this sentence is: ‘She
arrives in the morning.’

There’s something which connects all of
the sentences you’ve seen.

These sentences can be confusing because the
same word in English can do many different

jobs.

For example, ‘have’ can be a main verb
or an auxiliary verb.

‘In’ can be an adverb or a preposition.

If you understand parts of speech and how
these sentences are constructed, you’ll

see that all of these sentences follow the
rules, even if they look weird!

Next, let’s look at our last group of sentences.

Let’s read the sentences together: ‘That
said, that article that I read argues that

that interpretation is incorrect.'

‘If it’s like that, then that’s it.’

‘There are their bags, over there.’

Again, these sentences are confusing because
the same word, like ‘that’ or ‘there’,

can do more than one job.

Also, in one sentence, you have to deal with
homophones—words which have the same pronunciation,

but a different meaning.

Let’s start with a question: what does ‘that’
mean?

How many ways can you think of to use ‘that’?

First, ‘that’ can be used as a determiner,
like ‘this’ or ‘these’.

You can use ‘that’ to point to one thing
which is distant from you.

You can use ‘that’ as a conjunction, for
example, ‘She told me that I had a nice

voice.’

‘That’ can be a relative pronoun, similar
to ‘who’ or ‘which’.

Finally, ‘that’ is used in many fixed
phrases, like ‘that’s it’, which means

that something is finished.

With this information, can you understand
what’s happening in our sentences?

If not, don’t worry; we’ll look together!

Look at the first sentence: ‘That said,
that article that I read argues that that

interpretation is incorrect.’

First, you have ‘that said’, which is
a linking phrase.

‘That said’ introduces a contrasting idea.

It’s similar to words like ‘however’,
although it’s more colloquial.

The second ‘that’ goes with the word ‘article’.

It means that you referred to this article
before.

The third ‘that’ is a relative pronoun.

It has the same meaning as ‘which’, and
you could also use ‘which’ in this sentence

without changing the meaning.

Then, the fourth ‘that’ is a conjunction
which goes with the verb ‘argue’.

It’s not necessary; you could leave it out
of the sentence and it would still be correct.

Finally, the fifth ‘that’ specifies the
word ‘interpretation’.

Like ‘that article’, this means that you’ve
mentioned this before, and now you’re referring

back to it.

For this sentence, pronunciation is also very
important if you’re reading it aloud.

‘That’ used as a relative pronoun or a
conjunction is often pronounced weakly: /ðət/.

When you use ‘that’ as a determiner, or
in phrases like ‘that said’, it has its

full pronunciation: /ðæt/.

Listen and try to hear the difference: /ðæt/
said, /ðæt/ article /ðət/ I read argues

/ðət/ /ðæt/ interpretation is incorrect.

Using the weak and strong pronunciations correctly
helps your listener to understand the grammatical

structure of the sentence.

What about our second sentence?

Let’s read it together: ‘If it’s like
that, then that’s it.’

This sentence is hard to understand not only
because of the different uses of ‘that’,

but because it has no context.

First, let’s try to understand the end of
the sentence: ‘that’s it’.

Have you seen this phrase before?

Do you know what it means?

‘That’s it’ means something is finished.

For example, imagine you’re ordering some
food in a café.

You order some sandwiches, some muffins, some
coffee, and so on.

The server asks you, “Would you like anything
else?”

You answer, “No thanks; that’s it,”
meaning that you’ve finished your order.

The first ‘that’ in this sentence refers
to something which has been mentioned before,

but without context there’s no way to know
what it means.

Let’s try to give the sentence some context.

Imagine you have a car, and your car breaks
down.

You have to take it to the garage to have
it repaired.

They call you and tell you that the car needs
a new engine, and that the new engine will

cost more than the car is worth.

What would you do in this situation?

Would you pay for the new engine?

Probably not.

You might say, “If it’s like that, then
that’s it,” meaning that if the situation

is like this, then your car is junk, and there’s
no point trying to repair it.

So, this sentence is probably quite pessimistic.

It’s the kind of thing you might say to
admit defeat.

You’re saying, ‘If that’s the way things
are, then there’s no point trying any more.’

What about our last sentence?

This one is slightly different: ‘There are
their bags, over there.’

There are two points to think about here.

