Is it wrong to say “ I was absent in your class today”
Let say I missed first class of the day and afterwards Is it wrong to say " I was absent in your class today". Is it grammatically correct? Someone here was suggesting that since I am using today I can not use past form of verb. What should be the grammatical explanation. Would someone please help?
*Correction : It should be "I was absent from your class today"
past-tense past-perfect
|
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Let say I missed first class of the day and afterwards Is it wrong to say " I was absent in your class today". Is it grammatically correct? Someone here was suggesting that since I am using today I can not use past form of verb. What should be the grammatical explanation. Would someone please help?
*Correction : It should be "I was absent from your class today"
past-tense past-perfect
Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
2
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
1
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46
|
show 7 more comments
Let say I missed first class of the day and afterwards Is it wrong to say " I was absent in your class today". Is it grammatically correct? Someone here was suggesting that since I am using today I can not use past form of verb. What should be the grammatical explanation. Would someone please help?
*Correction : It should be "I was absent from your class today"
past-tense past-perfect
Let say I missed first class of the day and afterwards Is it wrong to say " I was absent in your class today". Is it grammatically correct? Someone here was suggesting that since I am using today I can not use past form of verb. What should be the grammatical explanation. Would someone please help?
*Correction : It should be "I was absent from your class today"
past-tense past-perfect
past-tense past-perfect
edited Nov 27 '17 at 6:02
Ruhul
asked Nov 27 '17 at 5:22
RuhulRuhul
113
113
Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
2
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
1
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46
|
show 7 more comments
Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
2
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
1
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46
Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
2
2
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
1
1
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46
|
show 7 more comments
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what will be the supper star
gg g gb gg g gb h g g g h g f d s a v b n m , . v c
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1 Answer
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oldest
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votes
what will be the supper star
gg g gb gg g gb h g g g h g f d s a v b n m , . v c
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
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what will be the supper star
gg g gb gg g gb h g g g h g f d s a v b n m , . v c
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
54 secs ago
add a comment |
what will be the supper star
gg g gb gg g gb h g g g h g f d s a v b n m , . v c
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
what will be the supper star
gg g gb gg g gb h g g g h g f d s a v b n m , . v c
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
answered 14 mins ago
Hugh LivingstonHugh Livingston
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Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
New contributor
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Hugh Livingston is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.
Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
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Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
54 secs ago
Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
54 secs ago
Welcome to EL&U, Hugh. Did you mean to post an answer or what?
– Centaurus
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Would you think it wrong to say "I ate breakfast today?"
– Azor Ahai
Nov 27 '17 at 5:28
The implication is that it was earlier in the day that you were absent, so "was ... today" is fine. But one might quibble about being absent from a class, rather than being absent in a class.
– Lawrence
Nov 27 '17 at 5:46
2
I'd definitely quibble. absent from is idiomatic; absent in doesn't even make sense/
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 5:48
So If a say "I was absent from your class today" . Is it ok?
– Ruhul
Nov 27 '17 at 5:51
1
@WS2 Sorry to be such a jerk I missed your irony; absent on-line. :-)
– Xanne
Nov 27 '17 at 19:46