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Catherine
once upon a time
Why does the phase "once upon a time" mean long long ago? "once" here is a noun and means "only one time",right? "upon" is more or less the same with "on". Maybe I should replace it with "on" to help me understand it? "a time" maybe means "an indefinite period' here. Then what does "on a time" mean?
I want to know the reason and understand it, not just recite the meaning. Thank you so much!
Jan 24, 2011 8:26 AM
Answers · 9
just look at it this way to make it simple:
once upon a time = one time in the past
and it doesn't technically mean "a long, long time ago..."..it's just that it's been known for that meaning because of how the phrase is often used in stories to describe something that took place long time ago...
January 24, 2011
I think the key part is the indefinite time. This could have happened a long time ago, or a few years ago, or even yesterday, or even never in reality. By keeping the time indefinite you don't need to stop and correlate historical information as to exactly when it happened.
"Once" works as an adverb - in fact, the whole phrase is adverbial because it describes the following verb. The next part is usually, "there was..." Was? When? "Once upon a time."
For "once" to work as a noun, you need articles or propositions in front to tell me that it is a noun: for once, this once, just the once...
Also have a look at where the stresses fall: "ONCE uPON a TIME..." Nice rhythm, hey? :)
January 24, 2011
"Once upon a time" is the traditional beginning to a children's fairy tale
January 25, 2011
"Once upon a time" is an idiom. The meaning of an idiom is independent of the words of which it is composed. The words do not change. Neither does the meaning.
January 24, 2011
btw Once upon A Time in America is one of my favs.
January 24, 2011
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Catherine
Language Skills
Chinese (Mandarin), English, Japanese
Learning Language
English, Japanese
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