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Can a teacher ask: "Have you brushed your teeth this morning?"
if a child is at school and has no opportunity to brush them later that morning if they haven't yet, because their brush is at home?

Or should past simple be used, because the child has no opportunity to brush them before the morning is over?

My question is really about the opportunity to do it that morning.

anouk
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  • Related: ["Have you seen her?" or "Did you see her?"](https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/23275/) and [Have you phoned or Did you phone?](https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/42845/) and [Present Perfect or Past Simple (two similar samples)](https://ell.stackexchange.com/questions/90636/) – Mari-Lou A Apr 30 '22 at 16:20
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    It is still morning, does the teacher know whether the child has not brought their toothbrush or not? Let's presume the teacher doesn't. Either form: "Have you brushed / Did you brush your teeth this morning?" would be acceptable. Some American speakers will prefer the latter form. – Mari-Lou A Apr 30 '22 at 16:44
  • @Mari-Lou A It is still morning and the child hasn't brought their brush. Is present perfect stil acceptable? – anouk Apr 30 '22 at 16:48
  • If the teacher already knew that the child had forgotten their toothbrush, then *I would prefer* the simple past because the teacher cannot know if the pupil's teeth were cleaned that same morning. It either happened or it didn't. – Mari-Lou A Apr 30 '22 at 16:52
  • @Mari-Lou A Why would you prefer simple past and not present perfect? – anouk Apr 30 '22 at 16:58
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    Because it either happened or not at a specific moment in the morning, the time when the pupil was getting ready for school. But I wouldn't object if I heard or read someone using the present perfect. – Mari-Lou A Apr 30 '22 at 17:00

1 Answers1

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A teacher can ask that. The fact that the child doesn't have the opportunity to brush their teeth is irrelevant. British English is more likely to favour present perfect. American English is more likely to favour past tense.

It is unlikely that a teacher would ask that question. Teeth-brushing is normally the responsibility of the parent (and the child).

James K
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  • So a teacher can use present perfect even if the child has no opportunity to brush their teeth at school that morning if they didn't brush them before coming to school? – anouk Apr 30 '22 at 17:10
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    Yes, If the teacher is implicity asking "Are your teeth clean now". It is irrelevant that the child won't have the opportunity to brush them or not. – James K Apr 30 '22 at 17:21
  • Children at nursery and playschool often brush their teeth after lunch (at least that's the case in the part of Italy where I live) The children have their own toothbrushes with their names or a picture which identifies the owner. Because it is *also* the teacher's responsibility to teach them good habits. – Mari-Lou A Apr 30 '22 at 17:33
  • @James K "Yes, If the teacher is implicity asking "Are your teeth clean now". It is irrelevant that the child won't have the opportunity to brush them or not." Does the same principle apply to "Have you had breakfast this morning?" – anouk Apr 30 '22 at 17:44
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    Yes.............................. – James K Apr 30 '22 at 18:14