champmag wrote:@Atul:
If I am presemtly in 2011 and I say that in 1970's the elite pre- school in New York City "had" 150 applications( this is a past perfect time frame). Shouldn't it be followed by a simple past time frame...And by 1990's this number rose to 3000.? Please correct me if I am going in the wrong direction.
Hi, let me try once again...see you are sitting in 2011 and you make two statements...and the statements are:--
1) I won the gold medal in 1999.---correct why???
see, here the use of simple past is correct not past perfect.because you are talking about only one past time frame...i;e the year 1999....you are not talking about what happened earlier etc.
That means you fix a point in past (year 1999) and talked about what happened at that particular point...or what happened in year 1999
2) By the age of 15, i had won many competitions in my school.----correct
I will try to explain this same example in a better way. See in this example, "
By the age of 15" this fix a point certain point in past (suppose 1999 when you become 15 years old)...with reference to your present time frame 2011, It fixes a time frame or a point in past, and that point is when you become 15 years old...
Now see, you want to describe what you did upto 15yrs old in other words before getting 15 years old...right??? so first you fixes a point in past and now going beyond that in past..in these cases what we use?? past perfect right...so do you get how 2-past actions are involved...
Moreover, the fixing of point (i.e year 1999 when you become 15yr old) is actually a state not action but its okay as the state is also in past and then we talked about something happened before that and that is our second action hence past perfect
Hope this helps