Difference between revisions of "Language/English/Vocabulary/Ago"

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*When we got talking I found out that I had been at school with her husband ten years before, (not ten years ago.)
*When we got talking I found out that I had been at school with her husband ten years before, (not ten years ago.)
==Related Lessons==
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Diminutives|Diminutives]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Not…as-such|Not…as such]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Prepare-IELTS|Prepare IELTS]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Colors|Colors]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Animal-Sounds|Animal Sounds]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/At-Home|At Home]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Latin-Greek-Hybrid-Words|Latin Greek Hybrid Words]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Language-registers|Language registers]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/English-words-of-Arabic-origin|English words of Arabic origin]]
* [[Language/English/Vocabulary/Although,-though,-but-and-however|Although, though, but and however]]

Revision as of 16:06, 26 February 2023

English-Language-PolyglotClub.jpg
Ago.jpg
Ago


Word order: six weeks ago

Ago follows an expression of time. 


Example

  • I met her six weeks ago. 

Tenses

An expression with ago refers to a finished time, and is normally used with a past tense, not a present perfect. 


Examples

  • She phoned a few minutes ago. (not She has phoned)
  • ‘Where’s Mike? '‘He was working outside ten minutes ago.’



The difference between ago and for

Ago says how long before the present something happened; for (with a past tense) says how long it lasted. 


Compare

  • He died three years ago. (= three years before now) (not He died for three years, or for three years ago.)
  • He was ill for three years before he died. (= His illness lasted three years.)

Ago and before with time expressions: counting back

We use "ago" with a past tense and a time expression to ‘count back' from the present; to say how long before now something happened.

We can use "before" in the same way (with a past perfect tense) to count back from a past moment. 


Compare

  • I met that woman in Scotland three years ago.(not three years before/ before three years)
  • When we got talking I found out that I had been at school with her husband ten years before, (not ten years ago.)

Related Lessons