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-Do you remember ________ he came?

-Yes, I do.He came by car.

[  ]

A.how

B.when

C.that

D.if

答案:A
解析:

回答的内容表示他来的方式,故选how。


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1.Look up English to Elvish.

2.Look up the Elvish word in the best Elvish dictionary you have, and, preferably, find out the context in Tolkien’s language dictionary.

3.Change the word to suit rules of grammar: singular or plural, mutations, verb tenses, etc.

       You cannot leave out any of these steps.If you do, you’re almost certain to have errors.Why you have to do step 2:

       Languages never match up one- to-one.English and Elvish are closer than usual, but there are still problems.And English has strange idioms: why are there no baths or beds in public bathrooms or restrooms? You can’t translate literally.You have to understand the meaning behind each word.

       In Elvish this is even more true, since our dictionaries contain more or less questionable reconstructions, and words that Tolkien later threw away or replaced.Find the best one you can.

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       Consider the nightmare of He left the bar.Is “left” the opposite of “right” (which also has two meanings) ? Is “bar” extruded steel(型材钢), or something to do with law? You have to know what words mean in both languages.

       And you’d be amazed at how many people ignore step 3, forgetting that language is more than a string of words, and there are rules about how to fit those words together.You can’t simply look up the word “I” and use it everywhere.Sometimes you need “me” or “my”.There’s a reason it takes a while to learn a language: you have to learn the rules.

       It drives me completely mad when people give a questionable translation they insist is right because “it’s in the dictionary”.A dictionary is a tool, a resource.but its entries(词目)should not be mistaken for a finished product.They are raw materials.

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