Because you were giving Tony and I such
bad instruction getting to you’re house; we could of gone the wrong way and
ended up completely lost and being to late for the party.
1. Verb
tense:
The instructions were given at a point in time, so we need to use the
simple past tense (rather than the past progressive).
2.
Pronoun use:
In the first clause, "you" is the subject of the verb and "Tony and I" is
the object, so we need to use the objective case for the pronoun ("me").
We would only use the expression "Tony and I" if it were the subject. For example: "Tony and I got lost".
3.
Number error:
"Instruction" is a countable noun, so we need to add an article ("a" or "the") or make the word plural ("instructions"). In this case, we would use the plural since there was likely to be more than one instruction given.
4. Missing
word:
We must convey the relationship between "instructions" and "getting to your house", so we need a preposition. Both "on" and "for" are acceptable.
5. Word
confusion:
Try not to confuse the contraction of "you are" ("you're") with the possessive pronoun ("your"). In this case, we need the latter.
6.
Modal:
After a modal verb (like "could"), we need to use use the base form of
verb. In this case, the verb is "have". If we contract this verb, it sounds like "of" -- but we must not confuse the two. The phrase should be written "could've".
7. Verb
form:
This last clause needs the past participle, rather than the progressive, form of the verb "be" (i.e., "been").
8. Word
confusion:
When modifying an adjective, we use the adverb "too" (rather than the preposition "to").
9.
Punctuation:
A semicolon is used to join two closely-related independent clauses. But in this sentence, the first clause is dependent, so we should use a comma, not a semicolon.
Possible solution:
Because you gave Tony and me such bad instructions for getting to
your house, we could have gone the wrong way and ended up completely lost and
been too late for the party.
3 comments:
Hi Michael,
I posted my extended explanation here: https://www.blogger.com/comment.g?blogID=2869943374408609048&postID=1007334207387280243
Hope that clears it a bit.
Thanks, Olena.
You wrote: "It seemed to me that to get a result in the end, I couldn't have used 'could have + PP' in this sentence. (If they didn't get lost, and didn't go the wrong way, etc. then there is no 'unfortunate' result, right?)"
I understand your thinking. And I can appreciate the uncertainty caused by the poor construction of the original sentence.
But I don't think it was an accident that the writer said "could [have]".
An English speaker will often say something like "You could've killed me [by] doing that!"
The 'unfortunate' result is the confusion and risk.
Oh, I see what you mean. I agree that it sounds just right to my ear as well. Unfortunately, given I'm not a native speaker, I tend to over-think myself and rely to much on the 'official rules'.
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