1. Trang chủ
  2. » Ngoại Ngữ

Động từ dễ gây nhầm lẫn5 doc

11 167 0
Tài liệu đã được kiểm tra trùng lặp

Đang tải... (xem toàn văn)

Tài liệu hạn chế xem trước, để xem đầy đủ mời bạn chọn Tải xuống

THÔNG TIN TÀI LIỆU

Thông tin cơ bản

Định dạng
Số trang 11
Dung lượng 60,17 KB

Các công cụ chuyển đổi và chỉnh sửa cho tài liệu này

Nội dung

DOUBT THAT/DOUBT WHETHER/ DOUBT IF If you really doubt that something is true suspect that it’s false, use “doubt that”: “I doubt that Fred has really lost 25 pounds.” If you want to exp

Trang 1

DOUBT THAT/DOUBT WHETHER/

DOUBT IF

If you really doubt that something is true (suspect that it’s false), use “doubt that”: “I doubt that Fred has really lost 25 pounds.” If you want to express uncertainty, use “whether”: “I doubt whether we’ll see the comet if the clouds don’t clear soon.” “Doubt if” can be substituted for “doubt whether,” though it’s considered somewhat more casual, but don’t use it when you mean “doubt that.”

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/doubt.html03/09/2005 15:37:40

Trang 2

DOUBTLESSLY

DOUBTLESS

Leave off the unnecessary “-ly” in “doubtless.”

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/doubtlessly.html03/09/2005 15:37:41

Trang 3

DOVE

DIVED

Although “dove” is a common form of the past tense of “dive,” a few authorities consider “dived” preferable in formal writing

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/dove.html03/09/2005 15:37:41

Trang 4

DOWNFALL/DRAWBACK

A downfall is something that causes a person’s destruction, either literal or figurative: “expensive cars were Fred’s downfall: he spent his entire inheritance on them and went bankrupt.” A drawback is not nearly so drastic, just a flaw or problem of some kind, and is normally applied to plans and

activities, not to people: “Gloria’s plan to camp on Mosquito Island had just one drawback: she had forgotten to bring her insect repellent.” Also, “downfall” should not be used when the more moderate

“decline” is meant; reserve it for ruin, not to designate simple deterioration

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/downfall.html03/09/2005 15:37:41

Trang 5

DRANK/DRUNK

Many common verbs in English change form when their past tense is preceded by an auxiliary

(“helping”) verb: “I ran, I have run.” The same is true of “drink.” Don’t say “I’ve drank the beer” unless you want people to think you are drunk An even more common error is “I drunk all the milk.” It’s “I’ve drunk the beer” and “I drank all the milk.”

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drank.html03/09/2005 15:37:41

Trang 6

DRASTIC/DRAMATIC

"Drastic” means “severe” and is always negative Drastic measures are not just extreme, they are likely to have harmful side-effects Don’t use this word or “drastically” in a positive or neutral sense

A drastic rise in temperature should be seen as downright dangerous, not just surprisingly large Often people mean “dramatic” instead

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drastic.html03/09/2005 15:37:42

Trang 7

DRIER/DRYER

A clothes dryer makes the clothes drier

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drier.html03/09/2005 15:37:42

Trang 8

DRIBBLE

DRIVEL

“Dribble” and “drivel” originally meant the same thing: drool But the two words have become differentiated When you mean to criticize someone else’s speech as stupid or pointless, the word you want is “drivel.”

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/dribble.html03/09/2005 15:37:42

Trang 9

drips and drabs

DRIPS AND DRABS

DRIBS AND DRABS

Something doled out in miserly amounts is provided in “dribs and drabs.” A drib is a smaller relative of a dribble Nobody seems to be sure what a drab

is in this sense, except that it's a tiny bit larger than a drib

Since the origin of the phrase is obscure, people try to substitute a more familiar word for the unusual word “drib” by writing “drips and drabs.” But that's not the traditional formula

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drips.html03/09/2005 15:37:42

Trang 10

DRIVE/DISK

A hard drive and a hard disk are much the same thing; but when it comes to removable computer media, the drive is the machinery that turns and reads the disk Be sure not to ask for a drive when all you need is a disk

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drive.html03/09/2005 15:37:42

Trang 11

DRUG

DRAGGED

“Well, look what the cat drug in!” Unless you are trying to render dialectical speech to convey a sense of down-home rusticity, use “dragged” as the past tense of “drag.”

List of errors

file:///C|/Temp/livres/commonerrors/errors/drug.html03/09/2005 15:37:43

Ngày đăng: 05/08/2014, 18:21

TỪ KHÓA LIÊN QUAN

w