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ELA 3: Tenses and Literature 24 Views
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Description:
Feeling tense about tenses? Fear not. We'll massage that confusion right out of you.
Transcript
- 00:01
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:09
At this point, you probably know so much about tenses that it makes you…well…tense! [Girl with a tense shoulder]
- 00:14
We suggest a Swedish massage!
- 00:16
While you're enjoying that massage, let's review how we use the different tenses… [Girl getting a shoulder massage]
- 00:20
The present tense is for events that happen in the present…
Full Transcript
- 00:23
…the past tense is for events that happened in the past… [Girl dressed like a caveman]
- 00:26
…and the future tense is for events that will happen in the future. [Girl dressed as a robot]
- 00:29
Whoever named these things definitely deserves a trophy. [Dino and Coop with a trophy]
- 00:32
Maybe the, "Most Obvious Names" award.
- 00:34
But what about events that take place in fiction?
- 00:36
Turns out we have a special tense just for that: the literary present. [Red Riding Hood next to the wolf]
- 00:40
We know, we know…more tenses? [Coop looks depressed]
- 00:42
Don't worry, we'll make learning this feel as nice as a Swedish massage. [Coop getting a massage]
- 00:46
The literary present is really just a special form of present tenses.
- 00:50
So…why do we need it?
- 00:52
After all, any time you read a book, you know it was written in the past. [Guy using a typewriter in a dark room]
- 00:55
…unless you're creepily looking over the author's shoulder as they write it. [Lightning flashes and shows someone behind the man]
- 00:58
Plus, some stories take place way in the future, which is definitely not the present…
- 01:02
…no matter how futuristic your robot vacuum might seem. [Cat lying on a robot vacuum]
- 01:04
But rest assured, Shmoopers, there's a good reason for this new tense.
- 01:09
People who study literature think of stories as alive and present. [A book flies out of a mans hands and says happy birthday]
- 01:13
Whenever someone reads a story, that story comes to life.
- 01:15
What we mean is that when you read a story, the events of the story seem like they're happening
- 01:19
in real time to you, the reader. [Girl imaging the Little Red Riding Hood story]
- 01:22
Let's see how this literary present works with an example.
- 01:25
Say we're trying to describe one of the first parts of Alice in Wonderland: when Alice sees [White rabbit jumping away]
- 01:29
the white rabbit with the pocket watch, and chases after him.
- 01:32
Since the literary present is a present tense, we describe the event as if it were happening [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:37
right now, in the present, with a sentence like this: "Alice sees a white rabbit with
- 01:41
a pocket watch, and chases after him."
- 01:44
So all in all, the literary present is actually pretty easy to use! [Girl smiling in the classroom]
- 01:47
Definitely easier than catching a rabbit who's late for an appointment. [Girl looks shocked as the rabbit jumps past her]
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