421. Sharpening the pencil of accurate grammar



A teacher of English, below is his (or her? sorry) name, asked in the


Forum of teachers of British Council – BBC about the usage of “good at” and “good in”. I found an answer on http://www.bbc.co.uk/ Intenational Service – Learning English. / Photo from prontooffice com




Submitted by divakar3368 on 11 August, 2010 - 21:10


Dear friends ,


Can anybody help me by explaining the difference between the usage 'good at and good in'.


Thanking you in advance,


Divakaran.



Fernando M Díez


Usage of 'good at' and 'good in'



Submitted on 12 August, 2010 - 12:40


Hello Divakaran,


I've found this, which can be a good answer. It's from BBC International Service - Learning English, http://www.bbc.co.uk/ . I don't have anything to add.


Best wishes


Fernando M Díez Gallego


Teacher of English. Teacher-trainer.


http://fernandoexperiences.blogspot.com


Granada (Spain)



“Lim Chiu Lan from Malaysia asks about prepositional phrases:


Would you be good enough to explain to me what is the difference between these prepositional phrases: good at and good in?


Which of the following is correct: 1) 'I'm good at English' or 2) 'I'm good in English' and 1) 'I'm good at football' or 2) 'I'm good in football'?



Roger replies:



To be good at and to be good in are often interchangeable, Lim, and there is no easy rule to follow. In simple statements, like the ones you have quoted, the standard form appears to be good at as in 'I'm not very good at football'.



However, in this following sentence, to be good in seems more likely than to be good at, i.e:



'He was the best in the class in French, but in mathematics and chemistry he was not so good.'



This is perhaps because with other expressions or verbs denoting assessment or ranking, the preposition in would be required, thus:



'In pharmacology she obtained/scored/gained/attained the highest marks.' “


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