First, ‘there’ has more than one meaning.

‘There’ can be used to say that something
exists, as in, ‘There’s a snake in the

toilet!’

‘There’ can also refer to a place which
is distant from you.

Secondly, words can have the same pronunciation
but different spellings and different meanings,

like ‘there’ T-H-E-R-E and ‘their’
T-H-E-I-R.

In this sentence, the first ‘there’ is
used to say that something exists.

The second ‘there’ is used to refer to
a place.

‘Over there’ means a place which you can
see, but which is not close to you.

‘Their bags’ explains who the bags belong
to.

So, this sentence could be an answer to the
question, ‘Where are their bags?’

They’ve lost their bags, and someone wants
to know where they are.

You see them somewhere, so you answer, ‘There
are their bags,’ and then you point to the

bags as you say, ‘over there.’

What about you?

Can you think of any examples of weird sentences
which you find really confusing?

Let us know in the comments!

Thanks for watching!

See you next time!

你好,我是玛丽。

欢迎来到牛津在线英语!

在本课中,您将看到九个
奇怪的句子。

你见过这九句话吗?

如果没有,请查看视频下方并阅读它们。

你怎么认为?

哪些是正确的?

实际上,所有九句话都是正确的。

但是,我们确信这些句子中至少有一些
对你来说看起来很奇怪。

在本视频中,我们将分析这些
句子中的每一个,以便您了解

它们的工作原理。

看看我们的前三句话:“

你曾经拔过牙吗?” 没有什么
影响。”

这三个句子有什么联系?

这三个句子都以不同的
方式使用“拥有”。 “

Have”可以是描述状态的主要动词
,例如“我有一台新电脑”,

或者描述动作,例如“我现在正在
吃午饭”。“

Have”也可以是助动词,
即 以完美动词形式使用。

有动词“必须”,你
用它来谈论义务和规则。

最后,还有一些带有
“have”的固定短语,比如“have something done”,

当你付钱让别人为你做某事时,你会使用这些短语

例如,你可以说,“我
昨天剪了头发”,意思是你付钱给

别人剪头发。

当你在一个句子中使用许多这些形式的“有”
时,你会得到奇怪的结果,

比如:“你曾经拔过牙
吗?”

在这里,你以三种不同的方式使用“有”

第一个“have”是助动词,
因为问题是完美的。

第二个“拥有”是动词
“必须”的一部分,用于谈论义务。

最后,第三个“有”是
短语“拔牙”的一部分。

这是什么意思?

你是否记得?

这意味着你付钱给别人
为你做某事。

在这里,这意味着您要花钱请
牙医拔牙; 你不是想

自己做。

那么,你能解释一下完整句子的意思
吗?

问题是询问您过去的经历,
以及您是否曾经需要

去牙医那里拔牙。

现在这有意义吗?

如果没有,请记住,您可以随时返回
并查看对您来说有困难的视频部分

让我们看看我们的下一句话:“
如果我不必

去修理我的车,我将不得不待更长时间。”

你能弄清楚这里发生了什么吗?

这里有一个线索:它和
你看到的最后一句话相似,但稍微复杂一些。

第一个“有”是辅助。

你在“would”之后使用“have”来
表明你在谈论过去。

在这种情况下,你谈论的是想象中的
过去:没有真正发生的事情。

然后,您使用“必须”来
谈论义务。

在“if”之后的第三个“have”是另一个
助动词。

再次,你在这里使用“有”来表明
你在谈论过去,在这种情况

下是想象的过去。

还有另一个“必须”,再次表达
了义务。

最后的“have”是
“have my car repaired”这句话的一部分,意思是你

付钱给别人
帮你修车。

现在,您应该能够解释句子的整体
含义了; 你能做到吗?

这句话的意思是你需要把
你的车修好,但如果你

不需要这样做,你就需要
在会议或活动或你正在谈论的任何事情上停留更长时间

我们的最后一句话呢?

“他吃的所有药都没有什么
效果。”

这个有点不同。

你能看到这里发生了什么吗?

