Started in 1987 vs. Starting in 1987Difference between “such things as” and “things such as”?“Rambling” versus “Babbling”?I don't want someone doing something?“Object pronoun + all” = ? = “all + of + Object pronoun”Using perfect constructions after “since”“if so” or “if yes” which one is correct?a noise or any noise(s)which starts, startingWhat is the meaning of “what you have in water” in the following sentence?How can i use both of them correctly (“there + a place” in a sentence)
How can "mimic phobia" be cured or prevented?
Picking the different solutions to the time independent Schrodinger eqaution
Do the primes contain an infinite almost arithmetic progression?
Can I visit Japan without a visa?
Yosemite Fire Rings - What to Expect?
How to explain what's wrong with this application of the chain rule?
Can I still be respawned if I die by falling off the map?
Can a College of Swords bard use a Blade Flourish option on an opportunity attack provoked by their own Dissonant Whispers spell?
Why did the EU agree to delay the Brexit deadline?
How does a computer interpret real numbers?
What should you do if you miss a job interview (deliberately)?
Why can Carol Danvers change her suit colours in the first place?
How to hide some fields of struct in C?
How could a planet have erratic days?
What is Cash Advance APR?
Can disgust be a key component of horror?
photorec photo recovery software not seeing my mounted filesystem - trying to use photorec to recover lost jpegs
Calculating total slots
Why is it that I can sometimes guess the next note?
Quoting Keynes in a lecture
What should you do when eye contact makes your subordinate uncomfortable?
Limits and Infinite Integration by Parts
Temporarily disable WLAN internet access for children, but allow it for adults
Is there a way to get `mathscr' with lower case letters in pdfLaTeX?
Started in 1987 vs. Starting in 1987
Difference between “such things as” and “things such as”?“Rambling” versus “Babbling”?I don't want someone doing something?“Object pronoun + all” = ? = “all + of + Object pronoun”Using perfect constructions after “since”“if so” or “if yes” which one is correct?a noise or any noise(s)which starts, startingWhat is the meaning of “what you have in water” in the following sentence?How can i use both of them correctly (“there + a place” in a sentence)
I think both started and starting make sense. Which is preferred? Is there any subtle difference in meaning?
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
meaning usage
add a comment |
I think both started and starting make sense. Which is preferred? Is there any subtle difference in meaning?
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
meaning usage
add a comment |
I think both started and starting make sense. Which is preferred? Is there any subtle difference in meaning?
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
meaning usage
I think both started and starting make sense. Which is preferred? Is there any subtle difference in meaning?
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
meaning usage
meaning usage
edited Mar 19 at 21:10
Kodos Johnson
1347
1347
asked Mar 19 at 7:05
LifeispicnicLifeispicnic
33018
33018
add a comment |
add a comment |
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
The two sentences are both grammatically correct, but they mean different things.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says two things: that the festival was started in 1987, and that the festival exhibits mangoes. (This sentence would be clearer if it said "First held in 1987" instead of "Started in 1987".)
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says that the festival exhibits mangoes, and that 1987 is the year that the festival started doing that.
This sentence still sounds a little awkward, though. I would phrase it like this:
Each year starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
add a comment |
Your first sentence sounds fine and natural to me.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are standing in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") looking back into the past ("started"). In the past it was started, now it exhibits. It's clear that the festival itself started in 1987, and that the present activities are "exhibiting" and "providing".
Your second sentence sounds a little odd.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are in the past ("starting") progressing towards the future (or the present, or the more recent past). Then suddenly we're in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") and (grammatically speaking) we don't know how we got here! It sounds like the "exhibiting" and "providing" started in 1987, not the festival.
A third way is:
Starting in 1987, the festival (has) exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and (has) provided a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Now everything happens in the past, however, I don't think this is what you want. It would appear this festival is still being run, so you want to use the present tense. Of course there are other tenses you could use as well as some that wouldn't work, and whichever tenses you decide to use should be consistent with each other. Fix your grammatical feet in once base tense (most likely the present), and go from there.
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
add a comment |
There is a thin difference in the meaning of both the sentences which becomes very obvious if we look closely. To summarize:
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival held in 1987 for the first time.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival exhibited varieties of mangoes in 1987 for the first time.
New contributor
add a comment |
The second version uses a present participle to refer to a past action. At best, it is awkward and arguably, it is grammatically incorrect.
