as soon as

IPA/az sˈuːn az/
IPA/æz sˈuːn æz/

as soon as — idiom

1. used to show that one event happens immediately following another, with little o

1.慣用語A2
釋義

used to show that one event happens immediately following another, with little or no delay in between — for example, you do one thing right after another thing finishes.

例句

Mei called her mother as soon as she landed in Tokyo.

as soon as + past simple for past events

As soon as Hassan finished his homework, he ran outside to play football with neighbours.

main clause after comma following 'as soon as' clause

同義詞
  • once

    More formal and often emphasises a condition ('Once you sign the form, the process begins')

  • the moment (that)

    More emphatic about immediacy ('The moment she opened the door, she smelled the cake')

  • when

    Weaker — does not stress immediacy; a general time relationship ('When I was in Paris, I visited the Louvre')

反義詞
  • before

    Indicates the opposite sequence ('Call me before you leave' vs 'Call me as soon as you leave')

文法句型

as soon as + clause (present simple for future; past simple for past)

main clause + as soon as + clause (optional position)

用法筆記

Unlike 'when', which can describe a general time relationship, 'as soon as' emphasises that the second event follows the first without delay. Frequently used in instructions and promises ('I will call you as soon as I hear anything'). No future tense ('will', 'going to') is used inside the clause after 'as soon as' — use the present simple instead.

常見錯誤

As soon as I will get home, I will call you.
As soon as I get home, I will call you.
💡After 'as soon as', use the present simple, not 'will', even when referring to the future.
As soon as the movie started, then he fell asleep.
As soon as the movie started, he fell asleep.
💡Do not add 'then' after the 'as soon as' clause.
I will tell her as soon as I will see her.
I will tell her as soon as I see her.
💡Same rule: present simple, not future tense.