本單元是關(guān)于保羅坦露真相的對話。
Alice: Look Paul, we've been seeing each other for quite a while, and I think we've been getting on well together...
Paul: I think so too!
Alice: Paul, there's something I want to ask you, and even though I'm afraid of the answer, I really need to know the truth. Paul, are you seeing anybody else?
Paul: No! Alice, there's no-one else, at least not in the way you think.
Alice: Not in the way I think? What does that mean? Just tell me Paul, what's going on?
Paul: Alice, I've been trying to tell you this for weeks now, but I've been afraid of your reaction. The truth is...the truth is that I was married for several years, but my wife left me eighteen months ago.
Vocabulary 字匯
to confess: 坦白,招供
to tell somebody that you have done something that you think is bad, or that you feel guilty about
to be seeing somebody: 與某人談戀愛,約會,交往
to be having a romantic relationship
what's going on? 怎么啦?
what's happening?
本單元的語言點(diǎn)是關(guān)于不定代詞的用法,請看下面關(guān)于常見的不定代詞 Somebody, anybody, nobody, everybody Every, some, any, no 等用法。
Somebody, anybody, nobody, everybody
Every, some, any, no 每一,一些,任何,無
'Every', 'some', 'any' and 'no' can be used with 'one', 'body' and 'thing' to form compound pronouns, such as everyone, somebody, anything and nothing.
'Every', 'some', 'any' and 'no' can also be used with 'where' to form adverbs such as everywhere, somewhere and anywhere.
Pronouns such as somebody, nothing and everything usually take a singular verb, even though they may seem to refer to more than one thing.
Don't touch that computer: somebody is using it. Don't worry. Nothing has happened.
Is everything ready for the party?
Everybody has arrived.
However, after everyone/everybody, we use they/their/them, even though the verb is singular.
Everyone has to take their shoes off before they come in.
Could everybody please put their names on the list?
Everybody enjoyed themselves at the party.
Somebody, someone, something, somewhere 某些人,某些東西,某處
These words refer to a person, thing or place, without identifying which person, thing or place.
somebody / someone: an unidentified person
something: an unidentified thing
somewhere: an unidentified place
Alice says 'there's something I want to ask you.' She is saying that she has a question, but she hasn't yet identified the topic of the question.
When she says: 'There's somebody else, isn't there?' this is a positive statement, followed by a question tag. Alice is saying that she believes that Paul is seeing another woman, but she doesn't know who.
More examples:
Somebody called yesterday, but I don't know who it was.
He had something to eat before he went home.
Have you seen my phone? I put it down somewhere and now I can't find it.
Anybody, anyone, anything, anywhere 任何人,任何事,任何地點(diǎn)
These words are used in questions and negative sentences, to refer to a person, thing or place, without identifying which person, thing or place.
anybody / anyone: an unidentified person
anything: an unidentified thing
anywhere: an unidentified place
Are you seeing anybody else?
I've just moved to a new town, and I don't know anyone.
I haven't had anything to eat since I arrived.
'any-' words are also used to express conditions:
'You can park anywhere' = 'if you need a place to park, use some of this space.'
'It's easy to find. Ask anyone' = 'if you can't find it, ask someone: everybody knows where it is.'
Nobody, no-one, nothing, nowhere 沒有人,沒有事物,沒有地點(diǎn) (表示否定)
These words are used in positive sentences, but they have negative meanings: they refer to an absence of people, things or place.
No-one is written with a hyphen between the two 'o's.
Nobody knows where it is.
No-one came to the party.
He says he knows nothing about the crime.
They are homeless. They have nowhere to live.
Everybody, everyone, everything, everywhere 所有的人,每個(gè)人,每件事,每個(gè)地方
These words are used to refer to all people, things or places. Everybody and everyone have the same meaning.
Everybody likes chocolate.
Everything closes at the end of the holiday season.
We need to tidy up. There's rubbish everywhere.