New contributor
add a comment |
Your Answer
StackExchange.ready(function()
var channelOptions =
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "481"
;
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);
StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
createEditor();
);
else
createEditor();
);
function createEditor()
StackExchange.prepareEditor(
heartbeatType: 'answer',
autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
convertImagesToLinks: false,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: null,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader:
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
,
noCode: true, onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
);
);
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f201264%2fstarted-in-1987-vs-starting-in-1987%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
4 Answers
4
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The two sentences are both grammatically correct, but they mean different things.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says two things: that the festival was started in 1987, and that the festival exhibits mangoes. (This sentence would be clearer if it said "First held in 1987" instead of "Started in 1987".)
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says that the festival exhibits mangoes, and that 1987 is the year that the festival started doing that.
This sentence still sounds a little awkward, though. I would phrase it like this:
Each year starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
add a comment |
The two sentences are both grammatically correct, but they mean different things.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says two things: that the festival was started in 1987, and that the festival exhibits mangoes. (This sentence would be clearer if it said "First held in 1987" instead of "Started in 1987".)
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says that the festival exhibits mangoes, and that 1987 is the year that the festival started doing that.
This sentence still sounds a little awkward, though. I would phrase it like this:
Each year starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
add a comment |
The two sentences are both grammatically correct, but they mean different things.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says two things: that the festival was started in 1987, and that the festival exhibits mangoes. (This sentence would be clearer if it said "First held in 1987" instead of "Started in 1987".)
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says that the festival exhibits mangoes, and that 1987 is the year that the festival started doing that.
This sentence still sounds a little awkward, though. I would phrase it like this:
Each year starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The two sentences are both grammatically correct, but they mean different things.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says two things: that the festival was started in 1987, and that the festival exhibits mangoes. (This sentence would be clearer if it said "First held in 1987" instead of "Started in 1987".)
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
The above sentence says that the festival exhibits mangoes, and that 1987 is the year that the festival started doing that.
This sentence still sounds a little awkward, though. I would phrase it like this:
Each year starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
edited Mar 19 at 14:03
Community♦
1
1
answered Mar 19 at 7:21
Tanner SwettTanner Swett
1,583611
1,583611
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
add a comment |
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
2
2
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
My gut feeling says there should be a comma after "Each year" - or you have to switch it: "Starting in 1987, each year the festival..." Is it a good gut?
– mic
Mar 19 at 12:46
2
2
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
The present tense "exhibits" doesn't work with "Starting in 1987", to me. You need some kind of past tense, as you bring in at the end.
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:48
4
4
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
I don't believe the "starting in" sentence particularly conveys that the exhibition of mangoes started in that year. It only says the festival itself started that year. However, "Starting in 1987, the festival has exhibited..." does make that link, because, just as in your third example, "starting" refers to "has exhibited" rather than to "festival".
– Monty Harder
Mar 19 at 15:03
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
Your rewording says they exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes each year. I expect the festival started smaller and grew. Maybe the first year it only exhibited 100 varieties of mangoes, and now it's more than 550 varieties. The original sentence is trying to say two different things: when the festival started, and what it does now. Your rewording is trying to combine the two ideas together so you end up with when the activities started.
– CJ Dennis
Mar 19 at 22:42
add a comment |
Your first sentence sounds fine and natural to me.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are standing in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") looking back into the past ("started"). In the past it was started, now it exhibits. It's clear that the festival itself started in 1987, and that the present activities are "exhibiting" and "providing".
Your second sentence sounds a little odd.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are in the past ("starting") progressing towards the future (or the present, or the more recent past). Then suddenly we're in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") and (grammatically speaking) we don't know how we got here! It sounds like the "exhibiting" and "providing" started in 1987, not the festival.
A third way is:
Starting in 1987, the festival (has) exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and (has) provided a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Now everything happens in the past, however, I don't think this is what you want. It would appear this festival is still being run, so you want to use the present tense. Of course there are other tenses you could use as well as some that wouldn't work, and whichever tenses you decide to use should be consistent with each other. Fix your grammatical feet in once base tense (most likely the present), and go from there.
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
add a comment |
Your first sentence sounds fine and natural to me.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are standing in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") looking back into the past ("started"). In the past it was started, now it exhibits. It's clear that the festival itself started in 1987, and that the present activities are "exhibiting" and "providing".
Your second sentence sounds a little odd.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are in the past ("starting") progressing towards the future (or the present, or the more recent past). Then suddenly we're in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") and (grammatically speaking) we don't know how we got here! It sounds like the "exhibiting" and "providing" started in 1987, not the festival.
