XPost: alt.usage.english
On 17/09/24 18:57, tonbei wrote:
"ever" is an emphatic word, so here it emphasizes the quoted
sentence. If so, still what I don't know is which part is emphasized
"I forget sometimes" or "I was a child", or the whole sentence.
Let's restore the original sentences.
Sometimes I forget I was ever a child. Ever young and stupid and
trusting.” ("Port Mortuary" by Patricia Cornwell, p258)
I guess the point has already been made that "ever" has a different
meaning in the two sentences. In the second sentence "ever" just means "always". That's the simple case.
In the first sentence the negative-polarity "forget" makes the "ever"
mean "at any time". (Rather than the "at every time" meaning it would
have in a positive-polarity sentence.) Switching to a positive form of the statement, we get "sometimes I believe that I was never a child".
The "never" and "ever" here are absolutes. In either form, the sentence
is stronger than weaker forms like "I forget that I was once a child"
which concede that he/she was a child for at least some of the time.
So I guess the answer to your question is that "ever" emphasizes the
clause "I was a child".
--
Peter Moylan
[email protected] http://www.pmoylan.org
Newcastle, NSW
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