“LEND” or “BORROW”? What’s the difference?

55,388 views ・ 2024-05-30

Learn English with Gill


Proszę kliknąć dwukrotnie na poniższe angielskie napisy, aby odtworzyć film. Przetłumaczone napisy są tłumaczone maszynowo.

00:00
Hello. I'm Gill at engVid, and today we have
0
0
4756
00:04
a lesson on lending and borrowing. When do
1
4768
4552
00:09
you say "lend" and when do you say "borrow"?
2
9320
3733
00:13
I know it can be a little bit confusing. Okay,
3
13065
3915
00:17
so I hope this lesson will help to clarify.
4
17260
4980
00:22
So, I've started with a quotation which says,
5
22980
6086
00:29
"Neither a borrower nor a lender be." That's
6
29078
5962
00:35
about money. I mean, you can lend and borrow
7
35040
2988
00:38
things other than money, but this is a piece
8
38040
3000
00:41
of advice spoken by a character in a play. You
9
41040
4708
00:45
may recognize it if you know your Shakespeare.
10
45760
4720
00:51
It's from Hamlet, and it's a character... It's a father talking to his son, and the
11
51280
7020
00:58
son is about to go away to another country, and the father is giving him some... What
12
58300
6860
01:05
he thinks is good advice. "Neither a borrower
13
65160
3455
01:08
nor a lender be." That's why the word order
14
68627
3313
01:11
is a bit strange because it's a poetic line from a Shakespeare play. So, anyway, that's
15
71940
7800
01:19
just a little introduction to the idea that
16
79740
3022
01:22
you can be a borrower and you can be a lender,
17
82774
3246
01:26
and they're different in some way. So, how
18
86300
2713
01:29
are they different? Well, let's have a look.
19
89025
2855
01:32
So, somebody might say, "Could you lend me
20
92280
6522
01:38
your pen, please?" And someone else might...
21
98814
6846
01:45
Or they might say... The same person might say, "May I borrow your pen, please?" But
22
105660
8080
01:53
they're asking the same thing here, but the
23
113740
3575
01:57
construction is just a bit different. They're
24
117327
3753
02:01
saying, "Could you lend me your pen?" So they're
25
121080
5505
02:06
asking for the pen to be given to them. Or,
26
126597
4943
02:11
"May I borrow your pen?" So, it depends on
27
131540
5665
02:17
who is doing the action. So, I hope this will
28
137217
6083
02:23
also help to show. So, you lend something to somebody, you give temporarily, you give
29
143300
9300
02:33
something to someone, they take it from you,
30
153600
4165
02:37
they borrow from you, you lend to somebody,
31
157777
4083
02:42
that person borrows from you. Okay? So, the
32
162300
4259
02:46
direction is from this person to that person.
33
166571
4469
02:51
This person is giving, lending, and this person
34
171240
5850
02:57
is borrowing, taking, temporarily, because
35
177102
5238
03:02
they're supposed to give it back again later.
36
182340
5574
03:07
Okay? So, "Could you lend me your pen?" or
37
187926
5214
03:13
"May I borrow your pen?" It means the same
38
193140
3749
03:16
thing, but it depends who is doing the lending
39
196901
4119
03:21
or the borrowing. So, let's just try a little
40
201020
4755
03:25
example here so that you can work out which...
41
205787
4873
03:30
Which word belongs in the gap. So, "I never ______ money to anyone." Or, "She is always
42
210660
9200
03:39
trying to ______ money from people." So, remember
43
219860
5103
03:44
we've got "to" and "from" here, which is a
44
224975
4385
03:49
clue. You lend to, you borrow from, so that should help you to work out how to fill in
45
229360
8180
03:57
these two gaps, which one is "lend" and which
46
237540
5378
04:02
one is "borrow". Okay. So, "I never ______",
47
242930
5270
04:08
so it's to do with giving. "I never give/lend."
48
248200
9233
04:17
Okay? So, "I never lend money to anyone, but
49
257445
8655
04:26
then another person, she is always trying to
50
266100
7658
04:33
take/borrow." Okay? "Borrow". "She is always
