MULTIMEDIA-ENGLISH
Everybody's gotta learn sometime (The Korgis)
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4:39
Video page URL
https://multimedia-english.com/videos/music/everybodys-gotta-learn-sometime-the-korgis-1238
Description

A hit from the 80's

Transcript

Change your heart
Look around you
Change your heart
It will astound you

I need your loving like the sunshine
Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime

Change your heart
Look around you
Change your heart
It will astound you

I need your loving like the sunshine
Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime

Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime
Everybody's got to learn sometime

Explanations

SOMETIMES, SOMETIME, SOME TIME


Some time vs. sometime.  Use “some time” when you mean “an amount of time.  For example:  She spent some time on that graphic presentation.”  Use “sometime” when you mean “eventually.”


Some time means "a length of time." Sometime means "at a time that either is not specified or is not even known." Sometimes means "occasionally (at unspecified times)."


How can I figure out when to use some time, sometime, or sometimes?

Most often, sometime is one word: He will wash the car sometime. When some is used adjectivally with time to mean 'a short time', 'a long time', or 'an indefinite time', then it should be written as two words: She has not heard from her friend in some time. Related words that can be discussed here include the pronoun anyone and the adverb anytime which are written as one word, while the pronoun no one is two, though you will sometimes see noone. The two-word spellings of any time and any one are used in these constructions: At any time during the program, you may excuse yourself. / If you want any one of these scarves, just let me know. The intended meaning drives the choice but some rules can help you make a choice. Some time is the choice when a preposition comes before it or a helping word follows it: A short time ago, I finished the project. / Some time ago, we had lunch together. Some time can be replaced with an equivalent phrase (like a short time, a long time), but sometime cannot, e.g.: They will get tested sometime during the school year. Sometime means 'an indefinite or unspecified time, esp. at a time in the future'. In speech, you will know to choose some time if your emphasis/stress is on time.