คือผมอยากถามว่าแกรมมาร์ที่เค้าใช้และคำศัพท์ยากมากใช่ไหมครับ
เช่น content, n.1
(kənˈtɛnt, ˈkɒntɛnt)
Also 7 containt.
[There is no corresponding use of content, contente, contento, contenta in the modern Romanic langs., which all express the sense by ns. derived from their actual pa. pple., as F. contenu, It. contenuto, Sp. contenido. Apparently, therefore, the Eng. word is a subst. use of content ppl. a. repr. L. contentum that which is contained, plural contenta. The singular was formerly in use in senses in which the plural is now alone used; in senses 2, 3, contents was in the 17th c. often construed as sing.
‘The stress conˈtent is historical, and still common among the educated, but ˈcontent is now used by many, esp. by young people; some make a difference, saying conˈtents, but cubic ˈcontent; and printers often use ˈcontents technically, while saying conˈtents generally. See Academy, 14 Nov. 1891’ (N.E.D., 1893).]
I.I That which is contained in anything.
1. a.I.1.a A thing contained; now only in pl. (with of or possessive): That which is contained (in a vessel or the like); also fig.
1526 Pilgr. Perf. (W. de W. 1531) 6 b, All this worlde with the contentes in the same. 1547 Boorde Brev. Health lxxiii. 23 Yf in an urine doo appere a content lyke as heares were chopped in it. 1625 Hart Anat. Ur. ii. viii. 96 All vrines are not accompanied with contents. 1783 Cowper Task iv. 506 Ten thousand casks For ever dribbling out their base contents. 1832 G. R. Porter Porcelain & Gl. 91 The contents of the kiln are left undisturbed until they are cool. 1884 M. E. Braddon Ishmael xii, The old toper swallowed the contents of both glasses without winking.
b.I.1.b Contrasted with continent.
1603 Holland Plutarch's Mor. 1019 The content is alwaies lesse than the continent. 1605 Bacon Adv. Learn. i. i. §3 If there be no fulnesse, then is the Continent greater than the Content. 1868 G. Macdonald Seaboard Parish I. iv. 66 Stealing from the significance of the content by the meretricious grandeur of the continent.
c.I.1.c sing. The amount (of a specified substance or material) contained; the amount or quantity yielded. Usu. with defining word prefixed.
1901 Chemist & Druggist LVIII. 18 Jeancard and Satie‥conclude that altitude has no influence upon the ester content of lavender oil. 1901 Yearbk. U.S. Dept. Agric. (1902) 41 The director of the Arizona Experiment Station reported that the sugar content in pounds per acre‥ranged from 1,491 to 3,361 pounds. 1955 J. H. Comroe et al. Lung vi. 106 Normal or low CO2 content and pressure does not mean that the patient is not seriously ill.
d.I.1.d Psychol. [tr. G. inhalt.] The totality of the constituents of a person's experience at any particular moment (see quots.).
1890 W. James Princ. Psychol. II. xvii. 28 The relations are part of the ‘content’ of consciousness. 1896 G. F. Stout Analytic Psychol. I. i. i. 41 It is an appearance in consciousness. It is what Brentano would call a content (Inhalt) of presentation. 1901 Baldwin Dict. Philos. & Psychol., Content,‥(2) A constituent of any kind of presented whole. (3) An object meant or intended by the subject.‥ See Intent for this meaning. Ibid., We may distinguish conveniently the presented content (argued about) and the process (the arguing). 1902 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. Apr. 279 Funded or consolidated contents, are‥such contents as are produced by bringing together, in a very intimate way, various part-contents. 1913 E. Jones Papers Psycho-Analysis 26 Freud‥contrasts the ‘manifest content’, which is the dream as directly related, with the ‘latent content’, which is the group of thoughts reached by psycho-analysis of the dream. 1916 C. E. Long tr. Jung's Coll. Papers Anal. Psych. 14 A definite presentation-content [Vorstellungsinhalt] can even create a stereotyped repetition in the individual crisis. Ibid. 76 The hallucinatory content and loud speaking is also met with in persons with hallucinations in lethargy. 1927 J. Adams Errors in School ii. 35 The thinker in whose mental-content they found a place. 1963 J. P. Guilford in Taylor & Barron Scientific Creativity ii. 102 Previously‥three kinds of content were distinguished: figural, structural, and conceptual.
คำศัพท์คือคำศัพท์ที่เป็น contemporary ใช่ไหมครับไม่ใช่ภาษาเก่าแก่แต่อย่างใด และแกรมมาร์ก็เป็นแกรมมาร์ปัจจุบัน?
