already
already — adverb
1. used when something has happened or become true by the time you mean.
used when something has happened or become true by the time you mean.
By eight o'clock, Mina had already packed both suitcases.
had already + past participle
The cafe was already full when we reached the station.
be already + adjective
I already know the answer, so you can ask Ben.
Our dog had already eaten before the children came home.
- previously
more formal and common in writing
- before
broader and often needs another time phrase or clause
- by then
points to a specific later time in a story
- earlier
compares one time with another rather than marking completion
文法句型
already + main verb
be already + adjective or noun
had already + past participle
用法筆記
Usually comes before the main verb, but after 'be': 'I already know' and 'The room is already full.' Distinguish from sense 2 SO SOON, which adds surprise rather than simple timing.
常見錯誤
2. used when something happens so early that the speaker reacts with surprise, plea
used when something happens so early that the speaker reacts with surprise, pleasure, or annoyance.
You're leaving already? The movie started only twenty minutes ago.
already? for surprise about early timing
Lena finished her science project already, and school starts tomorrow.
Is dinner ready already? I just washed my hands.
The baby is walking already, even though he is ten months old.
文法句型
verb + already?
be + adjective + already?
already, with surprised tone
用法筆記
Common in questions and comments where the speaker stresses 'already'. Distinguish from sense 1 BY THEN, which only states that something was true before a time point.