Learn English – Can “already” be used after a simple past verb in American English

adverbsamerican-englishbritish-englishword-order

A British colleague asked if these two sentences are grammatically acceptable in American English:

They found already high recognition in Europe and we wish to carry
that further.

Furthermore, they will perform a Shostokovich cycle at London's
Wigmore Hall, which they presented already in Chicago and New York.

He says that the "already" directly after the verb sounds off key in British English.

Best Answer

In BrEng, adverbs of time, like already, normally come (1) after the first auxiliary verb in a sentence (We have already been there), (2) after be as a finite verb (They are already here) and (3) before any other finite verb if there is no auxiliary verb in the sentence (We already knew that). There can be some variation, but both your examples would be unusual in BrEng. Both contain a finite verb with no auxiliary verb, so, in accordance with (3), we would expect They already found high recognition . . . and . . . which they already presented in Chicago and New York. Because BrEng prefers perfect aspect in these cases, the sentences would, in fact, probably occur, in accordance with (1), as They have already found high recognition . . . and . . . which they have already presented in Chicago and New York.

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