A third way is:
Starting in 1987, the festival (has) exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and (has) provided a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Now everything happens in the past, however, I don't think this is what you want. It would appear this festival is still being run, so you want to use the present tense. Of course there are other tenses you could use as well as some that wouldn't work, and whichever tenses you decide to use should be consistent with each other. Fix your grammatical feet in once base tense (most likely the present), and go from there.
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
add a comment |
Your first sentence sounds fine and natural to me.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are standing in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") looking back into the past ("started"). In the past it was started, now it exhibits. It's clear that the festival itself started in 1987, and that the present activities are "exhibiting" and "providing".
Your second sentence sounds a little odd.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are in the past ("starting") progressing towards the future (or the present, or the more recent past). Then suddenly we're in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") and (grammatically speaking) we don't know how we got here! It sounds like the "exhibiting" and "providing" started in 1987, not the festival.
A third way is:
Starting in 1987, the festival (has) exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and (has) provided a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Now everything happens in the past, however, I don't think this is what you want. It would appear this festival is still being run, so you want to use the present tense. Of course there are other tenses you could use as well as some that wouldn't work, and whichever tenses you decide to use should be consistent with each other. Fix your grammatical feet in once base tense (most likely the present), and go from there.
Your first sentence sounds fine and natural to me.
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are standing in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") looking back into the past ("started"). In the past it was started, now it exhibits. It's clear that the festival itself started in 1987, and that the present activities are "exhibiting" and "providing".
Your second sentence sounds a little odd.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
We are in the past ("starting") progressing towards the future (or the present, or the more recent past). Then suddenly we're in the present ("exhibits" and "provides") and (grammatically speaking) we don't know how we got here! It sounds like the "exhibiting" and "providing" started in 1987, not the festival.
A third way is:
Starting in 1987, the festival (has) exhibited more than 550 varieties of mangoes and (has) provided a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Now everything happens in the past, however, I don't think this is what you want. It would appear this festival is still being run, so you want to use the present tense. Of course there are other tenses you could use as well as some that wouldn't work, and whichever tenses you decide to use should be consistent with each other. Fix your grammatical feet in once base tense (most likely the present), and go from there.
answered Mar 19 at 10:19
CJ DennisCJ Dennis
1,963717
1,963717
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
add a comment |
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
1
1
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
"Since 1987, the festival has exhibited..." solves the problems in the "third way".
– David Richerby
Mar 19 at 13:49
add a comment |
There is a thin difference in the meaning of both the sentences which becomes very obvious if we look closely. To summarize:
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival held in 1987 for the first time.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival exhibited varieties of mangoes in 1987 for the first time.
New contributor
add a comment |
There is a thin difference in the meaning of both the sentences which becomes very obvious if we look closely. To summarize:
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival held in 1987 for the first time.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival exhibited varieties of mangoes in 1987 for the first time.
New contributor
add a comment |
There is a thin difference in the meaning of both the sentences which becomes very obvious if we look closely. To summarize:
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival held in 1987 for the first time.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival exhibited varieties of mangoes in 1987 for the first time.
New contributor
There is a thin difference in the meaning of both the sentences which becomes very obvious if we look closely. To summarize:
Started in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival held in 1987 for the first time.
Starting in 1987, the festival exhibits more than 550 varieties of mangoes and provides a rare opportunity to taste them all for free.
Meaning: The festival exhibited varieties of mangoes in 1987 for the first time.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Mar 19 at 18:17
SibghaSibgha
184
184
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
The second version uses a present participle to refer to a past action. At best, it is awkward and arguably, it is grammatically incorrect.
New contributor
add a comment |
The second version uses a present participle to refer to a past action. At best, it is awkward and arguably, it is grammatically incorrect.
New contributor
add a comment |
The second version uses a present participle to refer to a past action. At best, it is awkward and arguably, it is grammatically incorrect.
New contributor
The second version uses a present participle to refer to a past action. At best, it is awkward and arguably, it is grammatically incorrect.
New contributor
New contributor
answered Mar 20 at 1:09
user91638user91638
1
1
New contributor
New contributor
add a comment |
add a comment |
Thanks for contributing an answer to English Language Learners Stack Exchange!
- Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!
But avoid …
- Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.
- Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.
To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
StackExchange.ready(
function ()
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fell.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f201264%2fstarted-in-1987-vs-starting-in-1987%23new-answer', 'question_page');
);
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Sign up or log in
StackExchange.ready(function ()
StackExchange.helpers.onClickDraftSave('#login-link');
);
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Sign up using Google
Sign up using Facebook
Sign up using Email and Password
Post as a guest
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown
Required, but never shown