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  • Hi this is Tutor Nick P and this is Lesson 352, The lesson today is the difference

  • between mean to do something and mean doing something. Yeah. They sound very

  • similar but the meaning is completely different. All right. So let's take a look

  • at the note here. If someone means to do something, it means that one plans or

  • intends to do a particular thing. So they haven't done it yet, but they were

  • thinking in the future I might be doing that. They're planning on doing it, So

  • they've been they've been meaning to do it. So mean to do it. So just use the

  • regular infinitive of to do. All right. Let's look at the next one here. If

  • something... that's the abbreviation of something. If something means doing

  • something , you know, something else of course. It means it involves doing a particular

  • thing. All right. So let's look at some examples here. The first one well this

  • will follow the mean to do something, I meant to bring some extra cash with me,

  • so I could buy it. Meaning you were planning on bringing some extra cash

  • with you. So you would say I meant to bring, so you meant to do something. You

  • were planning on doing it. I meant to bring some extra cash, some extra money

  • with you. Okay. Now the second one. Again would follow the example of mean doing

  • something. It means again it involves doing a particular thing. So being a

  • firefighter you know a fireman. A firefighter means risking your life to save others.

  • Yeah. So in order to... if you are a fireman this was , this is what it will involve.

  • You have to accept that. That you know, that's part of your job. You may have to

  • risk your life at times. So it involves that. So in that case, we say to mean and

  • then the ING form. It means doing something. It means risking your life . Okay.

  • Good All right. Let's have another example

  • here. I've been meaning to fix that but I cannot find the time.

  • All right. So here you're just using you know, the past perfect tense. But it's

  • still the same thing. You, you mean to do something, you were intending to do it.

  • You've been planning to do it. You've been meaning to fix that. But you know,

  • maybe you're too busy. You don't have the time to do it. All right. So again you

  • would use to fix here. Okay Let's look at the next one with the X. Now with the X,

  • this is a case where a student might make a mistake . Where they, they

  • might use the form of mean to do something , when they should be saying

  • mean doing something. So here being a parent means to take on more

  • responsibility. No. Here you should this means this involves this. This involves

  • it, this activity. So being a parent means taking on more responsibility. That's

  • part of the action of being a parent; It means doing something. It involves it.

  • It's part of it. Okay. And so again another example where student could make

  • a mistake with this. Being a good teacher means to do class preparation. No. Again

  • here you should not be using the infinitive. You mean that it involves

  • this. This will be part of your job. This is what you're supposed to do. It's part

  • of your responsibility in your job. Being a good teacher means doing class

  • preparation . You are supposed to prep, prepare before time. Get ready before time. So you

  • can do a better job as a teacher. That's basically what it means. Okay. Anyway I

  • hope you can clearly see the difference now between the two. I hope it was informative.

  • Thank you for your time. Bye-bye.

Hi this is Tutor Nick P and this is Lesson 352, The lesson today is the difference

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A2 初級 美國腔

輔導老師Nick P Lesson (352) Mean to Do Something和Mean Doing Something的區別。 (Tutor Nick P Lesson (352) The Difference Between Mean to Do Something and Mean Doing Something)

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    anitawu12 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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