soon

/suːn/ (bre, ipa) · /suːn/ (ame, ipa) · /ˈsün especially New England ˈsu̇n/ (ame, mw)

soon — adverb

1. after a short period of time passes; at a time that is not far from now — for ex

1.副詞A1
釋義

after a short period of time passes; at a time that is not far from now — for example, saying that a bus will arrive in a few minutes, or that a holiday will come in a few weeks.

例句

Karim will finish his homework soon and join us for dinner.

will + [verb] + soon for near-future event

The doctor told Tamar that the baby would arrive very soon.

very + soon for emphasis

同義詞
  • shortly

    more formal; common in written English and news reports

  • presently

    formal, chiefly British; means 'in a short time from now'

  • before long

    phrase, slightly more literary; emphasises that the wait is not long

反義詞
  • later

    at a time in the future that is farther away

  • eventually

    after a long period or after many delays

文法句型

[subject] + will + [verb] + soon

soon + after + [noun phrase]

[verb] + soon enough

用法筆記

Often paired with 'very' or 'quite' for emphasis ('very soon', 'quite soon'). In past-tense narratives, 'soon' marks a short interval after the previous event: 'She arrived and soon found a seat.'

常見錯誤

I arrived soon to the meeting.
I arrived early to the meeting.
💡'soon' is about time after now or after another event; 'early' is about being before the expected time.

2. connects two events that happen one right after the other — the first event fini

2.副詞A2
釋義

connects two events that happen one right after the other — the first event finishes and the second begins with hardly any gap between them. The phrase 'as soon as' marks this close relationship.

例句

As soon as the bell rang, the students ran out of the classroom.

as soon as + past tense for completed events

Call me as soon as you hear any news about the job.

as soon as + present tense for future reference

同義詞
  • immediately after

    slightly more formal; stresses the absence of any delay

  • the moment that

    emphatic; suggests an even tighter connection between the two events

  • once

    shorter and more conversational; 'Once I get there, I'll call you.'

反義詞

文法句型

as soon as + [subject] + [past/present verb]

as soon as + [subject] + [present perfect]

用法筆記

The clause after 'as soon as' uses a present tense (not 'will') when talking about the future: 'I will call you as soon as I arrive' (NOT 'as soon as I will arrive').

常見錯誤

I will tell her as soon as I will see her.
I will tell her as soon as I see her.
💡after 'as soon as', use present tense for future meaning.

3. at the earliest moment that the situation allows, showing that a task is urgent

3.副詞A2
釋義

at the earliest moment that the situation allows, showing that a task is urgent and should happen with no waiting — often shortened to the letters 'ASAP' in notes and messages.

例句

Please send the report back to me as soon as possible.

as soon as possible in polite requests

The nurse said the patient needs to see a doctor as soon as possible.

同義詞

文法句型

as soon as possible

as soon as you can

用法筆記

Often abbreviated 'ASAP' in informal notes and messages. In formal writing, the full form 'as soon as possible' is preferred. The variant 'as soon as you can' is more conversational.

常見錯誤

I will finish it as soon as possibly.
I will finish it as soon as possible.
💡the correct form is 'possible', not 'possibly'.

4. expresses a choice between two actions or situations, where you are more willing

4.副詞B1
釋義

expresses a choice between two actions or situations, where you are more willing to do one than the other — this meaning only appears in the fixed phrases 'would (just) as soon' and 'would sooner'.

例句

I would just as soon stay home and watch a movie tonight.

would just as soon + [base verb] for mild preference

Christopher said he would sooner take the train than drive in this weather.

would sooner + [verb] + than + [verb] for contrast

同義詞
反義詞

文法句型

would (just) as soon + [base verb]

would sooner + [base verb] + than + [base verb]

用法筆記

Only appears in the fixed structures 'would (just) as soon' and 'would sooner.' 'Would rather' is far more common in everyday speech. 'Would sooner' is slightly more formal and often pairs with 'than' for contrast.

常見錯誤

I soon stay home.
I would just as soon stay home.
💡'soon' alone cannot express preference; the full structure 'would just as soon' is required.