Dimin
Can you help me with question no. 9? Please see the picture below. Which one is more appropriate? I selected alight. “The fire wasn’t alight.” Somehow, I also thought c is okay.
2023年12月15日 12:49
回答 · 9
2
The answer they want is D. In this usage, "alight" is an adjective. In American English, we would simply say that the fire was "out."
2023年12月15日
1
We use "on" and "off" to describe the state of devices that have switches like stoves, light bulbs, and automobiles. For fires or flames, we use expressions like "burning", "on fire", "in flames", "aflame", "flaming". When the fire is not burning, we say it is "out". To make it stop burning, we "put it out", "quench it", "smother it", or "blow it out". In the U.S., I don't hear the word "alight" often, but anybody would know what it means. These two categories, devices and fires, are handled in distinct ways, even in the same sentence: Jack: "Is the oven on?" Jill: "Let me take a look. Yes, I know it is on because I see the flame burning."
2023年12月15日
1
Hey there , d should be the answer 😊
2023年12月15日
The verb alight means to get out of a train or bus (a vehicle) The noun alight means to shine or be on fire. Were you working on nouns or verbs?
2023年12月15日
b
2023年12月15日
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