多彩な 英語 講師陣から検索…
夏无桀
in "Good Readers and Good Writers" There is a sentence" There is nothing wrong about the moonshine of generalization when it comes after the sunny trifles of the book have been lovingly collected." How to understand the "moonshine" n "sunny trifles"
2013年5月20日 10:29
回答 · 5
There's an obvious play on words here: moon/sun. "Moonshine" is home-distilled liquor; "sunny trifles" can be understood as "bright little details". The image here is that you collect the details in the text (as if they were fruit) and after thinking them over ("fermenting" them), your general thoughts on the topic will be a "distillation" of the details. The rest of the paragraph supports this analogy: details first, generalizations later.
2013年5月20日
I think he means that readers should first care about the story itself and the details (sunny trifles) that the author gives to make the world of the story. Then, it's ok to look at or take in the bigger meaning (the moonshine) of the story (the theme, the message, perhaps). I don't think he means moonshine in the sense of a kind of alcoholic drink.
2013年5月20日
まだあなたの答えが見つかりませんか?
質問を書き留めて、ネイティブスピーカーに手伝ってもらいましょう!

ご自宅で快適に語学を学べるチャンスをお見逃しなく。経験豊富な語学講師陣の中からお選びいただき、今すぐ最初のレッスンにお申し込みください!