其中两个“hads”是助动词
,两个是主要动词。

这句话是在说过去的某个时候,

说他之前吃的药都没有效果。

这句话使用了“有”的两种含义:
“有药”,意思是吃药

,“有效果”,这是一个固定的
搭配,如“有结果”或“

有影响”。

这句话写下来时看起来很混乱
,但在演讲中希望听起来

更合乎逻辑。

让我们再试一次:‘他/ə/d吃过的所有药
|| h/ə/d 几乎没有效果。

' 两个助动词的发音很弱,
意味着’h’声音部分

或完全消失,
元音减少为schwa:/ə/。

主要动词有完整的发音,
带有/h/和完整的元音:/hæd/。

此外,这句话在语法上非常
简单; 有一个主语:‘all the drug

he had’,一个动词,‘had had’,还有
一个补语:‘little effect’。

您可以听到主语和动词之间有短暂的停顿

这有助于让你的听众清楚地了解所有的“有”

这是很重要的一点,尤其是对于
你的听力:“have”作为

助动词在大多数情况下需要减少和弱发音
,而主要动词中的“have”

保持完整的发音。

如果你在想,“发音很弱”?

他在说什么?

了解弱形式; 我们的频道上至少有
一个视频可以

向您解释这一点,这是一个非常有用的
学习主题。

好的,让我们继续看看我们的下一
组句子。

让我们一起读这些句子:“
晚会在十点三十分快结束了。”

“猫从沙发后面跳了出来。”“

她早上进来。”

在我们看这些之前,我们想问你
一个问题 问题。

介词有什么作用?

介词可以做很多事情。

它们可以用来表示时间,例如“
八点钟开始”。

它们可以用来表示某物在
哪里; 例如,“它在橱柜里,

在最下面的架子上。”

它们可以表达动作,例如,“她
向湖边走去。”

介词可以与
名词、动词或形容词结合使用; 它们也

可以用于短语动词,例如“起床”。

最后,介词
在某些情况下也可以用作形容词。

例如,介词“over”
可以用来表示“完成”。

就像你看到的“have”的不同含义一样
,当你将所有这些

不同的方式结合起来在一个句子中使用介词时
,你会得到一些看起来很奇怪的

结果。

让我们看一下我们的第一句话:“
晚会在十点三十左右快结束了。”

这句话包含三个
介词。

他们都在做什么?

第一个“over”在技术上
不是介词。 它是

形容名词“聚会”的形容词,意思是“完成”。

然后,你有两个介词来
描述聚会结束的时间:“大约十点

三十”。

第二句类似。

“out”这个词在技术上是一个副词。
它将信息添加到动词“跳跃”;

那么,你连续有两个介词。

让我们看看:“猫从沙发后面跳了出来
。”

你能解释一下介词
在这里做什么吗?

“Out”——记住,它是一个副词——
与动词“jump”一起使用。

猫跳了出来,这意味着猫
在跳之前是看不见的。

然后,这两个介词描述了猫的运动
和位置。

他们告诉你猫跳出来之前在哪里
:它在沙发后面。

总的来说,这句话的意思是猫
藏在沙发后面,然后它跳

了出来,你看到了。

最后,让我们看看我们的最后一句话,
这可能是最令人困惑的!

她早上进来。

你能看到这里发生了什么吗?

虽然
连续两次出现“in”这个词看起来很奇怪,但它

在英语中既合乎逻辑又很常见。

与本节中的其他句子一样,
其中一个“ins”实际上并不是介词。

第一个“in”是副词,它
是短语动词“get in”的一部分,意思

是到达。

然后,第二个“in”是时间的介词
:它告诉你她什么时候到达。

所以,这句话的意思是:“她
早上到达。”

有一些东西连接
了你见过的所有句子。

这些句子可能会令人困惑,因为
英语中的同一个词可以完成许多不同的

工作。

例如,“have”可以是主要动词
或助动词。

“在”可以是副词或介词。

如果您了解词性以及
这些句子的构造方式,您会

发现所有这些句子都遵循
规则,即使它们看起来很奇怪!

接下来,让我们看看我们的最后一组句子。

让我们一起阅读这些句子:“
也就是说,我读的那篇文章认为

这种解释是不正确的。”

“如果是这样,那就这样了。”

“那里有他们的包。”

同样,这些句子令人困惑,
因为同一个词,如“那个”或“那里”,

可以做不止一项工作。

此外,在一个句子中,您必须处理
同音字——发音相同

但含义不同的单词。

让我们从一个问题开始:“那个”
是什么意思?

