ShmoopTube
Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.
Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos
Language Arts Videos 84 videos
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
Whales are great, but when we asked them to tell us a little bit about themselves, all they said was, “Weeeeeeoooooooohhhhhhhh.” So we’re goi...
ELA Drills, Beginner: Meanings 1. Use context clues from the text to find the answer.
ELA 3: Tenses and Literature 24 Views
Share It!
Description:
Feeling tense about tenses? Fear not. We'll massage that confusion right out of you.
Transcript
- 00:01
[Dino and Coop singing]
- 00:09
At this point, you probably know so much about tenses that it makes you…well…tense! [Girl with a tense shoulder]
- 00:14
We suggest a Swedish massage!
- 00:16
While you're enjoying that massage, let's review how we use the different tenses… [Girl getting a shoulder massage]
- 00:20
The present tense is for events that happen in the present…
Full Transcript
- 00:23
…the past tense is for events that happened in the past… [Girl dressed like a caveman]
- 00:26
…and the future tense is for events that will happen in the future. [Girl dressed as a robot]
- 00:29
Whoever named these things definitely deserves a trophy. [Dino and Coop with a trophy]
- 00:32
Maybe the, "Most Obvious Names" award.
- 00:34
But what about events that take place in fiction?
- 00:36
Turns out we have a special tense just for that: the literary present. [Red Riding Hood next to the wolf]
- 00:40
We know, we know…more tenses? [Coop looks depressed]
- 00:42
Don't worry, we'll make learning this feel as nice as a Swedish massage. [Coop getting a massage]
- 00:46
The literary present is really just a special form of present tenses.
- 00:50
So…why do we need it?
- 00:52
After all, any time you read a book, you know it was written in the past. [Guy using a typewriter in a dark room]
- 00:55
…unless you're creepily looking over the author's shoulder as they write it. [Lightning flashes and shows someone behind the man]
- 00:58
Plus, some stories take place way in the future, which is definitely not the present…
- 01:02
…no matter how futuristic your robot vacuum might seem. [Cat lying on a robot vacuum]
- 01:04
But rest assured, Shmoopers, there's a good reason for this new tense.
- 01:09
People who study literature think of stories as alive and present. [A book flies out of a mans hands and says happy birthday]
- 01:13
Whenever someone reads a story, that story comes to life.
- 01:15
What we mean is that when you read a story, the events of the story seem like they're happening
- 01:19
in real time to you, the reader. [Girl imaging the Little Red Riding Hood story]
- 01:22
Let's see how this literary present works with an example.
- 01:25
Say we're trying to describe one of the first parts of Alice in Wonderland: when Alice sees [White rabbit jumping away]
- 01:29
the white rabbit with the pocket watch, and chases after him.
- 01:32
Since the literary present is a present tense, we describe the event as if it were happening [Coop pointing at a blackboard]
- 01:37
right now, in the present, with a sentence like this: "Alice sees a white rabbit with
- 01:41
a pocket watch, and chases after him."
- 01:44
So all in all, the literary present is actually pretty easy to use! [Girl smiling in the classroom]
- 01:47
Definitely easier than catching a rabbit who's late for an appointment. [Girl looks shocked as the rabbit jumps past her]
Related Videos
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View. Is the statement in the video true or false?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Textual Analysis 1. The purpose of the instruction manual was...what?
ELA Drills, Beginner: Point of View 3. Which sentence in the passage best shows the narrator's point of view on the topic of Chelsea Simpson?
We wanted to make a video about sedentary rocks, but we couldn't get lazy uncle Rocky off the couch. Oh well. We'll teach you about sedimentary roc...
Today we're bringing you the opposite of Jurassic Park—how living things become fossils. Okay okay, it might not be quite as fun...but hey, at le...