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[personal profile] trinityvixen
I know, right? Moi!? Needing of the grammar help? But I totally do.

For my news and feature writing class, I got marked down on an assignment for mixing tenses (SHOCKING!). I want to be sure that he doesn't try to mark me down again for something I feel that I navigate pretty well in my academic writing, so I have to ask:

In an essay where you are writing in past tense but need to describe things that are a perennial thing, you can switch to present, right? My example:

A competitive cheerleading routine lasts two and a half minutes, divided into three segments. There is gymnastic tumbling; group stunting work where some girl, the flyers, are lifted and tossed; dancing; and, of course, cheering for the local team. She summarized routines thusly: “It’s like holding your breath for two and a half minutes, running a marathon, doing sprints, and smiling all at once. And making it look like nothing.”

Describing the events, I used past tense. But describing the rules of the thing--which are not linked to the past, and are immutable givens at any time--it is right to switch to present tense, correct? It was in French...

Date: 2008-02-28 04:38 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] kent-allard-jr.livejournal.com
Maybe your teacher is confusing "mixing tenses" with "subject-verb (dis-)agreement"? Cuz like everyone else, only problem I saw was with "some girls..."

Then again, I don't speak no English good.

Date: 2008-02-28 05:02 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] trinityvixen.livejournal.com
I believe my former infraction was, as with this one, a simple mistake. This one I've caught thanks to LJ posting it and now I've verified the answer to my actual question, I feel better about the work as a whole.

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