你能想到多少种使用“那个”的方法?

首先,“that”可以用作限定词,
例如“this”或“these”。

您可以使用“that”来指向
离您很远的一件事。

您可以将“that”用作连词,
例如,“她告诉我我的声音很好听”

“that”可以是相对代词,
类似于“who”或“which”。

最后,“that”用于许多固定
短语,例如“that’s it”,

表示某事已经完成。

有了这些信息,你能理解
我们句子中发生了什么吗?

如果没有,请不要担心; 我们一起看看!

看第一句话:“也就是说
,我读的那篇文章认为这种

解释是不正确的。”

首先,你有“that said”,这是
一个连接短语。

“那说”引入了一个对比鲜明的想法。

它类似于“然而”之类的词,
尽管它更通俗一些。

第二个“那个”与“文章”一词一起使用。

这意味着你之前提到过这篇文章

第三个“that”是相对代词。

它与“which”具有相同的含义,
您也可以在这句话中使用“which”

而不改变含义。

然后,第四个“that”是
与动词“argue”一起使用的连词。

这不是必需的; 你可以把它
从句子中去掉,它仍然是正确的。

最后,第五个“那个”指定了
“解释”这个词。

就像“那篇文章”一样,这意味着你
以前提到过这个,现在你又提到

了它。

对于这句话,
如果你大声朗读,发音也很重要。

用作关系代词或连词的“that”
通常发音较弱:/ðət/。

当您使用“that”作为限定
词时,或在“that said”之类的短语中,它有

完整的发音:/ðæt/。

听并试着听出区别: /ðæt/
说,/ðæt/ 文章 /ðət/ 我读到争论

/ðət/ /ðæt/ 解释不正确。

正确使用弱发音和强发音
可以帮助您的听众理解句子的语法

结构。

我们的第二句话呢?

让我们一起读一下:“如果是
这样,那就这样吧。”

这句话很难理解,不仅
因为“that”的用法不同,

而且因为它没有上下文。

首先,让我们试着理解
句子的结尾:“就是这样”。

你以前见过这句话吗?

你知道这意味着什么吗?

“就是这样”意味着某事已经完成。

例如,假设您
在咖啡馆点菜。

你点了一些三明治、一些松饼、一些
咖啡等等。

服务员问你:“你还想要
什么吗?”

你回答说:“不,谢谢; 就是这样,”
意思是你已经完成了你的订单。

这句话中的第一个“that”指的
是前面提到过的东西,

但没有上下文就无法
知道它的含义。

让我们试着给这个句子一些上下文。

想象一下,你有一辆车,你的车坏
了。

你必须把它带到车库
修理。

他们打电话给你,告诉你汽车需要
一个新引擎,而新引擎的

成本将超过汽车的价值。

在这个情况下,你会怎么做?

你愿意为新引擎买单吗?

可能不是。

你可能会说,“如果是这样,那就
这样了”,意思是如果情况

是这样,那么你的车就是垃圾,
试图修理它是没有意义的。

所以,这句话大概是相当悲观的。

这是你可能会说
承认失败的事情。

你是在说,‘如果事情
是这样的,那么再尝试也没有意义。’

我们的最后一句话呢?

这一个略有不同:“那里有
他们的包。”

这里有两点需要考虑。

首先,“那里”有不止一个含义。

“那里”可以用来表示某物的
存在,例如“厕所里有条蛇

!”

“那里”也可以指
离你很远的地方。

其次,单词可以有相同的发音
但不同的拼写和不同的含义,

例如“there” T-H-E-R-E 和“their”
T-H-E-I-R。

在这句话中,第一个“there”
用于表示某物存在。

第二个“那里”用于指代
一个地方。

“那边”是指你可以
看到但离你不近的地方。

“他们的包”解释了这些包属于谁

所以,这句话可以回答这个
问题,“他们的包在哪里?”

他们丢了包,有人
想知道他们在哪里。

你在某个地方看到他们,所以你回答说,“
有他们的包”,然后你指着

包说,“在那边”。

你呢?

你能想出一些你觉得很困惑的奇怪句子的例子
吗?

让我们在评论中知道!

感谢收看!

下次见!