rfvlxz
the phrase "look out onto" As she works behind her desk at the University of Illinois Chicago campus, Dean of Libraries Mary Case’s office looks out onto what she hopes is the future of her institution -- the potential home of the Obama Presidential Library. What is"looks out onto what she hopes"? And what does "onto" mean in this sentence? How to use it?
21 déc. 2014 20:44
Réponses · 2
What a hard question! Simply, she is looking AT the 'potential home of the Obama presidential library'. The phrase 'to look out onto' is different in two ways. Firstly, it is poetic, especially in this example. Imagine someone on top of a mountain, looking 'out onto' the scene below him; it is emotional. Secondly, it probably means she is inside, looking out of a window. Regarding the '... what she hopes' part, it is more: <<Mary Case's office looks out onto the potential home of the Obama Presidential Library, which she hopes is the future of her institution.>> So, she hopes that the new library is the future of her institution. I hope this helps.
21 décembre 2014
Vous n'avez pas encore trouvé vos réponses ?
Écrivez vos questions et profitez de l'aide des locuteurs natifs !