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I find the oed note puzzling, because the oed2 (and oed3—there was no change) article gives the pronunciation of ate as “/eɪt/ /ɛt/ /iːt/” and also makes it clear that /eɪt/ is the older form, with /εt/ being analogically formed based on similarly patterning strong verbs like read and lead (and also beat and heat in certain dialectal. (this is generalising from the sinifica. In short, what is the difference between the following sentences

I did eat my lunch an hour ago What are the differences in meaning/connotation/usage between them I ate my lunch an hour ago

They both are past tense

Honestly, i'm confused between them. 4 in several books and tv shows, there have been characters who say et instead of ate (as in, i et dinner yesterday at 6:00) I looked it up on wiktionary, which defines it but doesn't say where it's used Et (colloquial or dialectal) simple past tense and past participle of.

The home news silly square Because 7 ate 9.— gina d'amato, 9, milltown. As i'm of a certain age, i tend to blame all jokes like this on the anonymous geniuses at dixie cup corporation, who produced a line of riddle cups in the 1970s, and again in the 1990s So far, i haven't been able to verify that the onus belongs.

Is have ever eaten correct or do i have to use the past simple i ever ate, since the process (of eating) is already over

If i won't refer to any date in the past, which tense is the correct one Nonetheless, have ever eaten sounds correct to me But sometimes the usage of past simple and simple perfect just confuses me. The answer is that i have just eaten them is normal in british and i think us usage, but i just ate them is not normal in british use, or at any rate wasn't until recently (except in the different sense of mplungjan's answer)

Normally, one would say, have you had breakfast? or did you have breakfast [yet]? to ask if someone has eaten breakfast on a particular day or morning When used with breakfast, do can also mean eat (besides make, etc) However, this usage has more to do with frequency than anything else Thus, the following example is valid

I don't do breakfast on.

In bre, ate is sometimes pronounced /et/, and the cambridge dictionary gives this pronunciation Even if ate is pronounced like eight, there may well be subtle differences.

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