51
273770
7670
04:41
trying to borrow money from", so this is "to",
52
281440
5043
04:46
"lend to", and this is "from", "borrow from".
53
286495
4945
04:51
Okay? So, those prepositions help you sometimes to work it out.
54
291440
6480
05:00
So, okay, I hope that's clear. But then in the
55
300440
4026
05:04
past tense, we just have to be a bit careful
56
304478
3862
05:08
with the past forms because "to lend" is an
57
308340
5050
05:13
irregular verb, so the past form of "to lend"
58
313402
5298
05:18
is "lent". "I lent", "you lent", "he lent". It's
59
318700
5398
05:24
the same for all, all the pronouns, singular and
60
324110
5410
05:29
plural. "We lent", "they lent". It's the same
61
329520
4043
05:33
all the way through, but it's irregular. So,
62
333575
3965
05:37
we've got "lend" with a "d", then "lent" with
63
337640
3414
05:41
a "t". But then "borrow" is a regular verb,
64
341066
3274
05:44
so you just put "ed" on the end. "Borrowed", "borrowed". Okay?
65
344340
6100
05:51
So, again, we've got two sentences here with gaps, so it's the same situation
66
351220
9600
06:00
said in two different ways. So, "Yesterday, Anne _____ my pen" and didn't return it.
67
360820
8740
06:10
"Yesterday, I _____ Anne my pen" and she didn't
68
370280
5359
06:15
return it. So, which word goes in which gap?
69
375651
5029
06:23
So, one person does the lending and another person does the borrowing.
70
383480
5140
06:29
So, "Yesterday, Anne", and this time you haven't
71
389320
3545
06:32
got the "to" and the "from" to give you a clue,
72
392877
3483
06:37
so... Because they don't always appear, so you have to just work out. So, "Anne
73
397740
6240
06:44
did something with my pen", so what did she do? She took it, didn't she?
74
404840
8080
06:53
"You gave it, but she took it", so "Anne borrowed...
75
413800
4640
07:04
Anne borrowed my pen", she did the borrowing,
76
424500
4216
07:08
the taking, and she didn't return it. So,
77
428728
3852
07:12
then it's the other one in this gap. "Yesterday, I lent", "I gave", "I lent Anne
78
432740
7260
07:23
my pen", and she didn't return it. And if you
79
443520
4298
07:27
put the name of the person immediately after,
80
447830
4310
07:32
you don't say "I lent to Anne", I just... "I
81
452260
4091
07:36
lent Anne", you don't need the "to" in there.
82
456363
4197
07:42
So, that means you don't always have the little prepositions to help you
83
462840
5840
07:48
to know which it is. So, "Anne borrowed", "I lent", "I gave", "She took". Okay.
84
468680
7980
07:58
Right, so I hope that helps to give you a way of
85
478300
3777
08:02
working out whether to use "lend" or "borrow".
86
482089
3631
08:06
It's all about what direction it's going in,
87
486360
3751
08:10
giving or taking. Okay? And "to" or "from".
88
490123
3677
08:15
Right, so if you'd like to do a quiz on this topic, just go to the website,
89
495580
6600
08:22
www.engvid.com, and see how you do. I hope
90
502360
2987
08:25
that's been helpful. Thank you for watching.
91
505359
3141
08:29
I hope to see you again soon, and bye for now. Bye.
92
509460
3520
1242], 0,0, -0,2463235294117647 1,4294871794871795, 1,19209289
26, 21,6, "do", 0,90673828125] [21,6, 22,24, "wyjaśnij.", 0,83
968, 6051, 257, 47500, 312, 188 663, 311, 51001], 0,0 , -0,2322
, 32,02, " pożyczkodawca ", 0,734863281 ], [32,02, 33,78, " być ...", 0,6
4, 35,34, "około", 0,827148437 , [35,34, 35,82, " pieniądze.", 0,8
3086, 1417 , 281, 702, 1872, 11 293 , 264, 50749], 0,0, -0,22342
2, 796, 512, 485, 708, 51097], 0, -0,2234213966684243, 1,57727
, 51436] , 0,0, -0,2234213966684 3, 1,5772727272727274, 0,000896
772727272727274, 0,000896453857 1875, [[71,96, 72,16, "jest",
0,5], [72,16, 72,3, "a", 0,99853 5625], [72,3, 72,42, "bit", 0.
8, 77,18, „ graj.”, 0,884277343 ], [78,32, 78,96, „Więc”, 0,885
68, 293, 291, 393, 312, 257, 47 0, 11, 50722], 0,0, -0,27850506
