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| | 13 sausis 2011 15:18 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | Hello again Bilge
Do you mean
She's already too spoilt for my liking.
or maybe
She's already too spoilt in my opinion.
or
She already seems too spoilt to me.
or still something else...
'to me' in this sentence just doesn't seem quite right.
Thanks! |
| | 13 sausis 2011 15:52 |
| | Hello again Lein
I mean, this girl has already some spoilt behaviours towards me. Maybe we can change the word to me by towards me in the translation, can we? |
| | 13 sausis 2011 15:56 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | Ah, ok, I read the sentence completely the wrong way then.
How about this?
She already behaves in too spoilt a manner towards me.
It is a bit long but I can't seem to find a more concise way of expressing this... |
| | 13 sausis 2011 16:00 |
| | Oh, it is quite good and explains the meaning of the sentence well. It is OK for me. |
| | 13 sausis 2011 16:02 |
| | One more thing, wouldn't it be:
She already behaves in "a" too spoilt manner towards me. ? |
| | 13 sausis 2011 16:49 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | Hmm... No, but I don't know if there is a grammatical rule for that... It just sounds wrong. I have tried to find some sort of grammatical explanation but can't find a lot
Here is one (under number 1793):
http://www.archive.org/stream/newenglishgramma200sweeuoft/newenglishgramma200sweeuoft_djvu.txt
Oh, and here is a better one (page 59):
http://www.scribd.com/doc/19605867/mihai-mircea-zdrenghea-anca-luminita-greere-a-practical-english-grammar-with-exercises |
| | 13 sausis 2011 22:34 |
| | for me, we don't need to use "a manner". |
| | 14 sausis 2011 10:44 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | Would you rather see 'spoiltly'? That sounds very very weird. And 'spoilt' is an adjective, not an adverb, so 'she behaves spoilt' is gramatically wrong. ('she is spoilt' would be correct in terms of grammar, but not in terms of meaning I think.) |
| | 14 sausis 2011 17:25 |
| | Hmm, I don't know. I have just taken a look at the pages you told me, but there are too many things, couldn't find anything I just thought that as we say "in a good manner", we could also say "in a spoilt manner" and finally, "in a too spoilt manner". It is logical, isn't it? |
| | 14 sausis 2011 17:35 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | It is, but it doesn't work after 'too'. This is what the second reference says:
The indefinite article is placed AFTER an adjective (immediately before the noun in the singular) if that adjective is preceded by 'so', 'as', 'too', 'however', 'how':
It was too good a chance to be missed. |
| | 14 sausis 2011 17:52 |
| | OK, I see. Thanks for informing me. I have learnt a new thing thanks to you. |
| | 17 sausis 2011 12:42 |
| LeinŽinučių kiekis: 3389 | |