2

Who can tell me what the difference is between the meaning of the following?

She was in labour for 3 hours.

She went into labour.

nima
  • 5,817
  • 50
  • 155
  • 250
  • 3
    The difference is in the implied current state. The first implies that she was in labour for 3 hours but is no longer in labour now. The second just says that her pregnancy entered the "labour" phase and unless more news is available, she's likely still in labour. – Jim Mar 26 '14 at 07:37
  • Once again, the comment answer strikes xD – MMJZ Mar 26 '14 at 22:12

1 Answers1

4

"She went into labour.":

  • she started giving birth (generally means her waters broke or she otherwise started experiencing labour pains)
  • we don't know whether she is still in labour now or not
  • we're focusing on the moment the labour started (moment in time, not duration)

"She was in labour for 3 hours.":

  • 3 hours passed from the moment she went into labour to the moment the baby was born
  • we're focusing on the length of the labour (duration, not moment in time)
Alicja Z
  • 1,746
  • 10
  • 14