ใครใช้ Oxford English dictionary บ้างครับ
เช่น content, n.1
(kənˈtɛnt, ˈkɒntɛnt)
Also 7 containt.
[There is no corresponding use of content, contente, contento, contenta in the modern Romanic langs., which all express the sense by ns. derived from their actual pa. pple., as F. contenu, It. contenuto, Sp. contenido. Apparently, therefore, the Eng. word is a subst. use of content ppl. a. repr. L. contentum that which is contained, plural contenta. The singular was formerly in use in senses in which the plural is now alone used; in senses 2, 3, contents was in the 17th c. often construed as sing.
‘The stress conˈtent is historical, and still common among the educated, but ˈcontent is now used by many, esp. by young people; some make a difference, saying conˈtents, but cubic ˈcontent; and printers often use ˈcontents technically, while saying conˈtents generally. See Academy, 14 Nov. 1891’ (N.E.D., 1893).]
I.I That which is contained in anything.
1. a.I.1.a A thing contained; now only in pl. (with of or possessive): That which is contained (in a vessel or the like); also fig.
1526 Pilgr. Perf. (W. de W. 1531) 6 b, All this worlde with the contentes in the same. 1547 Boorde Brev. Health lxxiii. 23 Yf in an urine doo appere a content lyke as heares were chopped in it. 1625 Hart Anat. Ur. ii. viii. 96 All vrines are not accompanied with contents. 1783 Cowper Task iv. 506 Ten thousand casks For ever dribbling out their base contents. 1832 G. R. Porter Porcelain & Gl. 91 The contents of the kiln are left undisturbed until they are cool. 1884 M. E. Braddon Ishmael xii, The old toper swallowed the contents of both glasses without winking.
b.I.1.b Contrasted with continent.
1603 Holland Plutarch's Mor. 1019 The content is alwaies lesse than the continent. 1605 Bacon Adv. Learn. i. i. §3 If there be no fulnesse, then is the Continent greater than the Content. 1868 G. Macdonald Seaboard Parish I. iv. 66 Stealing from the significance of the content by the meretricious grandeur of the continent.
c.I.1.c sing. The amount (of a specified substance or material) contained; the amount or quantity yielded. Usu. with defining word prefixed.
1901 Chemist & Druggist LVIII. 18 Jeancard and Satie‥conclude that altitude has no influence upon the ester content of lavender oil. 1901 Yearbk. U.S. Dept. Agric. (1902) 41 The director of the Arizona Experiment Station reported that the sugar content in pounds per acre‥ranged from 1,491 to 3,361 pounds. 1955 J. H. Comroe et al. Lung vi. 106 Normal or low CO2 content and pressure does not mean that the patient is not seriously ill.
d.I.1.d Psychol. [tr. G. inhalt.] The totality of the constituents of a person's experience at any particular moment (see quots.).
1890 W. James Princ. Psychol. II. xvii. 28 The relations are part of the ‘content’ of consciousness. 1896 G. F. Stout Analytic Psychol. I. i. i. 41 It is an appearance in consciousness. It is what Brentano would call a content (Inhalt) of presentation. 1901 Baldwin Dict. Philos. & Psychol., Content,‥(2) A constituent of any kind of presented whole. (3) An object meant or intended by the subject.‥ See Intent for this meaning. Ibid., We may distinguish conveniently the presented content (argued about) and the process (the arguing). 1902 Amer. Jrnl. Psychol. Apr. 279 Funded or consolidated contents, are‥such contents as are produced by bringing together, in a very intimate way, various part-contents. 1913 E. Jones Papers Psycho-Analysis 26 Freud‥contrasts the ‘manifest content’, which is the dream as directly related, with the ‘latent content’, which is the group of thoughts reached by psycho-analysis of the dream. 1916 C. E. Long tr. Jung's Coll. Papers Anal. Psych. 14 A definite presentation-content [Vorstellungsinhalt] can even create a stereotyped repetition in the individual crisis. Ibid. 76 The hallucinatory content and loud speaking is also met with in persons with hallucinations in lethargy. 1927 J. Adams Errors in School ii. 35 The thinker in whose mental-content they found a place. 1963 J. P. Guilford in Taylor & Barron Scientific Creativity ii. 102 Previously‥three kinds of content were distinguished: figural, structural, and conceptual.
คำศัพท์คือคำศัพท์ที่เป็น contemporary ใช่ไหมครับไม่ใช่ภาษาเก่าแก่แต่อย่างใด และแกรมมาร์ก็เป็นแกรมมาร์ปัจจุบัน?