- 最后登录
- 2016-11-9
- 在线时间
- 822 小时
- 寄托币
- 5216
- 声望
- 482
- 注册时间
- 2009-9-13
- 阅读权限
- 100
- 帖子
- 68
- 精华
- 0
- 积分
- 4085
- UID
- 2697608
  
- 声望
- 482
- 寄托币
- 5216
- 注册时间
- 2009-9-13
- 精华
- 0
- 帖子
- 68
|
发表于 2009-11-11 16:58:56
|显示全部楼层
11.11(节日快乐!)
笔记:
本来打算今明两天完成得任务,今天结束了。明天课满,能尽早完成就尽早。
今天完成的是26~41.相对轻松。基本上内容前13期也覆盖过了。不过还是很有收获。
摘录部分需加强的:
In writing, "a historical event" is more commonly used.
这两个例子,助于我学会comma和semicolon的用法
1.Incorrect: I like this class, it is very interesting.
•Correct: I like this class. It is very interesting.
•(or) I like this class; it is very interesting.
•(or) I like this class, and it is very interesting.
•(or) I like this class because it is very interesting.
•(or) Because it is very interesting, I like this class.
2.Incorrect: My professor is intelligent I've learned a lot from her.
•Correct: My professor is intelligent. I've learned a lot from her.
•(or) My professor is intelligent; I've learned a lot from her.
•(or) My professor is intelligent, and I've learned a lot from her.
•(or) My professor is intelligent; moreover, I've learned a lot from her.
•1. Join the two independent clauses with one of the coordinating conjunctions (and, but, for, or, nor, so, yet), and use a comma before the connecting word.
•2. When you do not have a connecting word (or when you use a connecting word other than and, but, for, or nor, so, or yet between the two independent clauses) use a semicolon (;).
Avoiding Common Errors
1.Bad or Badly?
When you want to describe how you feel, you should use an adjective So you'd say, "I feel bad." Saying "I feel badly" would be like saying you play football badly. "I feel badly" would mean that you are unable to feel, as though your hands were numb. Here are some other examples:
o"The dog smells badly." Here, badly means that the dog does not do a good job of smelling.
o"The dog smells bad." Here, "bad" means that dog needs a bath.
N.B. Sometimes people say "I feel badly" when they feel that they have done something wrong. Let's say you dropped your friend's favorite dish, and it broke into a million pieces. You might say, "I feel really badly about what happened."
3. Sure or Surely?
Sure is an adjective, and surely is an adverb. For example:
o"He is sure about his answer." Sure describes he.
o"The Senator spoke out surely." Here, surely describes how the senator spoke.
N.B. Surely can also be used as a sentence-adverb. For example, "Surely, you're joking." Here, surely describes the entire sentence "you're joking." The sentence more or less means, "You must be joking."
————这是我不太明确的两组词语用法。
这是我记了这么多年仍然没记起来的。最后一次记它!!
Commonly Confused VerbsLIE versus LAY
Lie vs. Lay usage
Present
Past
Past Participle
lie, lying (to tell a falsehood) I lied to my mother. I have lied under oath.
lie, lying (to recline) I lay on the bed because I was tired. He has lain in the grass.
lay, laying (to put, place) I laid the baby in her cradle. We have laid the dishes on the table.
Example sentences:
After laying down his weapon, the soldier lay down to sleep.
Will you lay out my clothes while I lie down to rest?
SIT versus SET
On is used with days:
At is used with noon, night, midnight, and with the time of day:
In is used with other parts of the day, with months, with years, with seasons:
————总结得可以。系统下。
Place
To express notions of place, English uses the following prepositions: to talk about the point itself: in, to express something contained: inside, to talk about the surface: on, to talk about a general vicinity, at.
To introduce objects of verbs
English uses the following prepositions to introduce objects of the following verbs.
At: glance, laugh, look, rejoice, smile, stare
•She took a quick glance at her reflection.
(exception with mirror: She took a quick glance in the mirror.)
•You didn't laugh at his joke.
•I'm looking at the computer monitor.
•We rejoiced at his safe rescue.
•That pretty girl smiled at you.
•Stop staring at me. |
|