Experience vs Suffer
Quand utiliser chacun en anglais, avec le sens, le registre et des exemples.
Experience
Top 1000 (très courant)A2noun
Suffer
Top 1000 (très courant)B1verb
| Experience | Suffer | |
|---|---|---|
| Prononciation | 🇬🇧 /["/ɪkˈspɪəriəns/"]/🇺🇸 /["/ɪkˈspɪriəns/"]/ | 🇬🇧 /["/ˈsʌfə(r)/","/ˈsʌfəz/","/ˈsʌfəd/","/ˈsʌfərɪŋ/"]/🇺🇸 /["/ˈsʌfər/","/ˈsʌfərz/","/ˈsʌfərd/","/ˈsʌfərɪŋ/"]/ |
| Sens | What you have done or learned in life. | to feel pain or distress |
| Exemple | I had an amazing experience at the concert last night. | Many people suffer from anxiety and depression. |
| Registre | Neutre | Neutre |
| Fréquence | Top 1000 (très courant) | Top 1000 (très courant) |
| Niveau CEFR | A2 | B1 |
| Nature grammaticale | noun | verb |
| Collocations | considerable, extensive, great, have, lack, gain, experience of, a lack of experience, a wealth of experience, past, recent, historical, have, share, learn by, suggest something, teach (somebody) something, show something, by experience, from experience, in somebody’s experience, enjoyable, exhilarating, good, enjoy, go through, have, quite an experience | a lot, badly, enormously, be likely to, tend to, continue to, for, from, under, suffer in silence, a lot, badly, enormously, be likely to, tend to, continue to, for, from, under, suffer in silence |
| Antonymes | inexperience, ignorance | enjoy, thrive, prosper |
| Erreurs fréquentes | Confused with 'experiment' — mixing these words when talking about science., Omitting the object, saying 'I had experience' instead of 'I had an experience.', Using 'experienced' incorrectly as a noun, when it should be an adjective. | "Suffer with" instead of "suffer from", Using 'suffer' without a specific condition, Mixing up 'suffer' with 'sufferer' as a verb |
| Notes d'usage | Use 'experience' when talking about skills or events in formal and neutral contexts. Avoid in casual slang situations. Can refer to personal or professional activities. | Used when someone is experiencing pain or hardship. Avoid in casual contexts where lighter terms are appropriate. |
Questions fréquentes : Experience vs Suffer
Quelle est la différence entre Experience et Suffer ?
Experience: What you have done or learned in life. Suffer: to feel pain or distress
Lequel est le plus avancé : Experience et Suffer ?
Suffer est le niveau le plus élevé, à B1, sur l'échelle CEFR.
Experience et Suffer sont-ils au même niveau CEFR ?
Experience: A2, Suffer: B1 sur l'échelle CEFR.
Quelle est la nature grammaticale de Experience et Suffer ?
Experience: noun, Suffer: verb.
Peux-tu montrer un exemple de chacun ?
Experience: I had an amazing experience at the concert last night. Suffer: Many people suffer from anxiety and depression.
Puis-je utiliser Experience et Suffer de façon interchangeable ?
Pas toujours. Experience et Suffer sont proches et se recoupent parfois, mais elles diffèrent par le registre, la fréquence et l'usage, donc remplacer l'une par l'autre peut changer le sens ou le ton. Regarde les différences ci-dessus avant de substituer.