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Many English learners understand the situation perfectly but still choose the wrong verb.

Why?

Because in many languages one verb can describe both sides of the transaction.

English separates them.

The difference is not about the object.

The difference is about perspective.


The Core Difference

The simplest rule:

lend = give temporarily

borrow = receive temporarily

Think of the same situation from two different sides.

Example:

  • I lend you my book.
  • You borrow my book.

Same book.

Same situation.

Different viewpoint.


Using LEND

Use lend when you are the person giving something.

Examples:

  • Can you lend me your pen?
  • She lent me some money.
  • They lent their car to a friend.

The object leaves you temporarily.

Ownership does not change.


Using BORROW

Use borrow when you are the person receiving something.

Examples:

  • Can I borrow your pen?
  • He borrowed some money from his brother.
  • We borrowed a ladder from our neighbour.

The object comes to you temporarily.

Again, ownership does not change.


The Perspective Rule

Imagine the same situation:

John gives a book to Mary.

From John’s perspective:

  • John lends the book.

From Mary’s perspective:

  • Mary borrows the book.

This is the easiest way to remember the difference.


Common Mistakes

Mistake 1

❌ Can you borrow me your pen?

✔️ Can you lend me your pen?


Mistake 2

❌ I lent a book from the library.

✔️ I borrowed a book from the library.


Mistake 3

❌ She borrowed me some money.

✔️ She lent me some money.


Lend and Borrow in Questions

English speakers frequently use these structures:

  • Could I borrow your phone?
  • Can you lend me your charger?
  • May I borrow this book?

These patterns appear constantly in everyday communication.


Why Learners Confuse Them

Many languages focus on the transaction itself.

English focuses on the participant.

That means English asks:

Who is looking at the situation?

The giver?

Or the receiver?


A Simple Way to Remember

Ask yourself:

Am I giving it?

→ lend

Am I receiving it?

→ borrow

That’s usually enough.


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Real fluency comes from understanding relationships and perspectives, not from memorizing isolated rules.

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© Tymur Levitin
Founder & Director
Levitin Language School