51006], 0,0, -0,27 8505063540226 1,4943820224719102 , 0,00012147
, 51666], 0,0, -0,2785050635402 7, 1.4943820224719102, 0,000121
108,32, 109,0, „\”, 0,9565 96875], [109,0, 109,4, „I” 0,0], 2 1,5084745762711864,
0,00020027
2, 281, 552, 13, 1610, 11, 5166 , 0,0, -0,2917380104326222, 1,5
069, 13, 407, 11, 286, 1454, 34 486, 50950], 0,0, -0,2810905 70
135,08, „długopis?” , 0,9091796875 [135,08, 135,66, "więc", 0,883
01574803, 0,0020503997802734375 [[143,3, 143,64, "też", 0,831
164,76, "od", 0,81689453125 [164,76, 165,14, „ty.”, 0,89
, 168,74, „od ", 0,8056640625 [168,74, 169,18, "to", 0,87
, 291, 21774, 385, 428, 3435, 1 1 , 420, 50910], 0,0, -0,2263513
3862434, 8,612871170 043945e-05, [193.14, 193.4, "\ „Maj”, 0,913
8,28, 198,56, „ale”, 0,8964843 ], [198,56, 198,8, „to”, 0,903,
889, 1610, 11, 503, 9526, 307 1009, 50830], 0,0, -0,24371
1882.04, 213,74, „Więc”, 0,88134765 5], [213,9, 214,52, „„Ja”, 0,8
216,58, „do”, 0,8505859375], [ 6,58, 218,0, „ktoś.””, 0,78
, 257, 51292] , 0,0, -0,24371188 7504331, 1,459016393442623, 0,0
222,32, "pieniądze", 0,8383789062 , [222,32, 222,92, "od", 0,8 ,
02, 242,26, "jeden", 0,81494 140 5], [242,26, 242,44, "jest", 0,9
186046511627908, 0,012626647949 875, [[248,2, 248,76, "więc",
0,2,76, 263,9, "pieniądze", 0,774414 25], [263,9, 264,36, "do", 0,8
pożyczyć.\", 0,3 929729461669922] [274,68 , 275,42, „OK?”, 0,87
4,42, 284,7, „to”, 0,8798828 5], [284,7, 284,92, „jest”, 0,90
”,”, 0,7942708333333334], [289 6, 290,64, „pożyczyć” , 0,81705
, 5026, 51212], 0,0, -0,2508680 592215, 1,467065868263473, 3,37,44
, „nadzieja”, 0,8291015625], [3,44, 302,98, „to”, 0,9416 5 50900
], 0,0, -0,15568620642435 8, 1,6848484848484848, 0,000911 ,
16, „pożyczył”, 0,79248046875] [322,16, 322,74, „ty”, 0,87
, 325,42, „to samo”, 0,8168945312 , [325,42, 325,66, „za”, 0,89
9349, 13, 407, 11, 51304], 0,0, 0,15568620642435918, 1,68484848
72, 332,92, "the", 0,808105468 ], [332,92, 333,22, "to samo", 0.
"pożyczone"", 0,9176432291666 666 [340,3, 340,56, "z", 0,816
rrowed\",", 0,8287109375], [348 , 350,0, " \"pożyczone\".", 0,81
15031, 11, 370, 309, 311, 264, 12, 2590, 51208], 0,0, -0,25708
294, 597, 7417, 30, 50912], 0,0 -0,20800780765712262, 1,5568862
, 373,36, "Ania", 0,3120117187 , [373,36, 373,78, "moja", 0,858
48, 378,92, „który”, 0,8945312 , [378,92, 379,36, „słowo ", 0,8 ,5
, 384,22, " Więc", 0,895019531 ], [384,34, 384,54, " jeden", 0,8
,3, " drugi", 0,81787109375], 387,3, 387,78, " osoba", 0,799
99,36, " nie t", 0,946533203125 [399,36, 399,86, "zawsze",
0,34, 430,16, "i", 0,894042968 ], [430,16, 430,38, "ona", 0,8
"przerwa.", 0,849609375], [435,18, 35. 64, „ \"Wczoraj", 0,90071
,8, "nie zrobił", 0,931396484375], 445,8, 446,22, "powrót", 0,788
, "osoba", 0,79248046875], [4,14, 451,7, "natychmiast", 0,7
380, 643, 264, 503, 1353, 1, 29 456, 13, 51240], 0,0, -0,15820 ,1,
454,6, „Ania”,”, 0,687988 125], [454,6, 456,0, „Ja”, 0,93
94, 465,2, „ty”, 0,8935546875 [465,2, 465,5, „nie”, 0,948
26, 1890, 1883, 1033, 13, 50756 0,0, -0,16603807471264367, 1,4
6,08, „wziął”., 0 .86767578125 [476,08, 476,66 , „Okay.”, 0,8
478,98, „Right”, 0,8793945312 , [479,0, 479,34, „SO”, 0,9038
492.9, „\” do \ "", 0,95190429687, [493,02, 493,54, "lub 0,898
50740] , 0,0, -0,280560664394322 1,3782051282051282, 0,00028681
7,74, 497,92, "do", 0,90673828 5], [497,92, 498,12, "zrobić", 0,9
21, 13, 513 16], 0,0, -0,2805606 3943226, 1,3782051282051282, 0.
O tej stronie

Na tej stronie poznasz filmy z YouTube, które są przydatne do nauki języka angielskiego. Zobaczysz lekcje angielskiego prowadzone przez najlepszych nauczycieli z całego świata. Kliknij dwukrotnie na angielskie napisy wyświetlane na stronie każdego filmu, aby odtworzyć film od tego miejsca. Napisy przewijają się synchronicznie z odtwarzaniem filmu. Jeśli masz jakieś uwagi lub prośby, skontaktuj się z nami za pomocą formularza kontaktowego.

https://forms.gle/WvT1wiN1qDtmnspy7