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		Techniques and methods in Language Teaching > Just a matter of curiosity!     
			
		 Just a matter of curiosity! 
		
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 savvinka
 
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							| Just a matter of curiosity! 
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  Dear colleages,  Once I heard smb used to say "time" instead of "tense" describing a grammar  category. Is it acceptable in yr countries? Or is it rubbish !? Or I have probably  missed  smth, haven �t I? |  8 Jun 2010      
					
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 prevailingboy
 
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							| Hello,I heard such a usage but only in speeches,I didn �t come across a document writing  �past perfect time � etc. I think it is true in the speech,but not preferable in writing.My answer is: it is rubbish!! :) |  8 Jun 2010     
					
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 imanito
 
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							| hello! Not exactly. It �s not used like that.there is a difference between the two. 
 -Tense is a grammatical structure. 
 -Time describes when a certain situation has exactly occured. 
  For example, "The plane takes off at 7:00 tonight" 
 = The tense in this sentence is present simple tense but it refers to a future time because there is tonight. 
 
  it is so interesting. I hope I could help. |  8 Jun 2010     
					
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 imanito
 
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							| I had an epiphany   I have a simpler explanation. Tense has to do with verb inflection.It is what you see in front of you;that is, what is written or said (Explicit) Whereas time, it is the meaning regardless of the real form of the verb (implicit) 
 I hope my humble epiphany is correct and helped   |  8 Jun 2010     
					
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 savvinka
 
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							| Thank you, Imanito for yr kind explanation, Of course, I know the difference between two words. I simply suspected as it often happened with the languages, the borders are being rubbed away and people start using the words in a new way. I heard it from a respected person who is considered to be a very good English speaker, so I thought that it was probably acceptable ... |  8 Jun 2010     
					
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 Anna P
 
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							| In Portuguese, verbal tenses are called  �tempos verbais �.  Since  �tempo � means time, maybe savvinka has a good point. |  9 Jun 2010     
					
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 yulya_esl
 
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							| Tense - Perfect, Continuous, Simple
 Time - Past, Present, Future |  9 Jun 2010     
					
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