Is Do You Think I Have Forgotten Artinya Grammatically Correct?

2026-02-02 18:55:51 232

4 Answers

Charlotte
Charlotte
2026-02-04 22:33:37
I would break this down into three quick thoughts. First, the sentence as written needs capitalization and punctuation: it should be "Do you think I have forgotten 'artinya'?" Second, for clarity, consider replacing 'artinya' with an English equivalent if your audience might not know Indonesian: "Do you think I have forgotten the meaning?" Third, for natural spoken English, contractions often sound better: "Do you think I've forgotten what 'artinya' means?" That version signals both that you're talking about the meaning of a word and that you're asking whether you no longer remember it.

Grammar-wise, the present perfect 'have forgotten' is appropriate when you want to know if the forgetting has occurred at any point up to now, while 'forgot' (simple past) leans toward a specific past event. I personally prefer the contraction and the clearer phrasing; it reads friendly and direct, which is how I like to phrase things when I'm chatting about language quirks.
Victor
Victor
2026-02-05 15:32:36
That phrasing sounds a little off to my ear, but it's an easy fix. Grammatically, the sentence 'do you think i have forgotten artinya' has a few things to tweak: capitalize 'I', put quotes around the Indonesian word if you're mixing languages, and maybe rework the structure so the meaning is clear. A cleaner version would be: "Do you think I have forgotten 'artinya'?" or even more naturally, "Do you think I've forgotten what 'artinya' means?"

Beyond punctuation and capitalization, there's a nuance with tense. Using the present perfect 'have forgotten' asks whether the forgetting has happened at any time up to now; that's fine if you're asking about your current knowledge. If you want to ask whether someone believes you forgot it in the past, you might use 'Did you think I forgot the meaning?' But for most situations where you're clarifying whether you no longer remember the meaning, "Do you think I've forgotten what 'artinya' means?" sounds natural. I tend to use the contraction in casual chat because it flows better, and that little tweak usually makes everything sound friendlier.
Bella
Bella
2026-02-06 16:27:00
Okay, short verdict from me: it's understandable but not quite polished. You should capitalize the 'I', and it helps to either translate 'artinya' or wrap it in quotes so the reader knows you're referring to an Indonesian word. For example: "Do you think I have forgotten 'artinya'?" or more plainly, "Do you think I have forgotten the meaning?" If you want to be even clearer, say "Do you think I've forgotten what 'artinya' means?" That last version sounds the most natural in everyday conversation. I get why you might mix languages—I've done that a lot when chatting with bilingual friends—just tidy up the punctuation and tense and you'll be golden.
Uri
Uri
2026-02-07 05:13:14
That sentence could use small polishing: capitalization and a clearer structure. I would write it as "Do you think I have forgotten 'artinya'?" or, even more naturally, "Do you think I've forgotten what 'artinya' means?" Mixing languages in a single sentence is totally fine in casual talk, but putting the foreign word in quotes or translating it helps avoid confusion. Also, choosing between 'have forgotten' and 'forgot' changes the shade of meaning—'have forgotten' asks about your current state of memory, while 'forgot' points to a past event. I often default to the contraction because it sounds less formal and more like everyday speech, which I prefer.
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