• @[email protected]
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    29 months ago

    If I understand you correctly, you’re saying that:

    “No one kills more efficiently” includes all past events.

    “No one is killing more efficiently” would be the proper way to exclude past events.

    But I have a few questions about that:

    1. Does that mean that the phrase “No one has killed more efficiently” is the same as “No one kills more efficiently”?
    2. Would it be proper to say “No one is killing more efficiently” even if they are not currently killing at this exact moment, but just in recent history?
    3. If I say “No one speaks Ancient Greek”, am I incorrect? Is it fair to correct me with “Actually, the Greeks of 1000 BC speak Ancient Greek”?
    • @[email protected]
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      9 months ago

      Im saying that it’s ambiguous, the way I phrased it was it doesn’t necessarily exclude the past. When you add the word ancient to the example about speaking greek you’re adding additional context, no one does ancient anything because that word necessarily implies the thing isn’t done anymore. I asked for more context from op to avoid misunderstanding and you made and example of how that would work and why its important.

      Also since the greek example wasn’t a comparison like what I responded to we could make it one and see how that looks too.

      “No one speaks Ancient Greek as efficiently as the Language Majors”

      Would it be unfair to comment that maybe the Acient Greeks did?