Re: 'I speak good English' or 'I speak English well'?
- From: tony@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx (Tony Mountifield)
- Date: Mon, 13 Feb 2006 21:03:43 +0000 (UTC)
In article <cU2If.19508$wl.15629@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>,
MS <No.Way.Jose@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote:
A Sunday pub lunch disagreement needs resolving. A friend stated that 'I
speak good English' is actally not good English at all and that 'I speak
English well' is the correct way of saying it. Is she correct and, if so, why?
To me, there is a slight difference of meaning between the two.
In "I speak good English", "good" is an adjective denoting the quality of the
English being spoken.
In "I speak English well", "well" is an adverb denoting the skill of the
speaker at speaking English.
Ok, it's a subtle distinction. :-)
Is it possible to speak good English badly or bad English well?
Cheers
Tony
--
Tony Mountifield
Work: tony@xxxxxxxxxxxxx - http://www.softins.co.uk
Play: tony@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx - http://tony.mountifield.org
.
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