Difference between Time up and time over

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Anonymous  #141003  Fri, 23 Sep 05 02:28 PM

Hi. Could you please explain me the difference between time up and time over? In what cases can they be used? Thank you.

  
pieanne  #141080  Fri, 23 Sep 05 07:04 PM

My try:

Let's say you have 60 seconds to answer a question. You say "time's over" after the 60 seconds, maybe at the 61st or 62nd. You say "time's up" just as the bell rings, that is at the 60th second.

 

  
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Anonymous  #141400  Sat, 24 Sep 05 09:29 PM
Thanks a lot.
  
CalifJim  #141431  Sat, 24 Sep 05 11:43 PM
"Time's up" (The time is up.) means there is no more time for the task at hand.
"Time's over", at least to my AmE ear, means nothing at all, nor does "time over" unless the words are functionally separated, as in "I spent a lot of time  |  over at a friend's today".

CJ

  
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MrPedantic  #141443  Sun, 25 Sep 05 12:20 AM

I don't think "time's over"/"time over" is common in BrE either; unless it's jargon of some kind.

You could say "playtime's over", "lunchtime's over", i.e. playtime/lunchtime has ended.

MrP

  
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ranchhand  #141516  Sun, 25 Sep 05 07:46 AM

I don't know if this collocation is used in ESL/EFL locations other than Japan, but in Japan, it's really common. It's very likely a construction that was put in a textbook at one time and like so many other mistaken phrases, was believed to be the normal one for English.

As others have related, it is not natural English at all. These fossilized "errors" are extremely.difficult to eradicate. You can tell teachers time after time that the phrase is, "Time's up" and in the very next class, out will come, "Time's over".

 

 

  
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MrPedantic  #141709  Sun, 25 Sep 05 11:20 PM

Intriguing.

I suppose if enough Japanese people continue to say it, it'll become part of the natural language one day.

MrP

 

  
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