Question
26 May
- Japanese
-
English (US)
Question about English (US)
What’s the difference of the meaning between these examples?
The audience came out of the lecture hall looking inspired.
The audience looked inspired came out of the lecture hall.
What’s the difference of the meaning between these examples?
The audience came out of the lecture hall looking inspired.
The audience looked inspired came out of the lecture hall.
The audience came out of the lecture hall looking inspired.
The audience looked inspired came out of the lecture hall.
Answers
26 May
Featured answer
- English (US)
@kiosuke first one is great. For the second one maybe say:
“The audience looked inspired as they came out of the lecture hall.” You can even say “walked out” if you want.
Read more comments
- Portuguese (Brazil)
The 2nd one is incorrect, no one would really say that. The correct way is “The audience came out of the lecture hall looking inspired.”
- English (US)
@kiosuke first one is great. For the second one maybe say:
“The audience looked inspired as they came out of the lecture hall.” You can even say “walked out” if you want.
- Japanese
- Japanese
- English (US)
@kiosuke it shows they are doing two things at once. Walking out of the lecture hall AND looking inspired.
- Japanese
@Hikki07
Ah I have put 2 verbs in 1 sentence, so I have to separate into 2 sentences, and join them with “as” right?
Ah I have put 2 verbs in 1 sentence, so I have to separate into 2 sentences, and join them with “as” right?
- English (US)
- Japanese

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